Sunday, May 27, 2012

Are Obama's Sanctions Working On Iran? Well, Iran Now Is Building SECOND Nuclear Site...What Do You Think?


The reactor building at the Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran Photo: GETTY

Failure.  Total and absolute failure.  That should be the new political bumper stick of 2012:

" Obama 2012:  Failure.  Total and Absolute "

Well, the Iranians have decided that since the Western world is being so cooperative with their nuclear weapon plans that now is the time to EXPAND their nuclear ambitions and go ahead and start building their SECOND nuclear site.

Good job, Barack.  You really have proven to the Iranians what a rock you are.

The story comes from The Telegraph.




Iran to build new nuclear power plant


"Iran will build a 1,000-megawatt nuclear power plant in Bushehr next year," the television quoted Fereydoon Abbasi Davani as saying. He was referring to the Iranian calendar year running from March 2013 to March 2014.

The Mehr and ISNA news agencies both reported another nuclear plant was also planned and could be built in coming years.

ISNA quoted Mr Abbasi Davani as saying that designs for a 360-megawatt facility in Darkhovin, in the southwestern province of Khuzestan near the border with Iraq, "have been finished and we are reviewing it."

Darkhovin, a project initiated by France but abandoned after Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution, has been stalled because of European sanctions against Tehran.

In September 2011, deputy nuclear chief Mohammad Ahmadian said Iran was seeking foreign help to finish the project.

The current Bushehr nuclear plant was started by German engineers in the 1970s and was completed by Russia, which continues to help keeping it running and provides fuel for it. Inaugurated in 2010, it is due to come fully online in November this year.

In addition, Iran has a research reactor operating in Tehran that is used to make medical isotopes for patients with cancer and other illnesses.

State television made its announcement in the wake of talks in Baghdad on Wednesday and Thursday between Iran and world powers that focused on Tehran's controversial nuclear programme.

Iran insists its nuclear programme is exclusively peaceful and aimed at producing energy and medical isotopes. The West suspects the programme could include work towards developing a nuclear weapons capability, and they have backed UN Security Council resolutions demanding Iran curb its activities.

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