By
Nader Bagherzadeh
Current warmongering rhetoric coming
out of the Bush administration has only one message for Iran: Article 4 of Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
that guarantees an inalienable right to enrich uranium does not apply to
Iran. Although this strategy is totally
against the spirit of NPT, and since there is not a single piece of solid
evidence which would show that Iran has been engaged in proliferation of nuclear
weapons, the US government
still continues to threaten Iran with military strikes, all in
violation of Chapter VII of the UN Charter. In the larger context of this issue, the
US government is conveying to
the member countries that Article 4 can only be exercised by those countries
that are considered a client state of the US. A corollary to this US position is that
in order to retain the technological edge of Israel’s nuclear know how, no
country in the Middle East, friend or foe, can be trusted with nuclear fuel
enrichment capabilities, even for peaceful purposes, and future intentions is
claimed by the US government to be a source of concern and national
security.
The recent escalation of Washington’s fear mongering on Iran’s nuclear
capability can be attributed to two reasons. First, it provides another opportunity
for the Republicans to win the national election in 2008 by scaring voters to a
doomsday scenario where only a Republican candidate can handle a disastrous
conflagration, such as a WWIII conflict, with Iran. Secondly, relentless pressures from
Israeli lobby groups are so severe that no political figure present or future
can accept Iran’s rightful nascent peaceful
enrichment capability and survive an orchestrated backlash at the polls from
AIPAC or other similar groups.
Recent comments by GOP presidential hopefuls are nothing short of a
disgrace for a country based on the rule of law and integrity--Huckabee on CNN
Late Edition commented “we will bankrupt
them before we bomb them.”
If an ordained minister is audacious enough to make such a rabid comment,
then what can we expect from the likes of Rush Limbaugh and Sean
Hannity?
This enrichment paranoia that has
dominated Washington’s intransigent foreign
policy towards Iran is worth further
discussion. Iran’s Natanz enrichment facility is an IAEA
safeguarded facility that is being monitored 24/7 by cameras, sensors, and short
notice visits of IAEA inspectors that are residing in Iran. Any deviation towards weapon grade
enrichment levels (i.e., going from
5% to 90% pure uranium hexafluoride) will require a non-trivial redesign of the
centrifuge cascade that could take months before producing any fissile material
for a bomb. Within hours of such a
flagrant violation of the safeguard agreement, the UN Security Council would be
in a position to call for a special security session and pass a resolution to
condemn the act and even approve a military retaliation, within the guidelines of the UN
Charter. The White House
knows this full well, but its aim, as reiterated by Bush and Rice recently, is
much more sinister: the current policy is to go after Iran’s nuclear
technology knowledge; the non-existent nuclear weapons program is no longer
mentioned as they did a few weeks ago.
While this might have been a
sensible demand two years ago, it is unfortunately too late now. Even Bolton has admitted as much. Probably one of the reasons that
the publication of National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran has been
delayed by this White House is that the fair and balanced assessment from more
than half a dozen US intelligence agencies still project a suspected Iranian
bomb not to be ready until 2015 at the earliest. It would be interesting to know if
Cheney’s office, as they did during the run-up to the Iraq war, continues to meddle into the work of
CIA experts so as to get a “desirable” (to them) NIE report on
Iran.
Every effort has been made to
dissuade Iran from proceeding with its
safeguarded enrichment activity.
Rose Gottemoelle of Carnegie Endowment
reports that Putin on his recent trip to Tehran
reiterated a non-official proposal from two years ago to have
Iran suspend activities at
the Natanz until the UN Security Council would sort out what to do with the
sanctions and Iran’s rights under Article 4 of
NPT. Although the Russians
are obviously decades ahead of Iran in terms of efficiency of centrifuge design,
the fact that Iran will
depend on Russia for fueling its planned 20,000
mega watt nuclear reactors would be a recipe for disaster. Europeans and Russia do not have a good track record for
honoring previous agreements to provide fuel for Iran’s only
almost completed nuclear reactor at Bushehr. Currently Russia is bowing to US pressure and delaying fuel delivery for
Bushehr, but will they use future discussions with Iran on the Caspian
Sea partitioning to delay delivery?
If Iran decides to forego its domestic enrichment
capability and rely on foreign fuel support for the planned nuclear power
generated electricity, it would be prudent for the country to look for
alternative sources of energy than becoming dependent on nuclear fuel in the
stormy politics of Middle East from countries
that are not reliable.
... Payvand News - 10/31/07 ...