Monday, November 7, 2011

Washington Post is catching up with me. First on the WW3 Issue.

This video was just released on Washington Post online . This Video below was floating on YOUTUBE since September 23,2011. Meanwhile people are shouting Israel is going to start WW3 . Israel is going to do the job this Muslim President Obama wont do . That is to save the lives of millions of Americans and Europeans. If the Muslims want to kill themselves and their children in a nuclear blast they should do it to themselves , But the West loves their children. That life is worth saving. Muslims go kill your children while you wrap yourselves in your own hate. Blow yourselves up. But do it in your own land and in your own homes and Mosques.

Vote for Leah Lax in the Primary . Send donations to www.LeahLax.com. We need to protect Americans who live in the modern world not the world of suicide bombers.





Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said in September that Iran is talking to Russia about building additional nuclear power reactors. (Sept. 23, 2011)


IAEA says foreign expertise has brought Iran to threshold of nuclear capability

http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/iaea-says-foreign-expertise-has-brought-iran-to-threshold-of-nuclear-capability/2011/11/05/gIQAc6hjtM_story.html?icid=maing-grid10%7Chtmlws-main-bb%7Cdl5%7Csec1_lnk2%7C110484
Intelligence provided to U.N. nuclear officials shows that Iran’s government has mastered the critical steps needed to build a nuclear weapon, receiving assistance from foreign scientists to overcome key technical hurdles, according to Western diplomats and nuclear experts briefed on the findings.
Documents and other records provide new details on the role played by a former Soviet weapons scientist who allegedly tutored Iranians over several years on building high-precision detonators of the kind used to trigger a nuclear chain reaction, the officials and experts said. Crucial technology linked to experts in Pakistan and North Korea also helped propel Iran to the threshold of nuclear capability, they added.

The officials, citing secret intelligence provided over several years to the International Atomic Energy Agency, said the records reinforce concerns that Iran continued to conduct weapons-related research after 2003 — when, U.S. intelligence agencies believe, Iranian leaders halted such experiments in response to international and domestic pressures.
The U.N. nuclear watchdog is due to release a report this week laying out its findings on Iran’s efforts to obtain sensitive nuclear technology. Fears that Iran could quickly build an atomic bomb if it chooses to has fueled anti-Iran rhetoric and new threats of military strikes. Some U.S. arms-control groups have cautioned against what they fear could be an overreaction to the report, saying there is still time to persuade Iran to change its behavior.
Iranian officials expressed indifference about the report.
“Let them publish and see what happens,” said Iran’s foreign minister and former nuclear top official, Ali Akbar Salehi, the semiofficial Mehr News Agency reported Saturday.
Salehi said that the controversy over Iran’s nuclear program is “100 percent political” and that the IAEA is “under pressure from foreign powers.”
‘Never really stopped’
Although the IAEA has chided Iran for years to come clean about a number of apparently weapons-related scientific projects, the new disclosures fill out the contours of an apparent secret research program that was more ambitious, more organized and more successful than commonly suspected. Beginning early in the last decade and apparently resuming — though at a more measured pace — after a pause in 2003, Iranian scientists worked concurrently across multiple disciplines to obtain key skills needed to make and test a nuclear weapon that could fit inside the country’s long-range missiles, said David Albright, a former U.N. weapons inspector who has reviewed the intelligence files.
The program never really stopped,” said Albright, president of the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security. The institute performs widely respected independent analyses of nuclear programs in countries around the world, often drawing from IAEA data.
“After 2003, money was made available for research in areas that sure look like nuclear weapons work but were hidden within civilian institutions,” Albright said.

(AP) - In this April 8, 2008 file photo released by the Iranian President's Office, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visits the Natanz Uranium Enrichment Facility.

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