One particularly interesting detail: Tucked away near the very end of the deal's massive text is a section entitled "Nuclear Safety, Safeguards and Security," which stipulates that the West will train Iran to thwart sabotage against its nuclear facilities.
According to text, Iran will learn how to secure its controversial and covert nuclear program from all threats thanks to training by the "E3/EU+3," another designation for the P5+1 countries consisting of the US, UK, France, Germany, Russia and China, as well as the EU.
The section seemingly begins benignly enough, with a clause saying that "E3/EU+3 parties, and possibly other states, as appropriate, are prepared to cooperate with Iran to establish a Nuclear Safety Centre in Iran, engage in workshops and training events in Iran."
But then things take a turn, with the same world powers obligating to "co-operation in the form of training courses and workshops to strengthen Iran's ability to prevent, protect and respond to nuclear security threats to nuclear facilities and systems as well as to enable effective and sustainable nuclear security and physical protection systems."
Leaving no doubts about the intentions, the text then promises "co-operation through training and workshops to strengthen Iran’s ability to protect against, and respond to nuclear security threats, including sabotage."
Iran has frequently claimed to have thwarted sabotage attempts against its nuclear facilities, and Atomic Energy Organization of Iran (AEOI) head Ali Akbar Salehi claimed last August that the West and "the Zionist regime" were seeking to sabotage Iran’s nuclear industry.
The most effective attempt against Iran's nuclear program which significantly set it back was a 2010 cyber-attack known as the "Stuxnet virus." The cyber-attack wrought havoc by taking the Iran's reactors out of commission.
In December 2013, Iran's semi-official Fars News Agency claimed Israel and Saudi Arabia were teaming up to launch an updated version of the virus.
Moshe Ya’alon (Zionist War Minister) in May 2012 indirectly hinted that Israel may have been behind a computer virus that followed Stuxnet and was launched against Iran, known as the "Flame" malware.