Is that Apestein, about to be revived ?
There are lots of rumors (nothing substantiated) that he is still alive somewhere in Israel.
Is that Apestein, about to be revived ?![]()
Sure looks a lot like him.
’‘Chinese ships continue to move in and out of the waters of the Strait of Hormuz. We have trade and energy agreements with Iran, which we will respect and abide by.
We expect others not to interfere in our affairs. Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz, and has opened it to us.
If you go back to the 2017 hearings in Congress, it is mostly about ballistic missiles, militias and terrorism. That is, Iran's regional behavior plus the time limit on the treaty made it not worth keeping. Overlooked is that the US did not keep its side of the treaty - it could not, as the treaty was not ratified. But I guess the value of it being a joint agreement is that Iran found it useful to keep its commitments to the other members of the JCPOA. Also ignored was that the treaty was meant to address solely the nuclear issue; and nothing else.Amber G. wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 02:12 Rhetoric vs. Reality: Claims regarding "Obummer" or secret "deep mountain hide-outs" are old techniques designed to sway those already convinced of a conspiracy. From a technical standpoint, the deal's physical constraints—such as limiting Uranium Hexafluoride UF_6 and concrete-plugging the Arak reactor—created high-visibility bottlenecks that made any actual "breakout" easily detectable by monitors.
I will just say what my view is on the matter. The issue is not one of rolling knowledge back, it is about intent, threat and capabilities. While JCPOA did not change intent, it did restrict capabilities in exchange for "grease". The question is what did the regime do with this grease? Their actions fundamentally sought to destabilize Israel through its proxies and from an Israeli perspective after Oct 7, the patience to "manage" is no longer there.Amber G. wrote: ↑13 Apr 2026 09:05
1. You Can’t Bomb Knowledge:
The JCPOA didn't pretend Iran was naive; it just made sure they didn't have the physical materials to execute the "code."
2. The "Overnight" Jump Proves the Point:
The moment the U.S. walked out, it gave them the green light to use the "advanced code" they’d had all along.
4. The "Grease" vs. The "Hammer"
If you’re the guy holding the "hammer," would you rather have a year to see a threat coming, or six days? In 2026, we’re finding out the hard way that "Maximum Pressure" just resulted in "Maximum Enrichment."
--
Netanyahu and the hawks might want a world where Iran forgets nuclear physics, but that world doesn't exist.
Quick question for the room: If the goal is truly "denuclearization," how do we plan to address the enriched stockpile we have right now in 2026 without a technical agreement to down-blend it back to 3.67%? Hammering the infrastructure doesn't make the gas disappear.
-- Amber G.
I am not a diplomat either, but as a nuclear physicist who followed the work of Ernest Moniz closely, it is truly a shame the deal broke down (or did not became a better deal).A_Gupta wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 04:54If you go back to the 2017 hearings in Congress, it is mostly about ballistic missiles, militias and terrorism. That is, Iran's regional behavior plus the time limit on the treaty made it not worth keeping. Overlooked is that the US did not keep its side of the treaty - it could not, as the treaty was not ratified. But I guess the value of it being a joint agreement is that Iran found it useful to keep its commitments to the other members of the JCPOA. Also ignored was that the treaty was meant to address solely the nuclear issue; and nothing else.Amber G. wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 02:12 Rhetoric vs. Reality: Claims regarding "Obummer" or secret "deep mountain hide-outs" are old techniques designed to sway those already convinced of a conspiracy. From a technical standpoint, the deal's physical constraints—such as limiting Uranium Hexafluoride UF_6 and concrete-plugging the Arak reactor—created high-visibility bottlenecks that made any actual "breakout" easily detectable by monitors.
I am not a diplomat, so I don't know whether it is worth trying to build on the JCPOA and have additional issues covered by additional agreements; or whether to tear up the whole thing.
I appreciate the perspective on 'intent'—Oct 7 certainly shifted the 'management' calculus. But I noticed you didn't quite address the technical reality I raised earlier.ShauryaT wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 06:34I will just say what my view is on the matter. The issue is not one of rolling knowledge back, it is about intent, threat and capabilities. While JCPOA did not change intent, it did restrict capabilities in exchange for "grease". The question is what did the regime do with this grease? Their actions fundamentally sought to destabilize Israel through its proxies and from an Israeli perspective after Oct 7, the patience to "manage" is no longer there.Amber G. wrote: ↑13 Apr 2026 09:05
[<snip>
If you’re the guy holding the "hammer," would you rather have a year to see a threat coming, or six days? In 2026, we’re finding out the hard way that "Maximum Pressure" just resulted in "Maximum Enrichment."
--
Netanyahu and the hawks might want a world where Iran forgets nuclear physics, but that world doesn't exist.
Quick question for the room: If the goal is truly "denuclearization," how do we plan to address the enriched stockpile we have right now in 2026 without a technical agreement to down-blend it back to 3.67%? Hammering the infrastructure doesn't make the gas disappear.
-- Amber G.
If this action had been initiated with Iran NOT acting on its intent, then there was a case against this war. In a way, it proved Netanyahu's point that the JCPOA would only delay the inevitable as the mullahs will act on their intent - a threat that Israel cannot afford. If the mullahs chose to act, then they should have known what are its consequences. A mullah regime with Islamic revolutionary objectives with a nuclear weapon (the capability) is simply a non-negotiable and vital for Israel.
JCPOA was a good deal or not is drained water now. No one is going back there. The question for me from here on now is what happens if the regime does manage to stay - one can almost guarantee a sprint to the breakout line and hence a constant pressure and kinetic action in the area. There is no way out but through a regime change, which an air campaign alone cannot achieve.
Even if we accept the premise that 'regime change' is the only way forward, we are still left with a massive, immediate physical problem in 2026. As I asked: If the goal is truly 'denuclearization,' how do we plan to address the enriched stockpile we have right now without a technical agreement to down-blend it? >f the goal is truly "denuclearization," how do we plan to address the enriched stockpile we have right now in 2026 without a technical agreement to down-blend it back to 3.67%? Hammering the infrastructure doesn't make the gas disappear
I guess there are three options. Extraction and hand over, in-situ dilution or entombment. The first two if the regime acquiesces and if not entombment with a series of GBU-57 deep penetration bombs is the only other realistic option left. The sites would have to be under surveillance and any attempt to get to the materials would need kinetic action to deny access. I guess we rule out a forced entry option to the locations.Amber G. wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 07:29 You say the JCPOA is 'drained water,' but what is the alternative technical plan for the material already on the ground? Without a Moniz-style framework of technical rigor, how do we ensure a 'sprint to the breakout line' doesn't happen during the chaos of a regime transition? I’m curious what the 'hawk' plan is for the actual isotopes, not just the politics.
Thanks.ShauryaT wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 07:52 I guess there are three options. Extraction and hand over, in-situ dilution or entombment. The first two if the regime acquiesces and if not entombment with a series of GBU-57 deep penetration bombs is the only other realistic option left. The sites would have to be under surveillance and any attempt to get to the materials would need kinetic action to deny access. I guess we rule out a forced entry option to the locations.
Source please!bala wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 04:50 The Chinese have trade and energy agreements with Iran in return for giving them "knowledge" on nuclear stuff including how to get purer Uranium using better centrifuge tech. They also transfered many other secret designs of nuclear weapons in exchange for cheaper oil from Iran.
Before February 2021: Blind spot ( The Monitoring started in 1970 - I am starting from 2015)A_Gupta wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 10:40 The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has faced multiple stages of losing its ability to track Iran’s enriched uranium, with the process beginning in early 2021 and culminating in a total verification blackout in mid-2025.
Timeline of the Monitoring Gap
February 2021: The "Blind Spot" Begins
Iran stopped implementing the Additional Protocol, which had granted inspectors snap access to undeclared sites. A "temporary technical understanding" was reached where Iran continued to record data on surveillance cameras but refused to share the footage with the IAEA, creating a "continuity of knowledge" gap.
<snip>
True, but Israel has no incentive to resolve, especially as it has demonstrated its ability to severely degrade threats stemming from Iran and its proxies furthering Israel's dominance on the escalation ladder. Israel's beta tests both in the West Bank and Gaza to "live" in peace with a Palestinian government have failed. I will posit, the Iranian regime uses Palestine as a ruse to further its regime's agenda - which are preservation, state power expansion, strengthening Shia sect participants and expansion of Islamism - in that order. It promotes Its goals in opposition to the Judeo-Christian order and its power equations are poor. Asymmetric techniques is its only game with nuclear blackmail.
If we confirm that you have won, if we confirm that you are the greatest and most victorious blocker in the entire world, will you put down the phone for half an hour, just half an hour, and attend to your main duties?
To the 30 million Americans who have no health insurance, to the 800000 Americans who are homeless, to America's infrastructure that is dilapidated. To the 38 trillion dollars of United States national debt....
A durable Egypt–Israel‑style peace between Iran and Israel in 2026 is not impossible, but every structural condition that made the 1979 Egypt–Israel peace achievable is either missing or reversed today. The comparison is useful precisely because it shows how different the two situations are.Question: In 1973, after a war, Egypt and Israel came to an enduring peace. Is it possible in 2026 for Iran and Israel to come to such a peace?
The strategy that works with a domestic cat may not work with a tiger. Even with the US on its side, the power differential between Israel and Iran is much smaller than that between Pakistan and Balochistan, KPK or China and Xinjiang, Tibet.
Not the appropriate comparison. The perception of Israel among the US & western public (the context of my original post) was targeted using the actions of Israel against Palestinians, specifically in Gaza/West Bank, as a pretext for atrocity literature. This narrative building had been going on for years before the current Iran war.
Good one.Amber G. wrote: ↑15 Apr 2026 06:19 "MEDIATOR" TO "DEFAULTER"
Unbelievably embarrassing:
PAK government failed to clear bills at the Serena Hotel that it booked for the US–Iran talks in Islamabad beteeen April 10–12. The Aga Khan-linked owner had to step in and cover costs days later. A summit meant to project power of Pak's diplomacy ends up exposing the nation's economic dysfunction.
Could it be that Trump told to tell the press that the image was "doctored," but misunderstood and told everyone that he was depicted as a "doctor"????drnayar wrote: ↑14 Apr 2026 00:00Who knew watching the news can be so entertainingAmber G. wrote: ↑13 Apr 2026 23:55
OTOH He claims He is a doctor (Not kidding.. please see this clip -- can't even makes such things up -
"Trump says his AI picture was not he as Jesus Christ but as a doctor since 'he makes people better'."
"
As cardiologist :""I found 3 blockages in your heart's arteries. My plan is to create 3 more blockages to treat the exisiting blockages."
[img]https://pbs.twimg.com/media/HFy_8fmbMAA ... me=360x360[/imgbut seriously ., if only lives were not at stake !
“President Trump’s Truth Social post depicting him as Jesus was a doctored image.”
https://armscontrolcenter.org/fact-shee ... -programs/Amber G. wrote: ↑15 Apr 2026 05:22 If it starts, a nuclear arms race will be unstoppable
A sobering interview with the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency
>>>As tensions around Iran’s nuclear program escalate—from U.S. naval blockades to strikes on nuclear facilities and stalled negotiations—the risks described in this piece feel increasingly immediate. The ongoing conflict has already been framed as an effort to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, yet analysts warn it could have the opposite effect: pushing Iran, and potentially other regional powers, toward nuclearization as the ultimate security guarantee . With global powers simultaneously modernizing arsenals and regional actors reconsidering their own deterrence strategies, today’s crisis may not be an isolated confrontation—but the kind of trigger that could set off the broader, self-reinforcing nuclear arms race the article warns may become impossible to stop.
- see my post about Iran's nuclear plant with 210 tons of used fuel (~200 Kg of reactor grade Pu - enough for a 10-20 Nagasaki type amount of Pu))- is with Iran