I don't know if that's a bubble burster.
I would assume that the suspected nuclear sites have been under constant satellite surveillance for years. If the report is on increased activity at that site preceding an IAEA visit, there is one obvious conclusion to draw. It is possible that the increased activity is unrelated but considering the continued suspicious nature of Iran's dealings and repeated stonewalling, it is reasonable to be concerned. Iran could easily allow full inspections if they wanted to remove suspicion.
You're going to have to do me a favour. Please
highlight the part of the report that says anything about increased activity (the way you did "
without enriching uranium" in that other thread where some stupid sap didn't understand the difference between capactiy and consumption, remember?)
There's nothing about
increased activity, is there?
I think Paul Brannan explained it very clearly: “There’s no way to know whether or not the activity you see in a particular satellite image is cleansing or just regular work,” he said. “They build a lot of stuff. There’s a lot of activity there — always.”
Its a major military research base - theres lots of crap going on. They develop and test all sorts of munitions, explosives, fuels, etc that may require a containment chamber. They may have tested some nuclear components there, or maybe not (but probably yes, 8-ish years ago). But just because some trucks are carting around dirt, thats NOT the "smoking gun" everyone wants it to be. Big thick earthen berms are pretty good backstops at artillery ranges, and Parchin IS a test range. Having earthmoving equipment isn't all that unusual.
Every little bit of media reporting gets a bunch of people jumping around claiming it as proof of their position, whether they are diehard believers or disbelievers of an active Iran nuclear weapons program. And there's TONS of stuff that very VERY strongly points to the near-recent previous existence of that program, but there's just not enough evidence of sufficient quantity or quality of a currently active program to justify pulling the trigger at this time...............that doesn't mean that we'll be waiting until the very last possible second, or even miss that mark altogether. Its just too early to take any further steps beyond what is currently being applied.
If you have some strong, solid evidence that can't point to any other alternative than the active & current development of Iranian nukes, you might want to share them with your local authorities. If the covert means of monitoring Iranian progress have thus far failed to find anything conclusive, and based on Obama's stance on the matter (and dudes like Dagan, and Pardo, and Halevy), they haven't, then the overt efforts are also going to fall short........so either Iran isn't currently developing nukes, or they are soooo well concealed that the IAEA inspectors won't even know what sites they should be demanding to inspect. While Iran is hoping to avoid western escalation, they're not too interested in easing western suspicion. Remember, we need to apply our legal fundamentals to our actions, which means we need to prove their guilt, not that they need to prove their innocence.