October 3, 2008
Dr. Mohammed ElBaradei
Director General
International Atomic Energy Agency
Vienna, Austria
Dear Dr. ElBaradei:
In your
"Introductory
Statement to the Board of Governors" of the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) on September 22, 2008, you assured Iran that your agency will
protect her legitimate military secrets if she supplies such information about
some "alleged studies". You stated:
I
reiterate that the Agency does not in any way seek to "pry" into Iran's
conventional or missile-related military activities. Our focus is clearly on
nuclear material and activities. We need, however, to make use of all relevant
information to be able to confirm that no nuclear material is being used for
nuclear weapons purposes. I am confident that arrangements can be developed
which enable the Agency to do its work while ensuring that Iran's legitimate
right to protect the confidentiality of sensitive information and activities is
respected. I again urge Iran to show full transparency and to implement all
measures required to build confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of its
nuclear programme at the earliest possible date.
Dr.
Elbardei, as you know, your agency was used in the case of Iraq to "pry" into
legitimate military secrets of Iraq. Indeed, some in your agency helped to
prepare the ground for the eventual invasion of Iraq, an invasion where, as you
have stated recently, "700,000 innocent
civilians have lost their lives on the suspicion that a country has nuclear
weapons" (AP, September 16, 2008). A case in point is David Kay, who served as
the IAEA/UNSCOM (United Nations Special Commission) Chief Nuclear Weapons
Inspector in Iraq. He was accused by Iraqi officials of being a spy and was
quite instrumental in building the case for the 2003 invasion of Iraq. He once
admitted that some inspections in Iraq went hand in hand with spying. When in
1999 he was asked by PBS's Frontline what he thought about infiltration
of the UNSCOM by intelligence agents, he answered:
Well, I think it
was a Faustian bargain. The intelligence communities of the world had the only
expertise that you could use if you were unmasking a clandestine program. . . .
So, from the very beginning, you needed that expertise, but I can say for myself
personally—and I'm really only comfortable talking about myself—although a
number of us discussed this in the early days—I realize it was always a bargain
with the Devil—spies spying. The longer it continued, the more the intelligence
agencies would, often for very legitimate reasons, decide that they had to use
the access they got through cooperation with UNSCOM to carry out their missions.
Given this "Faustian bargain," it is difficult to imagine that the US and
Israeli governments, which are trying to do to Iran what they did to Iraq, are
not using your agency to gather information on the legitimate military
capabilities of Iran. It is also difficult to imagine that after the invasion of
Iraq your agency became clean of "spies spying," and that it can now
protect
the confidentiality of Iran's sensitive information and activities.
This is particularly troubling since
your agency cannot even safeguard its confidential reports. IAEA reports on Iran
and related material marked "Restricted Distribution" often appear on the
website of the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), an
organization that claims to be a "non-profit, non-partisan institution" (http://isis-online.org/about/about.html).
The documents appear on the ISIS website as soon as they are distributed among
the board members and many days before they are "derestricted." For example, the
restricted versions of IAEA reports of September 15, 2008, May 26, 2008,
February 22, 2008, November 15, 2007, etc., as well many other confidential IAEA
related documents, can be found on the website of the ISIS (http://www.isis-online.org/).
When a non-governmental agency receives IAEA documents that are designated
"restricted," one must conclude that your agency is still infiltrated with
"spies spying." What is worse is that when it comes to Iran, ISIS is not a
neutral organization. Its president and founder gave a "Policy Briefing" at the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee Policy Conference on March 5, 2006,
entitled "Nuclear Countdown: What Can Be Done to Stop Iran?".
As you know, AIPAC and similar Israeli lobby groups and individuals are
the main force in the US behind sanctioning Iran and pushing for a military
confrontation between the US and Iran.
Given that the
IAEA was infested with "spies spying" in the years prior to the invasion of
Iraq, and given that today it cannot even safeguard its restricted documents,
how can you claim that Iran's legitimate military secrets are safe with you? Dr.
ElBaradei, there has been considerable pressure on you and your organization to
produce reports that are to the liking of the US and its allies. The first lines
of the Associated Press report on
September 9,
2007, read: "Chief
nuclear inspector Mohamed ElBaradei is coming under intense pressure for his
handling of the Iran file, with the United States and key allies accusing him of
overstepping his authority.
The diplomats suggested that U.S. disenchantment with the International Atomic
Energy Agency chief was at its highest since early 2005." Subsequently, Reuters
reported on September 19, 2007, that US Secretary of State Rice, who has
previously accused ElBaradei of "muddying the message" stated: "The IAEA is not
in the business of diplomacy." Following your comments about the deaths of
700,000 innocent Iraqi
civilians on the suspicion that the country had nuclear weapons, Israeli
officials threatened you with losing your job. The first line of a news item in
Agence France Presse on October 29, 2007, read: "An Israeli cabinet minister [Avigdor
Lieberman] on Monday accused the UN atomic watchdog chief of trying to whitewash
Iran's nuclear programme for 'ideological reasons' after he said there was no
proof Tehran was seeking an atomic bomb." Lieberman, Minister for Strategic
Affairs, was quoted as saying: "Mohamed ElBaradei
is, simply, instead of fighting against Iran's nuclear programme, looking for
all the reasons to whitewash and justify it. . . . There is no doubt that the
role ElBaradei and the IAEA are playing today is a very, very negative role in
the process that is currently under way in the Security Council." A few days
later, on November 8, 2007, Agence France Presse
reported that Israeli Deputy Prime Minister
Shaul Mofaz has called for the removal of ElBaradei. Mofaz stated: "The
policies followed by ElBaradei endanger world peace. His irresponsible attitude
of sticking his head in the sand over Iran's nuclear programme should lead to
his impeachment." Following these threats, the tone of the IAEA reports changed
and old allegations—which had been around since 2005, and, as I have shown in my
book, were doubted to be authentic even by your agency—resurfaced (please see
The United States and Iran: Sanctions, Wars and the Policy of Dual of Dual
Containment).
It now appears that these same allegations are behind the IAEA's recent reports
and your promise to keep Iran's legitimate military secrets safe if Iran reveals
them to your agency.
Dear Dr. ElBaradei, those
of us who watched very closely how your agency was used to lay the foundation
for the invasion of Iraq are concerned that the IAEA is once again under sever
pressures and threats to prepare the ground for military attacks on Iran. We can
only hope that your agency will not become a vehicle to kill another
700,000 innocent civilians
in the Middle East.
Respectfully,
Sasan Fayazmanesh, Ph.D.
Professor of Economics
California State University
Fresno,
California
93740-8001
sasan.fayazmanesh@gmail.com
... Payvand News - 10/04/08 ...
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