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Iran Won’t Stop Enriching Uranium: The Bomb Is Just Part of the Plan – Opinion

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Amine Ayoub

Jerusalem Post, June 4, 2025

President Trump’s deadline for a deal to dismantle Iran’s nuclear program is fast approaching. Without a credible military threat, if Tehran fails to comply, the regime will confidently wait out the United States, call the president’s bluff and angle for a dangerously one-sided agreement. The odds of preventing a nuclear Iran peacefully have always been exceedingly low.

The regime has zero intention to repeat Moammar Gaddhafi’s fate after the Libyan dictator relinquished his weapons of mass destruction. Absent an acceptable settlement in the near term, Israel appears intent to strike while the regime’s defenses remain down rather than wait until the last minute to try to catch the final turn of the screw on a bomb. By itself, “maximum pressure” from U.S. sanctions cannot sway a regime with so much invested in its atomic venture and so little regard for its own people.

Recently, Iran’s president essentially dared the United States to walk away from talks and pile on more sanctions. Instead, realistic prospects of overwhelming force can really focus minds in Tehran. Earlier this year, Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, overcame his profound reluctance to engage with Washington once he feared serious conflict, including strikes on Iran’s nuclear facilities, as the only alternative. His decision was helped by Israeli strikes that devastated many of the regime’s best defenses and retaliatory capabilities late last year. Yet Iran also knows all too well how to offset its weaknesses by exploiting negotiations.

As they did with Presidents Obama and Biden, Tehran’s diplomats are slow-rolling talks, playing for precious time to move closer to a bomb, rebuild the regime’s arsenals, erode U.S. leverage by running out the clock on Mr. Trump’s deadline and ultimately forestall military action. It’s working. In a major story that broke on the eve of talks, Mr. Trump told Israeli officials he would not support military action and risk disrupting his pursuit of a deal. He reiterated that message late last month. With the United States and Israel at odds, talks are headed in the wrong direction as Iran defiantly rejects any hint of dismantlement. ….SOURCE

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