kastor ville
Registered Member
What did I say before? The fact the enriched material is inaccessible is an advantage......they can inspect the ruins all they want....but the inspectors can't reach the supposedly buried material
"Despite all this, there is no evidence of Iran dashing for a bomb. Instead, its nuclear program is now deliberately cloaked in ambiguity, with no international oversight of damaged facilities or visibility into its stockpiles of uranium and centrifuges. Iranian analysts frame this opacity as a strategic asset, strengthening deterrence without crossing the nuclear threshold. Where the more decisive shift is unfolding, however, is in Iran’s long-term strategic orientation. While holding firm to its bottom lines on enrichment and missiles, Tehran is now tilting more decisively toward non-Western powers—above all China—positioning this partnership as the cornerstone of its postwar trajectory."
foreignpolicy.com
"Despite all this, there is no evidence of Iran dashing for a bomb. Instead, its nuclear program is now deliberately cloaked in ambiguity, with no international oversight of damaged facilities or visibility into its stockpiles of uranium and centrifuges. Iranian analysts frame this opacity as a strategic asset, strengthening deterrence without crossing the nuclear threshold. Where the more decisive shift is unfolding, however, is in Iran’s long-term strategic orientation. While holding firm to its bottom lines on enrichment and missiles, Tehran is now tilting more decisively toward non-Western powers—above all China—positioning this partnership as the cornerstone of its postwar trajectory."
Iran’s Foreign Policy Is Changing in Real Time
The debate in Tehran is heating up—and moving in unexpected directions.







