Paul Brannan of the Institute for Science and International Security clings to belief that Vyacheslav Danilenko was assisting Iran with nuclear-weapons research at Parchin.
Iran Errata: Parchin and the Common Ground of Afghanistan
Led astray by conventional wisdom about Iran? We’re here to help.
The West Judges Iran by Not One, But Two Double Standards
When it comes to nuclear weapons and assassinations, Iran is judged by a different standard from the West.
Putting a Country on a Leash: Iran and Uranium
If Iran agrees, on paper, to end uranium enrichment, it will no longer be inspected and could then secretly recreate its program.
Is Disarmament to Proliferation as Spending Is to Austerity?
Disarming to prevent nuclear proliferation strikes some as counterintuitive as spending during an economic crisis instead of cutting spending.
Israel Attacking Iran Is Like Kettle Bombing the Pot Black
Israel’s refusal to come clean about its nuclear-weapons program is exponentially more duplicitous than whatever Iran has hidden about its nuclear-weapons work.
U.S. to Bomb Iran to Keep Israel From Attacking It?
If Iran developed and built nuclear weapons, both it and Israel would have incentives to use them to strike first in the event of a crisis
True Reason for Iran’s Apparent Interest in Nukes Discovered
Can Ayatollah Ali Khamenei be pro and con nuclear weapons at the same time?
Would Attacking Iran Really Make It More Determined to Build Nukes?
Various factors influence whether a state which has suffered an attack on its facilities for nuclear development will continue with its program.
Putting a Face on Iran Policies a Study in Frustration
It’s just as difficult determining who makes the decisions about Iran’s nuclear program as whether the Revolutionary Guard is behind the plot to assassinate the Arab ambassador.