As accusations continue and deadlock seems to be the only path towards any agreements. Teheran argues that the nuclear enrichment program is solely for the use of civilian energy and not for any raw nuclear materials usable for weapons. (click here) Over a indian meal the EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana and Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani try to come to an agreement over how to resolve the issue. SO far Iran has already been put on economic sanctions and if no agreement comes, a third set of sanctions will be imposed.
When reading this, it shows exactly how international policies can become very controversial with very few agreements as it goes to the issue of degrading a state’s sovereignty. With the EU and the US pressuring Iran to stop doing what it wants to do, tensions continue to grow. Since the enrichment programs and its goals aren’t fully known to outsiders and because nuclear material can be both good and evil, the user’s motives must be trusted. Since Iran is said to have support terrorist financially, if not directly, views from abroad tends to be pessimistic.