Source:
Buenos Aires HeraldWednesday, May 26, 2010 | 23:02 ET
Is Obama regretting a deal support letter sent to Brazil's Lula?
‘Major US newspapers censor Obama’s support of Iran fuel swap,’ US media
The US media seems to have been boosting a particular coverage of the fuel swap deal signed last week by Iran, Brazil and Turkey. At least, that's what the Foreign Policy's Director Robert Naiman of the US news site Huffington Post reveals on his latest article after searching and analyzing the US media coverage on the matter.
So far, US media and US foreign policy articles and columns, echoed the news of the agreement signed last week by Iran, Brazil, and Turkey for Iran to ship about half of its stockpile of low-enriched uranium to Turkey, in exchange for subsequent Western supply of higher-enriched uranium to fuel Iran's medical research reactor - fuel Iran needs in order to treat Iranian medical patients, fuel to which Iran is entitled as a signatory of the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
Even though the facts, Naiman, who's based in Brazil's financial capital city of Sao Paulo, warns readers on his article and says that "If you were paying close attention, you might know that the deal is quite similar to one proposed a few months ago by the United States."
"The Huffington Post's article indicates that "An initial AP news agency story on the Washington Post's website last Monday said the agreement was "nearly identical" to the deal the US was pressing for, although by the end of the day the AP article on the Post's website had been revised to downgrade this comparison to ‘mirrors'." {The original AP story is still visible through a link in Naiman's article.}
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