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Why Israel wants US bunker busters to hit Iran’s Fordow nuclear site

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Video   来源:Tennis  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Eso representa un aumento de casi el 50% desde el último reporte de la AIEA en febrero. El material enriquecido al 60% está a un corto paso técnico de los niveles de grado armamentístico del 90%.

Eso representa un aumento de casi el 50% desde el último reporte de la AIEA en febrero. El material enriquecido al 60% está a un corto paso técnico de los niveles de grado armamentístico del 90%.

The heaviest rain is likely to fall in Rhode Island and southern and eastern Massachusetts, Pederson said. Localized nuisance flooding and difficult driving conditions are possible Thursday, and catastrophic flooding is not expected.The storm is then expected to pass, leaving light rain and patchy drizzle, on Friday.

Why Israel wants US bunker busters to hit Iran’s Fordow nuclear site

“It’s just really a nice dose of rain for the region — not expecting much for flooding,” Pederson said.Snow is expected to be confined to mountainous areas, but accumulations there are possible.Nor’easters are usually winter weather events, and it is unusual to see them in May. They typically form when there are large temperature differences from west to east during winter when there is cold air over land and the oceans are relatively warm.

Why Israel wants US bunker busters to hit Iran’s Fordow nuclear site

But right now there is a traffic jam in the atmosphere because of an area of high pressure in the Canadian Arctic that is allowing unusually cold air to funnel down over the Northeast. The low pressure system off the East Coast is being fueled by a jet stream that is unusually south at the moment.“It really is a kind of a winter-type setup that you rarely see this late,” said Judah Cohen, seasonal forecast director at the private firm Atmospheric and Environmental Research.

Why Israel wants US bunker busters to hit Iran’s Fordow nuclear site

If this type of pattern in the atmosphere happened two months earlier, he said, “we’d be talking about a crippling snowstorm in the Northeastern U.S., not just a wet start to Memorial Day weekend.”

O’Malley reported from Philadelphia.Here’s what we know.

Late Friday, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection said that electronics, including smartphones and laptops, would be excluded from broader, so-called— meaning these goods wouldn’t be subject to

imposed on other countries.But U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick later said that this was only a temporary reprieve — telling ABC’s “This Week” on Sunday that electronics will be included under future sector-specific tariffs on semiconductor products, set to arrive in “probably a month or two.”

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