Talk Talk Talk....

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
yeap barry keeps saying that he can talk to iran and they will go along....guess iran didn't get the message the the messiah wants them to do this nuclear stuff his way ...... that talking is working about as good as it has with North Korea, and Russia...wait, NK, told him to screw off...Russia well he caved to them..so the atlkin worked for them...and uncle iamadumbazz just doesn't seem to pay much attention to barry or hilary or the rest of them...and Russia won't let the others impose sanctions...so, what do you bet that barry will want to "Talk" so more......

Nuclear deal threatened by Iranian response

By James Blitz in London and Najmeh Bozorgmehr in Tehran
Published: October 29 2009
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Iran has told the International Atomic Energy Agency that it wants to transfer its low enriched uranium in batches to France and Russia over a period of time rather than meet international demands for a large and immediate transfer.

Western diplomats have told the Financial Times that Tehran’s demand was made in a document handed to the United Nations nuclear watchdog in Vienna on Thursday.

Western powers – including the US, UK, France and Germany – had originally set a deadline of Friday last week for Tehran to accept a deal designed to avoid fresh sanctions being imposed on the Islamic republic.
The diplomats warned that the Iranian counter proposal would be “unacceptable”.

Under the terms of the Iranian proposal Tehran would initially transfer a limited quantity of LEU to France and Russia for manufacture into more enriched uranium that can be used in medical isotopes.

The diplomats say that Iran is then arguing that once it has received the first batch of the more highly enriched uranium, it will hand over a second batch of the LEU material, continuing this process into 2010.

“They are trying to turn this into a negotiation,” said a western diplomat who has been informed of the response to the IAEA. “But it makes no sense to do it in this way. Their response is unacceptable.”
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
You know I talked to a few Iranians this morning when I went to breakfast and they seem to think that Obama is dragging his a** to actually give Iran more time on the issue. They said the people there are fed up with the government and Obama hasn't done a thing that would help, while Bush has through some of the charities in Iraq.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
LOL!! Here you go the WaPo editoral staff see's Iran "Playing barry" for the useless "talker" he is....LOL!!! What a weak azz excuse of a leader we have in the WH.....

WaPo editorial: Iran is playing Obama

Rick Moran
October 29, 2009
American Thinker Blog: WaPo editorial: Iran is playing Obama

Remember a few weeks back in Vienna when, with great fanfare, the administration announced an agreement with the Iranians regarding their stockpile of enriched uranium? We were told that the mullahs had agreed to ship 70% of it to Russia in order to complete the processing into fuel suitable for a nuclear reactor.

Well, guess what? The Iranians are going back on the deal. They now say they will ship small amounts of their enriched uranium to Russia over the period of a year - the amount and timing of the shipments to be - you guessed it - negotiated.

This op-ed in the Washington Post lays out the administration's for their utter foolishness and asks:

"Can Obama Play Hardball?":


Many of us worry that, for Obama, engagement is an end in itself, not a means to an end. We worry that every time Iran rejects one proposal, the president will simply resume negotiations on another proposal and that this will continue right up until the day Iran finally tests its first nuclear weapon, at which point the president will simply begin negotiations again to try to persuade Iran to put its nuclear genie back in the bottle.
Russia, meanwhile, will continue to be accommodated as a partner in this effort, on the perpetually untested theory that if Obama ever did decide to get tough with Iran, Moscow would join in. Russia thus reaps all the rewards of engagement without ever having to make a difficult decision.

The worst of it is that the Tehran regime is now desperately trying to buy time so it can regain full control of the country in the face of widespread anger after the fraudulent presidential elections in June and a still-vibrant Iranian opposition. For the clerics, an endless negotiating process is not merely a means of putting off any real concessions on its nuclear program. It is also, and more important, a way of putting off any Western sanctions that could produce new and potentially explosive unrest in their already unstable country. That is the best card in Obama's hand right now. It's time for him to play it -- or admit that poker is not his game.

Russia has already said that sanctions are not the answer, that continued engagement with Iran is just fine with them. This means that in a matter of weeks, the president is going to be tested on how serious he is about stopping the Iranians from getting the bomb.

There are already indications that Obama will accept an Iranian fait accompli on a nuclear weapon because the only way to stop them at this point is military action that would result in regime change. All of this "engagement" is for show; Obama has already concluded that taking military action against Iran would cause more problems than it would solve.

The west could try the punitive sanctions route on their own - namely, cutting off deliveries of refined gasoline. But without Russia and China on board, such would be an exercise in futility.

This makes an Israeli strike on Iran's nuclear facilities very likely. Will Obama support our ally for doing something that we will be blamed for anyway? From what we know of this man and his attitude toward the Israelis, it would not surprise me if he took drastic action against our ally if they took the military route in defending themselves - all to curry favor with Iran and stop any attacks on America.

This whole thing is getting more and more depressing. The world's inability to deal with Iran may lead to a general war in the Middle East. And the blame can be placed at the feet of the American president.
 
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