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US bullies IAEA into reporting Iran to the UN Security Council
By Peter Symonds
6 February 2006
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In a decision that lays the basis for sanctions and future
military action against Iran, the governing council of the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) caved in to US pressure and voted
on Saturday to report Tehran to the UN Security Council.
The Bush administration, which has been pushing since 2003
for Iran to be referred to the UN Security Council for punitive
action over its nuclear programs, immediately applauded the vote.
President Bush declared that the decision was a clear message...
that the world will not allow Iran to have nuclear weapons.
Speaking in a similar vein in Germany, US Defence Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld deliberately inflamed tensions, by branding Iran the
worlds leading state sponsor of terrorism. The
world does not want, and must work together to prevent, a nuclear
Iran, he added.
To state the obvious, the world did not have any
say in the matter. Tens of millions of people around the globe,
who opposed and continue to oppose the illegal US-led occupation
of Iraq, are no doubt looking on in apprehension as Washington
once again seizes on unproven allegations concerning weapons
of mass destruction to threaten economic sanctions and possibly
military action against Iran.
The key decision was not taken at the IAEA meeting in Vienna
on Saturday but rather at a gathering a week ago in London of
the five permanent UN Security Council membersthe US, Britain,
France, Russia and Chinaplus Germany. At that meeting, all
agreed to support a resolution to report Iran to the
UN Security if it failed to suspend all uranium enrichment activities
and fully cooperate with IAEA inspections.
The meeting marked the first time that Russia and China have
supported a UN Security Council discussion on Irans nuclear
programs. While no consensus was reached on measures to be taken,
Moscow and Beijing effectively agreed in principle to action against
Iran. The only US concession was to delay any formal UN debate
on Iran for a month, giving the two countries a little time to
try to bully or cajole Tehran into acceding to US demands.
As in the case of Iraq, Washingtons bellicose stance
against Iran is not primarily about its alleged nuclear weapons
program. The Bush administrations actions are guided by
its ambitions to establish US economic and strategic dominance
in the resource-rich region. Significantly, the only major power
with nothing to lose if the UN Security Council were to impose
economic sanctions on Iran is the US, which has maintained an
economic blockade of the country since the fall of Shah Reza Pahlavi
in 1979.
For the past two years, the EU-3Britain, Germany and
Francehas attempted to steer a course between Washington
and Tehran, by encouraging Iran to give up its uranium enrichment
programs in return for a pact offering economic, technical and
security benefits. When negotiations collapsed last year, the
European powers, forced to choose between a potential confrontation
with Washington and their substantial economic interests in Iran,
fell in behind the US.
However reluctantly, Russia and China have now followed suit.
Moscow stands to lose heavily on arms sales and contracts to build
nuclear reactors in Iran. Beijing, which has invested heavily
in Irans oil industry, obtains 14 percent of its oil needs
from Iran and was expected to shortly become Irans largest
trading partner. Neither country has agreed to economic sanctions
against Iran, but voting for UN Security Council involvement has
inevitably brought such punitive measures one step closer.
Having pressured the EU, Russia and China into line, it was
relatively straightforward for Washington to obtain a majority
on the 35-member IAEA governing council. The emergency session
began last Thursday but a vote was delayed until Saturday in order
to ensure that the final majority was as large as possible27
to 3 with five abstentions. While close US allies such as Australia,
Japan and Singapore could be counted on, others had to be bullied.
The behind-the-scenes wrangling only highlights the cynicism
and hypocrisy that surrounds the international condemnation of
Iran. India, for instance, has refused to sign the Nuclear Non
Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and has a nuclear arsenal, yet Washington
is in the process of signing an agreement with New Delhi to enhance
nuclear cooperation between the two countries.
To pressure India, the US ambassador to New Delhi, David Mulford,
last month publicly warned that the India-US nuclear pact would
die in the US Congress if India did not support the
US against Iran. While his comment unleashed a storm of protest
in India and a formal retraction from the US, it undoubtedly reflected
what was taking place behind-the-scenes. In any event, India dutifully
voted with the majority.
Another glaring example of US double dealing is the case of
Washingtons close ally Israel, which, like India, has refused
to sign the NPT and has nuclear weapons but faces no international
campaign of condemnation. Egypt and other members of the so-called
Non-Aligned Movement timidly appealed to the IAEA meeting to include
a call for nuclear-free Middle East in the final resolution.
When the US finally conceded a less direct reference to a
Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction, Egypt also
voted with Washington.
One can only guess at the inducements or threats that were
used to ensure the vote of small countries such as Yemen, Sri
Lanka and Ghana. Only three countries voted against the resolutionCuba,
Syria and Venezuela. They were promptly branded the gang
of three by US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burnsa
clear warning that the US intends to exact future retribution
for this vote as well as the other crimes of which
they are already accused.
Resolution condemned
Iran immediately condemned the IAEA vote. Javad Vaidi, head
of the Iranian delegation, declared that the resolution
is politically motivated since it is not based on any legal or
technical grounds. Tehran has repeatedly declared that its
nuclear programs are for peaceful purposes and that its research
into uranium enrichment is designed to provide fuel for its ambitious
plans for nuclear power. Iranian leaders have insisted on their
legal right under the NPT to operate all aspects of the nuclear
fuel cycle.
Following the vote, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ordered
the countrys nuclear commission to restart its uranium enrichment
program and declared that Iran would no longer cooperate with
snap IAEA inspections of its nuclear facilities. At a press conference
last Friday, he denounced the attempts of a few nuclear powers
to dictate their policies... from a domineering position,
assuming that the Middle Ages relations are still valid.
Ahmadinejads nationalist demagogy has nothing to do with
a genuine struggle against imperialism. Rather, confronted with
a deepening social crisis at home, the Islamist regime in Tehran
is seeking to shore up a base of support by whipping up patriotic
hysteria while pressuring the major powers for a more advantageous
economic and strategic relationship. While the exact status of
Irans nuclear programs is unclear, there is no doubt that
sections of the ruling theocracy advocate acquiring nuclear weapons
to enhance Irans position as a regional power and as a deterrent
to US aggression.
While opposing US aggression against Iran, the World Socialist
Web Site does not in any way support the reactionary theocratic
regime in Tehran or any effort on its part to build nuclear weapons.
Far from acting as a deterrent, a handful of crude nuclear weapons
would only act as a further spur to a military attack by Washington.
The Bush administration has time and again declared that all
options are on the table and its close ally, Israel, has
threatened to destroy Iranian nuclear facilities. Acting Israeli
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert responded to the IAEA vote with the
menacing warning that Iran would pay a very heavy price
for resuming uranium enrichment.
The danger of imperialist aggression cannot be combatted through
the construction of nuclear weapons by countries like Iran and
North Korea and threats to wipe out millions of innocent working
people. Such threats play directly into the hands of Washington
and cut directly across the necessary political struggle to unify
workers around the world in an offensive against war and imperialist
oppression based on socialist policies. Needless to say, the regime
in Tehran is organically hostile to any such campaign.
The IAEA vote on Saturday does not automatically mean that
the UN Security Council will impose economic sanctions on Iran
next month. Russia, China and the European powers are all anxious
to avert a confrontation that will have disastrous consequences
for their economic position in Iran and the broader Middle East.
As a way out, Moscow has offered to establish a joint uranium
enrichment facility on Russian soil with Iranian involvementa
proposal that Tehran has ruled out following the IAEA vote. Although
a temporary compromise is possible, the Iranian regime is acutely
aware that any backdown threatens to produce a political backlash
from the very right-wing nationalist layers it has been stirring
up.
An editorial today in the London-based Financial Times
was pessimistic about the chances for averting a confrontation
and thus salvaging European economic fortunes in Iran. There
is probably, at best, no more than a one-in-five chance of the
standoff between Iran and the international community being resolved
without conflict. It noted that Iran was unlikely to back
down, pointing out: The ruling mullahs are widely despised
by their people, but Iranians across the political spectrum support
their countrys right to both technology and deterrencemaking
the nuclear controversy a God-given issue around which to rally
the nation.
The newspaper then held out the faint hope that Iran would
accept the Russian proposal for a joint uranium enrichment facility.
In exchange for full nuclear transparency, Iran could expect
some sort of US security guarantee (not to invade say) and international
underwriting of regional security arrangements binding Iran, Iraq
and the Gulf states led by Saudi Arabia into cooperation,
it stated.
In other words, a solution depends above all not only on a
retreat by Iran and cooperation from its traditional rivals in
the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia, but above all on the willingness
of the Bush administration to magnanimously give Iran an unqualified
security guarantee and to acknowledge Tehran as a regional power.
As the editorial concluded: It is but a slim chance.
See Also:
The political issues behind
the Iranian nuclear confrontation
[21 January 2006]
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