Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Obama's New Foreign Policy Initiative: Help Iran While They Want To Kill Us! If Democrat Candidates Were Dogs They Would Come in Last!

This from a dear friend and fellow memo reader: "Just saw on TV that Bergdahl has been charged with desertion. Unbelievable that O traded the 5 worst terrorists for this a-hole . Seven soldiers lost their lives trying to rescue him.

And if you recall O went on TV and claimed that Bergdahl served with honor and distinction. .....and he had a press conference in the rose garden to brag about this trade.

How much more damage will O cause before he leaves office? C---- "
===



===
Obama traded five terrorists for an apparent deserter and now he has ordered our air force to support Iran in its effort to re-capture of Tikrit.  Meanwhile, Iran backed radicals are liberating Yemen from Democracy - one of Obama's avowed foreign policy successes.

Obviously Obama learned he cannot close Gitmo, so he has begun to empty its population by releasing terrorists to return to the battlefield.

As for sending our air force to aid Iran in its stalled effort to retake Tikri, I find that somewhat perverse because it was only a few days ago Iran's leader said he wants to kill Americans and Iran is behind Obama's crushing defeat in Yemen.

You would think Obama could have negotiated and extracted something from Iran for helping pull their chestnut out of the fire in Iraq but then , as  Prof. Dershowitz said recently, Obama is a total failure when it comes to negotiating anything.

Would Obama have helped Hitler in his attempt to defeat Russia, had he been president instead of FDR?

If you think Obama is a joke, as I do, think about the fact that Hillary has become a comedian and now makes a joke out of everything she has been doing recently.  Have not heard her joke about her brother, Tony Rodham. Tony is Hillary's albatross  as Billy was for Jimmy Carter.

If Democrat candidates were dogs and ran in Hialeah, they would come in last but somehow their candidates become presidents - Carter, Clinton, Obama and maybe Hillary.  At least they entered a short lived winner named Jack K!

Meanwhile, the press and media attack Cruz and no doubt are lusting to do the same every time another Republican decides to throw their hat in the ring.

As for Obama, everything he does is related to "him."  The nation and Constitution always come last.

Are the Saudis coming to Obama's rescue? "The Saudis are beefing up their military presence along their border with Yemen. US officials told Reuters the deployment looks defensive, but YNet says the signs point to a Saudi offensive. Will the Saudis intervene in the civil war?"
===
If only Soros was aboard! Has he been shorting the EURO as he once did wrecking the Pound and making his first huge kill? (See 1 below.)
===
Legal or not? (See  2 below.)
===
I sent this link to Ms. Brill: http://on.fb.me/1buKQgh

(Also, see 3 below.)
===
Lift them or lump it. What will Obama do? (See 4 below.)
===

There is a medical distinction between “Guts” and “Balls”.

We've heard colleagues referring to people with “Guts”, or with “Balls”.

Do they, however, know the difference between them?

Here’s the official distinction; straight from the British Medical Journal: Volume 323; page 295.

GUTS - Is arriving home late, after a night out with the lads, being met by your wife with a broom, and having the “Guts” to ask: “Are you still cleaning, or are you flying somewhere?”

BALLS - Is coming home late after a night out with the lads, smelling of perfume and beer, lipstick on your collar, slapping your wife on the bum and having the “Balls” to say: 'You're next, Chubby.'
I trust this clears up any confusion.

Medically speaking, there is no difference in outcome; both are fatal.
===
Dick
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1) Soros: Greece Is Going 'Down the Drain'

The chances of Greece leaving the euro area are now 50-50 and the country could go “down the drain,” billionaire investor George Soros said.

“It’s now a lose-lose game and the best that can happen is actually muddling through,” Soros, 84, said in a Bloomberg Television interview due to air Tuesday. “Greece is a long-festering problem that was mishandled from the beginning by all parties.”

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras’ government needs to persuade its creditors to sign off on a package of economic measures to free up long-withheld aid payments that will keep the country afloat.

Since his January election victory, he has tried to shape an alternative to the austerity program set out in the nation’s bailout agreement, spurring concern that Greece may be forced out of the euro.
The negotiations between Tsipras’ Syriza government and the institutions helping finance the Greek economy — the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund — could result in a “breakdown,” leading to the country leaving the common currency area, Soros said in the interview at his London home.

“You can keep on pushing it back indefinitely,” making interest payments without writing down debt, Soros said. “But in the meantime there will be no primary surplus because Greece is going down the drain.”

Soros said in January 2012 that the odds are in the direction of Greece leaving the euro region.
“Right now we are at the cusp and I can see both possibilities,” he said in Tuesday’s interview.

Aid Payment

Tsipras is meeting with German lawmakers in Berlin on Tuesday after Chancellor Angela Merkel encouraged him to follow the path set out by Greece’s creditors. European Parliament President Martin Schulz said in an interview with Italian newspaper Repubblica that he expects a deal by the end of this week that will allow the release of at least some money.

The start of quantitative easing by the ECB at a time when the U.S. Federal Reserve is considering raising interest rates “creates currency fluctuations,” said Soros, one of the world’s wealthiest men with a $28.7 billion fortune built partly through multi-billion dollar trades in currency markets, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

“That probably creates some great opportunities for hedge funds but I’m no longer in that business,” he said. Soros, who was born in Hungary, said the war in eastern Ukraine between government forces and rebel militia supported by Russia’s President Vladimir Putin concerns him the most.

Without more external financial assistance the “new Ukraine” probably will gradually deteriorate and “become like the old Ukraine so that the oligarchs come back and assert their power,” he said. “That fight has actually started in the last week or so.”
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2)



The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) forbids any of its signatories to have nuclear weapons. Full stop. The P5+1 have been attempting to amend the NPT without going through the process established by the NPT itself — and attempting to do this for just one of its 190 signatories: Iran. Under the terms of the NPT, the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, plus Germany) have no legal authority to amend the treaty unilaterally, to abrogate the treaty, or to allow nations that are signatories to the NPT to abrogate the treaty.

The NPT can only be changed through a review conference of all parties. All changes agreed to after that must be consented to by the signatory nations, according to their own legal requirements. The rules, therefore, ever since the U.S. Senate consented to the treaty in 1969, are that the Senate would have to approve any change to the treaty. Otherwise, any nation that is a signatory to the NPT could say that it is no longer bound by the terms of the agreement and decide to have their own nuclear weapons capability — as many have already stated they would do, starting with Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the United Arab Emirates.

If Iran is allowed by the P5+1 to violate the NPT, not only will it have nuclear weapons capability with impunity, but also lifted sanctions, and a strong economy that will enable it go on expanding its reach, while remaining the world's largest promoter of terrorism.
As there already is an internationally agreed-upon law totally forbidding Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons — even if Iran were fully to cooperate — which, considering its proven track-record, is doubtful — why does anyone need yet another agreement to stop Tehran's nuclear program?
Why is the international community not simply enforcing the current NPT? Iran has already violated so many provisions of the NPT that the UN Security Council and the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) imposed a second protocol requirement on Tehran, to ensure that it abides by the 1970 treaty. The second protocol was also intended to ensure that, in the event of violations, major economic sanctions were imposed Iran by key members of the international community, including and most importantly the United States.
Iran has not abided by the second protocol of the NPT, either. Iran continues to spin its centrifuges and enrich uranium, while demanding that all sanctions immediately be ended. Instead of simply requiring Iran to live up to its obligations under the NPT — signed and ratified by Tehran in 1968 and 1970, respectively — the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany are trying to give Iran a special deal.
How special? Well, the P5+1 have proposed unilaterally to amend the NPT — just for Iran, no other nation.
If Iran is allowed nuclear weapons capability, other nations — including in South America, already infiltrated by Iran — will doubtless follow suit. The P5+1 would allow Iran, while still a member of the NPT, permanently to enrich uranium and produce plutonium in return for agreeing for some number of years (possibly ten), not to enrich “too much.”
There is, however, no “right to enrich” at all under the NPT or any other law, contrary to some misinformed “conventional wisdom.” There are nearly two dozen countries that produce nuclear energy, which do not enrich uranium. Others that do are under IAEA safeguard agreements that do not allow — in theory and mostly in practice — the diversion of such fuel to highly enriched weapons-grade uranium. The original NPT allows for that, if you follow the rules. Iran has not. Highly enriched uranium is not needed for peaceful purposes. So this new deal is not needed to provide Iran with nuclear energy for peaceful purposes.
Iran is therefore asking for special status in the nuclear bomb business, regulated by the NPT. Iran is asking that it be allowed to maintain thousands of centrifuges that enrich uranium. It is also demanding to be allowed nuclear reactors that produce plutonium, which can also make nuclear weapons. In addition, Iran is demanding that there be no restrictions on its ballistic missiles. Its arsenal is already the largest in the Middle East. According to the Director of National Intelligence, Iran has rockets that can reach all of the Middle East and much of Europe, and is moving in the direction of having an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capability, as early as this year, to strike other continents, presumably including the U.S.
Iran is further demanding that there be no restrictions on its state sponsorship of terror, which includes its support, financing and arming of terror groups such as Hamas, Al Qaeda and Hezbollah. Tehran also apparently will be given a pass on its complicity in attacks against Americans in Iraq, Lebanon, and Afghanistan, as well as the terror attacks at Khobar Towers, the African embassies and the World Trade Center in 2001, (as outlined by the 9-11 Commission Report).
Despite demands by the UN Security Council that Iran provide UN inspectors with access to facilities that members of the IAEA believe are or were used for nuclear weapons work, Iran has refused to comply. Some of these facilities have meanwhile been razed to the ground by Tehran, thereby eliminating what evidence might have been available for inspection.
In 2009, the Manhattan district attorney indicted a Chinese company — for the second time — for providing the top Iranian military commission in Iran with nuclear weapons technology components, now likely buried under tons of Iranian dirt and sand.
In light of this sad history, it is understandable that any agreement with Iran should, in the eyes of Congress, have the solid concurrence of the House and Senate; and if not a legal agreement requiring a simple majority vote, then a treaty requiring the concurrence of two-thirds of the U.S. Senate.
But as Secretary of State John Kerry has testified to Congress, the contemplated agreement with Iran would not be a treaty and would not have the force of law. It would be akin to an executive agreement, although the U.S. State Department spokesperson said that, at some time down the road, while the agreement in still in place, Congress might be asked to remove the congressionally-imposed sanctions against Iran.
In other words, if the potential agreement is neither law nor treaty, subsequent congressional action will be required for an executive agreement to which the Congress has not agreed in the first place.
There are also five other significant issues.
The deal would seek to amend the NPT unilaterally by the agreement of only seven of the 190 member nations of the NPT. Others have not given their consent. Such a change would also be in direct violation of the current provisions of international law, which lay out a well-defined path for any changes to the NPT.
Given that the NPT is a treaty to which the Senate consented in 1970, the NPT can only be amended by Senate concurrence in any such changes. If the agreement with Iran is not law insofar as the U.S. obligations go, what about those of the government in Tehran? In Iran, would this agreement have the force of law, or would the Supreme Leader, who this week said “Death to America,” be allowed to change its terms unilaterally? And what would be the consequences to him if he did?
If the agreement is not law, this means, insofar as the U.S. constitutional system is concerned, that any future President need not abide by its terms, and certainly any future Congress is not bound by its terms.
If the administration is seeking UN Security Council approval of the agreement, but not Senate approval, it is seeking to violate the U.S. Constitution, which has primacy over all laws, including international treaties. Since when can the UN Security Council amend U.S. treaty law? The UN can certainly propose amendments, but it cannot approve such changes on behalf of the U.S. Congress and the American people.
Forty-seven U.S. Senators put many of these same points in a March 2015 letter, which they sent to the rulers of Iran. This was met with thunderous condemnation by the Obama Administration. The letter indicated that the Senate signers obviously did not trust the Administration to abide by the terms of the Executive's agreement.
Unfortunately, the Administration complaint has things backwards. The Senators who signed the letter are worried that any agreement with Iran that is not required to secure Senate or House concurrence, will be, by its very nature, weak and filled with concessions to Tehran that could be harmful to U.S. national security.
Implicit in the letter is the concern that any agreement between just the Iranian regime and the U.S. Administration will not have sufficient safeguards. Considering the experience of the U.S. with North Korea, what would be safeguards tough enough to assure Iran's compliance? The negotiators, for instance, might be concerned that any realistic safeguards acceptable to the Senate might not be acceptable to the mullahs in Iran — making approval by the Senate unlikely.
The Senators who signed the letter certainly trust that the Administration will, in fact, abide by America's obligations in a new agreement. To them, that is the problem: if the agreement is terrible, the U.S. should not be forced to abide by it.

Requiring Senate concurrence would obligate the provisions of a new agreement to stand the sunlight of a tough examination during a Senate debate. The Senate critics of the pending deal with Iran simply do not share the belief of the Obama administration that Iran can become a “partner for peace” with the U.S. They seem, understandably, opposed to an agreement that comes with a note saying, “Trust us,” as an adequate substitute for the Senate scrutiny such a deal should require.
One important safeguard not in the agreement, for example, according to the Secretary of State, is that the agreement will “sunset” (expire) after a number of years. And on that date, Iran could return to being an ordinary member of the NPT again, despite its centrifuges, its terrorism and its ballistic missiles. It would then be free to enrich uranium to its heart's content — a “right” that is not in the NPT.
Then Tehran, unfettered by second protocols, sanctions, or enhanced inspections, can decide either 1) publicly to throw away the confines of the original NPT and break out toward nuclear weapons; or 2) surreptitiously to sprint to the development of nuclear weapons under the cover of the NPT.
Supporters of the Administration's position say: Don't worry; down the road a decade or so, the government of Iran will have changed.
How likely is that?
North Korea, which joined the NPT in 1985, actually signed a nuclear agreement with the U.S. After the IAEA in 1992 found suspicious discrepancies in its nuclear fuel production, North Korea agreed, in an October 1994 “Agreed Framework,” not to produce nuclear weapons.
In 1998, North Korea launched a long-range missile that had the capability, if further developed, of carrying a 2000-pound warhead to Hawaii and Alaska.

In 2002, North Korea admitted to cheating on the Agreed Framework, and to producing enriched uranium at a secret centrifuge facility.

In 2003, North Korea withdrew from the NPT.

In 2006, North Korea exploded a nuclear weapon.

In 2007, North Korea actually signed a new “agreement” with the United States, to denuclearize the Korean peninsula and end its nuclear weapons program.
North Korea, however, never implemented that agreement.

North Korea subsequently complained that the U.S. requirement for a “permanent” end to a North Korean nuclear weapons program was unfair. So did many in the American arms control community. They criticized the George W. Bush Administration for pushing an agreement that was “too tough.”
In 2009 and 2013, North Korea exploded more nuclear bombs.
Today, intelligence estimates indicate that North Korea has 10 nuclear warheads, as well as ballistic missiles that can, with a small nuclear payload, easily strike the West Coast of the United States.

In 2014, North Korea launched into orbit a small mock satellite that passed over New York and Washington, D.C. The Director of National Intelligence says that this space-launch capability gives North Korea a pathway to develop an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) capability.
Iran also just so happens to be the country with which North Korea most cooperates on ballistic missile development. During the nuclear bomb tests by North Korea, satellite photographs showed members of the Iranian military, including the head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, visiting the North Korean nuclear test site.
And in Washington, the Senate's letter is considered the problem?
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3)

Meet Google Israel’s Yossi Matias, The Genius Behind Many Of 

Google’s Most Stunning Achievements

By Maya Yarowsky, NoCamels 
You know that function on Google Search that finishes your sentences for you? Or what about the helpful information boxes that you often see at the top of a search inquiry? These central features of Google’s most valuable offering have helped the Internet giant beat out other worthy competitors, like Yahoo and Bing, and continuously do their share to make information more accessible.
What you may not know is that autocomplete, Google Trends, Knowledge Graph and a number of other features on Google were developed in Israel under the supervision of global Google VP of Search Yossi Matias. Tasked with establishing one of Google’s first research and development centers outside of the United States in 2006, Matias has been responsible for directing the Israeli R&D center towards stunning achievements and technological breakthroughs in the realms of search, big data, and internet privacy, as well as initiating impressive cultural entrepreneurship programs that too have “gone global”. In an exclusive interview with NoCamels, Matias paints a picture of just how important a member Google Israel has become in the company’s global family, and offers up his assessments on where the future of Israeli entrepreneurship is heading.
Product of the “idea factory”
Sitting down with Matias at Google’s Tel Aviv offices, he starts off the interview with the rather broad statement: “I have always sought to combine scientific research and technological entrepreneurship.” Though I frantically wrote it down, on second thought I wasn’t convinced that I totally understood what Matias was referring to. However, at the end of our hour-long conversation, his adage became clear.
googletlv
Google Tel Aviv’s office
Matias began his career as an engineer after receiving his doctorate in computer science at Tel Aviv University, setting off almost immediately to become part of one of the first “idea factories” at Bell Labs in New Jersey. What Matias calls “the place were innovation was born,” Bell Labs has produced work that has led to eight Nobel prizes and was the workplace of the likes of Google exec Eric Schmidt, computer science pioneer Richard Hamming, and Gordon Gould, the man to receive the first patent for a laser. It was there that Matias was able to become a big part of the first research into “big data,” or the act of processing huge databases of information into tangible figures, winning him and his partners the prestigious Gödel  Prize in Computer Science in 2005.
After co-founding his very own startup, HyperRoll, an enterprise software company that was acquired by software giant Oracle in 2009, Matias received a call from Google (he wouldn’t say if it was from Sergey Brin or Larry Page) tasking him with the establishment of an R&D center in Israel. “Even then, Israel was high up on the list for Google in terms of founding a research and development center. However, I still had two questions for the company before I committed to joining. The first was, ‘Why in Israel?’ and the second was ‘What would you like us to build here?’” According to Matias, the answer he received to the first question was a complement to Israel’s entrepreneurial flavor, similar to the arguments presented by Saul Singer in his book “The Startup Nation,” while the answer to the second was much more vague, along the lines of ‘We’d like you to figure it out’.
“The latter statement really describes that period at Google,” Matias accounts. “Eight years ago Google was a much younger company and there were a good many experiments into different sectors. Today, the strategic decisions on what we want to build and how are more organized and structured as part of our organization.” Brin and Page gave Matias a lot of responsibility in establishing an Israeli R&D center, and combining its two centers in Tel Aviv and Haifa, which may be the reason that the Israeli office tends to soar beyond others in terms of its role in Google’s core innovation.
Google Israel: The masters of search
Asked to explain some of the things that Google Israel’s offices are responsible for, the list pans out to be surprisingly long. “Israel has become one of the fastest growing centers in all of Google, now reaching the order of some 500 or so engineers alone, and one of the biggest areas we specialize in is search.” Anyone who has ever used Google (or the Internet) knows that search is what Google does best, and you may be asking – ‘what remains to be improved?’ – but as Matias and the team at Google Israel see it, there is still plenty work to be done. “I literally got this kind of question all the time back in 2006 because people said, ‘Well, I search for stuff and it’s better than I ever remember search being.’ However, this statement is rather naïve because in the past couple of years we have seen some of the most dramatic changes to search.”
campustlvhardatwork
The constant strive to improve the ease of access to information as well as the intelligence of search commands is what drives Google Israel towards international recognition and success. Google’s Israeli engineers developed the ‘autocomplete’ function for inquiries, YouTube videos, images and more, a feature that we use and take for granted on a daily basis. The team is also working hard to improve search on mobile, with Matias showing me one such feature; the ability to search for and purchase things like movie tickets by simply talking to Google Search. Other features developed in Israel include webmaster tools designed to improve the relationship between the world’s number one search engine and website owners, Google Trends, a project to track “viral” search words on the Internet, and the Knowledge Graph, or a global initiative to give us a better understanding of the world at a semantic level, providing more intelligent answers to the questions we ask. The latter feature may be familiar to you from events like the World Cup, when Google displayed the game scheduling information according to a user’s location, or the currency conversion services that eliminate the need to hop from one website to another in order to find the right conversion rates.
As Matias sees it, these impressive accomplishments are only a small piece of the pie, “Really, the ultimate goal of search, despite all of the progress we have, is still ahead of us. It’s no longer the case of collecting information – you want to get your information and get things done, simultaneously.”
This keen understanding about the current state and future of search, which Matias repeats is all about getting stuff done on mobile, is what won him the prestigious position of VP of Search in the company in December 2014, “This is recognition of the fact that some of the work done by teams here in Israel is central and strategic to what is being done at Google,” Matias says with pride and striking modesty.
Raising Google’s social, cultural impact
When Matias isn’t busy trying to figure out how to answer all of our questions, he deals with two equally important aspects of the Google ecosystem: Internet privacy and engaging minority entrepreneurs. One of the earliest researchers to study the implications of the Internet on our privacy, a sensitive topic that often comes knocking at Google’s doorstep, Matias believes that we must remain active in ensuring that our information is secure. “I think that a major point here is that as a society, we need to adapt to technology. One of the most obvious challenges in this realm is developing technologies that help protect user privacy while maintaining technological innovativeness,” he says.
bibiyossicampustlv
PM Benjamin Netanyahu visits Campus TLV with Matias
In addition to keeping our information safe, the Israeli team has initiated a number of impressive cultural engagement projects that have since gone global (within Google, that is).” One of the programs that began at Google Israel is called ‘Mind the Gap,’ an initiative to get more girls and women involved in tech and computer science by showing them that women play a crucial role in Google’s team. “The hypothesis going in was that much of the problem is one of perception, that if you can really change the perception of girls at that age to show them that technology is suitable for them, then you can make a difference in the future,” says Matias of the program originally proposed by two female engineers at Google Israel. According to Matias, the program has seen about 6,000 girls come through its doors since it began six years ago and has since spread to other Google offices in Poland, Tokyo and New York.
Another interesting project that began at Google Israel is called ‘Campus for Moms,’ which is all about keeping new moms and women on maternity leave busy and active in the high tech space. The initiative was sprung from another to get more minorities, particularly Arabs and orthodox Jews, more involved in tech through the Campus TLV, a mentorship program for young startups that started off by chance. Two years, 900 events and 60,000 participants later, Google Israel’s Campus TLV program succeeded in winning over global Google, and the ‘LaunchPad’ section of Campus TLV, an opportunity to connect early-stage startups with mentors, is now active in at least five other countries.
And the buck doesn’t stop there – Google Israel has played a central role in the development of one of Google’s most profound programs, the Cultural Heritage Program. Launched by Google in 2011 as the Google Art Project (though it was developed in Israel beforehand), the goal of the program was to put art exhibits and other cultural information online to educate and inspire future generations. Google Israel contributed to the project by taking over 130,000 images and documents from the Holocaust Museum in Israel (known as Yad Ve’Shem) and putting them online, later to be followed by an ambitious project to put the five Dead Sea Scrolls online, as well as the Nelson Mandela archive. According to Matias, the archives project “has become one of the main pillars for the Google Cultural Institute in Paris,” setting off what is now known as the Collections Project to bring archives online.
holocaustarchives
One of Google TLV’s projects has been to bring the Holocaust archives online
Adopting the global perspective
Now getting back to the connection between scientific research and innovation, a relationship that Matias seems to think will drive the future of technology. “One of the things that I have discovered over the years was that technologies could be built based on theories and research questions, and I discovered that research could be used to discover and think up new technologies.” He adds: “The opportunity to have impact on the end user in the development of technologies is now greater than any time that I can remember.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4)--Iran’s Chief Nuclear Negotiator: Lift All Sanctions First, No Concessions
By Bridget Johnson


Iran’s senior nuclear negotiator has stressed yet again that there is no deal with the P5+1 unless all sanctions on the Islamic Republic are lifted first.
In fact, there are “no concessions” on Iran’s part forthcoming, he said.

Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araqchi said early this month that Tehran’s “principle position is that all sanctions are lifted at once.”
Last week, 260 lawmakers in the 290-seat Islamic Consultative Assembly wrote a letter demanding that all sanctions be removed as a prerequisite for signing a nuclear deal.
“As a guarantee for implementation, in case of any violation of obligations by the opposite side, the agreement will be declared null and void and enrichment will be resumed at any required level,” the lawmakers wrote.
And over the weekend, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who will ultimately sign off on or reject any nuclear deal, tweeted his agreement. “We reject US fraudulent offer of reaching a deal w  first then lifting sanctions. Lifting sanctions is a part of deal not its outcome,” Khamenei tweeted.
Now today, with more than two weeks of negotiations having passed since his original comments, Araqchi is reiterating that “Tehran’s confidence-building measures and removal of sanctions by the powers are the objectives of the ongoing nuclear talks between the two sides,” according to the semi-official Fars News Agency.
Fars reported that Araqchi stressed “Iran is not to give away any concessions”:
He described the present phase of the talks as “sensitive”, and said it was natural for certain people to make some remarks to influence the process of the negotiations.
However, Araqchi said, Iran is not to grant any concessions.
Commenting on the recent remarks of the US President Barack Obama who said Iran has not provided enough concessions yet, he said the American president is making the remarks to affect the negotiations.
He said none of the parties is expected to offer concessions, specially Iran.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) said today at the Council on Foreign Relations and on the Senate floor that the Obama administration trying to repeal Iran sanctions at the UN and not coming to Congress would be met with a bipartisan “violent response.”
“The Iranians are going to demand immediate sanction relief, and I hope we’ll say no. Until the IAEA verifies what they’ve been doing in the past, I think it would be ill-advised to relieve the sanctions,” Graham said at the CFR event. “They’re going to ask for a research-and-development capability. That scares the hell out of me, and I hope we’ll say no. If they demand immediate sanctions relief, the deal probably falls. Then we’ll be in no-man’s territory. Just, we don’t know what will happen next.”
“And that’s the most dangerous time, because that’s when they’re most likely to break out. Whether they believe that Obama would use force to stop their breakout, after drawing the red line with Assad, I doubt it. Whether they believe that P5+1 would do it as a group, I doubt it after the way we’ve handled Russia and the Ukraine.”
White House press secretary Josh Earnest told reporters today that they “have made pretty clear… that this deal will be predicated on serious commitments from the Iranians about resolving the international community’s concerns with their nuclear program and a commitment that they will comply with intrusive inspections.”
“And those are the kinds of commitments that we’re going to insist on before we even contemplate any sort of sanctions relief,” Earnest said. “And what we would envision is a demonstrated commitment to the — to compliance with the agreement before phasing the sanctions relief.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------




No comments: