Vox interviews Rafik Hariri Center Nonresident Fellow Aaron Stein on the intricacies of the Iran nuclear deal, explaining why he believes it will be effective: 

The first person I called when negotiators in Vienna released the final text of the Iran nuclear deal was Aaron Stein, a nuclear nonproliferation expert at the Royal United Services Institute. Stein is a prolific writer and commenter on nuclear issues, and particularly on Iran’s nuclear program. (He is also doctoral fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy and a non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council.) And he is a die-hard wonk — someone who cares first and foremost about understanding the issues, rather than about picking a side.

Stein walked me through how the Iran nuclear deal works, what it does, and his assessment of it. That assessment was very positive, he told me: The deal “exceeds in all areas.” Under this agreement, if Iran tries to build a bomb, “the likelihood of getting caught is near 100 per cent.” As a result, “it makes the possibility of Iran developing a nuclear weapon in the next twenty-five years extremely remote.”

Read the full article here.

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