A Choice Between Peace and Peril
Iran does not have a nuclear weapons program, according to U.S. and European intelligence agencies. But reality rarely impedes on politics. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama, along with Netanyahu, all talk as if Iran is on the brink of dropping the big one on the Jewish state.
Netanyahu on Friday named Iran as Israel’s main threat after he was called to form a new government following the Feb. 20 elections.
“Iran is seeking to obtain a nuclear weapon and constitutes the gravest threat to our existence since the war of independence,” Netanyahu said at a ceremony at President Shimon Peres’ official residence. “The terrorist forces of Iran threaten us from the north,” the presumptive prime minister said in reference to Lebanon and Syria, where Israel says Tehran supplies arms to Hezbollah and Hamas. “For decades, Israel has not faced such formidable challenges.”
Netanyahu, whose arrogance is as outsized as his bellicosity, knows that for all his threats and chest thumping Israel is incapable of attacking Iranian targets alone. Israel cannot fly its attack aircraft over Iraqi air space into Iran without U.S. permission, something George W. Bush refused to grant, fearing massive retaliatory strikes by Iran on American bases in Iraq. Israel’s air force is not big enough to neutralize the multiple targets, from radar stations to missile batteries to Revolutionary Guard units to bunkers housing Iran’s Soviet- and Chinese-made fighter jets and bombers, and also hit suspected nuclear targets. The only route to a war with Tehran for the Israeli military is through Washington.
Netanyahu’s resolve to strike Iran means that we will soon hear a lot about the danger posed by Iran—full-page ads in American newspapers from Israel lobby groups have appeared in the past few days. Allowing this rhetoric to cloud reality, as we did during the buildup to the war with Iraq, would shut down the best chance for stability in the Middle East—a negotiated settlement with Iran. This may not finally stop Iran from developing a nuclear weapon, but a stable relationship with Iran would do more to protect Israel and our interests in the Middle East than massive airstrikes and a war that would bleed into Iraq and Lebanon and see Iranian missiles launched against Israeli cities.
“If you go into a problem with a mistaken assumption you come out with a bad policy,” said Sam Gardner, a retired colonel of the U.S. Air Force who has taught strategy and military operations at the National War College, Air War College and Naval War College, and who opposes the Israeli campaign to strike Iran.
Iran’s nuclear program is currently monitored by inspectors of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Iran had amassed about 2,227 pounds of low-enriched, or reactor-grade, nuclear fuel by late January, according to the latest updates from the arms control watchdog for the United Nations. To produce the 55 pounds of highly enriched, or weapons-grade, uranium needed for an atomic warhead, Iran would need 2,205 to 3,748 pounds of low-enriched uranium. It apparently has this amount—which is why Netanyahu refers to Iran as “an existential threat” to the Israeli state. But Iran has made no move to enrich the uranium and until it does cannot be accused of having a nuclear weapons program. Iran also does not have enough high-speed centrifuges at its facility in Natanz to further refine the uranium, according to the United Nations.
Iran has turned to its old nemesis Russia for assistance as Israel has become more strident. The work on the Bushehr nuclear reactor will soon be assisted by 3,000 Russian technicians. And Russia has promised to sell the S-300 missile to Iran to boost that nation’s air defense systems. The Russian Federation Security Council and the State Council’s new national security strategy statement says that the primary focus of the struggle over the next decade will be on hydrocarbons. The Middle East and Central Asia are mentioned specifically. In these areas, according to the document, the struggle could develop into a military confrontation. And, while the document does not mention the United States, there is no other rival military force in the region that can match the Russian machine. The more we push Iran the more Iran flees into the arms of the Russians and the closer we come to a new Cold War struggle for control of diminishing natural resources. Iranian officials have barred inspections of facilities producing centrifuge parts, a move which worries arms control specialists. Iran may be planning to build an undeclared centrifuge facility separate from Natanz. Iran has also barred inspectors from its heavy-water reactor near Arak, an action that has concerned inspectors who hope to examine the site for possible telltale “clandestine” features that could be used in a weapons program. These signs would indicate that Iran could begin a nuclear weapons program. But as of now there is no such program. We should stop speaking as if one exists.
The destruction of Iraq as a unified state has left Iran the power broker in the Middle East. This was the result of our handiwork and the misguided militarism of Israeli politicians such as Netanyahu. Iran, like it or not, holds the power to decide the outcome of several conflicts that are vital to American security. It has enormous influence with Hamas and Hezbollah and can accelerate or diminish the conflict between Israel and these groups. It and the U.S. are now the major outside forces in Iraq. The Shiite-led Baghdad government consults closely with Iran and for this reason has told the Iranian resistance group the MEK that it has 60 days to leave Iraqi territory and may see its leaders arrested and tried for war crimes. Once American forces leave Iraq it is Iran, more than any other nation, that will determine the future of any Iraqi government. And, finally, Iran has for centuries been embroiled in the affairs of Afghanistan. It alone has the influence to stabilize the conflict, one that increasingly threatens to spill over into Pakistan. Afghan politicians have sharply criticized the Iranian government for deporting more than 30,000 Afghans who had fled to Iran since October. Many, unable to find work or return to their villages, have signed up to fight for the Taliban, according to U.S. intelligence reports.
Iran has endured our covert support for armed militant groups from the Mujahedin-e Khalq Organization (MEK or MKO) to the Free Life Party of Kurdistan to the repugnant Jundullah, also known as the Army of God, a Sunni fundamentalist group that operates with U.S. support out of Pakistan. Jundullah has carried out a series of bombings and ambushes inside Iran. The militant group has a habit of beheading Iranians it captures, including a recent group of 16 Iranian police officials, and filming and distributing the executions. Iran has coped with nearly three decades of sanctions imposed by Washington. The U.S. support for the militant groups and the sanctions, meant to help change the regime in Tehran, have failed.
There is a lot riding on whom President Obama names as his special envoy to Iran. If, as expected, it is Dennis Ross, a former official of AIPAC, the American Israel Public Affairs Committee, we will be in deep trouble. Ross, who is expected to be placed in charge of the Iranian portfolio this week, is a vocal supporter of Israel’s call for increased pressure on Iran. He is distrusted, even despised, in the Muslim world and especially in Tehran. With good reason, he is not viewed as an impartial broker.
Ross has called for more draconian sanctions against Iran, something Russia or the five companies that provide Iran’s refined petroleum products are not likely to support. (The companies include the Swiss firm Vitol, the French giant Total and the Indian firm Reliance.) Ross backs the covert support for proxy groups and, I would assume, the alleged clandestine campaign by Israel’s intelligence agency, Mossad, to assassinate Iranian nuclear scientists. Mossad is rumored to be behind the death of Ardeshire Hassanpour, a top nuclear scientist at Iran’s Isfahan uranium plant, who died in mysterious circumstances from reported “gas poisoning” in 2007, according to the British newspaper The Daily Telegraph. “Other recent deaths of important figures in the procurement and enrichment process in Iran and Europe have been the result of Israeli ‘hits,’ intended to deprive Tehran of key technical skills at the head of the program, according to the analysts,” the paper reported.
It remains unmentioned that Israel, which refused to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty—signed by Iran—is in possession of 200 to 300 nuclear warheads, perhaps the single most important factor in the Middle East nuclear arms race.
“For the US to shape a peaceful relationship with Iran will be difficult under any circumstances,” Stephen Kinzer, author of “All the Shah’s Men,” wrote recently. “If the American negotiating team is led by Ross or another conventional thinker tied to dogmas of the past, it will be impossible.”
Obama has an opportunity to radically alter the course we have charted in the Middle East. The key will be his administration’s relationship with Iran. If he gives in to the Israel lobby, if he empowers Ross, if he defines Iran as the enemy before he begins to attempt a negotiated peace, he could ignite a fuse that will see our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan evolve into a regional conflagration. This may be the most important decision of his presidency. Let’s pray he does not blow it.
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15 Comments so far
Show AllDennis Ross will see to it that the war against Iran starts ASAP
But I could be wrong !
Addendum: It is now Feb 24, & Ross has indeed been officially appointed "special advisor" on Iran strategy.
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/2/24/headlines#10
santuary, what you say about georgia may be true, but israel *will not*, under any circumstances, attack iran w/o the approval and support of the u.s. if israel attacks iran, you can guarantee the u.s. has already signed up.
RLT, I would agree but there is a difference between overt public approval and tacit approval. The latter is pretty much a given at all times, except when trumped by US strategies that have a higher priority. I also see the possibility of misinterpretation of foreign policy messages and "accidents" by loose cannon ideologists although in an operation of that magnitude it's unlikely. Still, all it takes is one rogue plane and a nuke.
"Israel cannot fly its attack aircraft over Iraqi air space into Iran without U.S. permission"
Israel won't need to if its interest in using Georgian air bases is fulfilled. Israel, in addition to arms sales has supplied drones and military "advisors" to Saakashvili and was apparently directly involved in the attack on South Ossetia. It is no coincidence that Iran is (via a short hop down the Caspian sea or over Azerbaijan) next door to Georgia and Tehran no further in distance than Baghdad is from Tehran.
The constant drumbeat of disinformation, demonization and threats about Iran's nuclear facilities such as the latest from the US administration that Iran "must suspend all its uranium-enrichment related reprocessing" must be balanced against the latest IAEA report that states "there are no indications of ongoing uranium-enrichment reprocessing at Iran's nuclear facilities".
Shades of deja vu, as in WMD searches in Iraq, anyone?
Keep a close watch on Israel and Georgia. If Obama gets the US out of Iraq then the only reason that Bush had for denying an Israeli attack on Iran disappears.
Bush taught the world a lesson.
Iran Iraq and North Korea are named as the axis of Evil.
Iran is threatened, assaulted covertly, almost attacked.
Iraq is decimated. Cleansed and Genocided.
North Korea though builds a nuclear weapon, For that, the consequence? Heating Oil and other assistance given instead of being attacked.
Because I like Persia, want them not to be hurt, I hope they have a bomb or three tomorrow.
Joe.
Can Obama save Israel and the US from themselves? Yes, but will he? Probably not. Thus far he's offered up a nuanced, modestly improved version of the same old failed policies, the same old toxic Koolaid in a stylish new bottle.
O's brushoff of Helen's question re Israeli nukes was really sad. Can't touch the sacred cow.
Join me in giving him hell at http://www. whitehous.gov/contact.
Since no Israeli or US government in our lifetime has ever wanted peace, the choice is peril.
I'm almost certain I heard Hillary last weeks say that Iran has a bomb. In any case, Hedges has it exactly right here. Three decades of sanctions against Iran by the U.S. has benefitted us how?
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In the meantime, let's just remember to support the Iranian workers: www.iwsn.org
Israel has never chosen peace in its 60years of history. And it has made it an art form of blaming the victims for its acts of aggression and terrorism.
The only hope for Iran is to get tight enough with Putin that israel would risk nuclear retaliation if it hit Iran.
so the u.s. and israel are effectively already at war w/iran? fomenting terrorists, dissidents, separatists, and assassinations? and they (iran) are exercising restraint and actually supporting the u.s. on a number of levels in afghanistan and iraq? so who has the bat shit crazy insane religious fundamentalist death cult suicide wish again?
i think iran could pretty easily destroy u.s. forces in the region if they wanted to, given how overstretched those forces are and the logistical problems in supporting those troops. they could certainly make life far more difficult (rather than doing things like negotiating the standown of the mahdi army). they must know and take very seriously the threat of nuclear annihilation for any aggressive actions. sure sounds like a bunch of crazy jihadis to me.
"...The key will be his administration’s relationship with Iran. If [Obama] gives in to the Israel lobby, if he empowers Ross....he could ignite a fuse that will see our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan evolve into a regional conflagration. This may be the most important decision of his presidency. Let’s pray he does not blow it."
- The smart bet would be that he'll blow it. He's given in to the Israel lobby on every single decision so far, from nominating Biden, Rahm & Hillary to their positions, to his shameful silence during last month's massacre in Gaza, to his refusal to answer Helen Thomas' question about nukes at the press conference last week.
Note the phrase "...Israel cannot fly its attack aircraft over Iraqi air space into Iran without U.S. permission, something George W. Bush refused to grant..." If Obama gives Netanyahu permission, he will have outdone even Bush.