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East : Iran
Widening rift between major powers over Irans nuclear
programs
By Peter Symonds
1 October 2007
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A foreign ministers meeting of the UN Security Council permanent
membersthe US, Britain, France, Russia and Chinaplus
Germany broke up last Friday without agreeing to the Bush administrations
call for the immediate imposition of tough new sanctions against
Iran over its alleged nuclear weapons programs. Russia and China,
which both hold a veto in the Security Council, opposed the US
demands.
A joint statement announced that a new UN resolution would
be drawn up, but would not be tabled in the Security Council for
two months, pending reports from the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) and the EUs foreign policy chief Javier Solana.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner described the outcome
as a good compromise, but there was no disguising
the disagreements among the major powers, which could well preclude
new UN sanctions.
US Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told the media that
the US interpreted the joint statement as a commitment by all
signatories to back a third round of sanctions if there were no
positive response from Iran. It sent a very tough and strict
message to Iran. However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov declared that the agreement did not automatically mean
new sanctions in November. The statement is very ambiguous,
Lavrov said. What we discussed today is to concentrate everything
to help negotiations to succeed.
The joint statement welcomed an IAEA agreement reached with
Iran in July to systematically answer all outstanding questions
about its nuclear programs. The US and its European allies have,
however, been critical of the deal, formally protesting at the
time that IAEA chief Mohammad ElBaredei was acting outside his
brief by failing to insist on a complete shutdown of Irans
uranium enrichment program. The IAEA is not in the business
of diplomacy. It is a technical agency, US Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice curtly declared earlier this month.
The IAEA agreement not only delays the Bush administrations
plans for tougher penalties against Iran, but highlights the hypocrisy
of the US stance. Under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,
Iran is permitted to engage in all aspects of the nuclear fuel
cycle for peaceful purposes, including uranium enrichment. The
only basis for the US demands that Iran shut down its uranium
enrichment facility at Natanz was the claim that Tehran had failed
to satisfy the IAEA on all aspects of its programs. Washingtons
hostility to ElBaradeis deal with Tehran confirms that the
US is exploiting the nuclear issue as a pretext for action against
Iran.
ElBaradei is due to present his report to the IAEA board of
directors in late November. Another report is to be prepared by
the EUs Solana, who has been asked to attempt to restart
negotiations with Iran over a package of economic, security and
technical incentives in exchange for halting specified nuclear
programs, including uranium enrichment. In mid-2005, Tehran angrily
rejected an EU package as an insult to the Iranian people
and resumed work on its uranium enrichment facilities.
Last Fridays agreement to wait for the outcome of these
reports could rapidly fall apart. French Foreign Minister Kouchner
immediately announced that he intended to push for separate EU
sanctions against Iran at a meeting on October 15. We will
talk about sanctions. Already we are sending a letter to our counterparts,
he told the media. Britain and the Netherlands have indicated
their support, but other EU members are yet to announce their
stance. Kouchners move is in line with previous Bush administration
calls for a coalition of the willing to apply unilateral
penalties against Iran.
Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov has warned that any separate
EU sanctions could place a further UN Security Council resolution
in jeopardy. The issue was the subject of sharp words between
Lavrov and Rice last Wednesday, variously described by the diplomats
present as a very blunt exchange and pretty
rough. The growing gulf between Russia and China on the
one hand, and the US, Britain, France and Germany on the other,
was evident on Friday: after the meeting of the six broke up,
the US and the European powers met separately.
Behind these bitter divisions are the contending economic and
strategic interests of the major powers. As was the case prior
to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the Bush administration is exploiting
demands for sanctions and the threat of war as the means for undermining
its European and Asian rivals, all of which have substantial trade
and investment with Iran. Hoping to protect their economic position,
France and Britain have unambiguously supported Washingtons
aggressive stance, while Russia and China have attempted to fight
a diplomatic rearguard action in the UN.
Even among the European powers, there appear to be differences.
An article in the Financial Times last week highlighted
Germanys response to criticisms that it was dragging its
feet over sanctions against Iran. German officials told the newspaper
that the foreign ministry had been instructed to prepare a dossier
for Fridays meeting in New York setting out the failure
of the other powers to take action. It apparently included not
only a list of French corporations, such as Peugeot, Renault,
Total and BNP Paribas, still active in Iran, but also noted that
US businesses were trading with Iran using companies in Dubai
to hide their involvement.
Military threat
The refusal of Russia and China to agree to a new UN resolution
will not stop the Bush administration from pressing ahead with
new economic penalties against Iran, accompanied by the threat
of military attack. In recent weeks, a growing stream of media
leaks points to advanced preparations for US strikes on Iran.
At the same time, the most right-wing sections of the US political
and media establishment have been intensifying their propaganda
against Iran and demands for military action.
An editorial in the Wall Street Journal last Thursday,
entitled Bush and Iran, bluntly criticised the White
House for condemning Iran over its nuclear programs and alleged
support for anti-US insurgents in Iraq, but failing to take action.
It derided the diplomatic efforts of the US State Department and
dismissed UN sanctions as notable mainly for their weakness.
The newspapers opinion pages have consistently acted as
the mouthpiece for the most militarist faction of the Bush administration.
The editorials unmistakable conclusion was for a US war
against Iran. The Bush presidency is running out of time
to act if it wants to stop Iran from gaining a bomb. With GIs
fighting and dying in Iraq, Mr Bush also owes it to them not to
allow enemy sanctuaries or weapons pipelines from Iran. If the
President believes half of what he and his administration have
said about Irans behaviour, he has an obligation to do whatever
it takes to stop it.
Former US ambassador to the UN John Bolton delivered a similar
message to members of Britains Conservative Party over the
weekend. Bolton, previously one of the Bush administrations
leading neo-conservatives, told his audience that while military
force was not an attractive option... I would tell you I
dont know what the alternative is... If we were to strike
Iran it should be accompanied by an effort at regime change...
The US once had the capability to engineer the clandestine overthrow
of governments. I wish we could get it back.
In an interview with the Sunday Times, Norman Podhoretz,
a leading figure among so-called neo-conservatives, explained
that he had pressed Bush in a private meeting earlier this year
to take military action against Irans nuclear facilities.
You have an awesome responsibility to prevent another holocaust.
Youre the only one with the guts to do so, Podhoretz
said he told the president. While Bush did not indicate agreement,
Podhoretz noted, he listened intently and laughed when Podhoretz
spoke derisively of UN sanctions.
Bolton, Podhoretz and the Wall Street Journal are undoubtedly
giving voice to the opinions of those in the White House around
Vice President Dick Cheney. As far as this faction is concerned,
the failure of Americas rivals to agree to new UN sanctions
is just one more argument for unilateral US action against Iran
and the acceleration of already advanced preparations for a reckless
new military adventure in the Middle East.
See Also:
UN General Assembly meets
under shadow of US threats against Iran
[24 September 2007]
On eve of UN general assembly,
US military arrests Iranian official in Iraq
[22 September 2007]
Israel's air raid on Syria:
another threat to Iran
[18 September 2007]
Israeli air raid in Syria
heightens Middle East tensions
[17 September 2007]
Bush administration consolidates
plans for war against Iran
[17 September 2007]
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