How About An Honest NPT? 11-11-10 mpg President: Iran Not to Give Up N. Rights Looks like Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is still "hung-up" on that "treaty thing". You know, a contract were you sign on the dotted line, obey the rules and restrictions contained therein, and expect the other party to also fulfill their side of the contract. Like for instance, letting Iran -- or any other country -- develop peaceful nuclear technology for power generation, or medical isotope production, or uranium enrichment....even if, as with any advanced nuclear technology such as uranium enrichment, it could later be used to eventually "break out" and develop a weapons program. This was a well known possibility when the NPT was first drafted and signed by all of its signatories. Restrictions on these technologies and the signatory countries RIGHTS to develop these technologies are spelled out, in detail, within the treaty. Yet all the US-NRE (a.k.a. the AIPAC/Israeli Consortium's colony) and their lying presstituting lackeys have done for the last decade is constantly make up an endless series of childishly stupid lies about "Iran's nuclear program", ALL of which have been proven wrong -- sometimes within days -- time and time again. This mass-media farce has been going on to the point where it has become a tiresome, tedious, BORING ritual and everyone throughout the ENTIRE world now knows the US-NRE's signature on ANY treaty, much less the NPT, is not worth the piece of paper it's written on. Therefore the only honest resolution of this matter would be to re-write the NPT and put in a clause that states the following.... Any
government
that
wishes
to
pursue
the
peaceful
use
of
nuclear
energy,
in
addition
to
adhering
to
all
prior terms and conditions of the
NPT, must also agree to the following protocols....
It would have the added benefit that the US-NRE and its ruling parasites might even (Gasp!!) actually abide by the treaty's terms and conditions....for awhile anyway. Well....at LEAST for a few more years....before they formulate a new set of additional demands to impose on the world's international community not already included in the newly modified treaty. - mpg |