The Whole World is Terrified of What Iran Just Announced, Israel in Shock!

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The Whole World is Terrified of What Iran Just Announced, Israel in Shock!
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Feb 23, 2024 #israelpalestineconflict #russia #russianews
The Whole World is Terrified of What Iran Just Announced, Israel in Shock!

#israelpalestineconflict #russia #russianews

Diplomacy to renew this arms control deal has encountered numerous roadblocks, including Iran's nuclear achievements and linkages to events in the Gaza Strip and Ukraine.
Welcome everyone, in today's video; we’re going to tell you Iran Nuclear Deal?
The Iran nuclear deal, officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, is a historic agreement made by Iran and numerous international countries, including the United States. Iran agreed to dismantle much of its nuclear programme and open its facilities for more thorough foreign inspections in exchange for billions of dollars in sanctions relief.
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The Whole World is Terrified of What Iran Just Announced, Israel in Shock!
Proponents of the deal claimed that it would help prevent the rebirth of Iran's nuclear weapons programme, lowering the likelihood of violence between Iran and its regional enemies, particularly Israel and Saudi Arabia. However, the agreement has been in risk since President Donald Trump removed the US from it in 2018. Iran has resumed nuclear development in retribution for the US withdrawal and lethal assaults on prominent Iranians in 2020, one of which was carried out by the US. UN inspectors reported in early 2023 that Iran had enriched trace amounts of uranium to weapons-grade levels, causing international concern.
President Joe Biden stated that the US would return to the JCPOA if Iran returned to compliance, but after more than two years of stop-and-go talks, the countries are still far from reaching a resolution, and portions of the agreement would expire in late 2023.
The JCPOA, which entered into force in January 2016, restricts Iran's civilian nuclear enrichment programme. The five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany, known collectively as the P5+1, were essential to negotiations with Iran. The European Union also participated.
Some Middle Eastern countries, including as Saudi Arabia, claimed they should have been consulted or participated in the discussions because they would be the most affected by a nuclear-armed Iran. Israel explicitly opposed the accord, claiming it was too mild.
What was the goal?
The P5+1 sought to slow Iran's nuclear development so that if Tehran opted to seek a nuclear bomb, it would take at least a year, giving international powers time to respond. Prior to the JCPOA discussions, US intelligence authorities assessed that, in the absence of an agreement, Iran could create enough nuclear material for a bomb in a few months. Negotiating states feared that Iran's efforts to become a nuclear weapons state would plunge the region into a new crisis. One concern was that Israel would take pre-emptive military action against suspected nuclear facilities in Iran, as it had in Iraq and Syria, potentially resulting in reprisals from Lebanon-based Hezbollah or disruptions to oil transit in the Persian Gulf. Furthermore, Saudi Arabia has shown a desire to acquire a nuclear weapon if Iran successfully detonates one.
Iran has previously promised not to develop nuclear weapons as a party to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, which has been in force since 1970. However, following the toppling of the Pahlavi regime in 1979, Iranian elites secretly sought this technology.
Prior to the JCPOA, the P5+1 had been negotiating with Iran for several years, proposing various incentives to stop uranium enrichment. Following the 2013 election of reformist President Hassan Rouhani, the parties reached a preliminary agreement to guide negotiations for a broader deal.

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