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The political issues behind the Iranian nuclear confrontation
By the Editorial Board
21 January 2006
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The escalating confrontation between Iran and the major powers
over Tehrans nuclear programs raises crucial political issues.
Once again the Bush administration is recklessly setting the
course for military conflict. Again, the European powers, Russia
and China, caught between Washingtons demands and their
own economic interests in Iran and the Middle East, have chosen
to appease the US. While economic sanctions are currently under
discussion, the White House has repeatedly made clear that all
options, including a military attack, are on the table.
The EU-3Britain, France and Germanyhave called
for an emergency meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) to refer Iran to the UN Security Council for punitive sanctions.
Russia and China are yet to finally agree. However, at a meeting
on Monday in London, all five concurred with the US that Iran
had to return to full suspension of its uranium enrichment
activities, thus providing the pretext for increasingly aggressive
measures against Tehran.
The entire rationale for UN action against Iran, recycled endlessly
in the international media, reeks of cynicism and hypocrisy. All
five permanent members of the UN Security Councilthe US,
Britain, France, Russia and Chinahave nuclear weapons and
have failed to meet their obligations as signatories to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) to dismantle their huge nuclear
arsenals.
There is nothing benign about these stockpiles. Rather their
purpose is to bully, threaten and ultimately be deployed against
smaller, weaker powers, as the incendiary comments of French President
Jacques Chirac last Thursday make clear. Speaking at a nuclear
submarine base in Brittany, Chirac warned that France would not
hesitate to use nuclear weapons against any state that sponsored
a terrorist attack against vital French interests. The flexibility
and reactiveness of our strategic [nuclear] forces allow us to
respond directly on the centres of power, he declared.
A glaring double standard is applied to Iran, which is being
menaced with economic sanctions and military strikes over its
nuclear programs, while US alliesIsrael, India and Pakistanalready
have nuclear weapons. Other countries, such as Brazil, either
have built or are currently constructing uranium enrichment plants,
which are not outlawed under the NPT.
Just as it used Iraqs alleged weapons of mass destruction,
the Bush administration is exploiting the Iranian nuclear
threat to advance its ambitions for untrammelled domination
of the resource-rich region. Iran, which has the worlds
third largest reserves of oil and the second largest reserves
of natural gas, sits in a key strategic position astride the Middle
East, Central Asia and the increasingly important Indian subcontinent.
Even if the Iranian regime were to abandon all nuclear programs
and completely demolish its nuclear facilities, Washington would
invent another pretext for its provocative actions, which are
aimed at establishing US ascendancy in the region over Americas
European and Asian rivals.
In opposing the predatory activities of US imperialism in the
Middle East, however, the World Socialist Web Site does
not give any political support to the reactionary theocratic regime
in Tehran nor to any attempt on its part to acquire nuclear weapons.
The Islamic Republic established following the overthrow of Shah
Reza Pahlavi in 1979 represented the interests of dissident sections
of the bourgeoisie, not those of the working people who brought
down the hated dictatorship. The clerical powerbrokers have maintained
their rule for three decades through ruthless repression, directed
above all against any independent movement of the working class.
In response to the latest threats, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
has declared that his government will defy the UN Security Council
and proceed with plans to develop uranium enrichment. In a press
conference last weekend, he condemned what he called the medieval
attitude of bullies and issued vague threats
that a time might come that you would become regretful,
and then there would be no benefits in regretting. In a
veiled reference to the danger of skyrocketting oil prices, he
declared: They confront us and deal with us in very harsh
and illegal language, but ultimately they need us more than we
need them.
No one should mistake Ahmadinejads bravado for a genuine
struggle against imperialism. The aim of this limited challenge
is to pressure the major powers for a more advantageous relationship
for the Iranian bourgeoisie and to bolster Irans position
as a regional power. For the past two years, Tehran has been seeking
to use the nuclear issue to manoeuvre between the US and the European
powers for a formal agreement with the EU for closer economic
and political relations, in return for concessions on its nuclear
programs.
Ahmadinejad obliquely referred to war criminals
who back Israel and those who fight wars in other countries
in order to get security for themselves. But, for all its
posturing against the Bush administration, the Iranian regime
is an accomplice to the US war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Despite its formal opposition, Tehran cooperated with the US-led
invasion of Iraq, calculating that the defeat of its regional
rival would only strengthen its own position. In Iraq itself,
the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (SCIRI),
which is closely aligned to the Iranian regime, openly backed
the invasion and now forms a central component of the US puppet
regime.
Ahmadinejad blandly declared last weekend that our goal
is the peaceful use of nuclear technology and again asserted
Irans rights under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
to develop all aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle. Whatever his
public statements, however, the president is connected to the
most right-wing elements of the theocracy, who insist that Iran
has to have not only nuclear power plants, but nuclear weapons
as well. The construction of nuclear weapons is viewed as the
means to establish Iran as a regional power in the Middle East,
just as the Indian government is attempting to do in South Asia.
There are no doubt those in the Iranian regime who calculate,
or rather miscalculate, that if Iran had nuclear weapons the US
would be compelled to come to terms with Tehran in the same way
that it did New Delhi after its 1998 nuclear tests. However, a
few crude Iranian nuclear weapons would not seriously deter US
aggression. In fact, the construction and testing of an Iranian
nuclear weapon would only heighten the danger of a military strike
or all-out war by the US and its allies, with devastating consequences.
The danger of imperialist war will not be ended through the
acquisition of nuclear weapons by countries like Iran and North
Korea and bloodcurdling threats to incinerate millions of innocent
working people, in Israel or South Korea or elsewhere. Such threats
play directly into the hands of US imperialism. Washington has
exploited the outrage produced by Ahmadinejads openly anti-Semitic
statements, denying the Nazi Holocaust and calling for the state
of Israel to be wiped off the map, to justify the
current international action against Iran.
Ahmadinejads reactionary appeals to nationalism and xenophobia
cut directly across the only practical and progressive strategy
for combatting the eruption of US militarism: the development
of a broad global offensive against war and imperialist oppression
by the international working class, based on the struggle for
a socialist program. The natural allies of working people in Iran
are workers throughout the Middle East, including Israel, as well
as in the United States, Europe and internationally, not nationalist
demagogues like Ahmadinejad or any other faction of the Iranian
bourgeoisie.
The surprise victory of Ahmadinejad in last years presidential
poll was itself the product of a deepening economic and social
crisis in Iran for which no faction of the capitalist class has
any solution other than to place the burden onto the backs of
working people. His populist appeals to put Irans
oil wealth on peoples tables struck a chord with workers
and young people who are increasingly disenchanted with the corrupt
theocratic regime that has brought enormous wealth to a few at
the expense of the vast majority.
Ahmadinejads win reflected above all the political bankruptcy
of the so-called reformists led by former president Mohammed Khatami,
who came to power in 1997. Khatami promised to improve living
standards and establish basic democratic rights, but did neither.
He responded to every significant movement of workers and students
by immediately closing ranks with the conservative hand-liners
to crack down on dissent. At the same time he sought to open up
the Iranian economy to foreign investors and, to that end, improve
relations with Europe and the US, even as Washington invaded neighbouring
Afghanistan and Iraq and threatened military intervention against
Iran itself.
While Ahmadinejad capitalised on popular disgust towards the
reformers, he has no solution to the social and economic
catastrophe confronting millions of Iranians. Despite its large
reserves of oil and gas and the current high price of oil, the
Iranian economy is suffering from high inflation, a lack of investment
and decrepit infrastructure. According to an estimate by the National
Iranian Oil Company, the oil industry desperately needs $70 billion
over the next 10 years to modernise the countrys dilapidated
infrastructure.
UN economic sanctions on Iran will intensify the countrys
deep social crisis. The population is very youngnearly 50
percent is under the age of 20 and 70 percent is under 30. The
official unemployment rate is 16 percent, but other estimates
put the figure twice as high. Only half of the one million new
job-seekers entering the market each year find work. According
to a government study in 2004, joblessness among 15- to 29-year-olds
was set to skyrocket to 52 percent in less than two years.
The fact that the Iranian ruling class is compelled to rely
on Ahmadinejad is a sign of the political impasse that it has
reached. Unable to address the needs and aspirations of the Iranian
masses, it is forced to turn to a populist demagogue to whip up
anti-Semitism and chauvinism to divert attention from the governments
failure to solve the social crisis at home and its manoeuvring
with imperialism abroad. The climate of national emergency will
undoubtedly be exploited to further wind back what limited democratic
rights exist in Iran and crack down on dissidents, including various
minorities.
As the confrontation with US imperialism and its allies deepens,
the regime in Tehran may well decide that it has no alternative
but to embark on the course of developing, testing and stockpiling
nuclear weapons. There is no doubting the very real dangers posed
by the Bush administration, which has enunciated and aggressively
acted upon its doctrine of preventive war with reckless indifference
to the consequences and contempt for international law. While
insisting Tehran restrict its nuclear activities, the US is openly
flouting the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty by developing a
new generation of bunker-buster nuclear weapons that
are aimed precisely at the type of protected underground facilities
that exist in Iran.
The working class, however, cannot give any support to the
building of an Iranian nuclear weapon, which would inevitably
be justified through a frenzied nationalist campaign to defend
the Iranian state and the so-called Islamic revolution. The threat
of nuclear war is not an answer to imperialist aggression, but
a recipe for a nuclear holocaust in the Middle East and beyond.
The only realistic alternative to the predatory policies of imperialism
and the danger of nuclear war is the program of revolutionary
class struggle.
What is required is the construction of a broad, politically
independent movement of the international working class that tackles
the root cause of war and social inequality: capitalism and the
outmoded nation state system. In opposition to all forms of nationalism,
racism and chauvinism, workers must unite their struggles to reconstruct
the economic system on socialist lines to meet the social needs
of humanity as a whole, rather than the profits of a tiny handful.
That is the program advocated by the World Socialist Web Site
and the International Committee of the Fourth International and
fought for by its sections around the world.
See Also:
US, EU set to refer Iran to the UN Security
Council
[13 January 2006]
European media report US plans to strike
Iran
[5 January 2006]
US and EU-3 make another
provocative move against Iran
[29 September 2005]
US-EU deal on Iran:
a step towards confrontation, not a negotiated settlement
[25 March 2005]
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