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East : Iran
IAEA chief declares any attack on Iran an act of madness
By Peter Symonds
16 June 2007
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The latest meeting of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA), which ended on Thursday, has set the stage for a new round
of punitive measures against Iran over its nuclear programs. Washington
is pressing for a third round of UN Security Council sanctions,
but the presence of two US aircraft battle groups in the Persian
Gulf is a constant reminder that the Bush administration is keeping
all options on the table.
In his concluding remarks, IAEA director general Mohammed ElBaradei
ominously warned that the use of force against Iran would be an
act of madness ... [that] would not resolve the issue. Having
witnessed firsthand the Bush administrations use of lies
about WMDs to justify military aggression against Iraq, ElBaradei
is well aware that US diplomacy is also providing
the pretext for war against Iran.
ElBaradei bluntly told the BBC a fortnight ago: I wake
up every morning and see 100 Iraqi innocent civilians are dying.
I have no brief other than to make sure we dont go into
another war or that we go crazy into killing each other. You do
not want to give [an] additional argument to the new crazies who
say lets go and bomb Iran. Asked who the
new crazies were, the IAEA chief refused to be drawn,
simply saying: Those who have extreme views and say the
only solution is to impose your will by force.
It is not difficult to identify who ElBaradei is referring
to: the dominant sections of the American establishment. While
the Bush administration publicly maintains the fiction that it
wants a diplomatic solution, Vice President Dick Cheney
and his supporters barely disguise their support for military
action. All bar one of the Republican presidential candidates
declared their willingness in a televised debate on June 5 to
use nuclear weapons to destroy Irans atomic facilities.
As for the Democratic contenders, most have publicly backed the
US campaign of diplomatic bullying, economic sanctions and military
threats that is preparing the ground for war against Iran.
Currently the Bush administration is presenting its diplomatic
face. US IAEA envoy Gregory Schulte told Associated Press last
Tuesday that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is ready
to go to the [negotiating] table with our partners from Russia,
China and Europe.... All the Iranians have to do is ... suspend
... uranium enrichment [and] plutonium production that arent
necessary for civil purposes but are necessary if you want to
build a bomb.
Tehran, however, insists that its uranium enrichment plant
at Natanz is not only necessary to ensure an indigenous supply
of nuclear reactor fuel, but also conforms with its obligations
under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The latest IAEA
report presented to this weeks meeting confirms that Iran
is operating 1,312 gas centrifuges and has more under construction.
Tests confirmed that uranium was being enriched to 5 percent,
not the 80-90 percent level needed to construct an atomic bomb.
As for plutonium production, what Schulte is actually
referring to is a research reactor under construction at Arak,
which is still years from completion.
The Iranian regime, moreover, quite legitimately has doubts
that the US will negotiate in good faith. Tehran previously agreed
to a voluntary, non-binding freeze of its uranium
enrichment programs in 2004 to enable negotiations with Britain,
France and Germany (the EU-3), later joined by the US, over a
package of economic incentives to resolve the standoff. Iran insisted
from the outset that it would not give up its right to uranium
enrichment nor allow talks to drag on indefinitely, effectively
making the freeze permanent. After nearly a year of discussions,
the EU-3 finally made an offer that Tehran denounced as an
insult.
The US has offered no guarantee that new talks would be any
different. In a bid to restart negotiations, ElBaradei has been
pushing for a time-outa freeze of Irans
nuclear programs in return for a suspension of UN sanctionsto
allow for negotiations. In an interview with the New York Times
last month, the IAEA chief argued that, as Iran had already demonstrated
its ability to enrich uranium, diplomatic efforts should focus
on containing the program by allowing for a limited research capacity.
Not only has the US ignored proposals for a time-out, but, together
with Britain, France and Japan, formally rebuked ElBaradei for
suggesting a compromise.
In his remarks on Thursday, ElBaradei warned that time was
running out, saying: The next few months will be crucial.
While noting that Iran was three to eight years away from having
a bomb even if that was its intention, he added: [T]he longer
we delay, the less option we have to reach a peaceful solution.
The Bush administration is publicly playing down Irans enrichment
capability, but a debate is undoubtedly continuing in the White
House over timetables for the use of force. Following a visit
to Washington last weekend, Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shaul
Mofaz reiterated Israelis support for a military option
and suggested that diplomatic efforts should bear results
by the end of 2007.
Arming insurgents
Irans nuclear programs are not the only pretext for a
US attack on Iran. Senator Joseph Lieberman, who describes himself
as an independent Democrat, yesterday repeated his
call for limited military action against Iran. Last
Sunday he accused Tehran of training and equipping
insurgents to kill US soldiers and Iraqis. On Friday,
he extended the scope of his allegations to say that Iran
has already begun to carry out military action against American
soldiers and a lot of our allies in the Arab world.
According to Lieberman, Irans hand is behind every crisis
in the Middle East. He cited the civil war between Palestinian
factions in Gaza and the assassination on Wednesday of Lebanese
parliamentarian Walid Eido in Beirut. This is outrageous
stuff going on and its going to affect our security,
he said. If we dont ... stop Iranians from killing
Americans and our Arab allies today, its going to be impossible
for us to do what everyone in both [American] parties and all
ideologies say we have to do tomorrow, which is to stop them getting
nuclear weapons, Lieberman ranted.
Lieberman, who remains a bellicose supporter of the Iraq war,
provided no evidence to support any of his wild claims. Even the
official propaganda issuing regularly from the Pentagon and State
Department stops short of claiming as proven that Iranian regime
itself is supplying weapons to anti-US insurgents. Tehran has
denied the accusation and in talks last month with US officials
in Baghdad offered to assist in stabilising Iraq. As for the crises
in Gaza, the West Bank and Lebanon, the chief responsibility for
the deepening instability rests with the US, which refused outright
to recognise the elected Palestinian government and last year
backed Israels brutal war in southern Lebanon.
Lieberman is not an isolated individual, but reflects the views
of the most militaristic layers of the Bush administration and
American political establishment. True to form, the Wall Street
Journal opened its pages to the senator yesterday to defend
the US occupation of Iraq, as well as the Bush administrations
surge strategy, and to repeat again: Iran has
initiated a deadly military confrontation with us, from bases
in Iran, which we ignore at our peril, and at the peril of our
allies throughout the Middle East.
No less significant are the repeated accusations being made
by senior Bush officials that Iran is also supplying weapons to
the Taliban in Afghanistan. Following comments by Undersecretary
of State Nicholas Burns on Tuesday, Defence Secretary Robert Gates
repeated the allegation on Wednesday, saying: [G]iven the
quantities that were seeing, it is difficult to believe
that it is associated with smuggling or the drug business or that
its taking place without the knowledge of the Iranian government.
Gates offered no evidence to support his claim, nor any explanation
as to why Tehran would arm the Taliban fighters that it previously
opposed throughout the late 1990s.
Speaking to Associated Press on Thursday, Afghan Defence Minister
Abdul Rahim Wardak dismissed the statements of Burns and Gates,
saying: Actually, throughout, we have had good relations
with Iran and we believe that the security and stability of Afghanistan
are also in the interests of Iran.... There has been evidence
of weapons, but it is difficult to link it to Iran. It is possible
that [the arms] might be from Al Qaeda, from the drug mafia or
from other sources. Such statements by Wardak, Afghan President
Hamid Karzai and other top Afghan officials will do nothing to
prevent the Bush administration from repeating its unproven claims.
The steady stream of anti-Iranian propaganda from Washington
suggests that ElBaradei is not wrong to warn of the dangers of
a new war. Liebermans accusation that Iran is already killing
US soldiers is aimed at mobilising the right-wing zealots
that form the Bush administrations base of support, as well
as providing a convenient excuse for a defensive war
that would avoid the necessity for the UN Security Council to
provide a legal figleaf. Needless to say, any limited military
action by the US against Iran has the potential to involve
US regional allies and engulf the entire Middle East.
An unprovoked military strike on Iran would be an act
of madness. There is, however, an underlying method to the
Bush administrations madness. As a declining economic power,
US imperialism is seeking to exploit its residual military might
to dominate the key resource-rich regions of the globe. The occupations
of Afghanistan and Iraq, and now the aggressive push against Iran,
are aimed at asserting US control over the Middle East and Central
Asia and blocking the ambitions of its European and Asian rivals.
That is why, despite the quagmire in Iraq, the Bush administration
is still contemplating plans for regime change and war against
Iran.
See Also:
Senator Lieberman calls for US military
attack on Iran
[13 June 2007]
Republican presidential candidates back
nuclear strike against Iran
[7 June 2007]
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