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Offline Chacko-T

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Re: Iranian scientist assassinated in Tehran
« Reply #450 on: July 23, 2011, 05:47:45 PM »
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Obviously it was made by the Israelis, so its time to hit back and chase down some Israeli official home&abroad and place a nice shining bullet in their head.

Offline nomad

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Re: Iranian scientist assassinated in Tehran
« Reply #451 on: July 23, 2011, 07:53:17 PM »
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It's no good guessing who it was . Iran must know for sure who this is . As it appears to be either the work of well organised group or country . Once Iran knows exactly who this is then choices on actions can be made .Is it any good to assume it was country X  and then retaliate and then find out that it was country Y ? Or maybe it is false flag by internal group trying to bring their Yank friend into war ? If it is found to be the action of a country then this is sufficient declaration of war . Iran has to choose if it want to go to war now or not ! If it want to go to war then information about the culprit should be made public , and if not then information should not be made public .Bullet proof vest can be worn by scientist  also , when outside .Also no mobile phone or photographic equipment in class or nuke site to allow facial identification .Also nuke worker can have self defence pistol and training to carry inside jacket .

I suggessted before about giving false ID to all people involved in nuke work . Similar to secret service agent ! Only one person knows true identity of this people . All other people do not know anything , names , addresses , even what people look like !
This can be achieved  by letting all student and teacher to wear mask in class and student not talk about personal info and all have numbers for ID . People only allowed into secret location of class by one individual . After class finished student leave one at a time and taken home ( secret location ) by driver . Student sit in windowless car . Student should be searched to make sure no GPS on them and building away from city so no land mark for ID . Only  driver know where to drop student . Student not dropped outside home but one mile radius away from home so driver do not know exactly where student live . Also driver deliver student to second location not school . All student taken to final location by only one driver of bus . Window of bus is black also . Driver of bus does not know nature of building and bus is armoured .

This type of precaution to be taken in all nuke sites and university . The cost is minimal . Hire of say hundred driver of special taxi and one bus driver and one identifier at gate . Alternatively all theoretical work can be done by post and papers only thing that travel . Practical class only reason for travel .Finger print recognition as well as face recognition can both be used to allow into buildings .RIP to this young lost talent of Iran .   :'( :'( :'( :'( :'(
« Last Edit: July 23, 2011, 08:24:09 PM by nomad »
Error is inconsistent with my prime function .

Offline aryana

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #452 on: July 23, 2011, 08:57:27 PM »
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Iranian nuclear scientist killed in Tehran-report


TEHRAN, July 23 | Sat Jul 23, 2011 10:48am EDT

(Reuters) - An Iranian nuclear scientist was killed in the Iranian capital Tehran on Saturday, Iran's student news agency ISNA reported without giving his name.

"An Iranian nuclear scientist was assassinated in front of his house today ... and his wife was also wounded," it said. No other details were immediately available.

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi, Writing by Maria Golovnina)


http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/07/23/iran-assassination-idUSLDE76M09Z20110723
« Last Edit: July 24, 2011, 04:39:40 AM by Catsoo »
Iran Khodro largest auto maker in larger middle east

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DWwHIPoQdw8&list=UUMF4vfECnuAPAfW0s6lMpyg&index=1&feature=plcp

<a href="http://www.quickiqtest.net" title="IQ Test"><img src="http://www.quickiqtest.net/graphic/badges/sf114.gif" width="150" height="75" alt="IQ Test" border="0"></a><br>QuickIQTest.net - <a title="Quick IQ Test" href="http://www.quickiqtest.net">IQ Test</a>

this is the fixed video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bn-T-5k0_4E&list=UUMF4vfECnuAPAfW0s6lMpyg&index=1

Online reza18

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Re: Iranian scientist assassinated in Tehran
« Reply #453 on: July 23, 2011, 09:56:11 PM »
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OK..this is not funny anymore.Iran MUST HIT BACK. I don't care where but there're plenty of their scientists/professors hanging out there in the open.Making a complaint to the UN doesn't cut it. There's no question who's behind these attacks.The US/Zionist state and their Persian Gulf Arab puppet have already stated they're pursuing a campaign of sabotage and assassinations against Iran. What more proof do they need?

The intel chief must be fired ASAP.Too many assassinations have taken place under his watch.
Having said that, the main aim of this attack is to strike fear into other scientist in that field so as to discourage them. This scientist didn't have top security clearance so I wouldn't think he was key to Iran's nuclear program. Their goal is to hit as many soft targets as possible to scare of the rest off. Their aim is to make no Middle Eastern country have the knowledge in the field of nuclear science. They're wrong. Sometimes i just wish Iran detonates a nuclear device to shut them up forever..Sad day,indeed!!!

Until their ambassadors, scholars and professionals begin to fall, they'll never stop.

Online reza18

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Re: Iranian scientist assassinated in Tehran
« Reply #454 on: July 23, 2011, 10:23:42 PM »
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Obviously the Iranian government's security services don't take the nuclear issue very seriously - No???. The US created an entire facility in Los Alamos and kept all of her nuclear scientists there 24/7 with everything they need..No one goes out and no outsider is allowed in..Why can't Iran have such a facility?

It turns out the guy that was assassinated wasn't the real nuclear physicist they meant to target. It was someone who shared a similar name, though also with links to Iran's military. Immediate culprits could be PJAK or MKO elements doing their master's(CIA/MI6/Mossad and assorted PGCC terror network) bidding.

Showing off flying rockets, however impressive they may be, don't mean a damn thing if the brains behind them can't be protected. I say this again, the Intel chief, Moslehi, must be FIRED ASAP.

Offline sarmad17

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Re: Iranian scientist assassinated in Tehran
« Reply #455 on: July 23, 2011, 10:40:32 PM »
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According to latests news it was a student ...
Watch this NEW VID---> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E3CTpRJ_d9Y


 "We have clearly declared that the nuclear bomb belongs to politically retarded governments who lack logic," Ahmadinejad

Offline Apollyon

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Israeli terrorist attack in Tehran, one dead and his wife injured
« Reply #456 on: July 24, 2011, 02:35:11 AM »
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-14263126

He was shot dead by some gunmen.
The fact that he was a pHD student in electronics is a clear signal this was a terrorist attack supported by Israel's government.
Israel is extremely afraid of Iran's rapidly reaching a degree of self-sufficient technological parity and industrialization. It continues to weaken their position to attack their neighbors and also flies in the face of their claims to be the sole provider of innovation in the region.
He was killed in front of his child's nursery. They tried to kill his wife but she is only wounded. They managed to get away on bikes.

The hope here is to scare educated and intelligent Iranians away from Iran. Specifically, the attack was designed to scare not only intelligent Iranians but their families. This cowardly attack is designed to discourage the most educated and capable of Iranians from raising families in Iran, to reduce Iran's intellectual climate.
"The sword is victorious over money, the master-will subdues again the plunderer-will. . . A power can be overthrown only by another power, not by a principle, and only one power that can confront money is left. Money is overthrown and abolished by blood. Life is alpha and omega . . . It is the fact of facts within the world-as-history."

- Oswald Spengler

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #457 on: July 24, 2011, 05:20:09 AM »
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Slain man was student, not nuclear scientist: Iran


Tehran: Iran said the victim of a deadly shooting on Saturday was a university student — not a physicist involved in the disputed nuclear program, as state media first reported.

A mix-up over the victim's name apparently led to the confusion, the English-language Press TV said.

Initial reports said a pair of gunmen firing from motorcycles killed 35-year-old Darioush Rezaei, a physics professor whose area of expertise was neutron transport. Several news reports, including by the semi-official ISNA news agency, linked him to the country's nuclear program.

But an investigation later determined the slain man was Darioush Rezaeinejad, an electronics student at Khajeh Nasir University in Tehran.

The initial reports raised concerns because the attack appeared similar to other recent assassinations of scientists that Tehran blamed on the US and Israel.

The US and Israel and some of their allies accuse Iran of seeking to develop a nuclear weapons capability under the cover of its civilian atomic energy program.

Iran's missile program and its launch of satellites have raised fears it is also marching toward a capability to deliver a nuclear warhead across continents.

Iran denies the accusations and says its atomic program has entirely peaceful aims.

Despite the UN and other sanctions, Iran has steadily moved ahead with its uranium enrichment work, the central aspect of its nuclear program and the process that is of deepest concern to the West because it can be used both to produce reactor fuel and material for nuclear warheads.

Iran insists it is only after reactor fuel, but the UN's nuclear watchdog agency has accused Iran of stalling its investigation into the work for years.

In November, a pair of back-to-back bomb attacks in different parts of the capital killed one nuclear scientist and wounded another. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad blamed the US and Israel.

In those attacks, assailants on motorcycles attached magnetized bombs to the cars of two scientists as they drove to work. They detonated seconds later.

The man who survived that attack, Fereidoun Abbasi, is on a list of figures suspected of links to secret nuclear activities in a 2007 UN sanctions resolution, which put a travel ban and asset freeze on those listed.

Abbasi has since been named one of Iran's vice presidents and head of its nuclear agency.

At least two other Iranian nuclear scientists have been killed in recent years.

Besides the attacks on scientists, Iran has faced other setbacks in its nuclear work that it said were the result of foreign plots, including a mysterious computer worm that forced a temporary shutdown of Iran's main enrichment plant in the central town of Natanz last year.

Iran's foreign minister said earlier this month that his country was ready to cooperate more closely with the UN's International Atomic Energy Agency but only if it ends its investigation into allegations that Tehran has secretly worked on a nuclear weapons program — a condition rejected by the head of the UN nuclear watchdog.

Iran argues it has cooperated and answered all questions mandated by the plan governing the agency's probe.

http://zeenews.india.com/news/world/slain-man-was-student-not-nuclear-scientist-iran_721737.html

Offline Apollyon

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #458 on: July 24, 2011, 07:04:26 AM »
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I'm not sure what to believe. Seeing as how the news initially came from Iran, the authorities would know best.
Regardless, I would not blame official sources for covering up such a heinous act of terrorism, to help keep peace and unity in Iran.
Even if it was the case that in this particular example the victim wasn't a scientist, I'm still enraged that Israel is clearly murdering valuable, and more importantly innocent, Iranians, or paying goons to do their dirty work. These people are Iran's future. Even one is too many.

Offline maiser

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #459 on: July 24, 2011, 02:55:16 PM »
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Guys these are all made to strike fear into the Establishment of scientists and i say it again: The goal is to make the not-so-hardy people in this establishment fearful of their life and families, so they can easily switch sides for promise of better life and all that crap elsewhere when such things happen. But since they can only get at students and so on, IRI can counter-propagate these attacks as petty cheap attacks that have no real degrading value on Iranian science and progress. This is until Iran can map out the roots of this terror cell that is doing these things. But until then some weak-willed scientists might feel insecure enough to consider changing sides over it. Wars like these comes at a price you know....

Offline ZamZam

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #460 on: July 24, 2011, 07:24:27 PM »
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is anyone in iranian government corrupt to be giving info to foreign enemies?

Is this why ahmadi was sacking officials without warning... was he giving a hint?

Offline nomad

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #461 on: July 25, 2011, 01:10:16 AM »
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Additional security measure can help situation a lot .You have to account for all the possibility . I used to think that putting all important scientist in secure compound was best solution , but what if enemy just use fighter jet or missile and target all of them ? Like putting all your eggs in one basket . So best to keep them seperate . But they must think about changing name again ( and this time not tell IAEA ) and just allow interview of IAEA with masked person and person only has number .The address of scientist also changed again must be this time . Plus other thing I said before . :think:

The identification of workers by IAEA , in private or in situ , can be done by finger print identification and not face identification . In this way no one can describe a face and all worker are positively identified .
« Last Edit: July 25, 2011, 08:44:19 AM by nomad »

Offline Catsoo

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #462 on: August 22, 2011, 01:45:04 AM »
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Laser enrichment increases nuclear terror threat

Iran had already succeeded in this technology years ago

Scientists have long sought easier ways to make the costly material known as enriched uranium — the fuel of nuclear reactors and bombs, now produced only in giant industrial plants. One idea, a half-century old, has been to do it with nothing more substantial than lasers and their rays
of concentrated light. This futuristic approach has always proved too expensive and difficult for anything but laboratory experimentation.

Until now. In a little-known effort, General Electric has successfully tested laser enrichment for two years and is seeking federal permission to build a $1 billion plant that would make reactor fuel by the tonne.

That might be good news for the nuclear industry. But critics fear that if the work succeeds, rogue states and terrorists could make bomb fuel in much smaller plants that are difficult to detect. Iran has already succeeded with laser enrichment in the lab, and nuclear experts worry that G.E.’s accomplishment might inspire Tehran to build a plant easily hidden from the world’s eyes. Backers of the laser plan call those fears unwarranted and praise the technology as a windfall for a world increasingly leery of fossil fuels that produce greenhouse gases.

But critics want a detailed risk assessment. Recently, they petitioned Washington for a formal evaluation of whether the laser initiative could backfire and speed the global spread of nuclear arms. “We’re on the verge of a new route to the bomb,” said Frank Hippel, a nuclear physicist who advised Bill Clinton.

New methods of enrichment are considered potentially dangerous because they can simplify the hardest part of building a bomb — obtaining the fuel.

G.E., one of the world’s largest companies, says its initial success began in 2009 at a facility just north of Wilmington, N.C., that is jointly owned with Hitachi.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Laser-enrichment-increases-nuclear-terror-threat/Article1-735919.aspx

Offline Liverpool Forever

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #463 on: August 24, 2011, 02:33:19 PM »
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Can Iran have nuclear bomb in two or three years?
I think,Yes.
When Georgia is Behind us

Offline berislac

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Re: Iran Nuclear Energy
« Reply #464 on: September 03, 2011, 01:20:50 PM »
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By Paul-Anton Krüger
SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG/Worldcrunch

North Korea has markedly extended its arms cooperation with Iran since the start of 2011, according to information received by Süddeutsche Zeitung from Western secret service sources.

Pyongyang passed on to the Ministry of Defense in Tehran a highly specialized computer program that simulates neutron flows, say the sources. Such information is vital both for the construction of reactors, as well as the development of nuclear warheads. In addition, North Korean scientists are supposed to have taught their Iranian counterparts how to use the software. This could give Iran crucial know-how for making nuclear weapons.

The program is called MCNPX 2.6.0, which is an abbreviation of Monte Carlo N-Particle Extended, and it was developed by the US atomic weapons laboratory at Los Alamos. It is used by many Western universities and research institutes, mostly for numerous non-military purposes. However it is subject to rigorous export controls since it can also be used to develop atomic weaponry. Just how North Korea acquired the software is unclear.

The deal with Iran may be part of a broader cooperation for which Iran may have shelled out $100 million. Experts unanimously agree that this amount of money would be too high for just the program and training. North Korea has been shifting arms technology for years, mainly missiles, to countries like Iran in return for hard currencies. The CIA believes that North Korea helped Syria build a secret nuclear reactor to produce plutonium that was bombarded by the Israeli air force in 2007.

With the MCNPX 2.6.0 software, scientists can work out self-sustaining chain reactions that are necessary to create nuclear explosions. The simulations would make it possible for Iranian scientists to figure out with a high level of precision if a nuclear bomb would explode, assuming that all the mechanical components were functioning properly. According to Süddeutsche Zeitung’s sources, North Korea also delivered to the Iranians a so-called nuclear data library -- data banks of primary importance to ensure the exactitude of the simulations. Data garnered from North Korea’s own experiments is thought to be included in that library.


After research and development phases, North Korea tested nuclear warheads in October 2006 and then again in May 2009. Official documents show that the US also conducted experiments with nuclear material. The data was used for simulations that can further develop an existing arsenal of nuclear weapons and test reliability; the US stopped atomic testing in 1992.

In mid-February 2011, according to the secret service sources, a North Korean delegation went to Iran to teach a group of some 20 people working in the Ministry of Defense how to use the program. This group was linked to several dozen Iranian scientists working on the development of a nuclear warhead. The training is supposed to have taken place over a period of around three months at a secret Revolutionary Guard location.

Cash payments
According to the same sources, three of the North Korean experts went to Tehran to work at the Second Academy of Natural Sciences in Pyongyang, which is involved in the development of missiles and atomic weapons, and is thus under US sanction. Two other scientists were said to hold high positions at the Yongbyon Nuclear Scientific Research Center, which lies at the heart of North Korea’s nuclear program. The delegation is said to have taken part of the Iranian payment back to Pyongyang, in cash. Two of the North Koreans were expected to return to Iran in August, possibly to help Iranian scientists with concrete simulations.

This new information hardens suspicions that Iran is continuing to develop atomic weapons although, according to an internal 2008 International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) document, the country already possesses the information required to build a functioning warhead. The IAEA declined to comment on this and referred the Süddeutsche Zeitung to the latest report by its Director General, Yukiya Amano, which came out in May. In the report, Amano listed seven points detailing suspicious activities that could point to a "possible military dimension" to the Iranian nuclear program. At a meeting of the IAEA governing council in June, Amano stated off the record that his agency had indications that the questionable activities had been on-going “until recently.”

Both the European and American secret services are operating on the assumption that Iran is not currently running an active program to develop nuclear weapons. Most experts and members of the secret services believe that the Iranians have not yet made a political decision to do so – there are apparently diverging views within the Iranian government on the subject. At the very least, however, the Iranian government is trying to assemble the various prerequisites so that in case of emergency, it could build nuclear weapons within a short period of time. In the estimate of a majority of Europe‘s secret services, Iran carried on research and development work for nuclear weapons after 2003. In 2007, the US intelligence community issued a much-disputed report to the effect that Iran had ended an active nuclear weapons program in 2003.

Olli Heinonen, a nuclear proliferation expert at Harvard University and former chief inspector with the IAEA, told the Süddeutsche Zeitung that if Iran really is working on designs for nuclear weapons then cooperation with North Korea would be useful -- although the North Korean program is plutonium-based while Iran’s has up until now apparently been exclusively uranium-based. "Even if they have their own software and parameters, it’s always useful to compare notes," says Heinonen. In its universities, Pyongyang has "put a lot of effort into the simulation and calculation of neutron flows in warheads."

Iran and North Korea have cooperated closely on the development and construction of ballistic missiles, says Heinonen. "So it would be logical for them to discuss what you pack into the head of the missile and to work together on that front, too." Even if Iran already has plans for a functioning warhead, or may even have tested components, additional simulations are useful. "They’re clearly running an Iranian Manhattan Project," Heinonen added, referring to the US nuclear weapons program during World War II, “and want to improve their know-how.”

To produce a warhead, the goal would be “to keep making design improvements so that it’s as small and reliable as possible,” he explained. From that standpoint, collaboration with North Korea makes “perfect sense.”

Online impera

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Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #465 on: September 04, 2011, 09:42:35 AM »
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Quote
The Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) has announced that the country's Bushehr nuclear power plant has been connected to the national power grid with a capacity of nearly 60 megawatts.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/197332.html

For output nuclear power plant at full power (in this case 1,000 megawatts) is usually required for several months.

Offline Gigo

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #466 on: September 05, 2011, 01:03:09 AM »
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Yes.
Read the news this morning..

Offline parsipride

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #467 on: September 05, 2011, 02:43:03 AM »
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Comments from members that have extensive knowledge is welcome does this mean we finally got past  the hurdles
And that it will be full capacity this time or is it just some hot air and propaganda ..

Offline Izirbat

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #468 on: September 05, 2011, 03:39:03 AM »
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I actually heard that in CNN as well. what is intresting is that they said Iran is the first ME country to generate Electricity from Nuclear power.
I thought that izrael's .dimona was also used for electricity as well, so either 1) they don't want to mention Izrael at all in the same sentance as Nuclear tech or 2) Izrael does not use Nuclear power (just bombs).
 
Either case though the fact that they have mentioned it in a pro-Zionist media shows it is not hot air (as Parsipride says).
 
Congrats to all.

Update:
I just did some reseach and as late as March 2010 Izrael had pronanced that they want to use Nuclear energy for power. so I guess they don't have Nuclear energy.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8558160.stm
« Last Edit: September 05, 2011, 03:43:49 AM by Izirbat »
There are times like these where the resolve of a Nation is shown clearly to the world. Oh this great Nation of Iran together with its proud citizens showed the world that when the Silent Majority gets rattled the world better pay attention:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ls4I37lQrw&feature=player_embedded#at=42  2011

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HbYqckFvUJI&feature=player_embedded   2010

=======================================
This brings back sooooo much memory and tears to my eyes.
http://www.iranclip.com/player/169

Offline parsipride

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #469 on: September 05, 2011, 07:26:58 AM »
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Izirbat
I did not say or dismiss it as hot air , Presstv and some official have exaggerated in the past
I am not knowledgeable or have any credentials to substantiate or dismiss it that is why I asked for information
Lastly it is a great great accomplishment and source of pride for Iran and all Iranians in the face of all the back stabbing and
Sabotage

Offline Kabbalah

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #470 on: September 06, 2011, 03:23:36 PM »
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60 MW is ridiculous low output
The same amount of energy produces a middle hydro power plant  ;)
To watch the courageous Afghan freedom fighters battle modern arsenals with simple hand held weapons is a inspiration to those who love freedom. Their courage teaches us a great lesson-- that there are things in this world worth defending !!!

(Ronald Reagan. March 21, 1983.)

Offline Rakhsh786

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #471 on: September 08, 2011, 06:02:52 AM »
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Quote
60 MW is ridiculous low output
The same amount of energy produces a middle hydro power plant  ;)

Bushehr nuclear power plant's output is 1000 MW, not 60 MW.

Offline MO_SOBOH

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #472 on: September 08, 2011, 08:20:30 AM »
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I actually heard that in CNN as well. what is intresting is that they said Iran is the first ME country to generate Electricity from Nuclear power.
I thought that izrael's .dimona was also used for electricity as well, so either 1) they don't want to mention Izrael at all in the same sentance as Nuclear tech or 2) Izrael does not use Nuclear power (just bombs).
 
Either case though the fact that they have mentioned it in a pro-Zionist media shows it is not hot air (as Parsipride says).
 
Congrats to all.

Update:
I just did some reseach and as late as March 2010 Izrael had pronanced that they want to use Nuclear energy for power. so I guess they don't have Nuclear energy.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8558160.stm

I didnt know that!  :lol:
Im Sunni by mind, Shia by Heart, and Muslim by soul! La Ellaha Ela Allah!

Online IronHorse110

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #473 on: September 08, 2011, 11:57:08 AM »
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Bushehr nuclear power plant's output is 1000 MW, not 60 MW.


I think it has capacity for 5 reactors, but only 3 will become operational with 1000MW of energy.
Ya Ali, molla Ali (as)

"There is no wealth like knowledge, no poverty like ignorance" - Imam Ali (as)

"''melate ma neshan dade'ast ke be hadaf haye khod momen, va dar rahe on, ta nesar'e jaan eestade'ast.. chenin melati, az america va az hiiich ghodrati nemitars'ad, va be yaari'e khoda neshan khahad daad ke pirooz az on' e hagh, va momenan be hagh ast!"

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Offline aryana

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Re: Iran's Bushehr plant joins national grid
« Reply #474 on: September 08, 2011, 02:17:43 PM »
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I think it has capacity for 5 reactors, but only 3 will become operational with 1000MW of energy.
but only one reactor is intalled and contracted.

 

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