Bomb, Bomb Iran: Lessons From Iraq Unlearned
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By Jeremy R. Hammond
Foreign Policy Journal
Saturday, Jan 2, 2010
In a New York Timesop-ed
this week that advocates bombing Iran, the author, Alan J. Kuperman,
director of the Nuclear Proliferation Prevention Program at the
University of Texas at Austin, begins by suggesting that President
Barack Obama should “sigh in relief that Iran has rejected his nuclear
deal”.
In fact, Iran has said it is still open
to discussion with the U.S. about its nuclear program, but that if
meaningful dialogue is to continue, the threats of sanctions and
military aggression must first cease.
The U.S., however, continues to
threaten yet further sanctions, while also insisting that the threat of
force must remain “on the table” — a threat of aggression that itself
violates the U.N. Charter, which forbids member nations from
threatening the use of force as a tool for leverage in international
relations.
Kuperman’s reason for why Obama should
be happy is that the deal, under which Iran would export uranium to
Russia, which would enrich it to 20 percent (not the 90 percent
required for weapons-grade uranium) and return it as fuel rods for use
in Tehran’s research reactor, “was ill conceived from the start” since
Iran would “thus be rewarded with much-coveted reactor fuel despite
violating international law.”
His reference is to U.N. Security
Council resolutions demanding that Iran halt its uranium enrichment
activities. The problem with these resolutions, as Iran is not hesitant
to point out, is that they themselves directly violate the nuclear
non-proliferation treaty (NPT), which clearly states that parties to
the treaty have an “inalienable” right to enrich uranium for peaceful
purposes, and that the international community may take no action
prejudicial towards that right.
The U.N. resolutions, needless to say,
prejudice that “inalienable” right, particularly given the fact that
there is no credible evidence that Iran has a nuclear weapons program –
as both the U.S. intelligence community and the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) have pointed out.
In other words, under U.S. influence,
the Security Council in this case has acted as a rogue body itself in
violation of relevant treaties constituting international law and the
very Charter under which it ostensibly operates.
Iran, on the other hand, remains in
compliance with the terms of the NPT and is meeting its obligations in
allowing the IAEA to monitor and inspect its nuclear program, despite
much talk to the contrary.
Take the most recent example, the
charge that Iran’s uranium enrichment facility near Qom, still under
construction, was a violation of its obligation to declare any such
facility prior to the beginning of construction. We’re told that Iran
agreed to an updated version of its safeguards agreement with the IAEA
containing a clause specifying that obligation.
What we’re not told is that at that time, Iran had agreed to implement the terms of the Additional Protocol and revised safeguards agreement on a strictly voluntary basis. The voluntary nature of Iran’s implementation of these measures was explicitly, and in writing
(see the so-called Paris Agreement), recognized by the IAEA. Iran was
under no legal obligation to do so and had done so simply as a
“confidence-building measure”.
In return, Iran got nothing but further threats of sanctions and bombing. So it ended its voluntary observance of measures above and beyond that which was legally required of it.
The fact is that Iran has never
ratified the revised safeguards agreement, as would be required for the
revisions to be legally binding upon Iran. Under the safeguards
agreement Iran has formally and legally obligated itself to, it need
only declare such facilities six months prior to the introduction of
nuclear material (i.e., introduction of uranium into enrichment
centrifuges), which is exactly what Iran did in declaring the site
several months ago.
In response to meeting its obligations
under its safeguards agreement, the West responded by declaring that
the “secret” site (an adjective irreconcilable with the fact Iran
voluntarily declared it to the IAEA, but obligatorily used in the media
anyways) was evidence of Iran’s intentions to manufacture nuclear
weapons.
Summarily dismissed was Iran’s quite
credible explanation for the site it voluntarily disclosed, which was
that it was attempting to diversify its uranium enrichment capabilities
under the threat of certain countries to bomb their nuclear facilities.
The demonization and punishment of Iran
for its compliance with its obligations under international law is not
entirely unlike the charges against Iraq that it was in violation of
U.N. Security Council resolutions demanding it disarm because it had
not disarmed, when in fact it had disarmed, and when in fact
there was no credible evidence that it still possessed stockpiles or
was still in production of weapons of mass destruction (WMD).
The IAEA, for its part, has
continuously and consistently reported that it has verified Iran has
diverted no nuclear materials towards a weapons program. Former
Director General of the IAEA Mohammed ElBaradei, whose term ended just
last month, has repeatedly said that there is no evidence Iran has a
nuclear weapons program. His successor, Yukiya Amano, has made the same
observation.
Then, of course, there is the 2007
National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) from the U.S. intelligence
community that stated Iran today has no nuclear weapons program, which
according to Newsweek, is an assessment analysts still stand
by. The NIE did claim that Iran once had such a program in the past,
but that it ended it in 2003. The IAEA, on the other hand, recently
issued a statement saying there is no evidence Iran ever had a weapons program.
Kuperman continues by suggesting that
the goal of the international community should be to “compel” Iran “to
halt its enrichment program”, which, he claims, the proposal to send
its uranium abroad would not have done. It’s worth noting the fact that
this is an explicit rejection of the NPT.
He adds, “In addition, the vast surplus
of higher-enriched fuel Iran was to get under the deal would have
permitted some to be diverted to its bomb program”, claiming that
taking uranium from the fuel rods for further enrichment to
weapons-grade “is a straightforward engineering task requiring at most
a few weeks.”
The truth of the latter assertion
aside, which is contrary to most reports on the subject and contrary to
the whole supposed point of the deal, what’s notable here is the
assumption that Iran has a “bomb program”, despite, as was the case
with Iraq, the total lack of credible evidence to support the claim.
It’s enough in the mainstream corporate
media simply to take Iran’s “bomb program” as a matter of faith.
Evidence is simply not required, and it’s considered perfectly
acceptable by the editors of the New York Times and other mainstream sources to print assumptions expressed as statements of fact.
Again, for those who don’t suffer from
selective amnesia and aren’t prone to intentional ignorance, the kind
of reporting we saw from the Times, et al, prior to the
invasion of Iraq might perhaps serve as a lesson about the nature of
the role U.S. corporate media play in “manufacturing consent” from the
American public for U.S. foreign policies.
Kuperman next begs the question, “if
the deal would have aided Iran’s bomb program, why did the United
States propose it, and Iran reject it?” Oblivious to the fallacies
underlying the question, his own answer is that “The main explanation
on both sides is domestic politics.”
Obama simply wanted to “blunt
Republican criticism that his multilateral approach was failing” and
was seeking a short-term gain.
Iran, for its part, “rejected” the deal
that, by Kuperman’s own account, would have helped it towards the
presumed goal of achieving the bomb because “such a headlong sprint”
towards that goal “is the one step most likely to provoke an
international military response that could cripple the bomb program
before it reaches fruition.”
In other words, while Israel regularly
threatens that it won’t wait much longer for the U.S. to come to some
agreement with Iran before it launches an attack against Iran’s nuclear
sites that Iran’s possession of the bomb would surely deter, Iran is
willing pass up an offer that would constitute “a headlong sprint”
towards such a deterrent because doing so could actually jeopardize the
possibility of it obtaining the bomb, since if Iran accepted the deal
ostensibly designed to prevent it from being able to enrich uranium to
weapons-grade, Israel would be even more likely to bomb their nuclear sites even sooner than if it Iran just rejects the proposal.
Truly, Kuperman has a dizzying intellect.
“In sum,” writes Kuperman, “the
proposal would not have averted proliferation in the short run, because
that risk always was low, but instead would have fostered it in the
long run – a classic example of domestic politics undermining national
security.”
In sum, Iran is damned if it does and damned if it doesn’t.
Thus, the bombing of Iran is a
foreseeable and unavoidable consequence of the present U.S. policy
towards Iran. This consequence, admittedly, might very well be
disastrous, but the obvious solution – to alter U.S. policy – is simply
inconceivable. A change of policy is off the table. The resort to
violence is not.
It’s worth noting that Kuperman
acknowledges that the “risk” of Iran obtaining the bomb anytime soon
(assuming it actually is seeking it) “always was low”. This is an
interesting admission given the tendency of Western media to portray
Iran as being practically right on the verge of being able to
manufacture a nuclear weapon.
Returning to Iran’s “rejection of the
deal”, Kuperman suggests the so-called “rejection” was “likewise
propelled by domestic politics – including last June’s fraudulent
elections and longstanding fears of Western manipulation.”
The “fears of Western manipulation” is
a valid enough observation, the fears warranted enough. But again, as
with the presumption of an Iranian bomb program, it’s enough in U.S.
mainstream media to assert the claim of “fraudulent elections” as fact,
despite the spurious nature of the evidence for fraud and many strong
indications that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad legitimately won, including polls
conducted by Western organizations both prior to the vote and since showing strong support for his presidency.
Like the “rejection” of the deal,
Kuperman goes on to repeat what has become another unquestioned part of
the official narrative. Suggesting that President Ahmadinejad
“initially embraced the deal because he realized it aided Iran’s bomb
program”, he adds, “But his domestic political opponents, whom he has
tried to label as foreign agents, turned the tables by accusing him of
surrendering Iran’s patrimony to the West.”
The possibility that Iran has not
accepted the deal because it consists of an implicit rejection of their
right to enrich uranium for themselves is, like the thought of changing
U.S. policy, simply inconceivable.
The claim that Ahmadinejad “initially
embraced the deal”, only to “renege”, has become standard. But the
claim, though widely reported, cannot stand up to scrutiny based on the
actual facts that have been reported about the talks. Every indication
is that Ahmadinejad himself was open to the proposal, which he continues to be,
on the condition that the West cease its threatening and aggressive
posture towards Iran, and that the Iranian negotiators during the talks
agreed with the proposal on principle, in anticipation of further
talks, without formally accepting the deal – something, Iran has
pointed out, the negotiators were given no authority to do.
This is part of a larger narrative in
Western media in which the Iranian leadership is fractured and the
regime in a state of crisis due to the enormity of the opposition to
Ahmadinejad’s rule (part of the “fraudulent elections” narrative).
While there are elements of truth to this story line, it’s chiefly a
product of wishful thinking and the willingness of commentators to
succumb to their own propaganda.
Take, for example, reporting on the
massive gathering of people honoring the influential Grand Ayatollah
Hussein-Ali Montazeri upon his death just last week. The opposition, we
were told, of whom Montazeri was a leader, effectively took over the
rally and was able to turn it into a massive anti-regime protest.
Evidence for this was given in the form of amateur videos apparently
from cell phones posted to opposition websites showing close-up shots
of protesters shouting anti-regime slogans and holding up anti-regime
banners.
Wider video shots of the actual funeral
march, however, showed only an enormous crowd solemnly and respectfully
marching along with the casket, holding up only photos of the cleric,
not anti-regime banners. (The London Times, a leading outlet
for anti-Iran propaganda, acknowledges that, with no journalists in the
country due to restrictions on foreign media operations, much of its
reporting comes from anti-regime elements, but insists that its sources
are trustworthy, essentially a “just trust us” assertion that depends
upon the questionable trustworthiness of the Times itself as a source for news on Iran.)
“Under such domestic pressure, Mr.
Ahmadinejad reneged”, claims Kuperman, and then “threatened to enrich
uranium domestically to the 20 percent level.” Notice how remarks from
Iranian leaders that Iran would do what it has an “inalienable” right
to do as a party to the NPT is characterized by the verb “threatened”.
The underlying and familiar assumption
is that the rules are set by Washington, not by treaties comprising the
body of international law. A dubious enough assumption, but
unquestionable in the mainstream.
Iran’s “rejection” of the proposal
shows that it “cannot make even temporary concessions on its bomb
program”, and therefore, “Since peaceful carrots and sticks cannot
work,” – (more the stick than the carrot) – “and an invasion would be
foolhardy, the United States faces a stark choice: military air strikes
against Iran’s nuclear facilities or acquiescence to Iran’s acquisition
of nuclear weapons.”
There are numerous and obvious other options: to assume that evidence should be required of an Iranian nuclear program rather than establishing confrontational and aggressive policies based on the assumption that
this is so; to cease from violating international law with threats of
military aggression; to cease from deliberately isolating and provoking
Iran and instead meaningfully engaging the country in a
dialogue that actually recognizes Iran’s rights under the NPT; to live
up to the additional obligation under the NPT for the U.S. and other
nuclear-armed countries to provide member nations with nuclear
technology for peaceful purposes, etc.
But it is simply inconceivable that mainstream sources like the Times would actually find “fit to print” such elementary alternatives.
Without reading further, the conclusion
Kuperman would like his readers to draw (and here the headline,
“There’s Only One Way to Stop Iran”, is relevant) is clear: obviously,
we cannot acquiesce to Iran acquiring nuclear weapons; therefore the
only logical choice is to bomb Iran.
To underscore the unacceptability of
Iran obtaining the bomb, Kuperman employs a theme that should not be
unfamiliar to Americans: “If Iran acquired a nuclear arsenal,” he
writes, “the risks would simply be too great that it could become a
neighborhood bully or provide terrorists with the ultimate weapon”.
He draws just short of saying that if
we don’t bomb Iran, the consequences could come “in the form of a
mushroom cloud”, the familiar official refrain prior to the invasion of
Iraq – which had no nuclear program at all, much less a weaponized one
(Kuperman states further in the article that this fact “eluded American
intelligence until after the 2003 invasion”. U.S. intelligence
analysts, we are apparently supposed to believe, never bothered
themselves to read IAEA reports noting that the agency had completely
dismantled Iraq’s nuclear program by the mid-90s).
And so we must bomb Iran. Now,
“admittedly, aerial bombing might not work.” It could “backfire” by
“undermining Iran’s political opposition, accelerating the bomb program
or provoking retaliation against American forces and allies in the
region.”
All three are credible consequences
widely predicted among analysts. Iran may not have a nuclear weapons
program now, but if it is bombed, the likelihood that it would withdraw
from the NPT, move its nuclear weapons program underground, and begin
work towards obtaining a nuclear deterrent to further such attacks
would be increased in no inconsiderable measure.
Again, Iraq provides a useful lesson.
It was a direct consequence of Israel’s bombing of Iraq’s Osirak
reactor in 1981, according to the U.S.’s own intelligence assessments,
that prompted Saddam Hussein to begin pursuing his nuclear program
clandestinely and also to begin his pursuit to obtain nuclear weapons.
Kuperman actually mentions the Israeli
attack on Iraq’s Osirak reactor to support his assertion that bombing
Iran – the very thing he advocates – might actually result in Iran
“accelerating” efforts to acquire a nuclear weapon, but he obscures the
obvious lesson to be had from it by suggesting an opposite and much
more dubious conclusion: that the bombing slowed down, rather than
accelerated, Saddam’s efforts to obtain the bomb.
In other words, bombing Iran might
predictably and admittedly result in the very thing the bombing would
ostensibly be aimed at preventing. The obvious corollary is that the
bombing would not really be carried out in order to prevent that end.
Again, further lessons from Iraq are
instructive. Consider that the war ostensibly fought to make the world
safer from WMD and to fight terrorism resulted in the single most
probable situation, had Iraq actually had WMD, under which Saddam Hussein would have provided them to terrorists. Again, that was the assessment of the U.S. intelligence community prior to the invasion.
Fortunately, Iraq didn’t have WMD and so this never occurred. But among the direct consequences of the war that did occur was a considerable increase in
the threat of terrorism, again according to the U.S.’s own intelligence
assessments. Whereas prior to the invasion, terrorist attacks within
Iraq were virtually unknown, since the war began, the Iraq people
continue to be plagued by terrorism as a direct consequence of the war.
The war, analysts have observed, served
as a virtual billboard for terrorist organizations to recruit
individuals willing to commit acts of violence in response to U.S.
foreign policy – just as U.S. support for Israeli crimes against the
Palestinians was a principle causal factor for the 9/11 attacks, if we
are to believe the stated grievances of the originally accused
mastermind of those attacks himself.
Again, the corollary is obvious: the
official reasons for committing such acts of aggression against foreign
nations, if we presume leading policymakers are sane and rational,
cannot possibly be the actual rationale for them. That is perfectly
elementary, albeit a virtual heresy to actually point out in
respectable circles.
The war against Iraq had nothingto do with WMD or terrorism. Equally elementary is the observation that U.S. policy towards Iran has nothingto do with preventing it from obtaining nuclear weapons.
A further example is NATO’s bombing
campaign in 1999 against Yugoslavia, which was ostensibly carried out
to end atrocities on the ground, but which instead resulted in a sharp
escalation of the violence – a consequence of the bombing predicted by
the NATO leadership.
Kuperman also happens to mention that
campaign, but, again, as with his mention of Osirak, arrives at other
conclusions. Here, ignoring perhaps the most obvious lessons from his
own argument and examples, his conclusion is that “Iran’s atomic sites
might need to be bombed more than once to persuade Tehran to abandon
its pursuit of nuclear weapons.”
Bombing once won’t work, so Iran must
be bombed repeatedly. This logic is akin to arguing that since poking a
snake with a stick once might cause it to strike, it must be poked
continually in order to prevent it from being able to do so.
Similarly, Kuperman draws other lessons
from Iraq. “If nothing else,” he writes, “the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan have shown that the United States military can oust regimes
in weeks if it wants to.”
Indeed. But if we set aside intentional ignorance, other relevant lessons just might perhaps be drawn. Kuperman, rather like
the Wizard of Oz
telling Dorothy and friends to pay no attention to the man behind the
curtain, goes to extraordinary efforts to deflect attention away from
these, though.
Casting aside some of the most obvious
lessons from Iraq, Kuperman, having acknowledged the, shall we say,
“drawbacks” of his proposed solution, concludes simply that air strikes
“are worth a try.”
One might note the rather cavalier
attitude towards the use of violence against civilian targets for
political ends (the very definition of “terrorism”), an incitement to
violence that might raise questions about the nature of American
intellectual culture, and the moral values (or lack thereof) of the
intelligentsia, if we bother to ponder on the subject.
Kuperman, needless to say, doesn’t. Instead, he has just one “final question”: “who should launch the air strikes?”
The obvious answer is Israel, which
“has shown an eagerness” to bomb Iran, the option “some hawks in
Washington favor” in order “to avoid fueling anti-Americanism in the
Islamic world” – a rationale of astounding ignorance; the Islamic world
surely would recognize that were Israel to bomb Iran, it would be with
a “green light” from Washington, a wink and a nod. But never mind that.
Kuperman continues, however, with
“three compelling reasons that the United States itself should carry
out the bombings”, the obvious fueling of anti-Americanism and other
predicted and potentially disastrous consequences aside. The U.S. has
better equipment to do the job, could more credibly threaten “to expand
the bombing campaign” (that is, to repeatedly bomb the country), and it would be an opportunity to send “a strong warning” to other countries.
This latter rationale for the U.S.
bombing of Iran provides a more credible explanation for what the
actual purpose of such a bombing would be.
Kuperman, in line with the official
rationale for keeping the military “option” “on the table” – an
explicit rejection of principle that force should be used only as a
last resort, as well as a direct violation of international law –
suggests the “strong warning” would be for “other would-be
proliferators”.
Proliferation being obviously of little
to no consideration to U.S. policymakers – an elementary observation
drawn even from the arguments provided here – “proliferators” clearly
isn’t the right word here. “Nations seeking to act independently from
and in opposition to Washington” might be more accurate.
“The sooner the United States takes action” – that is, the sooner it bombs Iran – “the better”, concludes Kuperman.
At stake is U.S. “credibility”, in the
Mafioso sense of the word. Washington simply can’t have a country
defying its orders. That’s the bottom line. That’s the underlying
foundation of the policy of the Obama administration, carried over from
the policy of his predecessor.
But, of course, just as the war in Iraq
couldn’t be sold to the American public on the basis of its actual
rationale, expanding U.S. global hegemony, neither can the true reasons
for Washington’s policies towards Iran be mentioned. It just wouldn’t
do.
Better, as with Iraq, to construct
nonsensical arguments dependent upon an extraordinary level of
intentional ignorance and consisting at the most fundamental level of
claims for which there is little, if any, evidence to support.
Whether the American public has learned
the more obvious and crucial lessons from Iraq and has the moral
integrity to act on them remains to be seen. But what is for certain is
that without massive public pressure on Washington to alter its Iran
policy, the U.S. will maintain a course the consequences of which might
very well prove, as with Iraq, to be disastrous.
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