News Link • Iran
Iran's Nuclear Deception: The World Must Stop Playing Along
• https://www.thegatewaypundit.com, By Ali SafaviOnce again, both sides agreed to meet again—continuing a familiar cycle that has defined more than two decades of negotiations between the Iranian regime and its foreign interlocutors. But beyond the diplomatic theater lies a deeper, more troubling reality: the Iranian regime's long and deliberate pattern of lies—not only about its nuclear ambitions but also about its repeated violations of commitments made during negotiations with Europe and under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).
Let's speak plainly.
For over thirty years, the Iranian regime has operated on three pillars: denial, deception, and duplicity. This isn't just about centrifuges and uranium enrichment. It's about a regime that has weaponized dishonesty as a strategic tool—one it uses not only to advance its nuclear program but to manipulate the international community.
While much of the global discourse has rightly focused on the technical and strategic threats posed by Tehran's nuclear ambitions, it's time to spotlight the regime's consistent and calculated dishonesty. Because this isn't just a nuclear issue—it's a credibility crisis.
Since the early 2000s, Iran has used negotiations not to resolve tensions, but to buy time. Time to enrich uranium. Time to build secret facilities. Time to advance a nuclear weapons program under the cover of diplomacy.
The record is damning.
In 2003, the regime signed the Tehran Declaration. In 2004, the Paris Agreement. In 2005, it claimed to suspend enrichment. But behind the scenes, it was doing the opposite—hiding centrifuges, expanding covert operations, and building underground sites. These violations weren't uncovered by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) or Western intelligence. They were exposed by the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) and the Iranian resistance movement.
This is not speculation. It's documented fact.
Hassan Rouhani, the regime's former president and chief nuclear negotiator, admitted in his memoir that negotiations were used to buy time. While Europe negotiated in good faith, the regime rushed to complete key facilities like the Isfahan uranium conversion plant. These so-called "suspensions" were never genuine. They were tactical pauses—designed to dodge sanctions and military pressure while quietly advancing nuclear infrastructure.
Then came the JCPOA in 2015—a deal hailed as a diplomatic breakthrough. But even then, Tehran was already preparing to cheat. In a 2019 interview, Ali Akbar Salehi, head of the regime's Atomic Energy Organization, revealed that Iran had secretly acquired replacement tubes for the Arak reactor before it was supposedly disabled. He admitted the regime photoshopped images of the cement-filled reactor to fool the world. This wasn't just deception—it was premeditated fraud.




