Our favorite dictator has a new authoritarian friend! YEAH! The President and the Boy-Stomach-Kisser are gonna be nice and share "civilian" nuclear technology. Isn't that fantastic? Yippee!
Just one problem. You see Russia will be taking our crap (spent nuclear fuel) and they will be storing it. Now if you remember, these are also the people who can't track down their own spent nuclear fuel.
So in other words, it is like an advertisement to terrorists "come and steal this nice 'hot' nuclear material." Of course I guess that only matters to those who actually think al-Qaeda is separate from the CIA, but hey, whatever.
So now we are really fucked.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/07/AR2006070701588.html?sub=AR"President Bush has decided to permit extensive U.S. civilian nuclear cooperation with Russia for the first time, administration officials said yesterday, reversing decades of bipartisan policy in a move that would be worth billions of dollars to Moscow but could provoke an uproar in Congress.
Bush resisted such a move for years, insisting that Russia first stop building a nuclear power station for Iran near the Persian Gulf. But U.S. officials have shifted their view of Russia's collaboration with Iran and concluded that President Vladimir Putin has become a more constructive partner in trying to pressure Tehran to give up any aspirations for nuclear weapons.
SNIP
In the administration's view, both sides would benefit. A nuclear cooperation agreement would clear the way for Russia to import and store thousands of tons of spent nuclear fuel from U.S.-supplied reactors around the world, a lucrative business so far blocked by Washington. It could be used as an incentive to win more Russian cooperation on Iran. And it would be critical to Bush's plan to spread civilian nuclear energy to power-hungry countries because Russia would provide a place to send the used radioactive material.
At the same time, it could draw significant opposition from across the ideological spectrum, according to analysts who follow the issue. Critics wary of Putin's authoritarian course view it as rewarding Russia even though Moscow refuses to support sanctions against Iran. Others fearful of Russia's record of handling nuclear material see it as a reckless move that endangers the environment."
OH JOY!:sarcasm: