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					Originally Posted by adav8s28  From your link dated Aug 2017. Paragraph #3 
Trump has argued that Iran is violating the agreement struck under President Obama, although he has offered no evidence to support his claim and his administration has twice certified to Congress that Iran is in compliance.
 
Futher down in same link: The IAEA has access to the Parchin plant. 
 
Iran denied inspectors access to Parchin for years, then finally granted access in 2015 after undertaking extensive construction work at the site, according to satellite imagery studied by the IAEA. 
 
Trumps own adminstration has TWICE certified to Congress that Iran is in compliance. What does compliance mean? It means Iran is NOT enriching Uranium past a 3.67% concentration of U-235 and all 5000 of the high-speed centrifuges ARE turned OFF.   | 
	
 
cherry picking your points? you seem to have skipped a few .. 
"Inspectors with the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United  Nations organization tasked with monitoring Iran’s nuclear facilities,  have not requested access to military sites since the agreement went  into effect, according to experts monitoring the process."
let's see what the full article says ..
                                                                                                                                       By Shashank Bengali, Ramin Mostaghim                                             
                                                  Aug. 30, 2017 11:43 AM
     
                                                                                                                                                                 Reporting from Tehran — 
              As the  Trump administration calls for stricter monitoring of the Iranian  nuclear agreement, officials in Iran insist they are complying with its  terms and will not allow international inspectors into military sites.
Iran,  which agreed in 2015 to grant inspectors broad access to  nuclear-related facilities in exchange for the removal of severe  economic sanctions, accuses President Trump of trying to sabotage what  he has called the United States’ “worst deal.”
Trump has argued  that Iran is violating the agreement struck under President Obama,  although he has offered no evidence to support his claim and his  administration has twice 
certified to Congress that Iran is in compliance.
But  Trump administration officials looking for a way to increase pressure  on Iran have begun to zero in on military facilities that they say could  be used for nuclear-related activities barred under the agreement.
 Inspectors with the International Atomic Energy Agency, the United  Nations organization tasked with monitoring Iran’s nuclear facilities,  have not requested access to military sites since the agreement went  into effect, according to experts monitoring the process.
The  IAEA, in its most recent report in June, said Iran was meeting its  obligations under the pact. Experts say inspectors rely on intelligence  reports and other information to determine whether sites they have not  visited are being used for potentially illicit purposes.
Last  week, Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, took the  administration’s concerns to IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano in  Vienna. Haley said the inspectors’ reports “can only be as good as the  access Iran grants to any facility the IAEA suspects of having a nuclear  role,” according to a U.S. summary of the meeting.
Iranian  officials this week blasted Haley’s comments, accusing the U.S. of  fomenting a confrontation in order to withdraw from the deal.
 “Americans will not be allowed to inspect the military bases,” said  Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, a member of Iran’s nuclear implementation  committee, according to state television.
Mohammad Nabi Habibi,secretary-general  of the Islamic Coalition Party, which is close to Iranian Supreme  Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said Iran had agreed to detailed  inspections and not denied inspectors access to any facility.
“Why  do the Americans want more?” Habibi said in an interview with the  semi-official ILNA news agency. “I think the Americans are preparing to  break up [the nuclear deal].”
For many Iranians — including those  who support the nuclear deal — keeping inspectors out of military  facilities is a point of national pride.
“It’s our country, and  any country’s defense systems should be off-limits to international  inspections,” said Susan Saderi, a 44-year-old newspaper employee in  Tehran. “I’d be unhappy if the government allowed inspections, even  secretly.”
Jaafari Mohammadi, a middle-aged motorcycle  deliveryman, said access to the Parchin military complex outside Tehran  was “a red line” for Iranians.
“We cannot compromise on our military sites,” Mohammadi said. “It’s our honor, or our wife — we cannot give access to others.”
Iran  has argued that inspections of military sites would violate national  sovereignty, although the 2015 deal it signed with the United States and  five other world powers allows inspectors to gain limited access to any  site where illicit nuclear activity is suspected.
 There is a growing debate among experts over whether inspectors  should demand access to military sites, including those that in the past  were suspected of being linked to nuclear-related activities.
Last  week, the Institute for Science and International Security, a group of  leading scientists that has argued for stricter monitoring of the Iran  deal, released 
a report  calling on the United States and other parties to the nuclear deal to  require the IAEA to request access to the Parchin facility. The group  believes Iran might have used the facility to conduct tests to see how  certain materials react under high pressure, conditions similar to a  nuclear explosion.
Iran denied inspectors access to Parchin for  years, then finally granted access in 2015 after undertaking extensive  construction work at the site, according to satellite imagery studied by  the IAEA. Before the nuclear deal was approved, the IAEA agreed to  accept limited access to Parchin in the future and to allow Iranian  personnel — not the agency’s own inspectors — to collect environmental  samples at the facility for testing.
“The lack of ongoing access  to Parchin calls into question the adequacy of the verification of the  [nuclear deal] and the deal’s long-term utility to deter Iran from  obtaining nuclear weapons,” the report said.
Mark Fitzpatrick,  head of the nuclear policy program of the International Institute for  Strategic Studies, said that nuclear verification programs rely greatly  on cooperation from the host country and that IAEA inspectors would be  reluctant to demand access to facilities without evidence of anomalies.
“Right  now, if access [to military sites] were granted, it would look like  Iran is buckling under pressure, and that’s not something this  government is going to want its people to think,” Fitzpatrick said.  “It’s foolhardy of critics of the deal to demand IAEA access which will  only result in a standoff — unless that’s their real purpose.”
Other  analysts, however, believe Iran would be willing to compromise to avoid  having the U.S. impose additional restrictions on its struggling  economy. President 
Hassan Rouhani’s government says  the lifting of sanctions after the nuclear deal has boosted foreign oil  sales and helped control inflation, although unemployment remains  extremely high.
Nader Karimi Juni, an independent analyst, said  Iranian officials want to avoid a confrontation with Trump and would  probably be willing to grant limited access to Parchin and other sites  to preserve the nuclear deal.
 “Trump’s rhetoric is not taken seriously even inside the U.S., and  Iran has proven to be flexible and ready to negotiate when pressure  flares up,” Juni said.
 “I think Iran may likely negotiate and give  access to some military sites under some conditions, and the tensions  will let up. But if the rhetoric escalates … then any military  confrontation is possible because of a blunder by either side.”
See what happens when you read all of the article? seems to show a different point of view than yours, doesn't it?