By Jonathan Tobin
Intelligence estimate leaves Bush nuke policies in ruins and Jerusalem
isolated
After years of trying to build awareness of the threat from Iran, the
release this week of a new National Intelligence Estimate claiming that
it has no current nuclear-weapons program has sunk the campaign to keep
that Islamist republic in quarantine.
That is not the spin coming out of the administration or from many of
its supporters.
Instead, some of them claim the finding that Iran abandoned its nuclear
program in 2003 is proof that an aggressive American foreign policy,
mixing diplomatic sanctions, threats and military strikes, can bring
rogue regimes to their senses.
Nice try. But, if the Iranians were scared out of a nuclear infatuation
(as Libya apparently was after the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq),
then why have they spent the last four years busily — and publicly —
defending their right to go nuclear and holding ceremonies
commemorating each step along the way?
SANCTIONS SUNK
The same document, which reverses a 2005 finding from the same source
that claimed the Iranians were working on a bomb, also points out that
a nuclear capability is still the long-term goal and acknowledges the
scientific work that's been accomplished to get there. There's no sense
either in the piece of just how close the Iranians were when they
dropped the program.
But whatever the country is planning to do — or is doing now without
the knowledge of our spies — the proclamation that there's no current
nuclear program puts an end to all the Bush administration's hopes for
increased sanctions on Iran.
President Bush was right when he noted after the document's release
that Iran was and remains dangerous, and that nothing has really
changed. Iran is the leading exporter of terror in the world via
Hezbollah and Hamas. Its president has threatened Israel with genocide,
and its religious leaders (who hold the real power in the country) have
the goal of imposing their radical ideas about Islam throughout the
region and the world.
Supporters of an aggressive policy of Iran containment, such as the
American Israel Public Affairs Committee, can claim and be right that
the details of the report buttress the belief that it's a nation that
must be restrained.
But in the absence of an imminent nuclear threat, those who still think
that either Russia or China will go along with the West's push for more
sanctions are dreaming. And anyone who thinks the Western European
governments who've been reluctant passengers on Bush's anti-Iran
bandwagon won't now get off promptly is also not paying attention.
That's bad news for a number of reasons, of which only the most
prominent is the fact that the NIE might be wrong.
We can leave aside the fact that it makes no sense for a nation like
Iran, which is sitting on one of the biggest oil reserves in the world,
to be expending so much treasure on peaceful uses of nuclear energy
rather than military ones. We can also discount the fact that Israeli
intelligence sources, which have a slightly better track record than
Washington's spooks, disagree with the NIE.
This is, after all, the same U.S. group that two years ago were sure
the Iranians were developing nukes; that four years ago assured Bush
that the proof Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction was
a "slam dunk" and that utterly failed to predict the Sept. 11 attacks
or prepare Americans for their aftermath.
If these operatives are wrong again, it won't matter whether the motive
for their newfound caution stems from an overreaction to their Iraq
mistakes or, as some Bushites now claim, a politically inspired move by
some in the intelligence community to stop the use of force against
Iran.
If, as the document admits, the Iranians decide to go nuclear at some
point in the not-too-distant future — something that will be
facilitated by the reported construction of centrifuges — then it will
be too late to reassemble the coalition of concerned nations to do
something about what was billed as an urgent problem.
As those urging action on Iran have stated in the past, once Iran
crosses the nuclear threshold, the only options then will be
acquiescence or war.
All that notwithstanding, the NIE finding means that the air is out of
the balloon for the push for Iran divestment and international
sanctions. And that means both our European "allies" and the Russians
and Chinese, can go back to business as usual when it comes to trading
with Tehran. It also means that the Israeli diplomatic campaign to
raise awareness about Iran won't be going anywhere either.
But the toll on American diplomacy is greater than that.
The rationale behind the recently completed Middle East summit in
Annapolis, Md., was that opposition to Iran throughout the region would
be the impetus for support for a renewed peace process. With the
nuclear question now off the table — and with Europe almost certainly
dropping out of the argument — how exactly do Bush and Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice propose to convince the so-called "moderate"
Arabs to remain interested in isolating Iran?
LEFT WITH ABBAS
All of which leaves us with a Mideast policy that, at present, consists
almost solely of an irrational belief in the peaceful intentions of the
Palestinians and their leaders.
It was one thing for Bush to push hard for Israel to go to Annapolis
and to start final-status talks with Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas as part of a global vision that had, as its centerpiece,
the goal of stopping Iran.
With that central prop torn away from our foreign policy — and without
belief in the nuclear peril from Iran that both Washington and
Jerusalem have been promoting — all that's left is faith in Abbas and
the allegedly moderate Arabs who back him.
You needn't be a peace skeptic to understand that Abbas hasn't the
power or the ability to make a deal, or to finally end Palestinian
terror, even if Israel retreated from the West Bank, as it did from
Gaza. The fact that three of his own "policemen" celebrated the
Annapolis meeting by murdering a Jew in the West Bank in order to make
a political point should have reminded us that the differences between
Abbas' Fatah and its Hamas rivals are more style than substance.
All of which means that Bush's policy has now officially gone from a
prayer to a joke. That will leave Israel once again isolated and trying
to defend itself against false charges that its "occupation" of the
territories is the impetus for Palestinian terrorism and the sole cause
of the conflict.
If the NIE is right, we should be thankful that the ability of Iran to
commit nuclear genocide might not be in the cards. But right or wrong,
the administration now finds itself painted into a corner — with no
solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict in sight, and no hope of
rallying the world against a key Islamist threat
Even if there are no nukes in Tehran's future, that's a pretty
frightening thought for both Israelis and Americans.
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Iran Forecast: Don't Worry, Be Happy?
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)