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East : Iran
US and European allies provoke confrontation with Iran
By Peter Symonds
11 August 2005
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The Bush administration with the support of the so-called EU-3Britain,
France and Germanyhas seized on Irans decision to
restart its uranium conversion facility at Esfahan as the pretext
for condemning Tehran and threatening UN economic sanctions. Once
again Washington and its allies, with the backing of the international
media, are conducting a campaign of provocation and lies that
will ultimately lead to open confrontation if Iran does not completely
capitulate.
The crisis came to a head last weekend after Tehran rejected
an EU offer of economic incentives in return for foregoing key
uranium enrichment programs. Newly-installed President Mahmood
Ahmadinejad denounced the long-delayed package as an insult
to the Iranian people, demanded an apology from the EU-3
and made clear that Iran would resume operations at Esfahan. The
initial steps towards restarting uranium conversion took place
on Mondayunder International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
supervision.
These moves provoked a chorus of condemnations and threats.
Britain, France and Germany all claimed that Irans actions
breached an agreement reached in November 2004 to freeze uranium
enrichment activities and warned that Iran would be referred to
the UN Security Council. French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy
described Tehrans decision to be grave and troubling.
German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer declared in alarmist terms
that Iran faced disastrous consequences if it acquired
an atomic weapon.
An editorial in the Washington Post on Tuesday went
one step further, declaring that the refusal to accept the EU-3
offer was proof that Iran intended to construct a nuclear bomb.
Now there is no further room for obfuscation, and no further
reason to give Iranians the benefit of the doubt. The real aim
of the Iranian nuclear program is nuclear weapons, not electric
power... What remains to be seen is whether the Europeans will
come through, as they have promised they would, with a tough-minded
push for sanctions.
Irans blunt rejection of the European proposal is no
such proof at all. From the outset, Iran has insisted that its
nuclear programs are for civilian purposes and that, under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), it has the inalienable
right to develop every aspect of the nuclear fuel cycle, including
uranium enrichment. Faced with the threat that the EU would support
Washingtons demand for economic sanctions, Tehran agreed
last November to freeze its uranium enrichment programs, temporarily,
while negotiations took place.
At that time, the EU-3 pushed for a deal to avert UN sanctions
and preserve burgeoning economic ties with Iran, a major source
of oil for Europe. In March, however, the Bush administration,
which previously rejected any negotiations, agreed to cooperate
with the EU-3 in their talks with Tehran. The meaning of such
cooperation was all too obviousin return for
minor US concessions to Iran, the Bush administration extracted
a pledge from the EU-3 to support UN sanctions if the talks failed.
The Iranian government has insisted that its rights under the
NPT had to be part of any agreement and that it would not allow
talksand thus the freeze on its nuclear programsto
drag on indefinitely. The Bush administration, however, has consistently
ignored the terms of the NPT and demanded that Tehran end all
uranium enrichment. As a result, the final EU-3 package, reviewed
and approved by Washington, amounted to nothing more than a provocation:
behind a smokescreen of so-called economic and technical incentives,
the deal was based on a continuing Iranian freeze on uranium enrichment.
It is hardly surprising that Tehran immediately rejected last
weeks offer as an insult. The proposal is extremely
long on demands from Iran and absurdly short on offers to Iran,
and it shows the lack of any attempt to even create a semblance
of balance, an official statement declared. Iran is in the
process of building a nuclear power reactor at Bushehr and has
plans to build other reactors. Without enrichment facilities,
it would be left dependent on European or other countries for
crucial supplies of nuclear fuel.
As for any US-EU security assurances to Iran, these are completely
worthless. The Bush administration has never retracted its infamous
denunciation of Iran as part of an axis of evil, and
continues a relentless campaign of provocations and threats. The
latest by US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld took place this
week in the midst of the current crisis. Without providing a shred
of evidence, he accused Tehran of allowing weapons to be smuggled
to anti-US insurgents in Iraq, and concluded with a menacing warning,
ultimately, its a problem for Iran.
Washington now has two large armies stationed in countries
directly bordering IranIraq and Afghanistanas well
as basing arrangements in Central Asian countries on its northern
borders. While currently pushing for economic sanctions against
Tehran, the Bush administration has not ruled out the military
option and has encouraged its ally Israel, which has threatened
military strikes against Irans nuclear facilities. In January,
veteran journalist Seymour Hersh reported in an extensive article
entitled The Coming Wars that the US military had
already sent covert commando teams inside Iran to scout out targets
and prepare for possible air strikes or even a full-scale invasion
of Iran.
In this regard, the belligerent conclusion of the Washington
Post editorial is highly significant. The collapse of negotiations,
it stated, means that there is no excuse for Europe and
the United States not to act in tandem; neither should they take
any option off the table. It is no longer possible to consider
the Iranian nuclear threat as anything but deadly serious.
Coming from a leading representative of the so-called liberal
press, these comments signify that a certain consensus has been
reached in Washington that all measures, including military strikes
and outright war, should be used against Iran.
American recklessness
If Iran is secretly engaged in a nuclear weapons program, it
would be completely justified, given the repeated threats by the
US, which is armed to the teeth with the complete range of sophisticated
weaponry, including a huge arsenal of nuclear weapons. The Bush
administration has already waged an illegal war of aggression
to subjugate Iraq as part of its ambitions to secure untrammelled
hegemony in the resource-rich region. Iran, as well as having
huge oil and gas reserves of its own, stands at the strategic
crossroads between the Middle East and Central Asia.
The fact that the US military is bogged down in a quagmire
in Iraq and is reliant on a police military regime headed by Shiite
parties with longstanding ties to Tehran offers no protection
to Iran. Tehrans attempts to ingratiate itself with Washington
by giving tacit support for the US invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan
have only been met with US denunciations and threats. Washingtons
aim is not closer collaboration with the current government in
Iran but a new pro-American regime that will carry out US dictates.
The utter hypocrisy of Washingtons condemnations of Irans
nuclear programs was underscored by the remarks on Tuesday of
Irans chief IAEA representative Sirus Naser. Speaking at
an emergency IAEA meeting, Naser noted that the day was the anniversary
of atomic bombing of Nagasaki. As the only country ever to use
a nuclear bomb to kill and maim and turn to ashes millions
in a split second, he declared, the United States
is in no position whatsoever to tell anyone and to preach to anyone
as to what they should or should not do in their nuclear program.
Washingtons decision to unleash atomic weapons on the
civilian populations of Hiroshima and Nagasaki was conditioned
above all by its resolve to establish its unchallengeable global
dominance in the aftermath of World War II. The Bush administrations
insistence that Iran, as well as North Korea, give up all nuclear
programs that have even the potential, no matter how remote, to
be used to construct atomic bombs is motivated by the same objective.
The White House is determined to maintain its military superiority,
particularly against any potential target of US attack.
That is the only explanation for the obvious double standards
that underpin US nuclear policy. While demanding the Iran dismantles
its uranium enrichment program, the Bush administration tacitly
or openly approves the nuclear activities of its close allies.
It is an open secret that Israel, which has refused to sign the
NPT, has a store of nuclear weapons and missiles capable of hitting
targets throughout the Middle East, including Iran. In the case
of India, the Bush administration has just removed the remaining
US sanctions put in place following the Indian and Pakistani nuclear
tests in 1998. As for its own nuclear arsenal, far from reducing
it as required under the NPT, the Bush administration is augmenting
it with a new generation of bunker-buster weapons
that could be used, for instance, against Irans underground
nuclear facilities.
Washingtons contempt for international law in general
and the NPT in particular has provoked concern among other NPT
signatories attending the emergency IAEA meeting in Vienna this
week. If the US and its European allies are able to effectively
rewrite the NPT by forcing Iran to give up its right to uranium
enrichment then the nuclear programs of countries such as Malaysia,
Argentina and Brazil would also be put into question. A joint
statement issued by Malaysia, on behalf of other so-called non-aligned
countries, affirmed the basic and inalienable right of all
member states to develop atomic energy for peaceful purposes.
This half-hearted opposition has to date prevented the IAEA
emergency meeting from reaching agreement on a resolution referring
Iran to the UN Security Council. The EU-3 has confined itself
to promoting a draft statement calling for the resumption of talks
and the freeze on Irans enrichment program. Tehran has also
held out the prospect of renewed negotiations. Whatever happens
in the short-term, however, the present course of events confirms
that Washington and its allies are intent on confrontation with
Iran, regardless of the potentially disastrous consequences.
See Also:
US-EU deal on Iran: a step
towards confrontation, not a negotiated settlement
[25 March 2005]
US carrying out acts of war
against Iran, magazine reports
[20 January 2005]
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