Yes, Iranians should be able to benefit from national nuclear advancement programs. However, at this time the risk is just too high for other countries to chance more chaos of a nuclear scale to penetrate the Middle East. Especially in a country where the majority realizes its own inability to fairly choose their government. Iranians are a far cry from their ideal capability to control their own nation's government programs. Therefore, Iranian youth and citizens themselves should be the first ones "to say that we can't."
More easily said that experienced, I know. In an ideal world countries would happily grant Iran global privileges, and in an ideal world either every country or no country would possess nuclear weapons. But this does not prove Iran's incapability to continue it's uranium enrichment programs--it only proves the difficulty in negotiations and reaching acceptable compromise.
The current Iranian policy wishes not to cooperate with the Western world, nor does it promote negotiations, placing all other countries of power and influence or those countries threatened under decisively defensive behavior. Iranian officials and people alike simply cannot expect warmer reactions to incredibly dangerous actions.
Looking Back
13 years ago
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