Iran plan to send infidels to Hell
Article One Tells What Iran Has Now
And how they plan to obtain much More
Article Two Tells what will allow Iran to do It
To Continue the Program Until A Nuke’s Finished
At which time Iran has no plans to actually use Nukes
They have a much better plan to kill all the world’s Infidels
They are planning to talk us all to death before we go into Hell!
July 26, 2008
http://www.tribulationperiod.com/
The first thing I learned in the Holy Land in 1952 was the process of bartering. The bartering can last for hours and may require numerous contacts before it is finally consummated. At that time Israel had only been a state for four years, and my knowledge of the Arab-Israeli kind of cultural bartering was zero. In 1952 the long l ines of Jewish shops and stands for tourists
in Israel, and in the Arab cities of the Middle East, were in their infancy, and most of the bartering was done with wandering street peddlers carrying merchandise with them in carts.
I would barter for long periods with a particular street peddler for an item, but not buy it until he came down to what I knew was a fair price. Sometimes we did not reach a compromise, and I would return to my installation without purchasing it.
Next time I was in the same city, I would find that merchant, and we would begin bartering again.
This is not only the merchandise manner of bartering.
It also extends into their political bartering to get the one bartering with them to pay the price they ask. In some cases they were never willing to take the price I offered them, and they never came down to it, even though they knew it was fair. This is the case with Iran in their bartering to stop their drive to get nuclear weapons. They will never accept the incentives we offer them as a fair price, and are only trying to buy time. Even if they were to accept them, they will continue to develop nuclear weapons in secret.
Begin Jerusalem Post Excerpt Number 1
Ahmadinejad claims Iran now possesses 6,000 centrifuges
July 26, 2008
Associated Press , THE JERUSALEM POST
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad asserted that Iran’s interlocutors had agreed to allow it to continue to run its program as long as it was not expanded beyond 6,000 centrifuges, state radio
reporte
d.
Iran declared in April that it was aiming to double the 3,000 centrifuges it was running in its underground uranium enrichment plant in Natanz.
The assertion that Iran has reached that goal is certain to further rankle the United States and other world powers.
Washington and its allies have been demanding a halt to Iran’s enrichment out of fear it is intent on using the technology to develop weapons.
Iran’s leader made the announcement a week after the US reversed course in the negotiations by sending a top American diplomat to participate, prompting hopes for a compromise.
“Islamic Iran today possesses 6,000 centrifuges,” the semi-official Fars news agency quoted Ahmadinejad as saying in an address to university professors in the northeastern city of Mashhad.
A revised deal offered to Iran envisions a six-week commitment to stop expanding enrichment. In return, the six world powers – the US, Britain, France, Russia, China and Germany – would agree to a moratorium on new sanctions for up to six weeks.
That is meant to create the framework for formal negotiations that the six nations hope would secure Iran’s commitment to an indefinite ban on enrichment.
Ahmadinejad asserted that Iran’s interlocutors had agreed to allow it to continue to run its program as long as it was not expanded beyond 6,000 centrifuges, state radio reported.
“Today, they have consented that the existing 5,000 or 6,000 centrifuges not be increased and that operation of this number of centrifuges is not a problem,” state radio quoted Ahmadinejad as saying on Saturday.
In its negotiation with Iran, the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany have offered a package of technological, economic and political incentives in return for Iran’s cooperation to suspend uranium enrichment or at least not to expand it.
A report by the UN’s nuclear monitoring agency that was delivered to the Security Council in May said Iran had 3,500 centrifuges, though a senior UN official said at the time that Iran’s goal of 6,000 machines running by the summer was “pretty much plausible.”
Uranium can be used as nuclear reactor fuel or as the core for atomic warheads, depending on
the degree of enrichment.
Iran says it is interested in enrichment only for its nuclear power program.
The workhorse of Iran’s enrichment program is the P-1 centrifuge, which is run in cascades of 164 machines. But Iranian officials confirmed in February that they had started using the IR-2 centrifuge that can churn out enriched uranium at more than double the rate.
A total of 3,000 centrifuges is the commonly accepted figure for a nuclear enrichment program that is past the experimental stage and can be used as a platform for a full industrial-scale program that could churn out enough enriched material for dozens of nuclear weapons.
Iran says it plans to move toward large-scale uranium enrichment that ultimately will involve 54,000 centrifuges.
Ahmadinejad called the US participation in the latest round of nuclear talks “a victory for Iran.”
In a major shift in the Bush administration’s policy, US Undersecretary of State William Burns joined envoys from the five other nations in Switzerland at talks July 19 on Iran’s nuclear program.
In the past, the US said it would join talks only if Iran suspends uranium enrichment first.
“The presence of a US representative … was a victory for Iran, irrespective of the outcome.
… The US condition was for Iran to suspend enrichment but they attended (the talks) without such a condition being met,” Ahmadinejad was quoted as saying in the state radio report.
On Wednesday, Ahmadinejad praised the US participation at the talks as a step toward recognizing Teheran’ s right to acquire nuclear technology.
Begin Jerusalem Post Excerpt Number 2
Former Iranian leader rejects deadline
July 25, 2008
JPost.com Staff , THE JERUSALEM POST
Iran’s former president, the cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, told the international community on Friday that he rejected any deadline to respond to an incentives package designed to persuade Teheran to give up its nuclear enrichment program.
According to the AFP, Rafsanjani admonished Western powers to “not try to find fault,” but to “be patient and let wise people sit down and talk.” He made his statements in a sermon after Friday prayers, and his speech was broadcast on Iran’s state radio.
“Iran is ready to go there and talk – say whatever you have to say [during negotiations],” Rafsanjani declared.
“Now that negotiations are supposed to be held, why are you setting deadlines and giving ultimatums?” the head of two of the top clerical bodies in Iran asked.
After talks in Geneva last Saturday with EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and US Undersecretary of State William Burns ended without an agreement, Iran was given a two-week deadline to respond to the Western nations’ offer.
The UN has warned that it will take “punitive measures” if Iran persists with its nuclear enrichment activities. Currently, Teheran is under three sets of UN Security Council sanctions over its nuclear program.
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