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Iran bans two IAEA inspectors | Iran has banned two UN nuclear inspectors from entering the country, risking further anger from the West over its nuclear program. The Telegraph quoted Ali Akbar Salehi,
head of Iran 's Atomic Energy Organization, as saying that the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) had been informed of the decision, but did not identify the
names of the inspectors being banned. Iran said the inspectors were banned because
they disclosed to the media the contents of a "false" report on the country's
disputed nuclear program before the UN nuclear watchdog reviewed it.
In Washington, meanwhile, US Defense Secretary Robert Gates claimed iran is becoming a
military dictatorship, with religious leaders being sidelined. Suggesting that Tehran
may bend because of the pressure of the UN sanctions, Gates said:"What we've seen
is a change in the nature of the regime in Tehran over the past 18 months or so."
Fox News Sunday and the Washington Times quoted Gates as further saying: "You
have a much narrower-based government in Tehran now. Many of the religious figures
are being set aside." He claimed that Iran 's supreme leader, Grand Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, "is leaning on a smaller and smaller group of advisers." "There's
no doubt that Iran 's military and security forces are playing an active role
in running the regime," added a U.S. official familiar with assessments on Iran
. "Religious leaders like Khamenei continue to make key decisions and rely on
the vast security apparatus to carry them out," he said. Since Iran 's 2005 presidential
election, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) has expanded its control
over the national economy. Iran 's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a former IRGC
officer, has appointed many retired IRGC officers to posts in Iran 's government
bureaucracy. The IRGC has also begun to control more oil contracts and asserted
itself in Iran 's efforts to obtain nuclear technology. "I think you have a reasonable
chance of getting the Iranian regime finally to come to their senses and realize
their security is probably more endangered by going forward than by stopping it,"
Gates said of Tehran's nuclear program. |
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