• U.N. says Iran's enrichment stopped for unknown reasons
    5 replies, posted
[IMG]http://d.yimg.com/a/p/rids/20101123/i/r134717906.jpg?x=400&y=256&q=85&sig=SouGZeGPxP2V1C.gV9ka1Q--[/IMG] Dancers perform during an event to mark Iran's National Day of Nuclear Technology in Tehran, April 8, 2008 [quote=Associated Press]VIENNA – Nuclear inspectors monitoring Iran found the country's enrichment program temporarily shut down a week ago, the International Atomic Energy Agency reported Tuesday, reflecting a possible setback for the cornerstone of the country's nuclear activities and source of national pride. The U.N. nuclear monitor offered no reason for the Nov. 16 stoppage witnessed by IAEA staff and described in its latest report on Iran. The inspectors were on site at the Natanz enrichment plant in central Iran for only one or two hours, and it was unclear whether the shutdown lasted just hours, days, or longer. A senior diplomat familiar with the agency's overview of Tehran's atomic activities said the Iranians gave IAEA inspectors no time frame or explanation. The diplomat said he had known of only "two or three" such interruptions since monitoring of large scale enrichment Natanz began more than three years ago. In one case, he said, the Iranians had to change a tank containing the uranium gas fed into centrifuges — a procedure no longer necessary because cascades, or centrifuge configurations used to enrich, now had multiple tanks. The diplomat — who asked for anonymity because the agency report is confidential — said, however, that technical problems were likely the reason for the most recent interruption. Diplomats who first told The Associated Press of the interruption on Monday, also could not say what caused it. But some speculation focused on the Stuxnet worm, the computer virus thought to be aimed at Iran's nuclear program, which experts last week identified as being calibrated to destroy centrifuges by sending them spinning out of control. No one has claimed to be behind Stuxnet, but some analysts have speculated it originated in Israel. Iran denied that Stuxnet had succeeded in damaging its nuclear program. The country's nuclear chief, Vice President Ali Akbar Salehi, on Tuesday accused the West of being behind a failed sabotage attempt and said details about the virus became known only after Iran's "enemies failed to achieve their goals." [/quote] [IMG]http://gyazo.com/34c4a17b8a4014d8e205fdcf19eb4e98.png[/IMG] [img]http://gyazo.com/87cf659b01a1840142366fe8d11af9bc.png[/img] [IMG]http://gyazo.com/46c78f235ca0d4ef3527071b7c7d987d.png[/IMG] [IMG]http://gyazo.com/590f3a817b028fbc9e69d0b8ac159907.png[/IMG] Pretty much sums up the comments and idiocy of the Yahoo! community.
People who comment Yahoo news are stupid.
Haha at the 3rd comment. Even Yahoo has trolls.
[QUOTE=Thom12255;26248839]Haha at the 3rd comment. Even Yahoo has trolls.[/QUOTE] The replies are even better. [editline]23rd November 2010[/editline] Honestly I think sometimes that people sit at their computers masturbating because of the drama stirred up from the flame wars that they start.
[QUOTE=faze;26248872]The replies are even better. [editline]23rd November 2010[/editline] Honestly I think sometimes that people sit at their computers masturbating because of the drama stirred up from the flame wars that they start.[/QUOTE] Good sir I must inform you I am offended, these are my people you are discussing I would quite like you to cease your actions. :colbert:
[QUOTE=faze;26248872]The replies are even better. [editline]23rd November 2010[/editline] [B] Honestly I think sometimes that people sit at their computers masturbating because of the drama stirred up from the flame wars that they start[/B].[/QUOTE] Ahem. Trolls, I...
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