Rusia y los EE.UU est=E1n de acuerdo. La prueba del cohete iran=ED solo
presagia la intenci=F3n de fabricar bombas at=F3micas, si no ahora, en el
futuro. No me extra=F1ar=EDa una carrera armamentista en todo el Planeta,
donde todos quieran tener sus armas de destrucci=F3n masiva. La
humanidad en el pasado no ha demostrado tener sentido com=FAn y no s=E9
****qu=E9 en el futuro va a ser distinto. All=E1 los j=F3venes que vana a
quedar desprotonizados en la pr=F3xima guerra, que sin duda va a ser
nuclear.
La noticia sali=F3 en el informativo israelita DEBKA
-------------------------------
February 6, 2008, 3:55 PM (GMT+02:00)
Wednesday, Feb. 6, Moscow followed Wa****ngton in voicing concern that
the launch of Iran's Safir-1 space rocket Monday, Feb. 4, attested to
the existence of a nuclear weapons program. This diametrically
contradicts the US National Intelligence Estimate of last December,
which concluded Iran had shelved its covert military nuclear program
in 2003.
Moscow too has evidently abandoned its persistent denial of evidence
that Tehran is developing a nuclear bomb.
The two comments from the White House and the Kremlin also point to
Presidents George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin having settled their
dispute over harsh sanctions against Iran.
The two leaders began pulling their acts on Iran together in December
2007, as DEBKAfile first revealed, when Bush suddenly withdrew his
objections to Russian fuel ****pments for Iran's Bushehr reactor.
Tuesday, Feb. 5, in answer to a question, the White House spokeswoman
Dana Perino said Iran's "space" missile was cause for worry. Such
technology, she said, is the same as that needed to deliver a nuclear
bomb.
Wednesday, Feb. 6, Russian deputy foreign minister Alexander Losyukov
followed suit. He commented that Monday's test launch of Iran's
"Safir-1 (Explorer-1) raises suspicions over Tehran's claims of
peaceful nuclear intentions and suggested its possible desire to
create a nuclear weapon.
It was "of course a cause for concern." Long-range missiles are
components of a nuclear weapons system, the Russian official said -
the first time any senior Russian official had admitted to suspecting
Iran of underhand nuclear weapons activity.
DEBKAfile's Wa****ngton and Moscow sources re****t: The statements from
the two capitals indicate that Bush and Putin continue to cooperate on
Iran and have decided to leave the controversial NIE behind them. The
question is: Where does their collaboration go from here? Or,
specifically, how does the White House propose to reward the Kremlin
for adopting its hard line on Iran?
The place to watch may be Poland and the Czech Republic, where the US
president might be flexible in his push for missile interceptor bases
in consideration of Moscow's adamant resistance.
http://www.debka.com/
----------------------------------
El planeta va a quedar tan destru=EDdo que no s=E9 para qu=E9 se
prepocupan
de la contaminaci=F3n, al final solo van a haber cenizas.
T.Schmidt
P.S. La =FAnica parte buena es que los pol=EDticos y los religiosos van a
quedar muertos igual que el resto de la gente.


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