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Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shaul Mofaz (file photo)
(AFP)
Iran: Israel's Deputy Prime Minister Says Attack Looks 'Unavoidable'
Shaul Mofaz, Israel's transport minister and deputy prime minister, has told an Israeli newspaper that an attack on Iran looks "unavoidable" because of the apparent failure of UN sanctions to prevent Tehran from developing nuclear weapons. more
[ June 2008 ]
U.S.: Obama Tells Pro-Israeli Lobby He'll Do 'Everything' To Eliminate Iranian Threat
[ May 2008 ]
Iran: U.S. Says IAEA Report Highlights Tehran's Failure To Disclose Nuclear Activities
Iran: Tehran Set To Reject Nuclear Incentives Offer By World Powers
[ April 2008 ]
Azerbaijan: Nuclear Cargo For Iran Remains Stuck At Border
Iran: Beijing, In Diplomatic Gamble, Hosts Nuclear Talks
[ March 2008 ]
Iran/U.S.: President Bush Talks To Radio Farda
U.S./Iran: Bush Challenges Tehran, Offers 'Way Forward' In Nuclear Dispute
Iran: Russia Blocks New IAEA Resolution Against Tehran
[ February 2008 ]
U.S.: Intelligence Chief Assesses Security Threats From Afghanistan, Iran, Pakistan
Iran: Tehran Dismisses Alleged Evidence Of Secret Nuclear Program
Iran: U.S. Says IAEA Report Bolsters Case For Fresh Sanctions
Iran: Dissidents See Dark Legacy Of 'Glorious Revolution'
[ January 2008 ]
Iran: Tehran Under Pressure Ahead Of UN Sanctions Talks
Kyrgyzstan: IAEA Seeks Answers To Radioactive Seizure

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Introduction:
What is the explanation for what international negotiators have called Iran's "documented record of concealment and deception" about its nuclear program? That is the question that Iran has posed the world and its nuclear watchdog, the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), with increasing urgency since it began work on its first nuclear reactor in 2002. Since then, Iran has conceded the existence of nuclear fuel plants and, in January 2006, taken the crisis to a new level by ending its voluntary, two-year suspension of its uranium-enrichment program. Is this a legitimate part of Iran's efforts to develop a civilian nuclear-energy capacity? Or is the research intended to provide Iran's scientists with the expertise needed for a military nuclear program? Is a country that signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in 1968 aiming to acquire nuclear weapons?

Iran's half-hearted cooperation with the IAEA is fueling a confrontation that could lead to the United Nations' supreme body, the Security Council, imposing sanctions -- and increase the possibility of military action. Behind the immediate crisis lurks the fear that nuclear weapons will proliferate, in particular in the Middle East, an already combustible region.

This special RFE/RL page dedicated to Iran's nuclear program traces the events as they happened and outlines the arguments, the politics, and the concerns that the program has generated.

An annotated timeline of the standoff over Iran's nuclear program.
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