The prophecy is more than seeing into the future. For the prophecy sees without the element of time. For the prophecy sees things as they were, as they are, and as they always shall be.
Thursday, January 1, 2015
Iran Cheated On Nuclear Deal: Should We Be Surprised?
Stephen Hayes: Iran cheated on the interim nuclear deal
By Jon Greenberg on Wednesday, December 31st, 2014 at 10:58 a.m.
As the pundits look ahead to 2015, they know that time is running out
for the United States to reach a permanent deal with Iran over its
nuclear program.
The five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council —
China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — along
with Germany, have until mid March to come to terms on a deal with the
Islamic republic. If all goes the way the United States hopes, a signed
agreement will keep Iran out of the nuclear weapons club.
For now, the two sides are operating under an interim agreement,
which rolls back Iran’s stock of enriched uranium and freezes the
country’s capability to produce nuclear materials that could be used to
make a nuclear bomb. In exchange, Iran can sell its oil more freely and
gain access to millions of dollars in frozen assets.
“They want the deal for the sake of having the deal,” Hayes
said. “We basically caught — we’ve caught Iran cheating on the interim
deal and rather than saying, ‘Look, we’re done, you’ve proven that
you’re not an effective partner, that we can’t trust you,’ they say,
‘We’ll give you more time because we’re going to get to a deal.’ ”
We decided to check whether Iran was caught cheating on the interim agreement.
What we discovered is that while Iran isn’t squeaky clean, no point
is definitively in violation of the interim agreement. Importantly, the International Atomic Energy Agency has reported no violations with the Joint Plan of Action.
We’ll deal with each potential violation in turn.
Work with a new model of centrifuge
One of the pillars of the interim agreement, the Joint Plan of Action,
was to freeze Iran’s centrifuge facilities. It could keep the tens of
thousands of centrifuges it has and could repair any that were broken,
but it couldn’t expand its capacity. As part of the agreement, Iran
could continue some limited research and development work.
A problem emerged in November
when the International Atomic Energy Agency reported that in the
“R&D area,” Iran “has been intermittently feeding natural UF6
(uranium fluoride) into the IR-5 centrifuge.” Agency inspectors said
that no enriched uranium emerged because the Iranians recombined
everything back together at the end of the run.
This set off red flags because, until then, the Iranians had not fed uranium fluoride into that particular centrifuge.
Hayes told us that he took an “apparent violation” to be the equivalent of cheating.
But David Albright, the institute’s president, said that after a closer look, it wasn’t that cut and dried.
“It’s hard to say definitively one way or the other on the question of a clear violation,” Albright told PunditFact.
Albright and his group’s latest assessment
is that the Joint Plan of Action didn’t specifically allow the Iranians
to feed the uranium into the IR-5 centrifuge. But it’s not clear if
that constitutes a violation.
Albright said that an administration official told him that the
action was “inconsistent with the United States’ understanding of the
Joint Plan of Action.” That could be a diplomatic way of saying there
had been a violation, or it might mean that the original agreement was
unclear, a lawyer told Albright.
What is clear: The Americans asked Iran to stop, and Iran did.
Adam Mount, a nuclear security fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations, said as far as anyone can tell, the interim agreement has
achieved what it set out to do.
“There is no publicly available evidence that Iran has violated the
terms of the Joint Plan of Action,” Mount said. “Progress on the Iranian
nuclear program is frozen and in some of the most important areas, it
has been rolled back.”
Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association, a
group that hopes to see a final nuclear agreement with Iran, said it
would have been better if Iran hadn’t fed the uranium into the IR-5
centrifuge.
“Was it useful or helpful?” Kimball asked. “No. Was it specifically
prohibited by the Joint Plan of Action? Also no. There is a big
difference between the Iranians have been caught cheating, and a dispute
about the one centrifuge.”
In sum, the weight of the evidence says that it would have been
better if Iran had not fired up that IR-5 centrifuge, but doing so
didn’t rise to the level of violating the interim agreement.
The Joint Plan of Action says that the five Security Council
countries and Germany would stop trying to reduce the amount of oil that
Iran could sell. It also says that countries can continue to buy “their
current average amounts of crude oil.”
There are no specific caps, however, and no clear explanation of what would constitute a violation.
We spoke to Mark Dubowitz, who is executive director of the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a group that monitors enforcement
of sanctions against Iran. Dubowitz said he believes both Iran and the
countries that bought its oil skirted the deal. But ultimately, Dubowitz
said we can’t know for sure whether Iran’s oil sales violate the terms
of the agreement because we lack access to a critical piece. Behind the
public summary of the Joint Plan of Action is a much more detailed
implementation agreement. Only people with a certain level of security
clearance can see it.
“We don’t know what that says,” Dubowitz said. “Iran’s sales might be a violation. Or they might not.”
Also, several of the countries that are buying Iran’s oil, such as
India, Japan and South Korea, didn’t sign the interim agreement and thus
wouldn’t be bound by it. And lastly, while the United States has set
limits on the amount of oil Iran can sell, those are not written into
the Joint Plan of Action. Buying parts for a heavy water reactor
Some analysts we reached thought Hayes might have been thinking of
another potential problem with Iran. According to some reports,
it has continued to buy parts that could be used in its heavy water
reactor, which is another means to produce fuel for a nuclear bomb.
However, even if those reports are accurate, the activity falls outside the interim agreement.
Matthew Kroenig is a professor of international relations at
Georgetown University. Kroenig would not call these purchases a
violation of the Joint Plan of Action. On the other hand, Kroenig said
that shouldn’t make anyone feel any better.
“It is in violation of U.N. sanctions prohibiting Iranian procurement
of sensitive nuclear technology,” Kroenig said. “It also might reveal
something about how sincere Iran is about shutting down or converting
the reactor as part of a final deal.”
Iran has worked with a new kind of centrifuge that, while perhaps not
a formal violation, does seem to contradict the United States’
understanding of the deal, an expert told us. When confronted on the
matter, Iran stopped its work.
Also, there is some question about the amount of oil Iran is
exporting. But an expert said we just don’t have enough information to
determine whether that constitutes a violation of the agreement or not.
Hayes said we caught Iran cheating. You can say some allege that, and
you can say there’s some
evidence that might suggest that. But we found
no hand in the cookie jar. As such, we rate this claim Mostly False.
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