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The Iran nuclear deal, translated into plain English

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2seaoat



http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/the-iran-nuclear-deal-translated-into-plain-english/ar-AAamz6F

Centrifuges

Term: Iran will be allowed about 6,000 centrifuges: 5,000 at its Natanz facility and 1,000 at Fordow. It can only use first-generation IR-1 centrifuges, and has to give up other models.
Plain English: Centrifuges are pieces of equipment you use to enrich uranium, a natural ore, into nuclear fuel. If you enrich uranium long enough in centrifuges, it can be used to make a nuclear bomb. Iran currently has about 20,000 centrifuges, so it will have to give most of them up. It will also be allowed to use only its very old, first-generation centrifuges.
Why it matters: This means Iran will have a much smaller nuclear program, in terms of its ability to create nuclear fuel or, potentially, nuclear material for a bomb. It will also be restricted to its oldest, slowest, least capable centrifuges. The US had earlier hinted it might allow 6,500 centrifuges, so this is a favorable outcome for the US.
Uranium enrichment

Term: Iran will be allowed to enrich uranium to only to 3.67 percent.

Plain English: Iran will be allowed to turn raw uranium into the kind of fuel that can be used for a nuclear power plant. But nothing more.

Why it matters: Iran can have nuclear fuel, and it can make nuclear fuel, but it has to stop way, way short of making or having anything that could be used for a nuclear bomb (about 90 percent enriched).
Stockpile

Term: Iran will be required to reduce its stockpile of enriched uranium from 10,000 kg to 300 kg.

Plain English: Iran has to give up a stunning 97 percent of its nuclear stockpile.

Why it matters: This is very favorable for the US, but it punts on a really important question: how will Iran get rid of this stockpile? The US and Iran had disagreed sharply over how to do it. It looks like they still haven't found an answer.



© Provided by Vox.com

International negotiators assembled in Switzerland have announced the broad terms of the Iranian nuclear deal. Here they are, based on what we know, translated into plain English.

An important note: The deal is not yet finalized and it is not particularly detailed. Thursday's announcement is only for the basic framework. Negotiators will continue to meet over the coming months to develop a complete, detailed agreement based on these terms. The deadline is June 30 , but negotiations could collapse before then. However, this is a major step toward reaching a full agreement and thus potentially ending the world's years-long standoff with Iran over its nuclear program.

What follows is each of the items mentioned in the deal, along with a simple translation into plain English and a brief description of why it matters:
Centrifuges

Term: Iran will be allowed about 6,000 centrifuges: 5,000 at its Natanz facility and 1,000 at Fordow. It can only use first-generation IR-1 centrifuges, and has to give up other models.

A poster of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini is seen next to bank of centrifuges in what is described by Iranian state television as a facility in Natanz, in this still image taken from video released February 15, 2012. © REUTERS/IRIB Iranian TV via Reuters TV A poster of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini is seen next to bank of centrifuges in what is described by Iranian state television as a facility in Natanz, in this still image taken from… Plain English: Centrifuges are pieces of equipment you use to enrich uranium, a natural ore, into nuclear fuel. If you enrich uranium long enough in centrifuges, it can be used to make a nuclear bomb. Iran currently has about 20,000 centrifuges, so it will have to give most of them up. It will also be allowed to use only its very old, first-generation centrifuges.

Why it matters: This means Iran will have a much smaller nuclear program, in terms of its ability to create nuclear fuel or, potentially, nuclear material for a bomb. It will also be restricted to its oldest, slowest, least capable centrifuges. The US had earlier hinted it might allow 6,500 centrifuges, so this is a favorable outcome for the US.
Uranium enrichment

Term: Iran will be allowed to enrich uranium to only to 3.67 percent.

Plain English: Iran will be allowed to turn raw uranium into the kind of fuel that can be used for a nuclear power plant. But nothing more.

Why it matters: Iran can have nuclear fuel, and it can make nuclear fuel, but it has to stop way, way short of making or having anything that could be used for a nuclear bomb (about 90 percent enriched).
Stockpile

Term: Iran will be required to reduce its stockpile of enriched uranium from 10,000 kg to 300 kg.

Plain English: Iran has to give up a stunning 97 percent of its nuclear stockpile.

Why it matters: This is very favorable for the US, but it punts on a really important question: how will Iran get rid of this stockpile? The US and Iran had disagreed sharply over how to do it. It looks like they still haven't found an answer.
Sanctions relief

Term: The US and European Union will suspend sanctions after IAEA inspectors confirm that Iran has completed its requirements under the deal. United Nations Security Council sanctions will be lifted once Iran completes all actions addressing nuclear concerns. US sanctions related to non-nuclear matters, such as Iran's state-sponsored terrorism, will remain in place. Sanctions will snap back on Iranian violation.

Plain English: The US, Europe, and UN Security Council will remove their sanctions after Iran fulfills its end of the deal. But it is still very unclear how exactly that gets determined, when that happens, or whether it means the sanctions are lifted all at once, or over time. If Iran breaks its end, the sanctions will all come back (in theory).

Why it matters: Sanctions relief was a huge fight: Iran wanted all the sanctions off right away, the US and others wanted to remove them gradually. Some are reading this as Iran getting its demand, but it's just not clear at this point. It is true that, once European or United Nations sanctions come off, it will be difficult to re-impose them — even if Iran does cheat.
Nuclear facilities

Term: Iran will be allowed to use its nuclear facility at Natanz for enrichment. It can also use its facility at Fordow for research as a nuclear physics lab, but no fissile material will be allowed there.

Plain English: Iran will be allowed to keep using its once-secret "hardened facilities" — big structures with heavy blast walls to protect from attack — at sites known as Natanz and Fordow. Iran can keep using the one at Natanz to make nuclear fuel. It can keep using the facility at Fordow for what sounds like fairly limited nuclear research.

Why it matters: Iran really wanted to keep access to these facilities, partly as a matter of national pride. International inspectors will have access, so they won't really function as covert nuclear facilities anymore. And the stuff Iran gets with them to do is pretty limited.
Plutonium plant at Arak

Term: Iran will be required to rebuild its plutonium plant at Arak such that it will only make energy-grade plutonium, and will ship out its spent plutonium. It is barred from heavy-water reactor use.

Plain English: Iran had built a facility at Arak for making and storing potentially weapons-grade plutonium. Now, Iran will repurpose the facility to only make nuclear fuel.

Why it matters: You can make a nuclear bomb with one of two fuels: uranium or plutonium. The other parts of the deal limit and restrict what Iran can do with uranium. This part of the deal removes weapons-grade plutonium from the equation and only allows fuel-grade plutonium for powering a power plant.
Inspections

Term: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspectors will have access to Iran's nuclear sites, the uranium mines and mills, centrifuge plants, and supply chains. It will monitor dual-use technologies. It can access "suspicious sites."

Sal

Sal

Diplomacy ...

... what a novel concept.

2seaoat



It still may have numerous problems down the road, but I can bet that defense industry stock will be plunging between now and June......gotta stir a war up somewhere.......we need to start a thread.....guess where the boogieman will appear in the world next.

boards of FL

boards of FL

Meanwhile in Fox-News-Land...




The Iran nuclear deal, translated into plain English  HPkZY6S


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KarlRove

KarlRove

Cluster .....

ZVUGKTUBM

ZVUGKTUBM

I'd like to be a fly on the wall over in Israel in the office where Boehner and Bibi are commiserating over the deal. Or, they are plotting to undermine it between now and June.

http://www.best-electric-barbecue-grills.com

2seaoat



It has occurred to me that this whole stupid episode of our senators turning into traitors, and Bibi coming to tell America what a bad deal this is could have been a very clever ruse to bring Iran to the table. I know.......it would be impossible to assume Republicans could be clever, but they virtually made the President out as an adversary to Israel.....which sells in Iran. This is too good of a deal negotiated by the western allies......it probably never would have gotten to this stage without the sense that America was going to be split on Israel.......The President, SOS, the state department, and our intelligence community working in concert with our allies have started a process which could be amazing. The Iranian people have always been closer to American values than many other Middle East regimes, and hopefully modernity will ease these people into a democracy from the theocratic dictatorship they now suffer.

ZVUGKTUBM

ZVUGKTUBM

2seaoat wrote:It has occurred to me that this whole stupid episode of our senators turning into traitors, and Bibi coming to tell America what a bad deal this is could have been a very clever ruse to bring Iran to the table.   I know.......it would be impossible to assume Republicans could be clever, but they virtually made the President out as an adversary to Israel.....which sells in Iran.   This is too good of a deal negotiated by the western allies......it probably never would have gotten to this stage without the sense that America was going to be split on Israel.......The President, SOS, the state department, and our intelligence community working in concert with our allies have started a process which could be amazing.  The Iranian people have always been closer to American values than many other Middle East regimes, and hopefully modernity will ease these people into a democracy from the theocratic dictatorship they now suffer.

I remember when the Pensacola area was flooded with Iranian flight students (1976). They were flush with cash, and were fully immersed in American immorality. Some of them had too much fun and were not really learning how to fly. I lived in the BOQ at Whiting then, and my room mate learned how to say "Up Yours" in Farsi ("GOH!!"). So, he would see a bunch of them milling around outside, and stick his head out the door and yell "GOH" and then jump back in and he and I would giggle. They all drove Pontiac Trans Ams, smoked Winstons, and ate hamburgers every day for lunch. They liked to party and their brains were between their legs. Steeped in American decadence, one wonders how many of them survived the 1979 revolution back home.

http://www.best-electric-barbecue-grills.com

2seaoat



I just found out from Mr. Markle that Iran got everything they wanted......I finally figured out Mr. Markle does not understand plain English......that explains a great deal.

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