By Mohammad Kamaali
If there was a time when
Iranian analysts and decision makers would question the benefits of continuing
to cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, it would be now. The
IAEA has allowed systematic US intervention in Iran's nuclear file paving the
way to a third round of sanctions against Iran's nuclear programme. But while US
pressure on Iran in the knowledge that the IAEA has found no evidence of a
covert weapons programme, is perhaps
in the hope
that it will finally force the country to leave the NPT in protest, Iran it
seems is one step ahead and does exactly
the opposite.
On Monday March 3 rd ,
the UN Security Council following months of political wrestling voted in favour
of a
third sanctions resolution
against Iran,
repeating previous demands to stop uranium enrichment but this time covering the
country's entire banking sector as well as placing restrictions on air and sea
cargo movements; thereby beginning a new phase in US efforts to isolate Iran.
Unlike the two previous
resolutions and despite claims by China, Russia and other non-permanent members
of the Security Council who
tried to justify
their unprincipled stance,
this time sanctions are not merely 'a signal' but clearly punitive. They go
beyond Iran's nuclear programme and for the first time they can potentially
bring about physical confrontation leading to a full scale military attack on
Iran.
Had history not had a
habit of repeating itself, one would be surprised how this resolution could
possibly come about against a backdrop of consistent and increased cooperation
between Iran and the IAEA which has been reflected in consecutive reports by the
agency's inspectors.
Back in August 2007, Iran
and the IAEA agreed on a 'work-plan
' under which Iran
would answer a number of outstanding questions and in return the IAEA would
finally confirm publicly its findings to date regarding US allegations against
Iran's nuclear activities. The report in summary gave a clean bill of health to
Iran's nuclear programme in general; and in particular to its enrichment
activities. It said
"The Agency has been able to verify the
non-diversion of the declared nuclear materials at the enrichment facilities in
Iran and has therefore concluded that it remains in peaceful use."
The work-plan and further
reports by the IAEA, cleared Iran of all the issue referred to by the US as
evidence of a covert weapons programme. Plutonium experiments, traces of highly
enriched uranium, procurement of dual use technologies, research into
polonium-210, Gchine mine and reprocessing activities in Tehran were all
examined by the IAEA which found no evidence of any wrongdoing by Iran.
The only major outstanding
point in the work-plan was the "alleged studies". On this particular issue the
document said
" Iran reiterated that it considers the
following alleged studies as politically motivated and baseless allegations.
The Agency will however
provide Iran with access to the documentation it has in its possession
regarding: the Green Salt Project, the high explosive testing and the missile
re-entry vehicle. As a
sign of good will and cooperation with the Agency, upon receiving all related
documents, Iran will review and inform the Agency of its assessment."
For five months, the IAEA
despite this agreement failed to provide Iran with access to the documents on
these alleged studies. Then early February for the first time, ahead of the
report on 22 nd February, some documents were presented to Iran.After inspecting
the material, Iran stated
"the documents were fabricated and that the
information contained in those documents could easily be found in open sources."
Then on 15
February, that's 5 working days before the agency's latest report on Iran , the
US instructs the IAEA to present a few more documents to Iran.On this issue the
IAEA's report of 22 nd Feb said
"the Agency proposed a further meeting to
show additional documentation on the alleged studies to Iran , after being
authorized to do so by the countries which had provided it. Iran has not yet
responded to the Agency's proposal."
This single item, three
lines long, in an 11 page report which is otherwise quite positive, became the
basis of US and EU claims that Iran has failed to answer questions about its
nuclear programme; and enabled them to justify pressuring other UNSC members who
were not convinced of the need for harsher measures. Whether this vote too was
the
result of coercion
or not, a number of key
questions remain.
Why does the US release
only bits and pieces of the information it claims to have and why only on very
critical times? Why hasn't there been a single US allegation against Iran's
nuclear programme that given time to evaluate has not proved false? In absence
of any credible information from the US , isn't it time that the IAEA begins to
doubt US motivations?
The
famous laptop
that has now become a
cornerstone of the US case against Iran was first made available to the IAEA in
Nov. 2005 which means the US had access to it even earlier. It also means that
the people who prepared the
NIE
two years later in Nov. 2007,
knew a lot about this laptop; including whether or not it is fake. They must
have assessed its content much more vigorously than the IAEA. What makes them
conclude that Iran does not have a nuclear weapons programme, and yet the Bush
administration still pushing for sanctions based on concerns that Iran may have
a nuclear weapons programme? In short why is George W. Bush not listening to his
own intelligence agencies? Does he know something they don't? Or does he
want
something that they don't? What makes the IAEA
believe that the Bush administration given the opportunity will not use
unreliable data against Iran ? or that the neo-cons perhaps months away from
leaving office, having nothing to lose, will not engage directly into feeding
disinformation into Iran's nuclear file?
The US has already
implemented measures to protect itself if the contents of the laptop are proved
to be fake. First they claimed it came from an Iranian who fled the country,
then it was a terrorist cult working to overthrow the Iranian government, then
there was the German intelligence stealing it and finally the Israeli Mossad as
usual claiming to have a hand in everything. Nobody knows fully were it first
came from which is why all the parties can say they were misled by someone else.
Whereas on any suspected
nuclear sites the IAEA can take samples of radiating particles and physically
confirm the nature of the material, drawings on paper and worse yet those in
digital format are extremely easy to fabricate. "I can fabricate that data,"
said
one diplomat at the IAEA
after seeing excerpts from the laptop. "It looks beautiful, but is open to
doubt."
On the other hand it is
equally difficult for Iran to prove these allegations false. When the IAEA first
presented Iran with some documents early February 2008, Iran's response was that
these are fake. But the IAEA again on 8 th and 12 th February only a few days
later wrote to Iran reiterating its
"request for additional clarifications."
Did the
agency present new evidence to refute Iran's initial claim that the documents
are fake? The answer is no. So what "additional clarifications" does the IAEA
expect? Is it not up to the accusers to back their claims with verifiable
evidence? Iran again responded on 14 th February
"reiterating its earlier statements and
declaring that this was its final assessment on this point."
The fact is if Iran had
something to hide, it would think twice before immediately branding the
documents as fake. In other words Iran would not risk its consistently positive
record with the IAEA over something it could simply dismiss as "under
investigation." So what is the agency or those pulling its strings really trying
to achieve? Is it that difficult for its nuclear scientists to differentiate
between a technical case and one which bears all the marks of an open-ended
political circus? The answer perhaps lies deeper in the agency's latest report.
For the first time, the
scope of the information that the IAEA is trying to obtain from Iran has gone
beyond the agency's mandate which is limited to nuclear technology. Point 39 of
the report is effectively asking Iran for details of its missile programme so
that it may or may not be convinced that Iran's missiles are 'capable' to
accommodate a nuclear warhead. This is what Iran's representative to the IAEA
referred to as evidence that the UN's atomic watchdog is now acting as a proxy
for Western intelligence agencies trying to determine the extent and the nature
of Iran's conventional military capacity.
The day the governing
board of the IAEA reported Iran's case to the UN Security Council, it started a
process that many now believe may ultimately cause the collapse of the entire
non-proliferation regime. The IAEA which until then had largely managed to keep
itself away from politics by concentrating on technical issues, is now a
battleground between political forces which have found a new platform and an
excuse to settle old scores. A member-state, party to the NPT, which had
voluntarily implemented its additional protocol and consistently voiced its
opposition to weapons of mass destruction including atomic weapons, instead of
receiving assistance on its fully verified civilian nuclear programme, was
reported to the UNSC, vilified and bullied to the extent that many believed a
military strike would be inevitable.
By allowing itself to be
so blatantly manipulated by the United States , and by failing to defend the
rights of a non-weapon state against a gang of nuclear weapon states, the IAEA
has facilitated the first major cracks in the NPT which is one of the oldest and
most respected pillars of international security. Suddenly being part of the NPT
does not protect you anymore from harassments of nuclear weapon states. This
situation may well lead to many nations quietly looking at nuclear weapons as a
deterrent for the days to come when they may not necessarily share the same
world view as the United States.
Fifteen months after the
IAEA reported Iran to the UN Security Council, in June 2007 its director general
said:
"The [NPT] regime is
tattering in many ways. Today when we are talking here, for the last ten days
the parties to the NPT can't even agree on an agenda as what to discuss. That's
how dismal the state of affairs are."
For about six years now
Iran's nuclear file has been subject to an unprecedented attention from all
corners. Not only in rhetorical exchanges between US and Iranian officials which
can serve both domestic and international purposes, but also in nearly every
discussion regarding world security and the politics of power in the Middle
East.
One thing that is clear
throughout is that t he players in this game are not simply reacting to one
another or to random events, but are following detailed action-plans naturally
designed to return maximum gains. Part of this gain for the US is denying Iran
what it has declared as crucial to its future development. But another perhaps
more immediate gain is using this case and everything associated with it as a
catalyst for furthering other US interests.
From contracts between
major US military corporations and the GCC states to Cold War-style
exchanges
between US and Russia on a
missile defence system in Eastern Europe; from Israel crying out for support in
face of an "existential threat" to France trying to cosy up to the US after Tony
Blair; from India receiving US assistance in its unsupervised nuclear programme
to South Africa signing nuclear contracts with France, hugely profitable deals
are being facilitated in the name of preparing for an "emerging threat." The
beneficiaries of these deals are the very same people who advocate tougher
measures against Iran and more often than not disregard Iran's positive
gestures, ignore the findings of the IAEA and instead engage in
smear campaigns
against anyone who attempts
to deescalate the tension. These are the same people who take every opportunity
to portray Iranians as irrational and incapable of reasoning and therefore
deserving to be punished by any means possible.
Iran's nuclear file, its
referral to the UN Security Council and the subsequent votes of China and Russia
in favour of sanctions cannot be viewed in isolation from these countries' own
interests. In other words the US is not the only beneficiary of an isolated
Iran.
For so long as Iran's
nuclear file makes headlines, certain important issues can be swept under the
carpet. Be it the IAEA's failure to implement the 'other half' of the NPT which
obliges nuclear weapons states to disarm, or the failures on the Middle East
peace process, or perhaps Iran's growing influence in Iraq.This was most evident
a few days ago. While Iran's president was touring Baghdad outside the green
zone, the UNSC was voting on the third resolution on Iran's nuclear programme.
The Iraq story was almost completely boycotted in British media while the
nuclear one got all the headlines.
The US has proved in more
than one way that the concerns it has expressed regarding Iran's nuclear
programme do not have much to do with realities on the ground. For the past few
years Iran's nuclear file has been a platform from which the US has coordinated
an agenda which goes far beyond Iran itself. We have long past the stage where
this was a technical argument between Iran and the IAEA on a few "outstanding
issues" This is not even a nuclear proliferation issue anymore. The UNSC passed
the third resolution while it had on its table
a proposal
from Iran to implement the
NPT's additional protocol again if its file is returned to the IAEA. The US and
the EU3 had another Iranian proposal from 2006 to jointly develop Iran's uranium
enrichment facilities so that they would have first hand insight into the
programme; and therefore confidence that it remains peaceful. They
rejected
that too.
While Iran voluntarily
suspended uranium enrichment for nearly two years when it was negotiating with
the EU3, the US refused to even give security guarantees to Iran so that it
would continue freezing enrichment, let alone any incentives to encourage more
compromise. Recently in a House of Commons meeting I asked Ilan Berman from the
American Foreign Policy Council who has consulted for both the CIA and the U.S.
Department of Defense as an expert on regional security in the Middle East, why
the US refused to support the EU3 initiative back then while now it sees the
suspension of enrichment as a precondition of normalising Iran's nuclear file?
His answer shocked the audience. He said
he did not know of any suspension of
enrichment activities by Iran !
Given the options perhaps this was the best he
could do.
Following Monday's UNSC
vote, the IAEA's governing board rejected a proposal for an anti-Iran
resolution. Iran shortly afterwards
announced
that from now on its nuclear
programme will only be discussed with the UN's atomic energy agency; i.e. it
will no longer "negotiate" on this issue with the EU's foreign policy chief who
had been responsible to convey EU's demands and by extension those of the US to
Iran.
This marks an important
development which has come as a direct result of the latest Security Council
resolution against Iran.
For the past six years
while working with the IAEA at technical and legal levels, Iran had continued
the political path with the EU3. Yet despite being betrayed more than once in
these negotiations, until now Iran was
open to a deal
which could include the
suspension of uranium enrichment activities. In return it was hoped the US would
finally give some form of security guarantee that it would abandon its threats
of pre-emptive strike.
This move can be seen as
a sign that Iran is convinced the current US administration will not or cannot
afford to provide such guarantees and that this in fact has nothing to do with
the state of Iran's nuclear programme or its cooperation with the IAEA. Put
simply Iran has said: "You know what? The deal's off. I'm not selling."
About the author:
Mohammad Kamaali is a UK
board member of the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran
(CASMII:
www.campaigniran.org)
... Payvand News - 03/07/08 ... --