An Israeli analysis circulated via The Zioneer channels argues that nuclear issues are not on the table in US-Iran negotiations, which have been postponed to an unclear date. The analysis raises critical questions about 60% enriched uranium stockpiles, other enriched material, the fate of nuclear facilities, and stringent oversight — warning against accepting what it calls a "paper deal."
An Israeli analysis circulated via The Zioneer channels on Monday asserts that the core nuclear issue is not being discussed in the US-Iran negotiations currently underway. According to the analysis, talks have been postponed to an unspecified date, leaving critical questions unresolved.
The analysis lists four unresolved issues: the fate of Iran's 60% enriched uranium stockpile, additional quantities of enriched material, the status of current and future nuclear facilities, and the aggressive oversight needed to prevent deception. The author warns against accepting what is described as a "paper deal."
This comes as The Zioneer has reported extensively on the US-Iran nuclear talks this week, including a senior Israeli official dismissing the expected MOU as meaningless, and a White House official estimating an 85% chance of a deal. The analysis reflects the Israeli security establishment's longstanding skepticism toward the negotiations, which have shifted focus away from enrichment and toward broader regional issues, according to previous reporting.
- DevelopingReport: Iran nuclear talks may extend 60 days, including enrichment and inspections
- StrongIran further clarifies nuclear stance: Hormuz management to shift, enriched uranium deferred
- StrongGallant tweets 'Where's the uranium?' in English
- DevelopingNYT: Four core issues divide US and Iran in nuclear talks
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