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Iran is preparing its next step that a security expert warns that its main objective is: developing an nuclear weapon.
“Repair, restructuring and reconstruction is going to be a modus operandie of the Islamic Republic of Iran,” said Ben Ben Telu, senior director of the Foundation for Democracy’s Iran program, said. “It only depends on how they are going to do it? Tampering with the international community? Are they going to completely dark?
“It all remains to be seen,” he said.
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Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei addresses the media during the polling of Parliament elections in Tehran, Iran on May 10, 2024. ,
Spokesperson of Governance, Fatmeh Mohjarani, Confirmed this week Fordo, Isfahan and Natanz nuclear sites were “severely damaged” after the US and Israeli attacks on Iran’s nuclear program last month.
There are more questions than the limit of this loss, as well as doubt whether Iran was capable of carrying any rich uranium or centrifuge away from heavy protected sites before the strike.
However, the Trump administration said on Wednesday that it had “amazed” the three facilities, and is Rejected very much The report states that Iranian officials may be able to move some elements of the government’s prestigious nuclear program, with Israeli officials confirmed this week that they were continuing monitoring the situation closely.
Experts from the US and Israel have said that they believe that Iran is still assessing the range of damage from the “bunker busting” bombs, and that the governance will look to fix and repair what it can do – which means it is looking to buy time.
“There is no doubt, there is still a diplomatic strategy designed in governance that is designed to plant anyone, and to find as much time as possible for this government to do so,” said Ben Telu.
This week the Iranian regime suggested that after the indication by President Donald Trump, it was open to negotiation with the US that negotiations could begin as next week, although many Iranian officials said the deadline was more ambitious.
Irani Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi said in the CBS news interview, “I don’t think the conversation will start soon.” “Diplomacy doors will never close.”
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This satellite photo of Planet Labs PBC shows Iran’s underground nuclear enrichment place after the US air strike on Sunday, Sunday, Sunday on 22 June 2025. (Planet Labs PBC through AP)
But the government also took steps to obstruct the United Nations atomic watch – which was tasked to monitor all the nuclear programs of the country – and on Wednesday suspended all conversations with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
On the same day, the State Department condemned the move, and spokesperson Tammy Bruce said it was “unacceptable that Iran chose to suspend cooperation with IAEA, when it has a window to do reverse courses and choose a path of peace and prosperity.”
Iran has limited the reach of IAEA in the past and Ben Talebalu argued that Tehran would probably look back to do so again as it tries to hold any bargaining chip.
The Iranian security expert argued, “The next step of the Islamic Republic of Iran, and currently the most dangerous capacity is its diplomatic ability.” “It is the ability of governance to either enter the conversation with a weak hand and leave with a strong hand, or try to stop a military victory of their opponents from becoming a political victory.
He said, “If there is a conversation between the US and the Iranians, they are direct or indirect, the IAEA is going to hang the reach of the IAEA. This is already their most important weapon,” he said.
Ben Tallao reported that using IAEA as a bargain chip not only enables Iran to play for time as it looks to re -establish its nuclear program, but also to sow partitions in the US by creating uncertainty.
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The picture released by Iran’s nuclear power organization on November 5, 2019 shows centrifuge machines in Natanz uranium enrichment facility in Central Iran. (Iran’s nuclear power organization through AP, file)
He said, “By reducing monitoring and cutting the reach of IAEA to these facilities and cutting the reach of IAEA, the government is trying to rely on the intelligence alone to the US,” he said. “And as you see from a lot of political debate on the assessment of war damage, relying on the intelligence alone without the sources inspecting the sites, inspecting the features, documenting the features, by documenting the female materials, not equally different conclusions, not by the same intelligence organizations or representatives.”
Finally, Iran is not going to give up its atomic ambitions, Ben Talebu warned that Tehran’s safety equipment completely changed during his war with Iraq in the 1980s.
“Everything that we encounter the government which is a security threat, then started – ballistic missile programs, drone programs, maritime aggression, international terrorist system and nuclear programs all originated in the 1980s,” he said. “By reviving this nuclear program, the Islamic Republic was not engaged in a science fair experiment.
A large banner depicting Iran’s superior leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, next to a ballistic missile in Baharistan Square in Tehran, Iran, on 26 September, 2024, on the edge of an exhibition, which symbolizes the 44th anniversary of the beginning of the Iran-Eraq war. (Hosin baris/Middle East Picture/AFP via Getty Image)
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“The Islamic Republic was demanding a final preventive,” continued by Ben Talelu. “It was looking for a final detention because it was a vision for this region and the world, and it was ready to keep the resources of its kingdom behind the foreign policy muscle and behind that vision.”
The Iranian regime’s expert warned that Iran’s 40-year “passion” is not going to change due to American military intervention to develop its geopolitical objectives with developing its nuclear program.