|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East
US-sponsored IAEA resolution sets stage for confrontation
with Iran
By Peter Symonds
16 September 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Bowing to strong pressure from the Bush administration, the
35-member governing board of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) on Friday issued a provocative ultimatum to Iran setting
a deadline of October 31 to comply with all demands related to
its nuclear program. The resolution opens the way for the involvement
of the UN Security Council and economic sanctions if Teheran fails
to comply, leading to a rapidly escalating confrontation with
Iran.
Like the former regime of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, Iran is being
presented with an open-ended resolution demanding that it prove
the unproveable: that none of its nuclear programs are being used
for the production of material for nuclear weapons. Since the
beginning of the year, every step taken by Iran to demonstrate
that its nuclear facilities are intended for power generation
is followed by new accusations and demands for even more intrusive
inspections.
The latest allegation involves the discovery of minute traces
of highly enriched uranium in environmental samples taken at the
Irans incomplete uranium enrichment plant at Natanz. Iranian
officials claim that the traces come from imported equipment that
had been previously contaminated. The IAEA resolution calls on
Iran to suspend all uranium enrichment activities, provide a full
declaration of all imported material and components for its uranium
enrichment program and to give IAEA inspectors unrestricted access
to all its facilities.
Furthermore the IAEA has insisted that Iran promptly
and unconditionally sign an additional protocol allowing
for far more extensive IAEA inspections than allowed for under
the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. As well as specific demands,
the resolution also includes a catch-all clause calling on Iran
to comply with such other steps as deemed necessary
resolve all outstanding issues involving nuclear materials
and nuclear activities. It concludes by mandating a report
to be presented in November to enable the IAEA to draw definite
conclusions about Irans nuclear programs.
Not surprisingly, Washington warmly welcomed the IAEA resolution
and warned Iran that any failure to comply would be taken as an
admission of guilt. If they wish to disrupt that [inspection]
process, it can only lead the [IAEA] board and indeed the international
community to conclude that in fact they are not pursuing a peaceful
program, Kenneth Brill, US ambassador to the IAEA, declared.
An unnamed US official expressed Washingtons satisfaction
more bluntly, telling Reuters: [T]his resolution is really
tightening the noose on them [Iran]. If Teheran failed to
cooperate and was declared in non-compliance, he explained, Iran
will forfeit its right to share nuclear technology for peaceful
purposes. In particular, that will mean that Russia will
not be able to provide fuel for a nuclear power plant currently
being constructed at the Iranian port of Bushehr.
The comments highlight the fact that the Bush administrations
objective is not simply to ensure that Iran complies with the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. As far as Washington is concerned,
Irans entire nuclear program is illegitimate. Ever since
the fall of Americas ally, the Shah, in 1979, successive
US administrations have made every effort to prevent the completion
of the Bushehr plant as part of continuing broader economic sanctions
aimed at undermining the Teheran regime.
In the lead up to the current IAEA meeting in Geneva, the Bush
administration had been pressing for a resolution immediately
declaring Iran to be in non-compliance. While opposing such a
declaration, France and Germany fell into line with the new US
proposal for a deadline, effectively legitimising Washingtons
provocative moves. Having delayed any formal IAEA decision until
November, France and Germany joined the formal sponsors of the
resolutionAustralia, Japan and Canadaas well as the
US and Britain in strong-arming other IAEA members to support
it.
The Bush administration has been placing intense pressure on
Russia, in particular, not only to support a tough IAEA resolution
but to end any cooperation with Irans nuclear programs.
To date Moscow has resisted. Not only would such a move cost Russia
dearlymore than 300 Russian firms have been involved in
the $800 million Bushehr projectbut it would lead to an
immediate cooling of Russias relations with Iran, which
form a key component of Moscows strategy in Central Asia
and the Middle East. Russia did, however, support the IAEA resolution
as a means of appeasing Washington while simultaneously buying
a little more time.
Angry Iranian reaction
The IAEA resolution triggered an angry response from Iran with
its delegates walking out of the meeting in protest. Chief representative
Ali Akbar Salehi denounced the resolution, saying it was part
of broader US plans in the Middle East. Nothing would satisfy
Washingtons appetite for vengeance short of
confrontation and war, he said. It is no secret that the
[Bush administration] entertains the idea of invasion of yet another
territory, as they aim to re-engineer and reshape the entire Middle
East region. Salehi warned that Iran would be compelled
to make a deep review of its relations with the IAEA.
Over the weekend, however, Teheran began to backtrack. Vice
President Gholamreza Aghazadeh, who is also head of Irans
Atomic Energy Organisation, said that his country had no intention
of withdrawing from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
and was fully committed to its NPT responsibilities.
He said that Iran would proceed with talks over signing an additional
IAEA protocol but warned that it had serious problems with the
October 31 deadline and the resolutions venomous language.
But the IAEA resolution has precipitated a fierce discussion
in Iranian ruling circles, with right-wing sections of the Islamist
regime calling for the country to follow North Koreas example
and pull out of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty altogether.
An editorial in Hoseyn Shariaatmadari called for
the immediate expulsion of the ambassadors of the three countries
that proposed the resolution, warning that if authorities did
not, the Muslim people of Iran would do it by closing down
their embassies in Tehran.
The editorial declared: Yesterdays resolution of
the board of directors of the IAEA leaves no doubt about the fact
that the recent cacophonies over the nuclear activities of our
nation are a well calculated plot aimed at toppling the Islamic
Republic of Iran, using the NPT as a pressure tool. Another
hard-line newspaper, Jomhuri Eslami, argued: It should
be accepted that the correct way was the one North Korea chose.
It called on the government to continue the countrys nuclear
programs unabated, whether Washington likes it or not.
Yas No, a newspaper associated with moderate President
Mohammed Khatemi, also attacked the resolution, branding it as
partial, discriminatory and unusual and declaring
that the Iranian people would not stand for it. While not disagreeing
that the US was menacing the country, the newspaper blamed the
Islamic hardliners for isolating Iran from potential international
allies.
The sharpness of the commentary reflects legitimate concerns
in Teheran that it confronts a similar fate to neighbouring Iraq
where a barrage of lies about non-existent weapons of mass destruction
were exploited by Washington to justify a military invasion and
occupation. Iran could justifiably conclude that the only means
of preventing further US diplomatic and military provocations
is to press ahead with the development of nuclear weapons as rapidly
as possible.
In his 2002 State of the Union address, US President Bush bracketted
Iran with Iraq and North Korea as an axis of evil
and the most militaristic sections of his administration are pushing
for regime change in Iran to become US policy. The
pressure being applied to Iran over its nuclear program is no
more than a convenient pretext for advancing Washingtons
far-reaching ambitions to secure its strategic and economic interests
in the oil-rich regions of the Middle East and Central Asia.
The flavour of the discussion in US ruling circles is indicated
by an article in the right-wing Washington Times entitled,
Iran: the noose starts to tighten. It welcomed the
IAEA resolution for setting in motion a process that could
turn Iran into an international pariah statein much the
same way that Saddams dictatorship next door came to be
understood as an outlaw regime. The article went on to provocatively
suggest that Washington should turn a blind eye if Israel decided
to strike nuclear facilities in Iran, as it did Iraqs nuclear
reactor at Osirik in 1981.
Whatever the outcome of the next seven weeks, it is virtually
guaranteed that Washington will use the deadline set by the IAEA
to press for a more aggressive and confrontational stance against
Iran.
See Also:
Bush administration targets
Iran for US aggression
[26 June 2003]
Washington turns to regime
change in Iran
[29 May 2003]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |