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lennart
03-10-03, 18:41
Don't be fooled. The Iraqi maelstrom won't save Iran

European support for US threats against Tehran will lead to disaster

Jonathan Steele
Friday October 3, 2003
The Guardian

The cloud is still no larger than George Bush's hand but the storm of concern which the US is orchestrating over Iran is beginning to show uncomfortable similarities with the row over Saddam Hussein's Iraq.
A deadline has been set for Iran to make a full declaration of its nuclear energy programme by the end of this month. There is a demand for international inspectors to go in and examine any site to check for a possible hidden weapons project. Punitive measures are threatened in the case of non-compliance.

Many British and American critics of the last war take comfort in the view that the mess the United States and Britain have got into in post-war Iraq has the benefit that Bush and Blair will not repeat their adventure. Do not be fooled. That, increasingly, looks complacent.

Blair's speech this week showed that he stands by his view that preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction - if necessary by pre-emptive force - is top of his foreign policy priorities. It was not to be expected that the prime minister would publicly admit he got Iraq wrong. Had he done so, it would be a resigning matter.

But if he had private regrets he might at least have shifted the focus of future British policy to different challenges, like his old rhetoric about world poverty and Africa being a scar on the conscience of humankind. But no. He told the conference that dealing with WMD proliferation headed the agenda for the 21st century. On the BBC's Today programme, he went further by claiming a new success for the war on Iraq. It had helped to get Iran to cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, he said.

For Bush, too, dealing with WMD proliferation is still a high priority in spite of the fiasco of the failed search in Iraq. While North Korea has long been in the frame, the new element is Washington's heavy focus on Iran. Power, it is often said, lies in the ability to set the agenda, and it is remarkable how Washington has managed to switch the world's spotlight to Iran.

The White House is already hinting at using force. Warning Iranians that "development of a nuclear weapon is not in their interests", Bush said in late July that "all options remain on the table". The Los Angleles Times subsequently reported that the CIA has briefed friendly foreign intelligence services on a contingency plan for air and missile strikes on Iranian nuclear installations.

Much of the pressure is coming from the Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, and the same neo-conservative friends of his in Washington who drove the war on Iraq. They recently formed a "Coalition for democracy in Iran", which advocates the overthrow of Iran's regime. It includes well-known hawks like Michael Ledeen and Morris Amitay, a former executive director of the American-Israeli Public Affairs Committee. According to the Washington Post, Sharon recently told Bush that Israel might strike Iran's nuclear facilities, just as it destroyed Saddam Hussein's nuclear reactor in 1981. Whether Sharon only meant his warning as a device to get the US to take the issue seriously and strike first is not clear.

Few would deny that global nuclear proliferation is a serious danger. But as Ken Coates of the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation points out in a new pamphlet, the Bush administration's talk of "counter-proliferation" is diametrically opposed to the old language of non-proliferation. The original idea was that all nuclear-weapons states would move towards disarmamament, a pledge that the US, Britain and the other three declared bomb-owners made in 1995. Now we have a kind of class distinction. The US continues to develop new forms of nuclear weapons. US-friendly states that refused to sign the non-proliferation treaty (NPT) but have nuclear weapons - like India, Israel and Pakistan - are treated with kid gloves. An NPT-signer such as Iran, against whom Washington bears ancient grudges, is threatened with punishment, and possible force.

Iran is not North Korea. It has no bomb and has consistently said it has no plans for one. It has a nuclear power programme and plans for full-cycle fuel enrichment, but one reason for its drive towards self-sufficiency is that its world trade already suffers from US sanctions, as well as US pressure on Russia and other European states to restrict their own exports to Iran.

All Iranians, not just the regime's supporters, resent international pressure on their country to renounce nuclear power. As one of the first countries in their region which industrialised, they feel they have a "right to technology".

If Iran is secretly trying to develop a bomb, only a few politicians are behind it. "Iran has no military lobby for the bomb like Pakistan, nor a civilian-scientific one like India," according to Shahram Chubin, one of the most clear-headed analysts of Iran's national security policy, now a Swiss citizen. Marginalising Iran, refusing to consult it where its interests are involved, and generally demonising it would strengthen those in Iran who argue that nuclear weapons confer status and influence, he wrote some months ago. The war in Iraq and the stepped-up US campaign against Iran have only reinforced his case.

The time has surely come for some sort of "grand bargain" with Iran, a dialogue in which everything is put on the table, including a lifting of sanctions, the renunciation of the use or threat of force, and the restoration of diplomatic relations with the US in return for nuclear transparency. Sadly, the recent trend has been the other way. On Monday the European Union issued its toughest statement on Iran, echoing Washington's hard line. The French went along happily - no sign of Chiraquian revolt on this one. The EU warned that even if Iran signed the International Atomic Energy Agency's additional protocol to allow for snap visits by outside inspectors, this would only be a "first step" towards "restoring international trust".

In the case of Iraq, the Clinton administration and Britain made a serious mistake in 1998 by making clear sanctions would not be lifted in return for Saddam Hussein's compliance with inspections. Now the mistake is being repeated with Iran, giving it no clear incentive to cooperate, and making people in Tehran ask what the next demand will be.

Until this summer, the EU took a different line from Washington. Instead of "containment", it argued for more dialogue and trade with Iran. Unless the EU quickly breaks with Bush and resumes the path of incentives rather than threats, Iran is more likely to be pushed into wanting a bomb than renouncing it.
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,9115,1055025,00.html

Victory
03-10-03, 18:51
Tehran, Oct 3 - Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said here on Friday that Iran's conditions for signing the additional protocol to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) may be the same as those of the US.

"We also have conditions [for signing the additional protocol] and our conditions may be the same as those which the US has declared in its talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)," Rafsanjani told worshipers in a sermon at Tehran Friday Prayers.

He recalled US conditions that its signing the protocol must not jeopardize its security, values and sanctities, and that it must not lead to investigation of issues that are not related to the nuclear energy.

"We have not yet declared our conditions, but I think these are the cornerstone of our conditions," Rafsanjani said.

The Islamic Republic is already a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

However, the IAEA is refusing to provide Iran with the nuclear expertise that under the agency's regulations it is entitled to receive.

Iran says it needs to receive guarantees before signing the additional protocol that the sanctions imposed by the west are removed and that nuclear powers help the Islamic Republic attain nuclear technology to satisfy its energy needs.

Rafsanjani further refreshed vows that Iran would not pursue atomic weapons, stressing that these weapons are against the religious teachings of Iranians and all the Muslims.

"Just as the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has declared, we consider using atomic weapons as Haram (forbidden) according to the Islamic sanctities and the principles of our religion," Rafsanjani said. "

We have always been committed to this. Yet, it is regrettable that there is a ballyhoo against Iran in the world even though we have explicitly announced that the Islamic Republic only wants to use the nuclear technology for peaceful purposes."

He further recalled Iran's previous positions that it is willing to continue cooperation with IAEA, and that it would study the NPT's additional protocol thoroughly and would agree to sign it "if it fits our interests".

"They are well aware that we have made this decision at the highest levels of the country and are now following it.

But it is very unfortunate that they are so biased and merciless toward us," Rafsanjani said.

The IAEA board of governors last month set an October 31 deadline for Iran to prove it is pursuing peaceful nuclear programs.

The resolution that was submitted by Canada, Japan and Australia also calls on Tehran to clarify its nuclear program by the end of October and to suspend its uranium enrichment program.

Rafsanjani called the IAEA board of governors "hypocrite, deceitful and opportunist", stressing that this issue is "very ugly and dangerous" for world powers and their image in the international arena.

Waterval
03-10-03, 18:53
Geplaatst door Victory
Tehran, Oct 3 - Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said here on Friday that Iran's conditions for signing the additional protocol to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) may be the same as those of the US.

"We also have conditions [for signing the additional protocol] and our conditions may be the same as those which the US has declared in its talks with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)," Rafsanjani told worshipers in a sermon at Tehran Friday Prayers.

He recalled US conditions that its signing the protocol must not jeopardize its security, values and sanctities, and that it must not lead to investigation of issues that are not related to the nuclear energy.

"We have not yet declared our conditions, but I think these are the cornerstone of our conditions," Rafsanjani said.

The Islamic Republic is already a signatory to the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

However, the IAEA is refusing to provide Iran with the nuclear expertise that under the agency's regulations it is entitled to receive.

Iran says it needs to receive guarantees before signing the additional protocol that the sanctions imposed by the west are removed and that nuclear powers help the Islamic Republic attain nuclear technology to satisfy its energy needs.

Rafsanjani further refreshed vows that Iran would not pursue atomic weapons, stressing that these weapons are against the religious teachings of Iranians and all the Muslims.

"Just as the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei has declared, we consider using atomic weapons as Haram (forbidden) according to the Islamic sanctities and the principles of our religion," Rafsanjani said. "

We have always been committed to this. Yet, it is regrettable that there is a ballyhoo against Iran in the world even though we have explicitly announced that the Islamic Republic only wants to use the nuclear technology for peaceful purposes."

He further recalled Iran's previous positions that it is willing to continue cooperation with IAEA, and that it would study the NPT's additional protocol thoroughly and would agree to sign it "if it fits our interests".

"They are well aware that we have made this decision at the highest levels of the country and are now following it.

But it is very unfortunate that they are so biased and merciless toward us," Rafsanjani said.

The IAEA board of governors last month set an October 31 deadline for Iran to prove it is pursuing peaceful nuclear programs.

The resolution that was submitted by Canada, Japan and Australia also calls on Tehran to clarify its nuclear program by the end of October and to suspend its uranium enrichment program.

Rafsanjani called the IAEA board of governors "hypocrite, deceitful and opportunist", stressing that this issue is "very ugly and dangerous" for world powers and their image in the international arena.


Jeetje, is het al Kerst?

lennart
03-10-03, 18:54
Geplaatst door Waterval
Jeetje, is het al Kerst?

:hihi:

Victory
03-10-03, 19:04
Geplaatst door Waterval
Jeetje, is het al Kerst?

Veel mensen hier kunnen heel slecht of geen engels. En als de tekst lang is, lezen ze het niet. Door kleuren en andere lettergroottes aan te brengen, maak je het makkelijker om te lezen. (sommige lezen alleen de gekleurde gedeeltes).