Weekly Commentary
US Should not
Join the EU-Tehran Nuclear Bazaar
Call it a policy shift or a tactical retreat. Either way, the
announcement last Friday by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
that the United States had agreed to offer modest economic
incentives to Iran in exchange for Tehran's abandoning its
nuclear enrichment program, would send the wrong signal to all
parties concerned.
Tehran’s immediate rejection of the offer of membership in the
World Trade Organization and of sales of spare parts for
civilian aircraft, as” too insignificant to comment about,”
proved this point.
Noting that Rice has been misled in thinking Iran might stop its
work on uranium enrichment, Sirous Naseri, a senior Iranian
negotiator in nuclear talks with the European Union, told
Reuters that abandoning “our nuclear fuel program is not on the
table.”
And Hossein Mousavian, a senior official in Iran’s Supreme
National Security Council, told the BBC on Sunday that the US
offers did not amount to real concessions. The US should unblock
frozen Iranian assets, lift sanctions and stop "hostile
measures", he added.
The world's number one terror sponsors in Tehran are now further
assured that their continued rogue behavior and defiance of the
international community is paying off. They see that following
Paris, Berlin, and London, now Washington might be reluctant in
confronting them.
Obviously, Tehran intends to get as many concessions as it can
and still keep the essential component and infrastructure of its
nuclear weapons program intact. When it comes to rogue regimes,
the bitter truth is that diplomatic engagement is an exercise in
futility. The root cause of the nuclear crisis with Iran is not
a shortage of “economic incentives”; it is the nature of regime
in power in Tehran.
Iran is ruled by a theocratic regime, intrinsically incapable of
change and unable to meet the basic and legitimate political,
social and economic demands of its citizens.
This shows the inherit vulnerability of the mullahs’ regime.
Cognizant of this weakness, the clerical regime has tried to
ensure its permanence by making the survival of the system the
driving force of its domestic and foreign policy since coming to
power in 1979.
To this end, cracking down at home, exporting fundamentalism and
sponsoring terrorism abroad as well as developing weapons of
mass destruction have been the essential components of Iran’s
survival strategy.
It would be naïve to assume that the mullahs will agree to
undermine their survivability by abandoning one of its main
pillars. No amount of incentives would convince Tehran to do
otherwise.
A regime, which has lied for about two decades about its nuclear
program and continued its mislead-and-cheat campaign, while
pretending to cooperate with the UN inspectors after it was
caught red-handed, is clearly telling the world it has no
intention of changing course. Just last week, the Pakistani
government confirmed that A.Q. Khan had sold Iran uranium
enrichment centrifuges. (USADI)
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Center for Security
Policy (Decision Brief)
March
14, 2005
The Eurofaustians
"... And our duty is now clear: For the sake of our long-term
security, all free nations must stand with the forces of
democracy and justice that have begun to transform the Middle
East."
George W.
Bush, National Defense University March 8, 2005
Even as President Bush was drawing this lesson from the past,
Europe's leading nations - Britain, France and Germany - were
inveigling his Administration to join them in the latest example
of great democracies "excusing and accommodating tyranny" in the
pursuit of what passes for "stability." Within days of the
President's powerful address at NDU, the Eurofaustians had
induced him to join their effort to do a deal that would, as a
practical matter, legitimate, perpetuate and enrich the despotic
mullahocracy of Iran…
We should be clear, however. We have entered the bazaar and the
offer on the table should be understood by everyone to be but
the opening bid. The mullahs have already responded by saying
they will not abandon their uranium enrichment program, seed
corn for nuclear weaponry. Clearly, they expect more Western
offers will be made to induce them to be more tractable.
Unfortunately, it is predictable that the Europeans will be
all-too-willing to make such further offers, in the interest of
"keeping the dialogue going" and avoiding a rupture with Tehran
that would be seen as clearing the way for the Iranian bomb. (A
similar logic is impelling the Eurofaustians to resume arms
sales to Communist China, even as the PRC inexorably moves
forward with its plans to re-annex Taiwan, by force if
necessary.)
The futility of the Eurofaustians' deal-making is assured,
however, since there is no way to ensure that Tehran is
complying any more fully with future promises to freeze its
nuclear weapons program than it has with previous ones…
Worse yet, the process of deal-making with a repressive,
dishonest and aggressive Iranian regime buys the mullahs the one
thing they need most: Time. Time to complete their covert
nuclear program. Time to mate nuclear warheads with Iran's
growing arsenal of longer and longer range ballistic and cruise
missiles. Time to ensure that Iran's Chinese and Russian friends
will thwart any Security Council resolution the United States
might actually be able to persuade the EU-3 to support.
Arguably even more insidious is the prospect that the Bush
Administration will be seen by the Iranian people as having
decided, at least implicitly, that doing a deal with the Iranian
regime is more important than "standing with the people" of
Iran, who yearn for freedom from the mullahs. This is all the
more regrettable since it not only calls into question the
President's central organizing principle for the war on terror;
it would also seem to preclude, or at least greatly to impede,
the only tool that might actually prevent Iranian nuclear
armament: regime change in favor of freedom...
... We need to wage political warfare against the mullahocracy
if there is to be any chance of freeing its people and denying
terror's friends the Bomb. And neither time nor the
Eurofaustians will be on our side in waging such warfare.
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The Wall Street
Journal (Editorial)
March 14, 2005
Iran's 'No'
Last week brought the announcement of an agreement between
Europe and the U.S. on a package of carrots -- including
aircraft parts and the prospect of World Trade Organization
membership -- aimed at coaxing Iran to give up its nuclear
program through further diplomacy. If nothing else, this
tactical U.S. retreat ought to put to rest caricatures of the
Bush Administration as cowboy unilateralists bent on war with
the mullahs.
And we mean "if nothing else." Because the agreement also
encourages the world's No. 1 terror sponsors in their belief
that civilized nations will ultimately flinch from confronting
them over the nuclear issue. Tehran quickly dismissed the offer
as "insignificant" and, with the vocal support of visiting
Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez, again proclaimed Iran's right
to all phases of the nuclear fuel cycle.
The belief that there's a diplomatic solution to be had here is
increasingly the triumph of hope over experience. Iran lied
about its nuclear work to the International Atomic Energy Agency
for two decades, and again and repeatedly when confronted and
offered a chance to come clean. Just last week Pakistan
confirmed that A-bomb salesman A.Q. Khan had indeed sold Iran
uranium enrichment centrifuges, almost certainly as part of what
has become known as "the package." No one doubts Iran has a bomb
program…
Iran has already violated the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty
without being referred to the Security Council and has
consistently refused to renounce its alleged "right" to uranium
enrichment, a position it reiterated in response to last week's
offer. We hope by some miracle this latest diplomacy works. But
soon enough the more relevant question is likely to be: When
will Western leaders take Iran's "no" for an answer?
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The US Alliance for Democratic Iran (USADI), is a
US-based, non-profit, independent organization, which promotes
informed policy debate, exchange of ideas, analysis, research and
education to advance a US policy on Iran which will benefit America’s
interests, both at home and in the Middle East, through supporting Iranian
people’s aspirations for a democratic, secular, and
peaceful government, free of tyranny, fundamentalism, weapons of
mass destruction, and terrorism.
USADI supports the Iranian peoples' aspirations
for democracy, peace, human rights, women’s equality, freedom of
expression, separation of church and state, self-determination, control of
land and resources, cultural integrity, and the right to development
and prosperity.
The USADI is not affiliated with any government
agencies, political groups or parties. The USADI administration is solely
responsible for its activities and decisions.
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