By Cindy Saine,
VOA, Washington
A task force of the Bipartisan
Policy Center, a high-powered Washington-based research group, is calling on
President Barack Obama to devise a tougher strategy to prevent Iran from
developing nuclear weapons. In a newly released report, two former U.S. senators
and a retired general argue that if the United States does not act quickly to
address the threat, Israel is poised to take military action on its own against
Iran.
The subtitle of the report is "Time
is Running Out," and it sums up the experts' conclusion, as former Democratic
Senator Charles Robb of Virginia explained. "We believe that time is running
out, and we need to adopt a more robust strategy in order to prevent both a
nuclear Iran, and an Israeli military strike," he said.
|
 View of Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant in Southern Iran
Iran says its nuclear program is strictly for peaceful purposes |
The report was written by Robb,
Daniel Coats, a former Republican senator from Indiana, and retired U.S. Air
Force General Charles Wald, the former Deputy Commander of U.S. European
command.
The authors praise President Obama's
attempts to reach out to Iran diplomatically. But they argue that Tehran will
likely have the capacity to produce at least one nuclear weapon next year. They
say diplomacy urgently needs to be backed up with the threat of tougher
sanctions and military force.
|
The Development and Proliferation of
Nuclear Weapons

Today eight countries
are possessing nuclear weapons. The five nuclear weapons states
United States, Russia (former Soviet Union), United Kingdom, France
and China, are the only countries allowed to have nuclear weapons
according to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) from 1970. All
members of the United Nations except Israel, India and Pakistan have
signed the NPT. source:
nobleprize.org |
Senator Joseph Lieberman, an
Independent Democrat from Connecticut, agrees . . ."that a credible and explicit
threat of the possible use of military force needs to be put back on the table
in our discussions with Iran."
Western nations accuse Iran of
trying to develop nuclear weapons. Iran says its nuclear program is for peaceful
purposes only, and that it is not subject to negotiation.
The report was released as the
United States prepares to participate in preliminary talks with Iran on October
1. The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council - China, France,
Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States -- as well as Germany - are
expected to talk with Iran about security and economic issues.
Republican Senator Jon Kyl of
Arizona had some advice for those who oppose any potential military action
against Iran. "For those who don't like to contemplate the military option, of
course, the answer is: Then if you don't like the military option, let's do what
is necessary to avert it," he said.
Senator Kyl urged Congress to act
quickly on legislation to impose expanded and more effective sanctions on Iran's
banking and energy sectors as well as on companies that do business with them.
But Kyl said that if sanctions do not produce results within the next few
months, they need to be backed up with a credible threat of military strikes.
Retired Air Force General Charles
Wald said Iran should not believe that U.S. military forces are stretched too
thin in Afghanistan and Iraq to take action in Iran. "We do have a significant
amount of air power remaining. And I am not here because I am an airman trying
to advocate air power. I am just saying that is a tool we have and the Iranians
need to know that the United States is not stretched too far," he said.
General Wald made clear that he was
referring to limited air strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities, and not to
deploying U.S. troops in the country.
... Payvand News - 09/16/09 ... --
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