The Associated Press released a bombshellreporton Wednesday that revealed that Iran will be allowed to use its own inspectors to investigate a military site where it is suspected of conducting nuclear weapons work, under the terms of a secret agreement it signed with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Although some supporters of the Iran nuclear deal sought to discredit the initial Associated Press report, the news organization stands by its reporting and the Obama administration has not denied the story.
This unprecedented arrangement, which would involve Iranian personnel providing photos, videos, and environmental samples from the Parchin military complex to the IAEA, has stoked concerns that the IAEA investigation of Iran’s past work on developing nuclear warheads will amount to little more than a public relations exercise. The IAEA, as well as intelligence agencies from the U.S. and other countries, long have suspected that Iranian scientists experimented with high-explosive detonators for nuclear arms at Parchin and conducted additional weapons-related work at other sites.
Despite repeated promises to fully cooperate with the IAEA’s investigation, Iran has blocked IAEA inspectors from looking at the Parchin facilities and has razed buildings and stripped away large quantities of earth, further fueling suspicions that Tehran is concealing evidence of past nuclear weapons work. The IAEA investigation, which began long before the nuclear agreement was signed in July, has become a crucial part of the deal because the accord stipulates that sanctions can only be lifted after Iran resolves the IAEA’s concerns over the “possible military dimensions” of its nuclear program.
The disturbing news that the IAEA has agreed to outsource some of its responsibilities to Iran has amplified concerns that questions about Iran’s past efforts to develop nuclear warheads will be swept under the rug in a rush to lift sanctions.
Fred Fleitz, who has worked on Iranian nuclear issues at the CIA, State Department, and House Intelligence Committee during a distinguished 25-year government career, has condemned the IAEA’s side deal as a “preposterous and unserious plan to investigate past and ongoing Iranian nuclear-weapons-related activities.”
The IAEA’s absurd arrangement with Iran is a far cry from “anytime/anywhere” inspections promised by the Obama administration. The final agreement reached at Vienna allows Iran to delay inspections for up to 24 days, and possibly a lot longer if the U.N. Security Council gets involved in deliberations over possible Iranian efforts to delay inspections.
Charles Duelfer, who oversaw inspections of Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction programs as a top official of the United Nations Special Commission on Iraq (UNSCOM) from 1993 to 2000, has noted that Iran is likely to apply the lessons learned by Saddam Hussein’s regime in obstructing and thwarting U.N. inspectors.
The disclosure of the IAEA secret agreement has ignited a firestorm on Capitol Hill, where many members already resented that they were being kept in the dark on important aspects of the Iran nuclear agreement. On Wednesday, Sens. Mark Kirk, R-Ill., and Marco Rubio, R-Fla., called for the Obama administration to release secret letters to foreign governments assuring them that they will not be legally penalized for doing business with the Iranian government.
House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., blasted the administration on Thursday on the IAEA revelations:
Congress should not be finding out about the details of a secret side agreement with Iran through media reports. The House has already demanded that the administration give Congress the text of these agreements, as is required by the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act that the president signed into law. On its face, this agreement seems to give Iran much too much authority in determining how and when inspections happen at the Parchin military site. Though President Obama claimed that this agreement is not based on trust but on verification, this side deal makes it look like the exact opposite.
The IAEA’s ludicrous concessions allowing Iranian personnel to gather possible evidence about past Iranian nuclear weapons experiments set a dangerous precedent for future nuclear inspections.
Allowing Iran to assume such a prominent role in investigating itself would amount to putting the fox in charge of the chicken coop.
The Canary Mission database was created to document the people and groups that are promoting hatred of the USA, Israel and Jews on college campuses in North America.
A heroic US airman told tonight for the first time how he and his childhood friends brought down a gunman intent on massacring the passengers of the Amsterdam to Paris express train.
Spencer Stone revealed how he woke from a deep sleep to see a man holding an assault rifle and that it 'looked like it was jammed and it wasn't working'.
Speaking for the first time about his crucial role in thwarting the terrorist attack in northern France in Friday he said the trio decided they had to 'do something or die'.
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US serviceman Spencer Stone answering reporters' questions at the US embassy in Paris on Sunday
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Pat on the back for a hero: US ambassador to France Jane Hartley with (l-r) Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos at the press conference - two days after a 25-year-old Moroccan opened fire on the train
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Jane Hartley, Spencer Stone and Anthony Sadler look on as Alek Skarlatos recalls how they foiled the gunman
Mr Stone said: ‘I just wanted to survive and for my friends and everyone else on the train to survive.
‘He was ready to fight to the end, so were we.
‘I tackled him and Alek came down and put him in a choke hold and kept hitting him.
‘He had a box cutter and he started to go at me with that.
‘He let go and we started punching him all three of us and Alek hit him in the head with a pistol.
It was either do something or die
Anthony Sadler, American hero
‘We kept hitting him until he was unconscious.’
Stone spoke at a live news conference at the U.S. ambassador's residence in Paris along with Anthony Sadler and National Guardsman Alek Skarlatos.
The trio of Americans who foiled an attempted terrorist attack on a train bound for Paris said on Sunday they had no choice but to fight for their lives.
'At that time he was cocking the AK-47,' said Anthony Sadler, a California college student, from the U.S. ambassador's residence in Paris. 'So it was either do something or die...In times of crisis...do something. Hiding or sitting back is not going to accomplish anything.'
'I'm still waiting to wake up,' he said. 'It's like a movie scene or something.'
'I was thinking about survival,' said Spencer Stone, who serves in the Air Force. 'It was to survive and for everybody else on the train to make it.'
Train heroes recount moment they took down armed terrorist
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Spencer, who is visibly injured from the terror attack, said he was stabbed in the neck and hand
Stone is hailed not only for being the first to grapple with the attacker, but for helping to stop the bleeding in a French-American passenger wounded by a bullet.
Stone, wearing a sling on his left arm, was wounded in the attack and said he will receive further medical treatment in Germany.
In the beginning it was mostly gut instinct, survival
Alek Skarlatos
Stone said the attacker kept pulling out weapons from his bag, and that he was stabbed in the neck and sliced on his hand.
Stone said his thumb was reattached during his hospital stay in Lille. He thanked the French doctors, police officers and others.
Skarlatos said military training played a part in subduing the gunman.
'In the beginning it was mostly gut instinct, survival,' he said. 'Our training kicked in after the struggle.'
Mr Skarlatos said: ‘His intentions were pretty clear. He had a lot of ammo.’
Mr Sadler added: ‘He came into the car and started cocking the AK 47 so I guess he was intent.
eo shows France train terror suspect moaning on ground
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Healing: Spencer Stone emerged from the central hospital in Lille, France, wearing bandages and a sling a day after tackling a terrorist down
‘The gunman would have been successful if Spencer had not had got up.
‘I don’t know what I would have done if I was by myself.
‘But I saw Spencer get up and I saw Alek get up and they are my close friends.
‘These are my friends and I was the third person to get up
‘I thought like I got to do something.’
I just wanted to survive and for my friends and everyone else on the train to survive
Spencer Stone
In the glare of the hastily assembled press conference Ambassador Jane Hartley described the young men as ‘true heroes’ and said she was ‘so proud to be sitting here with you.’
Mrs Hartley said: ‘You often hear the word hero but in this case I think that word has been more appropriate.
‘I know these young men sitting with me won’t like it as during the brief period we have known each other they are so humble, but they are truly heroes.
‘When most of us would run away Spencer, Alek and Anthony ran into the line of fire, saying ‘let’s go’. And those words changed the day for many.
‘They demonstrated the very best of America with their selfless actions in tackling the assailant.
‘As President Obama said, in his phone call with President Hollande, these three brave young Americans, along with the French and British passengers, demonstrated remarkable bravery and acted, without regard for their own safety, in order to subdue a heavily armed individual who appeared intent on causing mass casualties.
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He wore a cast at the press conference and said thumb was reattached during his hospital stay in Lille, France. U.S. Ambassador Jane Hartley (also pictured) praised the three Americans as heroes
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Heroes relive dramatic moment they fought with train gunman
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‘As a representative of my country, as an American and as a mother of a son not much older than you I’m so proud to be sitting here with you. Thank you so much.’
The heroes dismissed claims by El Khazzani’s lawyers that he was not a terrorist and was only planning to rob the passengers.
They are truly heroes. When most of us would run away, Spencer, Alek and Anthony ran into the line of fire, saying `Let's go'
U.S. ambassador to France Jane Hartley
'We often use the word hero and in this case I know that word has never been more appropriate,' Hartley said.
'They are truly heroes. When most of us would run away, Spencer, Alek and Anthony ran into the line of fire, saying `Let's go.' Those words changed the fate of many.'
The young men are currently the ambassador's honored guests just a stone’s throw away from Paris’ prestigious Champs Elysee.
A source at the US Embassy told MailOnline: ‘They are the ambassador guests. They had drinks and pizza last night.
‘The young men joked they had checked it [the US ambassador’s residence] on [travel guide website] Expedia and decided it was ok.
‘They were brought down to Paris in the ambassador’s car.
‘She is very proud of them, we all are.’
THWARTED GUNMAN SCOFFS AT ACCUSATIONS HE'S A TERRORIST
The thwarted train gunman Ayoub El Khazzani has laughed at accusations he was trying to carry out a terrorist attack on the Amsterdam to Paris express, his lawyer has claimed.
Morocco-born El Khazzani, 26, says he does not see why his actions on the Thalys train on Friday have caused such an outcry and insisted that he was only interested in 'robbing the passengers'.
His lawyer, Sophie David, said the gunman appeared 'very, very thin and very haggard' when she met with him at a police station in Arras, northern France.
Meanwhile, the suspect's father defended him as a 'good boy' today, and insisted that he would never want to kill anyone.
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Suspect: Ayoub El-Khazzani (above), 26, has denied accusations that he was trying to
carry out a terrorist attack on Friday. He is being questioned by French counter-terrorism police after he allegedly opened fire on a high-speed train from Amsterdam to france Dad of man who stopped France train terror attack 'proud'
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Scrap dealer Mohamed Khazzani, 64, broke down in tears as he recalled the moment police knocked on the door of his rundown flat to tell him his son had been arrested with a Kalashnikov on board a packed Paris-bound high-speed train.
The greying dad-of-six, who lives in the southern Spanish port city of Algeciras after emigrating from his native Morocco, told MailOnline: 'They're saying Ayoub is a terrorist but I just cannot believe what I am hearing.
'I haven't eaten anything or slept since the police came round yesterday.
'They asked me if I knew where he was and when I said France they told me he had got himself into serious trouble and explained what had happened.
'I'm still in shock and haven't even told my wife Zahara yet who is in Morocco visiting relatives and won't be back until later this week.'
He added: 'There was no work for him here and it's the only reason he went [to France].
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Arrest: The suspected gunman was held on the platform (above) of the station in Arras in France so police could arrive and detain him
'You should ask them why they're doing that to young people, selling them empty promises and then dumping them on the street.'
Speaking in broken Spanish, he added: 'My son a terrorist? The only terrorism he is guilty of is terrorism for bread because he hasn't got enough money to feed himself properly.'
Mr Khazzani spoke out from his flat on the fifth floor of a dilapidated eleventh-floor tower black in the rundown Algeciras neighbourhood of El Saladillo.
He admitted he squats in the grubby three-bed apartment, which he was said was owned by a bank after the previous owner was evicted.
'I work day and night trying to make ends meet and this is how I live.
'My wife is away at the moment with one of my three daughters but the other two who are aged 15 and 17 still live here.
'Ayoub lived in Algeciras for a year and a half before moving to France.
'His older brothers Imran and Suleiman live in Morocco which is where my wife and I as well as Ayoub were born.
'Ayoub was religious and never smoked or drank alcohol.'
He finished: 'It's as if Ayoub is dead now. I know I'll never see him again now. I'm sure he'll go to jail for a long time.
'Now I just want to try to get on with my life and not be bothered any more.
'This is the first and last time I will be speaking about this.'