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USANews版 - 和疤蟆比起来, 现任法国总统成了powerful leader
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自由表达价值不容妥协伊朗马上要有核弹了, 到时候疤蟆会不会说这是他的政绩?
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话题: iran话题: nuclear话题: french话题: its话题: deal
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l****z
发帖数: 29846
1
Vive La France on Iran
The French save the West from a very bad nuclear deal with Iran.
Updated Nov. 10, 2013 5:23 p.m. ET
We never thought we'd say this, but thank heaven for French foreign-policy
exceptionalism. At least for the time being, François Hollande's
Socialist government has saved the West from a deal that would all but
guarantee that Iran becomes a nuclear power.
While the negotiating details still aren't fully known, the French made
clear Saturday that they objected to a nuclear agreement that British Prime
Minister David Cameron and President Barack Obama were all too eager to sign
. These two leaders remind no one, least of all the Iranians, of Tony Blair,
Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan or George W. Bush. That left the French to
protect against a historic security blunder, with Foreign Minister Laurent
Fabius declaring in an interview with French radio that while France still
hopes for an agreement with Tehran, it won't accept a "sucker's deal."
And that's exactly what seems to have been on the table as part of a "first-
step agreement" good for six months as the parties negotiated a final deal.
Tehran would be allowed to continue enriching uranium, continue
manufacturing centrifuges, and continue building a plutonium reactor near
the city of Arak. Iran would also get immediate sanctions relief and the
unfreezing of as much as $50 billion in oil revenues—no small deliverance
for a regime whose annual oil revenues barely topped $95 billion in 2011.
In return the West would get Iranian promises. There is a promise not to
activate the Arak reactor, a promise not to use its most advanced
centrifuges to enrich uranium or to install new ones, a promise to stop
enriching uranium to 20%, which is near-weapons' grade, and to convert its
existing stockpile into uranium oxide (a process that is reversible).
What Iran has not promised to do is abide by the Additional Protocol of the
Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT), which imposes additional reporting
requirements on Iran and allows U.N. inspectors to conduct short-notice
inspections of nuclear facilities. The International Atomic Energy Agency (
IAEA) has complained for years that Iran has refused to answer its questions
fully or provide inspectors with access to all of its facilities. IAEA
inspectors have been barred from visiting Arak since August 2011.
In other words, the deal gives Iran immediate, if incomplete, sanctions
relief and allows it to keep its nuclear infrastructure intact and keep
expanding it at a slightly slower pace. And the deal contains no meaningful
mechanisms for verifying compliance. "What we have to do is to make sure
that there is a good deal in place from the perspective of us verifying what
they're doing," President Obama told NBC's Chuck Todd in an interview
Wednesday. What we have is the opposite.
The President also told Mr. Todd that if Iran fails to honor the deal the U.
S. can re-apply existing sanctions: "We can crank that dial back up."
That's also misleading. Once sanctions are eased, the argument will always
be made (no doubt by Mr. Obama) that dialing them back up will give Iran the
excuse to restart enrichment. Any "interim" agreement gives more
negotiating leverage to Iran. If Iran really intends to cease its nuclear
program, it should be willing to do so immediately and unconditionally.
Enlarge Image
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius makes his way to a meeting during the
third day of closed-door nuclear talks at the Intercontinental Hotel in
Geneva November 9, 2013. Reuters
All of this echoes the strategy Iran pursued after its illicit nuclear
facilities were discovered in 2002. Current Iranian President Hasan Rouhani
was his country's nuclear negotiator from 2003 to 2005, when Iran briefly
suspended its civilian and military nuclear work in the teeth of intense
international pressure (and American armies on its borders with Iraq and
Afghanistan). That previous suspension is treated by U.S. negotiators as a
model of what they might achieve now.
It's really a model of what they should beware. "Tehran showed that it was
possible to exploit the gap between Europe and the United States to achieve
Iranian objectives," Hossein Mousavian, Mr. Rouhani's deputy at the time,
acknowledged in his memoir. "The world's understanding of 'suspension' was
changed from a legally binding obligation" to "a voluntary and short-term
undertaking aimed at confidence building."
Now the U.S. seems to be falling for the same ruse again. This time, however
, Iran is much closer to achieving its nuclear objectives. No wonder Israel'
s Benjamin Netanyahu felt compelled to warn the Administration and Europe
that they risked signing "a very, very bad deal," a blunt public rebuke from
a Prime Minister who has been notably cautious about criticizing the White
House. The Saudis, who gave up on this Administration long ago, are no doubt
thinking along similar lines. The BBC reported last week that the Kingdom
has nuclear weapons "on order" from Pakistan.
The negotiators plan to resume talks on November 20, and France will be
under enormous pressure to go along with a deal. We hope Messrs. Hollande
and Fabius hold firm, and the U.S. Congress could help by strengthening
sanctions and passing a resolution insisting that any agreement with Iran
must include no uranium enrichment, the dismantling of the Arak plutonium
project and all centrifuges, and intrusive, on-demand inspections. Anything
less means that Iran is merely looking to con the West into easing sanctions
even as it can restart its program whenever it likes.
I******I
发帖数: 14241
2
这个奥朗德虽然经济政策脑残,但是看起来整体的内政外交还能控制,考虑到法赤黑穆
泛滥的局面,能做到目前这样可以算是守成之君了。
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话题: iran话题: nuclear话题: french话题: its话题: deal