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Iran Isolation Attempts Backfire
Iran's provocative missile tests ten days ago again fueled the debate on the likelihood of aerial strikes against Iran. Since last week's thaw, however, an attack on Iran by the end of President Bush's tenure no longer appears in the offing. Moreover, the narrow, exclusively military focus of the debate misses the broader picture. The overall U.S. strategy of containing Iran has failed in principle. And the attempt to impose a sanctions regime on Iran has led to an erosion of U.S. strategic influence in Asia and the Middle East. Over the long term, Washington's shortsighted containment policy will only hurt Western business in the region. It will also play into the hands of China, drive crucial allies away, and render Iran untouchable.
At the eleventh hour, even the Bush administration seems to have realized, albeit in a limited way, the inherent failure of the containment approach. In an important about-face, the White House not only agreed to direct talks between U.S. and Iranian officials in Geneva this weekend but also held out the prospect of soon opening an American interest section in Tehran. This sea change suggests that the realists around Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense Robert Gates having finally gained the upper hand over the faction around Vice President Dick Cheney in the intra-administration feud. The reversal also acknowledges that the dual approach of sanctions and military threats have produced nothing but America's own isolation. The far-reaching repercussions of these counterproductive sanctions against Iran and America's increasing isolation in Asia are best illustrated by this month's breakthrough on the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline.
It's the Gas, Stupid
The Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline (IPI) is a $7.5 billion project designed to supply Indian mega-cities with natural gas from Iran's Persian Gulf fields via a 1,700 miles long pipeline across Pakistan. The project has been repudiated and boycotted by one project partner or the other uncounted times since its conceptualization. But on July 3, Indian Oil Minister Murli Deora affirmed on the sidelines of the World Petroleum Congress in Madrid that India expects to finally sign the deal next month. This long-time-in-coming breakthrough constitutes a crucial step toward energy security for India.
For the United States, on the other hand, it deals a resounding blow to the fragile international sanctions front the Bush administration has crafted to contain Iran. What is more, with China keen on joining the project, a new geo-strategic axis - Tehran-Islamabad-New Delhi-Beijing - is about to emerge. This axis will radically reshuffle the power structure in Asia and, with it, the global balance of power.
Despite the Cheney faction's saber-rattling, the Bush administration has banked on economic sanctions strangling investment and beating a technology-dependant Tehran into submission. This strategy of tightening the economic corset choking Iran and thus forcing it to renounce its nuclear ambitions, however, has isolated the United States and its allies more than Iran. For the time being, Washington has succeeded in cajoling French Total SA, Anglo-Dutch Shell, and Spanish Repsol to withdraw their bids to exploit the Iranian South Pars field, the world's largest gas field, and the EU approved freezing the assets of a major state-owned Iranian retail bank, Bank Melli, last month.
But Iran's countermeasures have been in the works for quite a while. After all, the country has long suffered from the effects of sanctions and the reluctance of Western companies to invest in its energy sector. So it has increasingly looked eastward for new financiers and partners. The most striking example is Iran's March 24 bid for membership in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), the Central Asian security group dominated by Russia and China.
This new "looking east" -- negahe be shargh -- policy concept is the brainchild of Bangalore-educated, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki. While an Iranian SCO membership is still in the future, Asian dominance over the Iranian market is a current reality. China already ranks as the number one foreign investor in Iran. Malaysian Petronas and LG Korea feature prominently in the exploitation of South Pars. The new IPI would be a final nail in the coffin of the sanctions regime.
The Empire Strikes Back
The United States has fought hard against the new pipeline linking Iran, India, and Pakistan. As recently as July 15, Senators Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Richard Shelby (R-AL) threatened to strengthen the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996 that allows for the litigation of foreign firms investing in sanctionable business in Iran - a clear warning signal to India. Meanwhile, since the three countries could not bear the projected costs of $7.5 billion on their own, Washington has also used its considerable influence at the World Bank in the person of former president Paul Wolfowitz. He bluntly informed Pakistan that the bank would not allow any international institution to finance the project.
In its attempts to destabilize Iran and disrupt the possible route of the pipeline, the United States is allegedly supporting Jundallah. This militant insurgency in the Iranian Sistan and Baluchistan Province, has suspected links to the Taliban and the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), which has been fighting a guerilla war against the Pakistani army since 2000. This clandestine Baloch connection - recently exposed by Seymour Hersh in The New Yorker - undermines America's fragile, always-on-the-brink-of-a-coup ally, Pakistan. Washington is also pushing for the alternative of a Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India pipeline (TAPI), the construction bids for which, as a side benefit, would go to U.S. companies. This alternative scheme is strikingly similar to the pipeline deal Unocal struck with the Taliban in 1996.
U.S. obstruction is not the only problem facing the IPI project. Iran is asking for a lot of money; India and Pakistan have notorious difficulties cooperating. But this cluster of American threats and coercions proved until recently to be pivotal in preventing the project from getting off the ground. Former Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns cited preventing IPI as one of his greatest accomplishments at a conference at Harvard University in March.
Push Factors
India, however, desperately needs energy for its growing economy. And it will risk its relationship with the United States to get this energy. Moreover, its heavily subsidized low gas prices are no longer sustainable, especially now before an election year. After all, with oil around $140 per barrel and a global recession looming on the horizon, the United States no longer has the ability to pressure countries to sever energy ties with Iran, as it did when a fire-breathing John Bolton forced Japan to withdraw its bid to exploit the Iranian Azadegan oil field. It is now every country for itself in the new energy environment.
Despite U.S. opposition, then, the IPI pipeline is back on line. The last commercial difficulties between Pakistan and India concerning transit fees have been cleared away, and only minor technical details remain for a trilateral meeting in Tehran scheduled for the coming weeks. If an agreement is reached this summer, construction could commence in 2009 and be completed by 2012. Pakistan is eager to expand its new role as the energy corridor of the future. It expects an annual $600 million in transportation fees from IPI and is vigorously politicking for China to join the project in order to increase those revenues. Until Indian consent was secured, Pakistan used the Chinese wild card as a bargaining tool to force a wavering India's hand. But now it seems that Islamabad and Tehran can have it both ways. If World Bank financing is off the table, China can step in to foot the bill.
Finalization of IPI in the coming weeks would be more than a slap in the face for President Bush. After all, in 2006 he personally fought for a nuclear cooperation pact with India designed to meet India's energy needs while tying it closer to the United States as a counterweight against a rising China. Now however, not only has the Indian government so far failed to get the pact ratified in the Indian parliament, but India is about to collaborate with China in undermining America's sanctions on Iran. Pakistan, beefed up with more than $10 billion in military aid by the Bush administration, is also giving the cold shoulder to Washington. And Iran, soon to be the number one energy supplier for East Asia, becomes more untouchable by the day.
The Bush administration's lofty design to keep Iran in the box and use the Indian tiger to tame the Chinese dragon runs the risk of collapsing in the last months of his presidency. In fact, the American sanctions regime is driving Iran into China's arms and facilitating a Sino-Indian rapprochement. Even worse, America is facing the rise of a new strategic axis in Asia that stretches from Tehran to New Delhi to Beijing, with Islamabad as a central hub, and financed by petrodollars. Then again, the Bush policy, by giving a lift to this new strategic energy alliance, may ultimately strengthen support in Washington for a military strike against Iran: to accomplish what containment failed to do.
Hannes Artens is a contributor to Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org) and the author of The Writing on the Wall, a political novel cautioning against war with Iran. He has worked with the Carter Center as well a think tank advising the German parliament on U.S. foreign policy. He is a contributing editor of TheAgonist and can be reached at hannes@hannesartens.com
Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies



14 Comments so far
Show Allhttp://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=9501
Just like with the bully in the playground, eventually enough guys get together to confront said bully.
This American would not be sad to see American companies lose big on this one.
They would do two things though.
1). Get royally pissed at the Republican Party.
2). Cry for an air-strike to include Iranian oil fields.
It is a well-documented point that so many US conservative diplomats cannot distinguish between 'American Interests' and 'American Corporate Interests'. They see any attempt to limit our companies as a direct 'attack' on the United States.
So contrary to the positive tone of this article, I am feeling pretty gloomy.
"As recently as July 15, Senators Christopher Dodd (D-CT) and Richard Shelby (R-AL) threatened to strengthen the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act of 1996 that allows for the litigation of foreign firms investing in sanctionable business in Iran - a clear warning signal to India."
So tell me, what makes the US think that laws it passes in the United States, has ANY bearing on what foreign companies do in foreign countries? The laws of the US are not applicable outside it's borders. It's sheer arrogance to think otherwise. So basically, what they're saying is that the US government can sue foreign companies for doing business with countries the US doesn't like. Hmmm... how... retarded.
The reversal also acknowledges that the dual approach of sanctions and military threats have produced nothing but America's own isolation.
I wouldn't have though it possible for the U.S. to render itself further isolated from the world community than it already has with its total disregard for virtually every rule of international law and common decency established for the conduct of civilised nations. But one should never underestimate the USA Incorporated's capacity for short-sightedness, self-immolation and sheer stupidity.
Pretty soon I won't need to speak English any more.
And you will need to learn Chinese :-)
I always thought it was incredible that the United States would elect two convicted drunk drivers to President and Vice President. Maybe Americans don't really study before they vote. Or maybe the 'election' is a sham. Either way, say Goodbye to the American Century. If the old dumb guy wins in November, I will literally be rolling on the floor laughing.
Come on, get it over with quick :-) It's like pulling off a bandaid, just elect McCain, don't prolong the slow decline.
Makes one wonder who is really stirring up the tribes in Pakistan? Does 'false-flag' ops ring a bell?
Could we be creating an excuse to invade Pakistan?
Tune in later.
In the meantime - read 'Three Cups of Tea'
http://www.amazon.com/Three-Cups-Tea-Mission-Promote/dp/0143038257/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1216759830&sr=8-1
Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time (Paperback)
by Greg Mortenson (Author), David Oliver Relin (Author) "In Pakistan's Karakoram, bristling
"It will also play into the hands of China, drive crucial allies away, and render Iran untouchable."
Good.
So the USA is trying to contain Iran? Someone please contain the USA before we succeed.
"Even worse, America is facing the rise of a new strategic axis in Asia that stretches from Tehran to New Delhi to Beijing, with Islamabad as a central hub, and financed by petrodollars."
While critical of US policy, the author seems comfortable with empire.
The idea of a country that imports $2 billion of oil a day "isolationg" a country that exports $1.4 billion a day can boss the exporting nation around economically shows how warped the leadership in the U.S. really is. They are just plain delusional.
There was an article in the Los Angeles Times yesterday about "planning for the next war," an exercise the Holy Pentagon is only to eager to continue.
It read like a psychiatric report from an asylum.
The next war will be the struggle to convert our energy and transportation sectors. Armies and bombs will not be used, but, apparently, the Holy Pentagon can't think outside the killing box.
How is it possible to write an article on containing Iran and never use the word "Israel"? I don't know, but Artens managed to do it. And amazingly, that same word shows up in none of the previous responses.
It is my understanding that the Bush regime is trying to get a bilateral nuclear agreement with India now. Most likely as a way to try and prevent a Iran/Pakistan/India gas deal from going through. They have been pressuring India not to go along with this deal. The US is a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which prohibits them from selling/giving nuclear technology to a non signatory. India is not a NPT signatory, therefore if the US sells them nuclear technology it is in breach of the NPT contract. But of course they are already in breach of contract by not curtailing there own nuclear weapons activities.
'Provocative' missile-tests, or 'Defensive'?
[Or, just a covert puppet-state playing their-role in this "Game", as directed and as useful to the real-Interests involved...?]
In any end-analysis/import -- will the above even-matter?
Before assuming Iran's current/past-'leadership' independent&innocent, recall that nuclear-technology was near-forced upon them by those aforementioned 'Interests' (just like the nonsense in '53 and latter in '79) -- who, worldwide, also 'own' most uranium-mining/resources and dictate actual 'interests' profiting from balance-of-powers, strife, and the World-Politic/Finance. The Practicality of any nuclear/fissile-Tech is obviously a Dead-End and Zero-Sum-Endeavor/Sink-Hole (and if they really wanted Western-innovation and/or a Hedge against their sole-resources running-dry, they'd be building more windmills than centrifuges...).
Iran is 'safe' for just as long as 'we' find/make them Useful (barring-accidents, which can certainly-happen when 'most aren't in-on-the-Joke/Game').
Syria and Lebanon (and more-prized if less-strategic 'points North&East') haven't that temporary security/usefulness, unfortunately -- or the ready-alliance/'choice' betwixt a lesser-Evils of Western, or Russian, or Chinese Suzerainty -- watch instead for a Western-front to open, and long before Iran&Pakistan are really-targeted.
"This long-time-in-coming breakthrough constitutes a crucial step toward energy security for India.
For the United States, on the other hand, it deals a resounding blow to the fragile international sanctions front the Bush administration has crafted to contain Iran."
And this is overblown-nonsense, as well...
If the US wanted to so-compete, Chevron's exploitation of Burma's nat-gas would have turned-left into India (or reserves of nat-gas&Pipelines would be so-directed in occupied-Afghanistan, with its little-Oil but much gas/opium) -- instead of being directed to unneeded-terminals in Thailand, or (from/in Afghanistan) directed towards a Euro-Market. [Besides, the long-supported 'terrorists' of the Paki-Frontier, or Baluchi's-alone, can/will disrupt any gas passing through any Iranian-pipeline routing through Pakistan]
The big-picture here is the Great-Game...with its well-known implications and Strategies -- and has-been, for over a century [look for 'who', ultimately, really-Profits -- and there are your 'real-Playas'].
"India, however, desperately needs energy for its growing economy"
That tired old conventional wisdom is now fully discredited. In the state of Kerbala India, 30 million Indians thrive in self-sufficiency, and the best literacy and heath/nutrition and longevity rates in the world with the bare minimum of inputs including energy, but instead have secured for themselves mass land, water and food independence and pursue and achieve best value in all the human necessities. I hope that readers here are willing to enbrace the concept of value, which is simply bang for the buck, outputs over inputs, a concept we use to make our routine economic decisions. In Kerala and Cuba, and many other places, value is INSTITUTIONALLY embraced with enthusiasm and just look at the result. They do not need this western capitalist conventional wisdom and material crap commodities. They are SELF SUFFICIENT and are reaching the pinnacle of human achievement by doing with less, doing without the beast capital. What is actually happening to India today is a very serious problem for India. Instead of India working to spread Kerbala's culture of self-determination and prosperity across the whole subcontinent, the government is allowing the western capitalist demons a door in to infiltrate, to corrupt, and to enslave as much of India as possible, and Kerbala will be under threat - the capitalists will destroy Kerbala's achievements and enslave the population as it is trying to enslave the entire world. Are you ready to stop drinking the kapitalist koolaid? Are you ready to be part of the solution?