Air strikes, reportedly being contemplated as an option by the White House, would strengthen the hand of Iranian hardliners, unite the Iranian population behind a bomb, and would almost certainly trigger an underground crash programme to build a small number of warheads as quickly as possible ... Air strikes would be unlikely to destroy all the centrifuges Iran is using to enrich uranium. An attack could trigger a walkout by Iran from the non-proliferation treaty and the departure of UN inspectors. It could also lead to the departure of Russian experts at an Iranian nuclear reactor at Bushehr, leaving a potential source of plutonium unmonitored.
Promoted by Scott Redding, 72 Mayfield Road, Coventry, CV5 6PN, on behalf of The Green Party, 37A Vyse Street, Birmingham, B18 6JY. For more information, please call 07906 316726.
05 March 2007
Attack on Iran Would Strengthen Hardliners
Frank Barnaby, a former nuclear weapons scientist, now a consultant for the Oxford Research Group, has said that an attack on Iran is likely to backfire and accelerate Tehran's development of a nuclear bomb.
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