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Dubai Knight wrote:Lionheart wrote:Choco... I have question
In your opinion are there any country Mid east which is allowed to develop Nuclear Technology and Weapon to deter West Influence?
Saud Arabia
Jordan
UAE
Oman
Egypt
Libya
Syria
Iran( the only real democracy in Mid east, along With Hamas)
Iraq( does not exist anymore)
Yemen
Algeria
Tunisia
Etc
I'd just like to point out that Algeria, Tunisia and Libya are not technically Middle East countries Lionheart. They all have coastlines on the Mediterranean and are actually on the African Continent. Can I suggest that once more you seem to confuse countries that are Islamic as being 'East' and all others as being 'West'. I also note with interest that you omit Morrocco. Are they too far 'west' to be considered 'east' for you?
In answer to your question to Choco...no country should have nuclear weapons, including the ones that have them already. Unfortunately it is very hard to 'unlearn' something once it has been learnt.
Knight
arniegang wrote:I would like to point out at this point not one single country listed has the ability to produce a Nuke without WESTERN help or technology.
So i dont really see the issue here. On one hand Lionheart is winging about the Islamic Brotherhood blah blah, then he hypothesise's about "what if" Nuke production in the ME.
So to conclude, its NOT ok to have western influence ie Burger King, but it is OK to want to have Nukes.
mmmmmmmmmmm
Chocoholic wrote:I can't be bothered to answer your question Lionheart as you don't listen. But I'll agree with DK and say no country should carry Nuclear weapons, it's a disaster waiting to happen.
If they can't produce NUKES without western help than why was Iraq invaded and Why is Iran pressured to stop their Nuclear activities? Iran never recieved Western help for the development of their NUclear plant.
kanelli wrote:I totally agree with DK, Choco and Liban in their latest posts.
Lionheart, why on earth should any country have nuclear weapons? Have you not read the history about Hiroshima and Nagasaki - have you not seen the pictures? The same thing for chemical weapons - they should be abolished. If every country got rid of weapons of mass destruction then this world would be a safter place for everyone.
What a shame that we have starving people, insecurity, and evironmental degredation happening on this planet - yet these are low on the priority list for most countries! Instead they are worried about having the most money, or taking revenge on other countries, meddling in other countries affairs etc.
Some people would do better to think of themselves as WORLD CITIZENS and take action to make the WORLD a better place. Instead, so many cling to ethnic, religious and political groups and cause destruction in the name of petty rivalry and selfish intentions.
arniegang wrote:If they can't produce NUKES without western help than why was Iraq invaded and Why is Iran pressured to stop their Nuclear activities? Iran never recieved Western help for the development of their NUclear plant.
WRONGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGG
Background
The foundations for Iran's nuclear program were laid in the 1960 under auspices of the U.S. within the framework of bilateral agreements between the two countries. In 1967 the Tehran Nuclear Research Center (TNRC) was built and run by the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI). The TNRC was equipped with a US supplied 5-megawatt nuclear research reactor. Iran signed and ratified the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1968. With the establishment of Iran's atomic agency and the NPT in place plans were drawn by Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (Iran's monarch) to construct up to 23 nuclear power stations across the country together with USA by the year 2000.
By 1975, The U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, had signed National Security Decision Memorandum 292, titled "U.S.-Iran Nuclear Cooperation," which laid out the details of the sale of nuclear energy equipment to Iran projected to bring U.S. corporations more than $6 billion in revenue. At the time, Iran was pumping as much as 6 million barrels (950,000 m³) of oil a day, compared with about 4 million barrels (640,000 m³) daily today.
President Gerald R. Ford even signed a directive in 1976 offering Tehran the chance to buy and operate a U.S.-built reprocessing facility for extracting plutonium from nuclear reactor fuel. The deal was for a complete "nuclear fuel cycle". The Ford strategy paper said the "introduction of nuclear power will both provide for the growing needs of Iran's economy and free remaining oil reserves for export or conversion to petrochemicals."
The Bushehr project
The Bushehr Nuclear Power Facility is located 17 kilometers south of the city of Bushehr (also known as Bushire), between the fishing villages of Halileh and Bandargeh along the Persian Gulf.
The facility was the idea of the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who envisioned a time when the world's oil supply would run out. He said that, "Petroleum is a noble material, much too valuable to burn." Instead, he wanted a national electrical grid powered by clean nuclear power plants. Bushehr would be the first plant, and would supply energy to the inland city of Shiraz.
In 1975, the Bonn firm Kraftwerk-Union A.G., a joint venture of Siemens AG and A.E.G Telefunken, signed a contract worth $4 to $6 billion to build the nuclear power plant. Construction of the two nuclear generating units was subcontracted to ThyssenKrupp AG, and was to have been completed in 1981.
Kraftwerk-Union was eager to work with the Iranian government because, as spokesman Joachim Hospe said in 1976, "To fully exploit our nuclear power plant capacity, we have to land at least three contracts a year for delivery abroad. The market here is about saturated, and the United States has cornered most of the rest of Europe, so we have to concentrate on the third world."
Kraftwerk-Union fully withdrew from the Bushehr nuclear project in July 1979, after work stopped in January 1979, with one reactor 50% complete, and the other reactor 85% complete. They said they based their action on Iran's non-payment of $450 million in overdue payments. The company had received $2.5 billion of the total contract. Their cancellation came after certainty that the Iranian government would unilaterally terminate the contract themselves, following the 1979 Iranian Revolution, which paralyzed Iran's economy and led to a crisis in Iran's relations with the West.
In 1984, Kraftwerk-Union did a preliminary assessment to see if it could resume work on the project, but declined to do so while the Iraq-Iran war continued. In April of that year, the US State Department said, "We believe it would take at least two to three years to complete construction of the reactors at Bushehr." The spokesperson also said that the light water power reactors at Bushehr "are not particularly well-suited for a weapons program." The spokesman went on to say, "In addition, we have no evidence of Iranian construction of other facilities that would be necessary to separate plutonium from spent reactor fuel."
The reactors were then damaged by multiple Iraqi air strikes between March 24, 1984 to 1988. Shortly afterwards Iraq invaded Iran and the nuclear program was stopped until the end of the war.
In 1990, Iran began to look outwards towards partners for its nuclear program; however, due to a radically different political climate and punitive U.S. economic sanctions, few candidates existed.
In 1995 Iran signed a contract with Russia to resume work on the half complete Bushehr plant. The construction is being done by the state-controlled company Atomstroyexport (Russian for Atomic Construction Export), an arm of Russia's atomic energy ministry, Minatom. The Russians assert that because the reactor will be used for civilian purposes only, their contract is legitimate under the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
It was not until 2002 that the USA began to question Iran's nuclear intentions after the MKO (an anti-government guerrilla group) revealed the existence of the Natanz and Arak facilities.
source :
http://www.aljazeera.com/me.asp?service_ID=10023
a fairly reliable source dont you agree Lionheart
arniegang wrote:But YOU said
i quote
"Iran never received Western help for the development of their Nuclear plant"
Lets discuss your incorrect facts first Lionheart or has the West taken taken over control of Al Jazeera
Like Kanelli says Lionheart, we can all play the cut and paste game, and when we do, it starts putting some of your theories and so called "facts" into the garbage can
Lionheart wrote:Kanelli... If Iranians are incapable developing their own nuclear technology than why all the threats?
Isn't better if West stops assisting Iran withs Nuclear technology instead of threats of War?
arniegang wrote:Lionheart
With the greatest of respect i do not paste propoganda. I take from reliable sources and with further respect i take things from one of the most trusted Islamic Sites there is, not some numpty blinkered extemists web site.
arniegang wrote:Lionheart wrote:Kanelli... If Iranians are incapable developing their own nuclear technology than why all the threats?
Isn't better if West stops assisting Iran withs Nuclear technology instead of threats of War?
You need to "actually" read what i posted Lionheart. The west no longer assist Iran, the russians are now helping them to complete their power stations.
And if you read the website, Al Jazerra in fairness to them, puts a very balanced viewpoint. It states the Americans case of why they do not need Nuclear Power.
In summary, they state that because of their huge oil and Gas reserves and the fact they burn off enough wasted gas to supply x 4 Nuclear power stations, they are wasting money and resources in going the N. Power route.
That arguement is fairly convincing and reasonable dont you think?
All the input from the West ceased in 1980 when the American Embassy and staff were taken hostage after the Ayatolah came into power.
arniegang wrote:Your posts display a total lack of knowledge regarding Nuclear Energy Lionheart. Considering you started this thread, i am amazed you know so little on the subject.
If you actually knew what you were talking about, or did some homework on FACTS, you would learn that many western counties like the UK, are in fact decommissioning their Nuclear Power Stations for 2 reasons.
Safety and..
Cost.
Remember Chernobyl and Long Island !!!
kanelli wrote:What would give that perception?
The US and other Western countries are far more multicultural than most Muslim countries, and you can find many different religions there. Christians and people of other faiths have no concept of Jihad (as the Muslim extremists use it, which I know is incorrect) and there has been no movement on the part of religious leaders (e.g. the Pope etc.) to rouse their religious followers to fight Muslims and attack Muslim countries. It is only in Islamic countries where some people are turning the current world political issues into an issue of religion. Please don't bring up the crusades, because that was eons ago. If some Muslims want a crusade against Christianity or the West just because it is mostly non-Muslim - then they too are in the dark ages and haven't progressed much.
Lionheart wrote:Kanelli... If Iranians are incapable developing their own nuclear technology than why all the threats?
Isn't better if West stops assisting Iran withs Nuclear technology instead of threats of War?
Liban wrote:kanelli wrote:What would give that perception?
The US and other Western countries are far more multicultural than most Muslim countries, and you can find many different religions there. Christians and people of other faiths have no concept of Jihad (as the Muslim extremists use it, which I know is incorrect) and there has been no movement on the part of religious leaders (e.g. the Pope etc.) to rouse their religious followers to fight Muslims and attack Muslim countries. It is only in Islamic countries where some people are turning the current world political issues into an issue of religion. Please don't bring up the crusades, because that was eons ago. If some Muslims want a crusade against Christianity or the West just because it is mostly non-Muslim - then they too are in the dark ages and haven't progressed much.
There is no reasoning with you. Even when I answer you directly you do not comprehend. ITs just too bad...
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