Sources inside MI6 have confirmed what the White House doesn’t want to hear: the new Iran nuclear deal is a ticking time bomb. Uncovered documents and briefings from senior intelligence officials reveal a stark warning that the regime in Tehran will be emboldened, not restrained, by the concessions being offered. The Americans are spinning this as a diplomatic triumph.
But the men in suits in London see a different picture: a regime that has already used previous deals to expand its influence across the Middle East, funnelling cash to proxies in Yemen, Syria, and Lebanon. The same cash that was meant to be frozen is now flowing back into the pockets of the Revolutionary Guards. I’ve seen the internal memos.
They read like a confession: ‘We are enabling the very behaviour we seek to prevent.’ The deal’s sunset clauses are a joke. After eight years, Iran can resume enrichment without any meaningful oversight.
By then, they’ll have the know-how and the centrifuges to go nuclear in months. The White House is betting on good faith. But when has that ever worked with a regime that hangs dissidents and exports terror?
British intelligence is already drafting contingency plans for a nuclear-armed Iran. That’s not optimism. That’s a surrender dressed up as diplomacy.










