Connect with us

Advertisement

381 Views

Trump Fears Iran could transfer its nuclear weapons to Venezuela to counter the US in Middle East

Iran Venezuela nuclear deal, US iran war, US sanctions on Venezuela, North Korea nuclear weapons to iran and venezuela. nicolás maduro nuclear program in South America.

Published

Recently, some reports claimed that Iran’s 400kg Uranium is still in an unknown place outside Iran but even after the joint mission of Mossad, US military and CIA, there was no major damage to Iran’s Fordow Nuclear sites. Apart from this, Iran still has nuclear bomb grade enriched uranium with which bombs can be made within a few months, but Iran has recently withdrawn from the cooperation of the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency). A big problem is going to arise for the US and Israel because Iran, the US and Israel have always been enemies of each other in South America since the relations of Venezuela and Cuba with America have deteriorated. So in such a situation, the US, Argentina, Canada and Israel are afraid that Iran can now possibly provide nuclear technology and nuclear weapons to Venezuela, Brazil and Cuba to counter the US because Iran feels that this is not a better way to counter the US because Iran’s relations with Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen and Arabs in the Middle East have also become bad. Russia has been an ally of Venezuela, Cuba and Brazil since the beginning because Russia believes that America’s increasing involvement in NATO and funding in the Ukraine war has become the biggest threat for Russia. Recently, US sanctions have been imposed on both Venezuela and Iran, which will cause maximum losses to the western world in future because even though all kinds of sanctions have been imposed on Iran and Venezuela by Western countries, still Iran and Venezuela are able to develop guns, missiles, arms ammunition and radar.

Why Venezuela moving for Nuclear Programs with Russia and Iran?

Currently, Venezuela’s primary motivations are energy diversification (to reduce vulnerability to hydro droughts and oil industry failures) and securing reliable baseload electricity to end debilitating blackouts. This pursuit is deeply intertwined with its strategic alliance with Russia (Rosatom). National prestige also plays a role. However, the economic crisis, sanctions, lack of infrastructure, and political instability pose enormous, likely insurmountable, barriers to actually building and operating a commercial nuclear power plant in the foreseeable future. While the intent and agreements exist, tangible progress toward a functioning plant remains minimal. The focus for now is on much smaller-scale research and training cooperation with Russia. Iranian IRGC has been involved in infrastructure projects, ports, shipyards, and possibly airbase upgrades, enhancing Venezuela’s military logistics and projection capabilities. In the future, We would possibly see a huge move in Venezuela’s Nuclear programs with iran and Russia. Iran, North Korea and Russia transferring Military Equipment, potentially including Small Arms, ammunition, missiles, Financial and nuclear technology to Venezuela. It could be possible that Venezuela may fight US in coming year about related to its nuclear dream. In the future, We may see Guyana-Venezuela war in Latin America.

Continue Reading