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Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Nuclear dispute: Iran is seeking support in North Korea


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has called on the West to the nuclear dispute with Tehran to draw "red lines". "Iran sees no international determination to stop its nuclear program," Netanyahu said during the weekly cabinet meeting. Israel and the U.S. want in October to hold the largest ever joint military exercises. The Israeli army said that it was a routine exercise that has nothing to do with current events. Against the backdrop of tensions with Iran over its nuclear program, however, the exercise provides a lot of attention. The maneuver had been postponed earlier this year. Iran, in turn, seeks allies. The country wants to work more closely together with the U.S., North Korea and so the teeth. To this end, both countries signed several agreements in Tehran at the weekend, as the office of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced. Both Iran and North Korea is accused by the West to prepare for the construction of nuclear weapons. Israel considers such plans of Iran in light of the demands of Tehran, to destroy Israel, as a threat to its existence. Tehran denies to develop nuclear weapons. Iran, however, called conditions for access to the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA, the controversial Parchin military facility. His country wanted to gain insight into previously Western intelligence documents, said IAEA ambassador Ali Asghar Soltanieh, the Iranian news agency ISNA, according. In these confidential documents allegations of some Western countries against Tehran were included.Parchin is also not registered as a nuclear plant, the IAEA therefore not authorized to inspect the complex. Meanwhile, the leadership in Tehran to deal with allegations of Bahrain. Reason manipulations of expressions of Egyptian President Mohammed Mursi to Syria conflict by Iranian television. In his speech at the conference of the Non-Aligned Movement countries in Tehran Mursi had said on Thursday that the rebels in Syria fighting against an oppressive regime. Iran's state television had in translation into the local language Farsi simple word "Syria" replaced with "Bahrain". His speech had Mursi Iran, a close ally of the Syrian regime, duped open.

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