IRAN: BUSH ISOLATED, UNDER PRESSURE,
TRIES TO TALK THE TALK WITHOUT WALKING THE WALK
UFPJ Iran Talking
Points 41
By Phyllis Bennis
Institute for Policy Studies June 2, 2006
-- The Bush administration's "offer" to join direct
talks with Iran reflects Washington's international
isolation on the Iran issue; the offer itself is simultaneously
very significant and entirely fake.
-- The U.S. is still trying to ratchet up international
pressure against Iran - proposing an "antimissile shield"
for Europe, still threatening a return to the UN Security
Council and calling for a "coalition" to impose economic
sanctions - but the split between the U.S. and Europe
is rising, and the Bush administration looks increasingly
desperate.
-- New threats against Iran from Israeli Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert during his visit to the United States appear
to be mostly designed to shore up his hard-line credentials
for a domestic audience, but still cannot be dismissed
out of hand.
-- U.S. policymakers need to be pushed to challenge
Bush's claim that "nothing can be taken off the table"
- to say precisely that some things MUST be kept "off
the table," and those things include threats of a preventive
attack against Iran and threats to use nuclear weapons
of any sort, both of which are violations of international
law.
-- We need serious diplomacy; the U.S. should enter
into direct talks with Iran without preconditions, and
prepare to provide security guarantees and renounce
talk of "regime change" in Tehran. The goal should be
creation of a weapons of mass destruction-free one throughout
the Middle East.
The Bush administration's decision to participate in
talks with Iran is a direct result of its failure to
win even a modicum of international support for its
military and economic threats, as well as a rising chorus
of influential military, retired diplomats, and other
elite voices within U.S. policy circles. Bush's plummeting
approval ratings (down below 30%) and the increasing
media and public focus on the abject failures and U.S.
war crimes in Iraq have also played a key role in challenging
the attack-Iran cabal. The uniformed military services
tend to oppose a military strike against Iran since
they are more aware of the potential consequences; the
pro-war contingent appears to believe that "regime change,"
based on the Iraq model, would somehow succeed. Whether
they actually still believe that the Iranian population
would welcome a U.S. attack or the overthrow of the
regime with sweets and flowers remains uncertain, but
Cheney's longstanding leadership of the attack-Iran
club makes the White House climb-down particularly significant.
On the other hand, Washington's "offer" to negotiate
with Iran only after Iran agrees to verifiably abandon
all enrichment activity means that it is not yet a serious
proposal. What happens to Iran's enrichment program
- which is legal for civilian nuclear power use under
the terms of the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) - is
supposed to be the result of negotiations; imposing
a its abandonment as a precondition means the U.S. is
not yet serious about diplomacy. Initially, Iran welcomed
the U.S. offer but rejected the preconditions. But European
pressure has remained intense, since it has been clear
that the "E-3" negotiators (France, UK and Germany)
could not offer Iran the one thing Tehran was clear
that it needed for negotiations to succeed: a security
guarantee that it would not be the target of U.S. attack
or destabilization "regime change" efforts. Only the
U.S. itself could provide such a guarantee. But the
Bush administration has not indicated any willingness
so far to consider a security arrangement; earlier public
State Department statements that "security guarantees
are not on the table" remain on the table.
The U.S. also gave in to Europe's proposal to offer
a package of incentives, including a light-water reactor
and guaranteed supplies of fuel, designed to entice
Iran into giving up its enrichment program. Without
a U.S. security guarantee Iran will likely reject that
offer. Washington also agreed to take the issue off
the Security Council agenda. And no sanctions were included
in the package. But a day later the U.S. renewed its
threats to return to the Council in the future if Iran
does not agree to suspend its enrichment program. Although
Bush claimed that Russia and China now accepted the
U.S. threat to return to the Council, neither Moscow
nor Beijing made any new statement that actually softened
their longstanding opposition to sanctions. Earlier
administration announcement of plans to build an "anti-missile
shield" to protect Europe from Iranian missiles have
gained no traction in Europe or among the U.S. public.
While international governmental pressure on Iran continues,
there remains a significant split between the non-proliferation
focus of Europe (willing to consider sanctions) and
to a lesser degree Russia and China (preferring enticements),
and the ideologically-driven "regime-change" approach
of the U.S. (favoring regime change, including military
attack). So far the Bush administration has failed to
win broader support even for an anti-Iranian "coalition,"
let alone a unified Security Council resolution, but
this White House has shown its willingness before to
move recklessly and unilaterally despite global opposition.
So there is no room for complacency or assumptions that
an attack on Iran won't happen because the military
is against it or because it is so obviously dangerous.
Israel continues to assert its own threats against Iran.
Speaking to the U.S. Congress in late May, Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert described Iran as an "existential threat"
to Israel. Echoing Bush's own claims about Iraq's alleged
WMDs in the run-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Olmert
said, "The international community will be measured
not by its intentions but by its results. If we don't
take Iran's bellicose rhetoric seriously now, we will
be forced to take its nuclear aggression seriously later."
He was answered with a huge congressional ovation. Olmert
referred to the widely quoted statement from Iran's
president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, claiming that he threatened
to "to wipe Israel off the map." In fact, as the London
Guardian recently pointed out, on that specific quote,
it appears Ahmadinejad has been mis-translated and did
not say that. Further, however unhelpful it may be diplomatically,
there is little question that much of Ahmadinejad's
rhetoric is as domestically driven as Bush's and Olmert's
own.
Right now Israel appears willing to follow the Bush
administration's lead on Iran, rather than moving precipitously
on its own. But despite his coalition government, Olmert
remains significantly weakened at home, lacking the
military credentials that made his predecessor, Ariel
Sharon, so popular. Facing potential opposition to his
U.S.-backed plan to permanently annex major blocs of
settlements while withdrawing only 20% of the settlers
from some parts of the West Bank, Olmert's bellicose
anti-Iran rhetoric may serve him well. During Olmert's
visit Bush restated his pledge to defend Israel if it
is attacked by Iran; some analysts saw that as a subtle
warning to Israel not to take the military initiative
against Iran. But Olmert also claimed that he and Bush
saw "eye to eye" on Iran. Whether Olmert might decide
that he requires more than threats against Iran to stay
in power, and how far he might be willing to act on
his rhetoric, remain unclear.
Members of Congress and other policymakers, even some
strongly opposed to a military strike on Iran, have
been reluctant to challenge directly the Bush administration
insistence that for diplomacy to work, "everything must
remain on the table." Some opposition appears to be
strengthening in recent days. But it is still necessary
to make clear to policymakers that some things indeed
MUST be taken publicly off the table, made off limits
from the beginning. Threats of war crimes (launching
a preventive war or using nuclear "bunker-busters" or
any other nuclear weapon or even threatening a nuclear
strike on a non-nuclear state - all of which are war
crimes) must not be considered acceptable components
of the U.S. diplomatic arsenal.
The new report just issued by Hans Blix and his Sweden-based
international commission concludes that disarmament
was being set back by "increased U.S. skepticism regarding
the effectiveness of international institutions and
instruments, coupled with a drive for freedom of action
to maintain an absolute global superiority in weaponry
and means of their delivery. The U.S., the sole superpower,
has looked more to its own military power." The report
called on nuclear powers to reduce their nuclear arsenals,
and said nuclear weapons should be banned altogether.
"Weapons of mass destruction cannot be uninvented,"
the report said, "but they can be outlawed, as biological
and chemical weapons already have been, and their use
made unthinkable."
Our immediate demand must be for direct U.S. talks with
Iran based on international law and treaties and with
no preconditions. The goal of such talks: an end to
U.S. threats of "regime change" and real U.S. security
guarantees for Iran, normalization of relations between
the U.S. and Iran, and a weapons of mass destruction-free
zone throughout the Middle East, in which all countries
in the region verifiably agree not to seek nuclear weapons,
and Israel's unacknowledged but provocative nuclear
arsenal (the only existing nuclear weapons in the Middle
East) is brought under international supervision and
destroyed. The Blix report, significantly, also called
for declaring regions free of weapons of mass destruction
- "particularly and most urgently in the Middle East."
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