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Trump Draws Red Line on Iran: Enriched Uranium Must Be Destroyed or Handed Over

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When the (nuclear) dust settles, President Donald Trump says it will not be in Iranian hands.

“The Enriched Uranium (Nuclear Dust!) will either be immediately turned over to the United States to be brought home and destroyed or, preferably … destroyed in place,” Trump wrote Monday on Truth Social.

Trump said the preferred option is that “in conjunction and coordination with the Islamic Republic of Iran,” the material would be “destroyed in place or, at another acceptable location, with the Atomic Energy Commission, or its equivalent, being witness to this process and event.”

Iran has about 970 pounds of enriched uranium, according to the Associated Press.

Much of what Iran has is hard to reach because it was buried underneath rubble when the U.S. attacked Iranian nuclear facilities last June.

That has led some commentators to speculate that the only sure way to keep the enriched uranium out of Iranian hands is to have U.S. troops on the ground in Iran to either retrieve the uranium or oversee the process.

Do you think Trump can get Iran to agree to hand it over or destroy it?

“No one has given me a briefing on how you would do it without boots on the ground,” Republican Sen. Rick Scott of Florida has said. “It doesn’t mean you can’t. But no one’s ever briefed me about it.”

Complicating the issue is that Iran has issued statements in the past suggesting the uranium is not going anywhere.

“The Supreme Leader’s directive, and the consensus within the establishment, is that the stockpile of enriched uranium should not leave the country,” Reuters quoted one Iranian source as saying.

Iran’s fear is that sending the uranium outside the country would make Iran more vulnerable to an attack from Israel, which has taken the position that the war is not over as long as Iran has the uranium.

A report in the New York Post said that getting the uranium is a linchpin of any peace deal.

“No dust, no dollars — in other words, no highly enriched uranium, then the Iranians aren’t going to get any real relief,” a U.S. official said.

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“If they do nothing, they get nothing. If they do a lot, they can actually get a lot,” the official said.

“No one disputes that the stockpiled enriched material will be disposed of. It’s a question about how,” the official said, noting that “national pride considerations” are a complication from the Iranian perspective.

“There is a political value in the United States to getting it. There is obviously a political value in the Iranians not handing it over to the United States,” he said.

“A lot of the debate is not really what happens to the stockpiled material. But it’s how the Iranians can sell it to their own hardliners and to their own population in a way that gets us what we need as well, and that’s really the conversation that’s happening,” he said.

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Jack Davis is a freelance writer who joined The Western Journal in July 2015 and chronicled the campaign that saw President Donald Trump elected. Since then, he has written extensively for The Western Journal on the Trump administration as well as foreign policy and military issues.
Jack Davis is a freelance writer who joined The Western Journal in July 2015 and chronicled the campaign that saw President Donald Trump elected. Since then, he has written extensively for The Western Journal on the Trump administration as well as foreign policy and military issues.
Jack can be reached at jackwritings1@gmail.com.
Location
New York City
Languages Spoken
English
Topics of Expertise
Politics, Foreign Policy, Military & Defense Issues




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