Chain Reaction and Chaos by Shajari Sadegh;

Chain Reaction and Chaos by Shajari Sadegh;

Author:Shajari, Sadegh;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: undefined
Publisher: UPA
Published: 2012-08-15T00:00:00+00:00


It was in 1994 that after 11 years of successive failure and being lost in the labyrinth of the nuclear world, Iranian officials began to understand the range of the issue. By the end of 1995, many countries around the world were involved in the Bushehr Nuclear Power Reactor. Technically or politically, the issue had involved Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Argentina, the Czech Republic, Poland, Brazil, France, China, Russia, Ukraine, the United States, and Israel.

After hesitating for so long, Iranian policymakers reluctantly admitted that the Crescent could be defeated by the hexagram Star of David if the Christian Cross supported the latter. They concluded that the idea of “neither Eastern nor Western” was nothing but a dream and a slogan that was out of touch with the worlds’ realities. Through much experience, they realized that if, and only if, the Persian Gulf could escape from the gravity of the Sun and the Moon, Iran could escape the Superpower’s sphere of influence. Moreover, no regime could afford to fight at two national and international fronts forever. Tehran, and, likewise, its Arab neighbors, saw no necessity in respecting human rights. What was not seen was the green light that the submissive leaders of Arab states ‘yes man good’ had earned, since, unlike Iran, having no universalistic claim they were just building high-rises in their immense deserts, returning the petrodollars to its initial place. However, of course, not all of the petrodollars, they kept a good deal for their personal use.

After the nuances between the adjacent nations were sensed in Tehran, since any national reconciliation seemed impossible, some thought that they needed to replace the proclaimed policy of “neither Eastern nor Western” with the slogan of “either Eastern or Western.”

For more than a decade, two opposite wills opposed each other on the Iranian nuclear scene. On one side, the Islamic State struggled to implement the Shah's unfinished nuclear mission—the same program, but in a different political space—while on the other side, the United States, with icy eyes, looked differently at the same program, assiduously demonstrating its will to keep the chapter of the monarchy era closed.[26]

1. Pierre Chabanne, former manager of Spie Batignolles in Iran, recounted me his memoirs of Iran.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.