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Emanuele Ottolenghi

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Emanuele Ottolenghi,

Emanuele Ottolenghi

Analysis

As talks fizzle out, an Iranian reactor comes to life

February 28, 2013 12:30
A worker stands at the entrance of Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant (Photo: AP)
1 min read

Despite guarded optimism and the promise of two more rounds of talks in March and April, the latest tranche of nuclear diplomacy between Iran and six world powers, which ended on Wednesday in Almaty, Kazakhstan, offered nothing new.

Iran made it clear it would not shut down its enrichment facility at Fordow — a key Western demand — and it would not abide by UN Security Council resolutions obliging it to halt uranium enrichment.

This week’s talks mark 11 years of diplomacy — evidence that Iran has achieved its goal of earning time without facing disastrous consequences.

The fact that time is a precious commodity in this game of constant brinkmanship was made plain when, earlier this week, the Daily Telegraph revealed that Iran’s Arak heavy water reactor was edging towards completion. Scoops aside, the International Atomic Energy Agency’s latest report, which was released last week, mentioned Arak’s steady progress and indicated that it could become operational by the end of this year or at the beginning of 2014.