Unable to read pea brain?
Re-post for the retard...
- Iran will give up about 14,000 of its 20,000 centrifuges.
- Iran will give up all but its most rudimentary, outdated centrifuges: Its first-generation IR-1s, knockoffs of 1970s European models, are all it gets to keep. It will not be allowed to build or develop newer models.
- Iran will give up 97 percent of its enriched uranium; it will hold on to only 300 kilograms of its 10,000-kilogram stockpile in its current form.
- Iran will destroy or export the core of its plutonium plant at Arak, and replace it with a new core that cannot produce weapons-grade plutonium. It will ship out all spent nuclear fuel.
Iran would simply not have much of its nuclear program left after all this.
You understand they've lied and cheated at every stage, right? Why are they suddenly going to go straight?
No he doesn't the mullahs are good people
Why should Iran trust the United States? We have one of the most evil men who ever lived as our President. Do you trust Obama?
ignorant more than evil, and he'll be gone in 16 months. Do you like the mullahs?
You must love the mullahs...because if Congress somehow prevents America from participating in this deal, it will empower the mullahs and allow them to rally Iranians against America...
You really need to educate yourself about the Iranian people...
Iranian attitudes on nuclear negotiations
Iran’s Nuclear Program - A near-unanimous majority of Iranians say that it is necessary for Iran to have a nuclear energy program. Seven in ten say that the Iranian government’s purpose in expanding its nuclear capabilities is for peaceful nuclear energy, while one in five say it is also for developing nuclear weapons.
Iranians are divided about the likelihood of success in the negotiations over Iran’s nuclear program. A large majority say they would not fault Iranian officials if the talks fail to achieve an agreement.
Mistrust and Doubts about Whether Sanctions Would Be Removed - Iranians express high levels of mistrust in the P5+1 countries. More germane,
Iranians express high levels of doubt that the United States would remove sanctions, even if Iran were to meet U.S. demands in regard to its nuclear program. Three quarters say that the United States would find some other reason to impose sanctions. This view is related to the perception—held by three in four—that the United States’ main reason for sanctioning Iran is not concern about nuclear weapons but some other motive. Asked what these other motives might be,
the most common responses are that the United States seeks to dominate Iran or block its development. Feelings of mistrust and doubts are highly correlated with resistance to agreeing to confidence building measures in the nuclear negotiations.
Relations with U.S. - Views of the United States, especially the U.S. government, continue to be quite negative. These appear to be related to past and present U.S. policies toward Iran much more than to cultural and religious differences. Nonetheless, large majorities favor making efforts to mitigate the conflicts between Iran and the United States and support a variety of confidence building measures. A slight plurality has a positive view of the American people and people-to-people confidence building measures are viewed even more positively. A majority thinks that it possible for Islam and the West to find common ground.