Originally
published on Znet/ZMagazine
Foaad Khosmood: In the April 17
issue of New Yorker Magazine Seymour Hersh has an eye-opening piece that quotes
Administration insiders who suggest nuclear war with Iran is a
serious option. You had written back in October of 2005 that "The strategic
decision by the United States
to nuke Iran was probably made long ago."
What led you to that conclusion at that time? What do you think of the Hersh
piece?
Jorge
Hirsch: Of course
the Hersh piece is extremely useful in bringing this issue to the forefront of
public attention. However already several months ago an analysis of the facts
led me to the conviction that a deliberate decision had been made to use nuclear
weapons against Iran. First, the US pursuit over several years to get an IAEA
resolution against Iran, no matter how weak, which it
finally achieved in September 2005. It didn't make any sense as a diplomatic
move if the goal was to exert pressure on Iran, in view of the clear dissent by
Russia and
China. It had two purposes: one was
to bring the issue eventually to the UN Security Council, even knowing that
Russia and
China would veto any action
against Iran, so that, just
as in the case of Iraq, the
US could argue that other countries
share its concern but not the resolve to act. But more importantly, the
US issued a commitment to the
UN in 1995 that it wouldn't use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear countries
signatories of the NPT, which however explicitly excluded countries that are in
"non-compliance" with the NPT. So by securing the IAEA resolution of September
2005 of Iran's
"non-compliance" the US
achieved that it can now use nuclear weapons against Iran "legally",
i.e. without violating its 1995 commitment. This explains why it was pushing for
it so adamantly.
Furthermore the
US has radically changed its nuclear
weapons policies since 2001 to erase the sharp line that traditionally existed
between nuclear and non-nuclear weapons. It now "integrates" both types of
weapons in its military strategy, and envisions the use of nuclear weapons
against underground facilities, preemptively against countries "intending" to
use WMD's against US forces, and "for rapid and favorable war termination on
US terms". Several scenarios like
that, that apply specifically to the Iran scenario, were made public in
2005 in the Pentagon draft document "Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations", to
prepare the country for what was being planned.
Furthermore, the
administration has been pushing Congress every year to fund new nuclear weapons,
"more usable" nuclear weapons, and bunker busting nuclear weapons, to prepare
the public mind for the attack. Many are under the mistaken impression that
Congress has resisted these efforts, however they forget or don't know that the
B61-11, a bunker-buster that can be used against Iranian underground facilities,
is in the US arsenal since 2001. Its yield
(power) is classified but is likely to include very low yield, to cause "reduced
collateral damage" and thus be more "acceptable".
Furthermore, as I pointed
out several months ago and is also mentioned by Hersh, the administration is
stacked with nuclear weapons experts that are hawks and participated in the
formulation of the new nuclear weapons policies: National Security advisor
(Hadley), deputy national security advisor (Crouch II), undersecretary of
defense for intelligence (Cambone), chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Science
Board (Schneider), undersecretary of state for arms control and international
security (Joseph) and ambassador to the UN (Bolton). Bolton was appointed in the face of very strong bipartisan
opposition. None of these positions require specific nuclear weapons expertise,
however these "nuclear warriors" are in high positions for a reason: to
advise President Bush to use nuclear weapons. And let's not forget Cheney, who
was the architect of new nuclear weapons policies back in 1992 to target
non-nuclear-weapon countries, and Rumsfeld who advocates a smaller high tech
military where nuclear weapons play an essential role.
It also became clear to me
that there is a long-term advantage in the view of advocates of America's
"preeminent role in the world" (PNAC) to use nuclear weapons against Iran: to
establish the credibility of the US nuclear "deterrent" against non-nuclear
countries that pursue courses of action contrary to US interests. The
Iran situation lends itself
to a scenario where the US
use of nuclear weapons will appear to be "inevitable", under the conditions that
have been created by the US carefully and methodically over
the course of several years for that purpose. Finally, I believe President Bush
has embraced the breaking of the 60-year old taboo against the use of nuclear
weapons as his personal goal, to be his lasting "legacy" that will overshadow
other "accomplishments" of his administration.
FKh: Is a war with
Iran now inevitable? Is a nuclear war
inevitable?
JH: If there is an aerial bombing of
Iran, I believe it is inevitable it
will go nuclear. The intention is there, the advisors are there, the nuclear
policies and the weapons are there. The excuses to make it "acceptable" to the
American public are there. The President has sole authority to order the use of
nuclear weapons, Congress has no say. The chain of command doesn't go through
the Joint Chiefs of Staff that may oppose it as Hersh mentions: it goes directly
from Bush and Rumsfeld to commanders of the Unified Combatant Commands such as
Gen. Abizaid and Gen. Cartwright. Unless those individuals disobey orders, there
is no way to stop it.
I believe there is a high
probability of war with Iran because key people in the
administration desperately want it, but I don't believe it is inevitable. I hope
there will be a sufficiently large public outburst of opposition, eg thanks to
Hersh's and other's revelations, to make it impossible. The dire situation in
Iraq of course is making it more
difficult, and I hope there will be strong voices in the administration and
influential republicans that will recognize the likely disastrous consequences
and oppose it. Or perhaps influential old-timers like Bush Sr. and Scowcroft
will be able to dissuade President Bush.
However I believe there is
very little time: an attack may well happen within the next 2 weeks, while
Congress is in recess. There is no advantage to those that want it to happen in
waiting.
FKh: What is the
rationale for America using nukes on Iran, given that even the CIA believes
Iran is at least "10 years" from any
nuclear weapon production?
JH: The use of nuclear weapons against
Iran will be justified by "military
necessity". In theory, Iran could equip missile warheads
with chemical or biological weapons and aim them at Israeli cities or US bases
in the area. The declared US policy of "preemption" would
"justify" using highly accurate earth penetrating nuclear weapons to destroy
missile silos or suspected underground facilities housing WMD's. The argument
will be made that a few hundred or thousand Iranian "collateral damage"
casualties of low yield earth penetrating nuclear weapons is preferable to
potential tens of thousands of US or Israeli casualties from Iranian missiles
equipped with WMD warheads.
The US accuses Iran of having clandestine chemical and
biological weapons facilities, even though it doesn't present proof of such
assertions, and despite the fact that Iran is signatory of the Chemical
Weapons Convention and Biological Weapons Convention treaties. Furthermore the
US has worked very hard over the past 15 years to create the perception
that nuclear, biological and chemical weapons are all similar "WMD"'s, to
prepare the ground for the US use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear-weapon
countries. However the scientific fact is, nuclear weapons are million-fold more
destructive than all other weapons and in contrast to chemical and biological
weapons there is no protection against nuclear weapons.
FKh: What would be the
likely impact on the EU3/IAEA/UN negotiation process for Iran? Some of
theorized that the Bush Administration is hoping Iran would withdraw from the NPT, like
North
Korea did, creating an excuse for intervention.
What is your view on this?
JH: Just like in the run-up to the
Iraq war, I believe there was
the hope that Iran would withdraw from the NPT to
create conditions to "justify" an aerial attack. Iran would have
been justified in withdrawing, since its right as an NPT signatory are clearly
being violated. Wisely it has chosen not to do so. North Korea is in the fortunate situation of
having a deterrent to US attack, a few nuclear weapons with
which it could retaliate if attacked. Iran does not have that recourse.
FKh: Could the threat of
using American nuclear weapons be overplayed in order to serve as a "limit" to
any Iranian response to a conventional attack/strike? I distinctly recall in the
first months of 2003, the Administration leaked that US is prepared to use
nuclear weapons in "retaliation" if Saddam decided to use chemical weapons
against advancing US troops.
JH: I don't believe the threat of
American nuclear weapons use is being overplayed. Iran will respond to a conventional attack with
conventional weapons (eg missiles) and will not be deterred by a
US nuclear threat from doing so. The
US will use nuclear weapons against Iran because certain sectors of the American
establishment, that are in power now, believe it is in the long term strategic
interest of the US to do so.
FKh: Is
Iran's recent show of force
in the Persian Gulf through military exercises involving high-speed torpedoes
significant to the US establishment?
JH: I don't believe it is. The
US can use overwhelming force
against Iran, including nuclear weapons, and
Iranian military power is relatively insignificant. The US can destroy a
large number of Iranian facilities with relatively little risk to US forces. As
Gen. Abizaid recently remarked, "If you ever even contemplate our nuclear
capability, it should give everybody the clear understanding that there is no
power that can match the United States militarily." However no
US military power will be
able to contain the chaos and asymmetrical warfare that will engulf the region
after the US attacks
Iran.
FKh: Is there any
likelihood of UN Security Council approving any kind of force against
Iran? What about Sanctions?
JH: I don't think there is any
likelihood the UN Security Council will approve any kind of force nor sanctions
against Iran. Iran is well
within its rights within the NPT to enrich uranium on an industrial scale. The
US does not want
Iran to do it even on a
research scale, it doesn't want Iran to have even the "knowledge" or
"capability" to do so. President Bush openly acknowledged Iran's right (in
the March 16 NSS, and also earlier) when he said that this is a "loophole" of
the NPT. Well, one party to a treaty cannot simply declare part of a mutually
agreed treaty a "loophole", and expect other parties to automatically submit to
unilateral modifications of the treaty.
Russia and China recognize that it is Iran's right to enrich uranium, so they will not
agree to force or sanctions against Iran, and since both have veto power
at the UN Security Council, neither of those courses of action will be approved
by the Security Council.
FKh: Can Russia and
China be persuaded to back the Bush regime the way IAEA member India was just
weeks ago when it voted to report Iran to the UN? It is often mentioned that
these countries have economic interests in Iran, but doesn't that mean they could be
"bribed" with bigger incentives from the US?
JH: Neither Russia nor China can be persuaded to back the
US in this instance. There are no
"bigger incentives" that the US could offer to Russia and China, they are
backing a legitimate right of Iran, and it is not to their strategic advantage
to allow for further expansion of US power in that region. India could indeed be bought off by US incentives
like the nuclear deal, because its shortsighted leaders don't recognize that
they are committing national suicide by entering into this nuclear deal with the
US.
FKh: Does the
US Congress pose any barrier to this
administration? Some say in an election year, where Republicans could lose
control of Congress, risky actions like war -or even riskier "nuclear" war- will
not be approved. What do you think?
JH: Congress is unfortunately not posing
barriers to the administration in the Iran situation, on the contrary some
democrats sound even more hawkish than the administration. This is likely to be
in large part due to the very effective work of AIPAC, and the persistent
US propaganda over the years
that Iran is the "prime sponsor" of
terrorism, developing weapons of mass destruction and even having ties with Al
Qaeda. Those statements have as little proof as the propaganda against
Iraq had, yet Congress has accepted
them as facts.
I don't believe the
prospect of losing control of Congress plays a role in the thinking of the
people in the administration that are intent in nuking Iran. They regard this
action as being in the long term strategic interest of the United States,
they have worked towards this goal for many years, so that short term setbacks
like losing control of Congress are not likely to be a deterrent. The invasion
of Iraq doesn't make sense in
isolation, since it would leave Iran in a much stronger position in
the region. The intent was always to attack Iran after invading Iraq, to suppress Iran's rise as a
strong regional power that does not conform to US interests.
FKh: Some in
Iran's substantial exile
community think it best to pressure Iran's government to back off the
confrontation. It seems Iranian leadership is backed into a political corner but
If Iran suddenly decided to "give in"
and stop nuclear production, will that pacify the Bush Administration?
JH: It will not, the nuclear issue is
just an excuse. The US has built its case against Iran over many years, see for
example the 1998 Rumsfeld report: " Iran is placing extraordinary emphasis on
its ballistic missile and WMD development programs.", "Iran has acquired and is
seeking major, advanced missile components that can be combined to produce
ballistic missiles with sufficient range to strike the United States."; " Iran
is developing weapons of mass destruction. It has a nuclear energy and weapons
program, which aims to design, develop, and as soon as possible produce nuclear
weapons." Those are just assertions, with no backing from reality. In 1993 the
CIA estimated that Iran was 8-10 years away from
acquiring nuclear weapons, the NIE estimate 12 years later is that it is still
10 years away.
If Iran declared it will stop nuclear production,
the US would make other
demands: that it opens up all its military facilities to inspections, destroys
all its missiles, whatever it takes to get Iran to say
"no", and then use that as a reason to attack.
The best assurance that
Iran will not develop nuclear weapons
is to allow it to have a full civilian nuclear program under IAEA supervision,
as allowed by the NPT, including uranium enrichment to 3%, well below
weapons-grade uranium at 90%, as many other non-nuclear-weapon countries do.
Bombing Iran will drive its nuclear program
underground and ensure it will do the utmost to acquire nuclear weapons as soon
as possible.
FKh: Will the American
people really stand for another "Iraq" only 3 years after the previous
one?
JH: Unfortunately the American people
will not be asked, and neither will Congress. In signing into law the
congressional authorization to use force against Iraq in October 2002, the
President explicitly stated that even though he appreciated receiving that
support he didn't need it, since he has the authority to initiate military
action under the War Powers Resolution, and he can also invoke the 2001 Senate
Joint Resolution 23 alleging that Iran supports terrorism against the US. First
the bombing will start, then the President will address Congress and the public
to "explain" the action and ask for support.
FKh: Just last week you
wrote in AntiWar.com: "People in the know have to come forward with information
that brings the impending attack to the forefront of attention of Congress and
the American public and thwarts it." Is the Hersh article what you had in mind?
JH: Yes, the Hersh article is an
example of what I had in mind, but it is not enough. People in the know
have to come out and reveal detailed plans, for example whether tactical nuclear
weapons are already deployed in the Persian
Gulf region. This is very likely to be so, and American people have
a right to know. Of course revealing classified information is punishable under
US law. However it should be remember
that the Nuremberg principles (crafted by the
US and its allies) established that
international law supersedes internal law. The use of nuclear weapons against
Iran, and any preparations to
that effect, would be illegal and immoral under international law (eg 1996
International Court of Justice opinion, that the US is bound to).
General Pace repeatedly warned Iraqis during the 2003 invasion that any use by
them of WMD would be "illegal and immoral", and he very recently advised the
US military that "It is the absolute
responsibility of everybody in uniform to disobey an order that is either
illegal or immoral".
I am convinced the American
people will stand behind and support anybody that has the courage to "break the
law" and reveal that the US is about to break the 60-year-old taboo on the use
of nuclear weapons, since such an action by the US will cause long term grave
damage to America. And I am convinced that if the administration goes
through with this plan, those responsible will eventually be brought to justice.
FKh: You have mentioned
a threat of Iranian chemical and biological weapons as a justification for
invasion. You've even theorized that such an argument may be framed in the
context of the Avian Flu pandemic threat to Europe and America. Is the
administration really that desperate for a context? And does this not betray
that there is no real danger from Iran?
JH: By now there is an international
consensus that there is no "imminent threat" from Iranian nuclear weapons. Even
those that argue that Iran is
intent in developing nuclear weapons acknowledge that Iran would need
several years to do so. The Israeli "point of no return argument" has been at
times adopted by administration officials (eg Robert Joseph) but is not very
convincing. To justify a US attack, that is likely to escalate
into large scale military action, an "imminent threat" is needed. The
US accuses
Iran of having chemical and
biological weapons and programs as well as of sponsoring terrorism, and it is
natural to expect that some combination of those allegations will be used. E.g.
that Iran is about to launch
missiles with chemical or biological warheads against US troops in
Iraq, or is about to give
terrorist groups chemical or biological weapons to be used against
America. It is important to note that
Executive Order 13292 of 2003 made information on "weapons of mass destruction"
and on "defense against international terrorism" classified. The reason for that
is so that such allegations would not be subject to public scrutiny prior to the
attack.
There are however several
reasons that point to the Avian flu pandemic threat as a convenient excuse: 1)
It has a natural time element that cannot be postponed, the yearly bird
migration season; 2) The bird flu "danger" has been played up by administration
officials far beyond what is scientifically justified; 3) Administration
officials emphasize the danger of bird flu transmission over long distances by
wild birds, even though this is scientifically in doubt; 4) Iran has an advanced
biotechnology and biomedical effort, and the US accuses Iran of having a
bioweapons program embedded in it. It is natural that Iran would be studying the H5N1 avian flu virus,
even the US is deliberately trying to develop
dangerous mutations of the virus to learn how to combat them. 5) There are
scientists in the US
administration and in the US military that have warned about
the danger of influenza as a bioweapon.
Of course what I discuss
above answers the last part of your question: there is no real danger from
Iran, it is all
fabricated.
FKh: What will be the
likely Iranian response to a conventional air strike? What about a nuclear
strike?
JH:
Iran is likely to respond to any
US attack using its
considerable missile arsenal against US forces in Iraq and elsewhere in the Persian Gulf. Israel may attempt to stay out of the
conflict, it is not clear whether Iran would target Israel in a
retaliatory strike but it is certainly possible. If the US attack includes nuclear weapons use against
Iranian facilities, as I believe is very likely, rather than deterring
Iran it will cause a much more
violent response. Iranian military forces and militias are likely to storm into
southern Iraq and the
US may be forced to use nuclear
weapons against them, causing large scale casualties and inflaming the Muslim
world. There could be popular uprisings in other countries in the region like
Pakistan, and of course a
Shiite uprising in Iraq against American occupiers.
Finally I would like to
discuss the grave consequences to America and the world if the US uses nuclear weapons against
Iran. First, the likelihood of
terrorist attacks against Americans both on American soil and abroad will be
enormously enhanced after these events. And terrorist's attempts to get hold of
"loose nukes" and use them against Americans will be enormously incentivized
after the US used nuclear
weapons against Iran.
Second, it will
destroy America's position as the leader of
the free world. The rest of the world rightly recognizes that nuclear weapons
are qualitatively different from all other weapons, and that there is no sharp
distinction between small and large nuclear weapons, or between nuclear weapons
targeting facilities versus those targeting armies or civilians. It will not
condone the breaking of the nuclear taboo in an unprovoked war of aggression
against a non-nuclear country, and the US will become a pariah state.
Third, the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty will cease to exist, and many of its 182
non-nuclear-weapon-country signatories will strive to acquire nuclear weapons as
a deterrent to an attack by a nuclear nation. With no longer a taboo against the
use of nuclear weapons, any regional conflict may go nuclear and expand into
global nuclear war. Nuclear weapons are million-fold more powerful than any
other weapon, and the existing nuclear arsenals can obliterate humanity many
times over. In the past, global conflicts terminated when one side prevailed. In
the next global conflict we will all be gone before anybody has prevailed.
Jorge Hirsch is a professor of
Physics at the University of
California at San Diego. He is a Fellow
of the American Physical Society and an organizer of a recent petition,
circulated among leading physicists, opposing the new nuclear weapons policies
adopted by the US in the past 5 years. He is a
frequent commentator on Iran and nuclear
weapons.