|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
Bush administration demands UN action against Iran
By Peter Symonds
2 May 2006
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The Bush administration has seized on last Fridays International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report on Irans nuclear programs
to issue a new round of demands and threats, directed as much
against its European and Asian rivals as against Tehran.
Washington is pressing for the UN Security Council to adopt
a binding resolution under Chapter 7 of the UN Charter that would
declare Tehran a threat to international peace and security
and formally pave the way for economic sanctions and military
measures.
Russia and China have initially rejected such a resolution,
well aware that the US would exploit it as a flimsy justification
for aggression against Iran. Chinas UN ambassador Wang Guangya
declared last week: I think Chapter 7 means many things,
including the worst scenario, and I dont want to elaborate
on that.
In a round of interviews on Sunday, US Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice accused Iran of playing games with the international
community. In reality, it is the Bush administration that
is engaged in an elaborate diplomatic charade as it steps up efforts
to destabilise the Iranian regime and draws up war plans.
The situation bears an eerie resemblance to the steps taken
by the Bush administration prior to its illegal and unprovoked
invasion of Iraq in March 2003. Washington is again using the
threat of unilateral action to bully and threaten the UN Security
Council, particularly its permanent veto-wielding members, into
sanctioning punitive measures against Iran.
Even the language is similar. In place of the so-called coalition
of the willing, US officials are now speaking of an alliance
of like-minded states. I absolutely believe
that we have a lot of diplomatic arrows in our quiver at the Security
Council and also like-minded states that would be able and willing
to look at additional measures if the Security Council does not
move quickly enough, Rice told CBS on Sunday.
President Bush told the media last Friday, the diplomatic
process is just beginning. However, the US ambassador to
the UN, John Bolton, has indicated that the US would seek a Chapter
7 resolution giving Iran a short time to comply before
considering targetted sanctions or possible trade restrictions.
We do think theres a sense of urgency here and we
hope that we can get council action just as soon as possible...
There are a variety of things that could be undertaken within
or without the Security Council, he stated.
The US has already launched a new round of diplomatic bullying.
US Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, Nicholas Burns,
is due to meet today in Paris with officials from the other permanent
UN Security membersBritain, Russia, France, Chinaas
well as Germany to decide on action against Iran. Burns declared
last week that the IAEA report proved that Iran was an international
outlaw and called for a major international reassessment
of doing business with Iran. Rice is due to meet with the
foreign ministers of the same countries in New York on May 9.
Bush and his officials all speak as if the IAEA report concludes
that Iran is seeking to build nuclear weapons, which Tehran has
repeatedly denied, insisting that it is only exercising its rights
to peaceful nuclear activities under the Nuclear Non-proliferation
Treaty (NPT). The report only confirms what Tehran has publicly
announcedthat it has restarted uranium enrichment.
While it is certainly possible that the Iranian regime is seeking
to build nuclear weapons, the IAEA report provided no direct evidence
of such a program. As in the case of Iraqs alleged nuclear
programs in 2002, the IAEA is being called on to prove a negativethat
nowhere in Iran are there any activities that could lead to the
production of nuclear bombs. Every attempt by Tehran over the
last three years to comply with the IAEA has been followed by
provocative new allegations emanating from Washington and further
IAEA demands for wider access to sites, documents and personnel.
US strategic ambitions
For the Bush administration, Irans nuclear programs are
simply a convenient pretext to exert pressure on the UN and to
whip up a campaign of fear at home. American officials absurdly
brand Iran as the greatest security threat to the US, knowing
full well that this economically backward country, even with a
handful of nuclear weapons, is no match for the US military. Even
if Tehran were to fully comply with IAEA requirements, the White
House has lined up a long list of equally bogus excuses to press
ahead with regime change in Tehran.
Washingtons greatest political asset is the Iranian bourgeois
regime itself, which through its empty nationalist bluster plays
directly into the Bush administrations hands. The divisive
xenophobic and anti-Semitic rhetoric of Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, which is aimed at propping up his fragile government,
directly cuts across a unified opposition by working people in
the Middle East and internationally. In response to the latest
IAEA report, Ahmadinejad bombastically declared: The Iranian
nation wont give a damn about such useless [UN] resolutions.
In accelerating a confrontation with Iran, the Bush administration
is pressing ahead with long-held ambitions to secure untrammelled
US dominance over the resource-rich region. As well as having
huge reserves of oil and gas itself, Iran stands at the strategic
crossroads between the Middle East, Central Asia and the increasingly
important Indian subcontinent. The installation of a pliant pro-US
regime in Tehran would directly undercut the efforts of Washingtons
rivals in Europe and Asia over the last decade to establish economic
relations with Iran. Russia and China, as well the EU, Japan and
India all have substantial interests in the country.
The emerging fault lines in the UN Security Council underscore
the dangers not just of a US military assault on Iran, but of
a broader conflict over oil and resources involving the major
powers. In response to US aggression against Afghanistan and Iraq,
Russia and China in particular have been forging closer economic
and strategic relations through the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.
The two countries held their first joint military exercise last
year in China and are planning a second next year.
Moscow, in particular, has been quietly challenging the growing
US presence in the former Soviet republics of Central Asia. At
its meeting last year, the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO)
called on the US to set a deadline for the withdrawal of its military
bases from Central Asia in the lead up to its intervention into
Afghanistan. The Pentagon has already been forced to pull out
of its Karshi-Khanabad base in Uzbekistan and confronts demands
for a huge increase in rent for its other main base in Kyrgyzstan.
Significantly Iran was admitted as an observer, along with
India and Pakistan, to the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation meeting
last year and is seeking full membership. At a meeting of the
organisation in Beijing last month, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Ivanov was quick to dismiss any military support for Iran against
the US, declaring: Iran is an observer state in the SCO,
so no one bears any responsibilities to protect it. I discard
right away any idiotic ideas that the SCO will defend Iran.
Nevertheless, the vehemence of the reply highlights the fact that
the formation of such a bloc challenges US ambitions in the region
and raises the prospect of future military conflict.
To date, Russia and China, along with other countries that
have economic interests in Iran such as Britain, France and Germany,
have backed away from any direct confrontation with the US. All
of these powers voted for the IAEA resolution in February to refer
Iran to the UN and then in March for a non-binding presidential
statement in the UN Security Council setting a 30-day deadline
for Iran to cease uranium enrichment. In all likelihood, Moscow
and Beijing will again seek to appease Washington in forthcoming
meetings on Iran and try to limit the scope of any UN action.
Far from inhibiting US plans in any way, support for a Chapter
7 resolution on Irans nuclear programs will be one step
closer to a confrontation. Facing slumping political support at
home and a deepening quagmire in Iraq, the Bush administration
has desperately latched onto Iran as a means for diverting public
attention while further advancing US strategic and economic ambitions.
See Also:
US threats against Iran-the
specter of nuclear barbarism
[13 April 2006]
Washington considering nuclear
strikes against Iran
[10 April 2006]
UN Security Council bows to
US pressure for a statement against Iran
[31 March 2006]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |