Weekly Commentary
Tehran’s
Determined Path to A-Bomb
Without question Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's defiant
tone and vigorous defense of Iran's nuclear weapons program in
his address to the United Nations General Assembly last
Saturday, made it amply clear that Tehran was determined to
continue its breach of international demands to suspend its
nuclear activities. Less clear is whether Washington is resolute
enough to respond with equal vigor to Tehran rogue behavior.
A few weeks ago, a senior European diplomat told Reuters that
the European Union’s approach to resolve the nuclear issue with
Iran had come to an end. The point was further reinforced with
Ahmadinejad’s remarks at the UN.
In a thinly-veiled threat, he told the General Assembly that "we
will reconsider our entire approach to the nuclear issue" if
Iran’s is not left to its own device to move forward with its
nuclear program. This statement further convinced the IAEA
members that Tehran’s so-called civilian nuclear program was a
diversion from the real clandestine weapons program.
Ahmadinejad’s diatribe was not as surprising as push by some
countries still pressing for more time to be given Tehran to
“rethink” its hard-line position. After almost two years of
futile talks with Tehran, this suggestion, far from being naive,
is utterly reckless. Time is what the free world does not have
and what the clerical regime seeks.
In October 2003, when Tehran was not yet this far along in its
nuclear program, there was more than enough credible evidence to
refer Iran’s case to UN Security Council. Indeed, the EU bears
full responsibility in letting Iran advance its nuclear weapons
program under the diplomatic fig leaf and the legitimacy the
Union’s foolhardy “soft approach” accorded Tehran. Did anyone
really expected Tehran to be negotiated into stopping its
two-decade long nuclear weapons program which it considers as
being indispensable to its survival strategy?
The ascension of Ahmadinejad to office of presidency - the last
bastion of power not fully in the hands of the
ultra-conservation faction before him - leaves do doubt that a
new page has turned in Iran’s political landscape at home and
abroad. To advance its two-pronged campaign of acquiring nuclear
weapons and establishing an irreversible dominance in Iraq,
Tehran placed a thug par-excellence in the presidential office.
Since Ahmadinejad was elected, Tehran’s subversive operations in
Iraq have significantly increased and even extended to
influencing the draft Iraqi constitution. The Wall Street
Journal reported on Monday that many in Washington have
“expressed alarm about the provisions concerning women's rights,
the role of Islam in Iraqi daily life and the deference accorded
to Shiite clerics with close religious and cultural ties to
neighboring Iran.” This was echoed last week by a leading
Iranian opposition coalition. "The National Council of
Resistance of Iran claimed that article 21 of Iraq's draft
constitution, which deals with asylum for refugees, could be
used to expel members of the People's Mujahedeen Organization of
Iran (PMOI),” wrote the Associated Press.
Meanwhile, the rise in violence and deadly attacks on British
troops in the southern Iraq has been attributed to Iran.
According to Times of London “British officials are convinced
that Iran is implicated in the upsurge in violence.. Iran has
been supporting a local terror group run by Abu Mustafa al-
Sheibani, who is blamed for the murder of at least 11 British
soldiers.”
Meanwhile, the rise in violence and deadly attacks on British
troops in the southern Iraq has been attributed to Iran.
According to Times of London “British officials are convinced
that Iran is implicated in the upsurge in violence.. Iran has
been supporting a local terror group run by Abu Mustafa al-
Sheibani, who is blamed for the murder of at least 11 British
soldiers.”
On the nuclear front Tehran has been even more belligerent. Even
before Ahmadinejad’s UN address, the clerical regime had already
decided to resume uranium conversion at Isfahan facility. And
last week Alireza Jafarzadeh, an expert on Iran’s nuclear
program and president of Strategic Policy Consulting, said that
Iran's military is creating underground tunnels designed to
conceal materials for a nuclear weapons program, according to
Associated Press
In short, with Ahmadinejad at the helm, the most extremist
faction of the ruling theocracy has completed its control over
all levers of power. The clerical regime has defined its
objectives, mapped out its path and staffed its leadership at
all three branch of government.
The question is: has Washington done the same thing to counter
Tehran’s nuclear threat and meddling in Iraq? The answer is no
and time is running out on both fronts.
(USADI)
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United Press
International
September 19,
2005
Iran gearing for war?
WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (UPI) -- Is Iran preparing for war with the
United States? It sounds inconceivable, but the U.S. invasion of
Iraq has spooked Tehran's mullahs to prepare for the
unthinkable. Writing in the Sept. 17 issue of the Arab News,
Iranian columnist Amir Taheri states, "incredible though it may
sound there are signs that Tehran may be preparing for a
military confrontation with the United States, and has convinced
itself that it could win." This may explain, partially, why
Iran's mullahs are emulating the Vietcong by going underground,
at least so far as their nuclear program and missile
construction structures are concerned.
Iranian opposition officials, citing intelligence reports
received from sources inside Iran, claim the Islamic republic is
building a vast network of tunnels and secret centers across the
country, for the purpose of hiding its nuclear processing
facilities and missiles capable of carrying nuclear warheads.
The tunnels and underground endeavors have been codenamed
"Development Projects." They are classified as "top secret" by
Tehran. The Iranian government has forbidden the tunnels and
centers be referred to by their names, designating instead each
one by a specified code. The tunnels and processing sites have
been placed under "very strict and tight security and
intelligence system," maintained by the military, according to
intelligence reports from Iranian opposition. "Iran is
increasingly moving its nuclear facilities to military sites,"
said Alireza Jafarzadeh, an Iranian dissident living in
Washington. Backing-up his claims with a detailed blueprint of
what appeared to be a plant of some sort, Jafarzadeh, explained
in great detail, at a press conference last week, the perils of
Iran going nuclear.
Other opposition groups are also decrying the dangers posed by a
nuclear-armed Iran and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who was in
New York last week to address the United Nations General
Assembly, was greeted to a tumultuous welcome by tens of
thousands of protestors objecting to his visit and calling
attention to Iran's pursuit of its nuclear program.
Iran's Gachin uranium ore mine is producing about 21 tons of ore
annually, enough to manufacture about four nuclear bombs per
year, according to a U.S. government report first made public by
ABC News.
"Seven of Iran's 13
nuclear-related facilities were kept secret until 2002,
including enrichment plants at Lashkar-Abad, Tehran, Natanz, and
uranium processing at Adrekan and Gachin," the report said.
Iran has been hiding its nuclear
programs for the good part of 18 years, pointed out Paul
Leventhal, president of the Nuclear Control Institute, and co-
founder of the Iran Policy Committee, an ad-hoc group comprised
for the most par of former U.S. government officials lobbying
the Bush administration to empower Iranian resistance inside the
country.
The IPC sees as key player the
Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, or MeK, a cult-like group accused of having
Marxist- Islamist tendencies, if ever the twain could meet.
"When one also considers Iran's concealment and deception
activities, it's difficult to escape the conclusion that Iran is
pursuing nuclear weapons," the U.S. government report went on to
say. "It is reaching the point which is beyond critical," warned
Leventhal, urging the International Atomic Energy Agency -- the
U.N.'s nuclear watchdog -- to "promptly investigate" Iran's
nuclear infractions, adding that much "evidence" has been
ignored by the IAEA.
Commenting on the "evidence that
Tehran is building a nuclear bomb," a Tehran commentator on
Sahar TV asked "why should we believe the United States now when
it lied about weapons of mass destruction in Iraq?"
The danger posed by a nuclear-armed Iran, as Patrick Clawson,
deputy director for research at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy, explains, is that it would instigate a nuclear
arms race in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia and Egypt, for
example, would find it hard to allow Iran to remain the only
country in the region (besides Israel) to go nuclear. It would
create "a snowball effect," says Clawson.
"The world would not be better off
if more countries were armed with nuclear weapons," said
Clawson. "Iran talks of its rights without mentioning its
obligations. Iran has a right if it cooperates with the IAEA,"
pointed out Clawson.
But Iran, so far, has refused to cooperate, playing a cat and
mouse game with both the IAEA and the Euro-3 - Britain, France
and Germany - who have been tying to negotiate a peaceful and
adequate solution to Iran's nuclear quest.
Jafarzadeh, now president of Strategic Policy Consulting, but
who represented the Mujahedeen-e- Khalq until the Iranian
resistance group found its way on the U.S. terror list, warned
of the "speed with which Iran is proceeding" with its nuclear
program. The election of Ahmadinejad to the presidency of the
Islamic republic consolidated Iran's power base, bringing the
army and the Revolutionary Guards under the mandate of the
mullahs.
Taheri, the columnist, points out that "another sign that Tehran
may be preparing for war is the appointment of military officers
to posts normally held by civilians, such as governors, mayors
and directors of major public corporations."
Following in the footsteps of the
Vietcong and their wartime leader Ho Chi Minh, Iran's supreme
guide, Ali Khamenei, is reported to be building a "bunker-like
structure" close to his house in the city of Mashhad in the
vicinity of the holy shrine of Reza, the eighth imam, reports
Taheri.
The bunker is reported to have the
capacity to house the entire Iranian government. Speaking to CNN
during his New York visit President Ahmadinejad said Iran is
absolutely determined to pursue a nuclear energy program and
"will use every resource" it has to battle the United States and
European nations trying to prevent it. Stay tuned.
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Daily
Telegraph
September 20,
2005
Blair and Straw Split by Iran
Nuclear Crisis
A serious rift has opened between Tony Blair and Jack Straw over
whether to retain the threat of military action against Iran if
it refuses to halt its nuclear programme. A day after Mr Straw
declared that the crisis "will not be resolved by military
means", Downing Street distanced itself from the Foreign
Secretary.
It lined up behind President
George W Bush, who has made clear that "all options are on the
table" while wanting a diplomatic solution and insisting there
are no plans to use force. The Foreign Office made no attempt to
hide the disagreement last night. "Jack's view is clear," said a
senior official. "Military action is inconceivable."
Earlier, the Prime Minister's
official spokesman played down any suggestion of a split but,
when asked about the difference between Mr Straw's views and
those of the US President, he emphasised that Mr Blair agreed
with Mr Bush.
"On May 12... the Prime Minister
at a press conference said that what President Bush has said is
perfectly sensible. "You can't say you are taking options off
the table. But he went on to say, I think very sensibly too,
that nobody is talking about invasions of Iran or military
action against Iran."
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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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