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Why does Iran always go against the United States?

At the meeting of the Board of Governors of the International Atomic Energy Agency, which started on March 2nd, the Iranian nuclear issue became one of the important topics. At the same time, the US Treasury Department announced on the 3rd that it would impose sanctions on 11 Iranian companies. This is the first time that the Obama administration has imposed economic sanctions on Iran.

the director general of the international atomic energy agency, ElBaradei, stressed on the 2nd that the IAEA hopes to find out some information about the Iranian nuclear issue as soon as possible, but in the past few months, "due to the lack of cooperation from Iran, this work has not made progress". Whether Iran's nuclear program has a military nature is still an unresolved issue. According to a report submitted by ElBaradei in February, by the end of January this year, Iran had accumulated more than 1, kilograms of low-purity enriched uranium. Analysts believe that as long as Iran continues to enrich this, it will theoretically acquire the nuclear materials needed to build a nuclear bomb. However, according to ElBaradei, these uranium materials in Iran are under the monitoring of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The US government seems to be inclined to accept the conclusion that Iran has no nuclear weapons program for the time being. In November 27, the US government issued an intelligence assessment, convinced that Iran has suspended its nuclear weapons program since the autumn of 23, and it is very unlikely that Iran will develop nuclear weapons at present. The new U.S. government has largely continued this view. Blair, the new national intelligence director of the United States, said in his annual threat assessment report to the Senate Intelligence Committee in February that Iran showed no signs of starting its nuclear weapons program. On March 1st, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates believed that Iran could not make nuclear weapons in the short term. Although Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the US Army, recently expressed his belief that Iran has enough fissile material to make a nuclear bomb, he pointed out that Iran has the theoretical ability to convert low-enriched uranium into nuclear materials for weapons.

In view of the ineffectiveness of the Bush administration's policy of confronting Iran without dialogue, the Obama administration is reviewing its current policy toward Iran, and successive senior government officials have expressed their willingness to negotiate directly with the Iranian government, saying that as long as Iran abandons its nuclear program, it is possible for both sides to resolve their hostility. The Iranian side believes that as long as the United States changes its fundamental strategy, it is possible to create conditions for direct dialogue between the two sides. Although both Iran and the United States regard the other side's policy change as a prerequisite for dialogue, it at least shows that both countries are willing to improve their relations through dialogue.

it may not be a big problem whether the United States and Iraq can talk about it, but it is hard to say whether the two sides can talk about it. The United States is willing to "face-to-face" with Iran in order to get Iran to give up its nuclear program, that is, the whole nuclear development with uranium enrichment as the core at present, but this is exactly what Iran resolutely refuses. Iran believes that it has confirmed that if it does not develop nuclear weapons, it should confidently develop civil nuclear energy. Iran obviously welcomes the U.S. government to change its policy and improve relations through direct dialogue, but it is hard for it to pay the price of abandoning its nuclear program.

From this point of view, the nuclear game between Iran and the United States has entered a new stage: as the new American administration changes its policy toward Iran, the possibility of starting a dialogue between the United States and Iran is increasing; However, with the rise of Iran's nuclear capability, it is difficult for Iran to abandon its nuclear program at this stage, and the challenges facing the US policy toward Iraq have also increased.