By not allowing inspectors to enter sites ,the Ayatollahs give one more reason to bomb their country.
It should also make some nations standing idly by.....think that maybe they ought to take part in and enforce sanctions.
Sanctions might keep the Iranian program in the light of day. Not forgotten. Could make a difference...
And when we bomb......I'd hit that Parchin site so friggin' hard they wouldn't find any pieces.![]()
Lets start slow. Just have drones casually pop chaff pods over quite a few power plants (or power distribution hubs).
No body dies. We lose a cheap drone or two.... and they spend a week trying to get the power back on.
We'll call it 'negotiating'.
I agree with MUSHROOM123, a limited attack on their facilities only is not enough because Iran will throw everything it has (ground troops, tanks, fighters etc) at Israel once the first bomb lands on its soil, which would call for further air strikes. Now there's always the chance bombing their sites would scare them ****less and make them get their act together, let them know the West means business.
Only problem there is now a limited amount of time before Iran moves to move their nuclear program to hardened sites esp with the centrifuge enrichment program... any attack will likely take place before Iran starts transferring the centrifuges to the underground sites that have recently been build..
Its likely that after Iran has ensured that their centrifuges are protected from being taken out in a single strike that they will move from passive warhead research that they went to after the first explosive tests.
I put passive research as just research and study on the fields without conducting more active testing since the first rounds they did. Once they have secured their enrichment program so that its harder to take out they will get back into the active testing of explosives and triggers once they get that down they will move to quickly push through the weapon grade enrichment..
And how will Iran get its tanks and troops to Israel? they dont share a land boarder and most countries in the region are just as upset and worried about Iran's nuclear program and are not likely to allow Iran to just sent troops and tanks through their country.