| Time | Text |
|---|---|
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Iran's Sweetheart Deal
00:02:23
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| So Iran negotiates this sweetheart deal, which is going to enable them to continue to enrich uranium, get $150 billion so they can continue to build their intercontinental ballistic missile system. | |
| They've got safeguards in this where the International Atomic Energy Association won't be able to really inspect in a timely manner. | |
| They can keep playing this off. | |
| They can create delays. | |
| They've got the ability to self-inspect the most dangerous nuclear facility, the one in Parchin, where they suspect nuclear weapons were being developed. | |
| They have other things that they get as a benefit of this. | |
| They have a nuclear breakout capability that even our energy secretary who was doing negotiations, this Moniz with John Kerry over there, that they could, he even said they could break out in just a few months. | |
| So while these negotiations were going on, and one of the reasons there were negotiations, I'm going to shift back to the geopolitical for a moment, was because Iran had gotten to a point where the sanctions weren't really working that well, and they got up to 19,000 centrifuges. | |
| Now, what that means in common terms here is that you could actually build a nuclear weapon if you're spending 19,000 centrifuges in six weeks. | |
| So this was really ratcheting up the pressure here because Iran got up to 19,000 centrifuges. | |
| So what happened in November of 2013, the international community, the P5 plus 1, which is five permanent members of the UN security, France, UK, U.S., Russia, China, and plus one, Germany, convinced Iran to cut back about half of those centrifuges on the hopes that the sanctions would be lifted off. | |
| And they went through a bunch of negotiations. | |
| They kept getting extended as the creators of CHESS, Iran, continued to negotiate their way through the best sweetheart deal they could get. | |
| And then ultimately on July 14th of 2015, this deal was put forward. | |
| In the midst of those negotiations, Ayatollah Khomeini came out and said, we want 190,000 centrifuges, which means you could have 38 nuclear weapons per year if you ever got that many going at one time, which you could send on your ICBMs into Paris, into Berlin, into New York, an EMP over America. | |
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Geopolitical Tensions Rising
00:01:34
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| This has only been pushed off now if this deal works out for a short period of time, 10 years maybe, right? | |
| This sort of thing. | |
| So it's a very troubling situation. | |
| And that's the geopolitics of it. | |
| And I think Jeremiah has written about it. | |
| I think he's told us that something is going to come down and the Lord is going to take matters in his own hands. | |
| There's going to be a disaster. | |
| There's going to be an attack. | |
| Iran has enemies. | |
| And it seems like it very well could be Israel, although it doesn't tell us that's who it is. | |
| But in 2011, Israel had plans on the table to strike Iran's nuclear facilities. | |
| And they did this in 2007. | |
| They struck Syria's nuclear facility and they did it in 1981. | |
| So they already have plans and have done this in the past. | |
| They cannot allow another nuclear weapon state in the Middle East. | |
| Wasn't it last week they said they discovered the raw materials to make this? | |
| They found reserves of uranium, yes. | |
| That they had much more than they thought they had. | |
| Oh, yeah. | |
| One of the things that was favorable to trying to work with them on a deal was that they weren't going to be able to enrich a lot of uranium from their own reserves. | |
| I think it was very clever that Iran concealed the fact that they have plenty of uranium they can enrich in their own, and they didn't reveal that until after this deal was already in motion, right, and already accepted on July 14th of this past year. | |