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by CryptoPunk
1994 days ago
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Detection of any enriched uranium at a site, combined with evidence of recent earth work, would be a pretty clear smoking gun, so I don't think that would be a viable way to avoid being held accountable for unauthorized nuclear enrichment. >>Nor would Iran act differently if the EU had fully joined the pressure, or if the EU would also have torn up the deal. Reneging on a deal undermines the credibility of the diplomatic process and ratchets up tensions which increases the chance of a military conflict. Having a united front is good both for cross-Atlantic ties and the chances of resolving the dispute peacefully. |
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The UN/IAEA process requires unanimity among the major powers. Since Iran has been left with an semi-believable out, there's enough diplomatic cover to allow Russia/China to cover for it there (see Syrian chemical weapons for comparison). For once such a position would be understandable: If seeing enriched Uranium could eventually lead to war, and there's a way to rationalize it, how much of a smoking gun would it be? Allowing that rationalization was an error in the deal.
> Having a united front is good both for cross-Atlantic ties and the chances of resolving the dispute peacefully.
The structure of the deal made some form of renegotiation inevitable (since the main restrictions were temporary). The question is how to do it.