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US administration slams door on negotiations with Iran
By Peter Symonds
16 May 2006
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The Bush administration has emphatically ruled out any direct
talks with Tehran, despite an overture from Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, an open letter from top Iranian official
Hassan Rohani and an appeal by the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan
over the past week.
The US stance highlights the absurdity of President Bushs
declaration, repeated last Tuesday, that his administration is
engaged in diplomacy as the first and most important
option to resolve the dispute over Irans nuclear programs.
As far as the political gangsters in the White House are concerned,
diplomacy consists of issuing ultimatums, backed by
the threat of war, and bullying opponents and allies alike into
acceding to US demands.
Bushs comments came just one day after Ahmadinejad sent
an 18-page letter addressed to the US presidentthe first
direct, public contact between the two countries since the overthrow
of the US-backed Shah Reza Pahlavi in 1979. If the US were at
all serious about diplomacy, it would have seized on the long,
rambling and occasionally barbed document as an opening for negotiations.
Stratfor, a conservative thinktank with close links to the
US intelligence establishment, assessed the letter as an Iranian
effort at reestablishing relations with the US. Embedded
in passages that would seem to be completely unobjectionable to
any audiences at home [in Iran] can be found key phrases and hints,
letting the other side know that one is ready to make concessions
in exchange for reciprocity. Thus, tensions can be defused without
anyone actually appearing to be compromised.... It will be interesting
to see how the Americans write back.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice dismissed the letter
out of hand as nothing new. Bush declared that Ahmadinejad
had failed to address the main questionwhen will you
get rid of your nuclear program? In other words, what is
required of Tehran is nothing short of complete capitulation.
The White House also rejected an open letter from Hassan Rohani
published last Tuesday on the Time web site. Rohani, who
was Irans former chief nuclear negotiator, is currently
the representative of Irans supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamanei on the countrys powerful Supreme National Security
Council.
Rohanis tightly-drafted letter pointed out that Iran
has no reason to build nuclear weapons, has repeatedly declared
it is not doing so and that the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) after three years of inspections has found no evidence
to the contrary. What is, then, the motive for the rush
to heighten the situation and create a crisis? Could it be that
the extremists all around see their interestshowever transient,
domestic and short-sightedin heightened tension and crisis?...
It is high time to cease sensationalism and warmongering, pause
and think twice about where we are heading, he declared,
before setting out a series of Iranian proposals for resolving
the dispute.
US State Department spokesman Sean McCormack declared: Weve
seen it. I think there really isnt anything new in it.
Washington also rejected a further offer from the Iranian president
last Thursday to negotiate and an appeal the following day by
Kofi Annan for the US to come to the table and join the
European countries and Iran to find a solution.
In comments to CNN on Sunday, former US President Jimmy Carters
national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski scathingly declared:
Its really ironic. We are not negotiating with Iran,
but we are negotiating. Who are we negotiating with? We are negotiating
with the negotiators with Iran. And its an absurd situation.
He pointed to the double standards of the Bush administrations
willingness to engage in multilateral talks with North Korea,
which claims to have manufactured nuclear weapons, but not with
Iran.
Reflecting concerns in US ruling circles about the recklessness
of the Bush administrations actions, Brzezinski warned against
pumping up an atmosphere of urgency when the
earliest, by most intelligence analyses, the Iranians will have
nuclear weapons is approximately five years, more likely 10. Some
even say 15. He called for negotiations with Iran, but the
appeal, like all the others, fell on deaf ears.
US diplomatic thuggery
The Bush administrations aim is not a negotiated deal
with Iran over its nuclear programs, but regime change
and the installation of a pro-US puppet administration in Tehran.
Irans alleged nuclear weapons programs are simply the pretext
for advancing Washingtons broader ambitions to dominate
the resource-rich regions of the Middle East and Central Asia.
Iran, with its own huge reserves of oil and gas, is strategically
located between the two regions and between US-occupied Iraq and
Afghanistan.
Washingtons diplomacy is not directed primarily
at Tehran, but rather at bullying its European and Asian rivals
into sanctioning and supporting its actions. Having pressured
the EU, Russia and China into referring Iran to the UN Security
Council, the US is now pressing for a binding Chapter 7 resolution
declaring Tehrans nuclear programs to be a threat
to international peace and security opening the door for
punitive sanctions and military action against Iran.
Negotiations between the permanent members of the UN Security
Councilthe US, Russia, China, France and Britainplus
Germany ended last week in considerable acrimony. With the exception
of the US, which has maintained an economic blockade on Iran since
1979, all the major powers have investments and economic interests
in Iran that would be undermined by sanctions or a military attack.
Russia and China in particular have opposed any UN resolution
that would provide the pretext for punitive measures against Iran.
According to the Hong Kong-based Standard, the meeting
of six foreign ministers on May 8 was described by one US official
as a pretty extraordinary session and everyones been
talking about it in private since. What was to be a polite
30-minute chat in Rices suite before dinner turned into
a two-hour slanging match before the ministers sat down to shrivelled
sea bass and further bickering in front of top officials.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov repeatedly complained
about the remarks of US Vice President Richard Cheney during a
trip the previous week to Lithuania, in which he provocatively
attacked Moscow over restrictions on democratic rights and its
use of oil and gas as tools of intimidation and blackmail.
Lavrov accused US officials of undermining European efforts to
resolve the Iranian crisis and threatened to veto the draft resolution
drawn up by Britain and France, with US backing, if it were brought
to the UN Security Council.
In his state of the nation address last Wednesday, Russian
President Vladimir Putin openly castigated the Bush administrations
hypocrisy over democratic rights, declaring: Where
is all the fervour about the need for human rights and democracy,
when it comes to the need to realise their own interests? Here
it seems everything is possible, there are no restrictions.
He obliquely warned that the use of force [by the US against
Iran] ... could be more disastrous than the initial threat.
Underlining the sharpness of tensions, Putin called for a rebuilding
of the Russian military to preserve the strategic balance
of forces. After pointing out that the US now spent 25 times
Russia on its armed forces, he declared, to the applause of Russian
parliamentarians: Their house is their fortress. Good for
them. But that means we must make our own house strong and firm.
Because we see what is happening in the world. As they say, Comrade
Wolf knows whom to eat. He eats and doesnt listen
to anyone. And judging by appearances, he has no intention of
listening. The bitterness of US-Russian relations reflects
the intensity of the scramble for resources and strategic position,
particularly in the Middle East, Eastern Europe and the former
Soviet republics of Central Asia.
Following the collapse of the New York meeting of foreign ministers,
the six powers agreed to allow the European countries a fortnight
to draft a new UN Security Council resolution that would offer
Iran a package of economic and political incentives to end its
uranium enrichment program, as well as outlining punitive measures
if it failed to do so. Such a proposal is unlikely to gain the
support of Russia and China as it would commit them to actions
that they previously opposed in the event that Iran declined the
incentives. Last weekend, Ahmadinejad indicated that
Tehran would reject any package that required it to shut down
its enrichment facilities.
The Bush administration has already made abundantly clear that
it intends to proceed against Iran, with or without the support
of the UN Security Council. US ambassador to the UN John Bolton
bluntly declared on May 2: If for whatever reason the council
couldnt fulfill its responsibilities, then I think it would
be incumbent on us, and I am sure we would press ahead to ask
other countries or other groups of countries to impose those sanctions.
If the US fails to achieve its objectives through sanctions, as
is almost certainly the case, then Bush and other top US officials
have repeatedly declared that all options [that is, including
US military action] are on the table.
The relentlessness of the US pursuit of Irans nuclear
programs is not a measure of the threat posed by Iran, but of
the political and economic crisis confronting US imperialism.
Confronted with deepening military quagmires in Iraq and Afghanistan
and profound hostility to its policies at home, the Bush administration
is recklessly preparing for a new criminal military adventure
both to divert public attention, to intimidate its international
rivals and to consolidate its grip in the Middle East. Putins
remarks make clear Washingtons militarism will sooner or
later produce a reaction from its rivals, who are determined to
defend their vital interests, thus sowing the seeds for far broader
and even more catastrophic conflicts.
See Also:
Bush administration demands UN action
against Iran
[2 May 2006]
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]
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