The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2015.Yukiya Amano: The world's eyes on Iran
VIENNA©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© (c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2015.
2 Comments
Login to comment
Jandworld
Your island your world your furure
RichardPearce
That there was so much discrepancy between the reports Amano's board of politicians produced and the reports of both the IAEA inspectors and even Israel's spies makes the claims that Amano hasn't been heavily political in his actions, and that his reports were merely recitations of facts. Both the inspectors and spies reported no signs of military dimensions, no sign of even interest in military dimensions, and the inspectors reported full cooperation with their ridiculously frequent and thorough inspections, audits, and investigations. That Amano insisted on only including the allegations that were vague enough, or were based solely on claims of intent that flew in the face of both the direct evidence and the past behaviour of Iran (refusal to produce or attempt to produce chemical WMDs, let alone use them, at a time when their situation was so dire that imminent destruction at the hands of those wielding WMDs and using them on civilians seemed inevitable) and excluding the myriad allegations from the same sources that had been shown, even to the most skeptical, to be false, and backed by forgeries and misinformation was a blatantly political, non factual decision by him. The only way that the 'concerns' about Iran's civilian nuclear program could be portrayed as something other than farcical was to not include the overwhelming number of false claims made.