Filed under: Afghanistan, Ahmadinejad, airstrikes, ashkenazi, ban ki-moon, Barack Obama, Britain, central bank, Condoleezza Rice, Coup, Credit Crisis, DEBT, Dick Cheney, diplomacy, Dollar, Economic Collapse, economic depression, Economy, Ehud Barak, Europe, european union, False Flag, George Bush, global economy, Great Depression, Greenback, hamas, Inflation, Iran, Iraq, Israel, John Bolton, Mike Mullen, Military, military strike, Mossad, nation building, neocons, Nuke, occupation, Preemptive Strike, preemptive war, Robert Gates, Ron Paul, Russia, Shock and Awe, stephen hadley, Stock Market, Syria, Tehran, UN, United Kingdom, US Economy, War On Terror, WW3, ww4
U.S. ’diplomatic’ talks in Iran to legitimize attack
Jerusalem Post
July 27, 2008
Joint Chiefs Chairman Adm. Mike Mullen (L) salutes Israeli Chief of Defense Forces, Lt. Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi who recently warned that all options must be prepared against Iran.
Recent talks the United States held with Iran are aimed at creating legitimacy for a potential attack against Iranian nuclear facilities, defense officials speculated on Sunday as Defense Minister Ehud Barak headed to Washington for talks with senior administration officials.
Barak will travel to Washington and New York and will hold talks with his counterpart Robert Gates, Vice President Dick Cheney, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Admiral Michael Mullen, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley.
Officials said it was likely that President George W. Bush would join the meeting between Barak and Hadley. On Wednesday, Barak will fly to New York for a brief meeting with United Nations Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon.
Barak’s departure to the US came as IDF Chief of General Staff Lt.-Gen. Gabi Ashkenazi returned to Israel on Sunday from a week-long visit to the US as Mullen’s guest. Ashkenazi held talks with Cheney, Hadley and other senior officials with a focus on the Iranian nuclear program.
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak (L) on Tuesday said; “A policy that consists of keeping all options on the table must be maintained” shakes hands with Barack Obama who also states would take “no options off the table”.
“There is a lot of strategic thinking concerning Iran going on right now but no one has yet to make a decision what to do,” said a top IDF officer, involved in the dialogue between Israel and the US. “We are still far away from the point where military officers are poring over maps together planning an operation.”
In recent weeks, Mullen has said publicly that he is opposed to military action against Iran which would open a “third front” for the US military which is currently fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Barak’s talks in the US come a little over a week after the Bush administration sent its number three diplomat to Geneva to participate in European Union talks with Iran over its nuclear program.
The move led to reports that the US was changing its isolation tactic vis-à-vis Iran but Israeli defense officials speculated Sunday that the move was really a ploy to buy international support in the event that Bush decides to attack Iran in his last months in office.
“This way they will be able to say they tried everything,” one official speculated. “This increases America’s chances of gaining more public support domestically as well as the support of European nations which are today opposed to military action.”
Diplomatic officials have speculated that the Iran-US talks were also connected to the presidential elections.
According to the IDF officer, the frequent meetings between Israel and the US in recent weeks – Mullen was in Israel in June – is a sign of the strong ties between the two countries as well as the mutual interest both take in different regional issues such as Iran, Hizbullah, Hamas and Syria.
Bolton: U.S. should help Israel hit Iran
Jewish Ledger
July 25, 2008
Former U.N. ambassador John Bolton said the United States should assist Israel in any strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities. The ex-U.S. envoy in an op-ed in the July 15 Wall Street Journal said the United States must consider what assistance to extend to Israel before and after an airstrike.
“We will be blamed for the strike anyway, and certainly feel whatever negative consequences result, so there is compelling logic to make it as successful as possible,” wrote Bolton, who was known for his hawkish foreign policy views.
“At a minimum, we should place no obstacles in Israel’s path, and facilitate its efforts where we can.” Bolton said the efforts to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions through sanctions had failed, and even if they could still be enacted, the time for their effectiveness has passed.
Recent News:
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=65029§ionid=351020104
Barak urges US to keep all options open against Iran
http://www.spacewar.com/2006/080729070910.oczdbq0a.html
Israel: All options ‘must be prepared’
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=64702§ionid=351020104
Ahmadinejad Condemns World Powers for Expanding Atomic Arsenals
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news..pKNAp.L0&refer=home
Report: Ex-Mossad chief says strike on Iran could ‘affect us for 100 years’
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1005579.html
Iran not building nuclear weapons: Ahmadinejad
http://www.spacewar.com/2006/080728132521.5ygplkgv.html
US lawyer seeks to sue US over Iran threats
http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=64435§ionid=3510302
Iranian Military Convoy Mysteriously Blows Up
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/w..onvoy-rocked-by-mystery-explosion.html
Russia says opposes deadlines for Iran response
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080724/wl_nm/iran_nuclear_russia_dc
Senior Iran cleric rejects deadline for nuclear response
http://www.spacewar.com/2006/080725120357.4nqr7cvn.html
Former NSA’s Tell Bush To Stop Threatening Iran
http://www.washingto..008/07/22/AR2008072202698_pf.html
Meteor Sparks Fear Of Iranian Missiles In Israel
Anti-War Movement Successfully Pushes Against War With Iran
Iran Attack, Election Suspension, Martial Law in the Cards?
MSM News Americans Will Not See About Iran
Filed under: 2-party system, 2008 Election, Ahmadinejad, airstrikes, Barack Obama, Britain, China, Coup, Dictatorship, diplomacy, Empire, Europe, european union, False Flag, flip flip, flip flopping, Fox News, France, gas prices, gaza, George Bush, Globalism, hamas, Hezbollah, Iran, Iraq, Israel, John McCain, Lebanon, left right paradigm, Media, middle east, Military, Military Industrial Complex, military strike, nation building, neocons, Neolibs, Nuke, obama, occupation, Oil, palestine, Petrol, Preemptive Strike, preemptive war, Propaganda, Pullout, Russia, Saber Rattling, Saddam Hussein, Sanctions, Shock and Awe, sudan, Syria, Tehran, UN, United Kingdom, War On Terror, White House, WW3, ww4
Obama: No Option Off The Table On Iran
Reuters
July 23, 2008
U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama said on Wednesday a nuclear Iran would pose a “grave threat” and that the world must stop Tehran from obtaining an atomic weapon.
Obama told reporters during a visit to Israel that if elected, he would take “no options off the table” in dealing with the Iran issue and said tougher sanctions could be imposed.
“A nuclear Iran would pose a grave threat and the world must prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama told reporters after visiting the Israeli town of Sderot, which lies close to the border with the Hamas-run Gaza Strip.
He said the international community should immediately offer “big sticks and big carrots” to persuade Iran to halt its nuclear program. The West suspects Iran wants to build atom bombs but the Islamic Republic says its aims are peaceful.
“Iranians need to understand that whether it’s the Bush administration or the Obama administration, this is a paramount concern to the United States,” he said in Sderot, which has been hit by cross-border rockets fired by Gaza-based militants.
McCain, Obama agree: U.S. must dominate Middle East
PSL Web
July 26, 2008
Senators John McCain and Barack Obama differ in their proposals for when and how the United States should begin a major troop withdrawal from Iraq, and under what conditions they would enter into negotiations with the government of Iran.
On just about every other issue related to U.S policy in the Middle East, the presumptive presidential candidates of the Republican and Democratic parties are in near total agreement. And when it comes to the goal, the word “near” can be deleted. Both share—as must all ruling class-approved candidates for the position of CEO of the empire—an unquestioning dedication to U.S. domination of that key strategic region. Seventy percent of known global oil reserves are located in the Middle East.
Both Obama and McCain have expressed a limitless devotion to the state of Israel. Both have emerged as leading voices in the chorus of demonization against the governments of Iran, Syria and Sudan, and popular movements such as Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Hamas and other Palestinian resistance organizations.
Obama: air strike on Iran useless
Press TV
July 24, 2008
The White House hopeful Barack Obama says an air strike on Iran will not halt its nuclear program, calling for tougher Iran sanctions.
“Iran is a big country. They have dispersed their nuclear capabilities in a way that you are not going to see smooth, surgical strikes solving the problem entirely the way that Israel was able to deal with Iraq’s nuclear threat,” he told ABC News.
The Illinois senator called for “tough sanctions” coupled with “tough diplomacy that makes the calculus for the Iranians different.”
While insisting that “war is not a good option,” Obama maintained that he “would not take military options off the table when it comes to Iran and dealing with their nuclear capacity.”
The US has set a two-week deadline for Tehran to halt its nuclear program, after their talks on Iran’s nuclear program.
Envoys from the five permanent members of the UN Security Council–China, Russia, the US, Britain and France–plus Germany held a meeting in Geneva on Saturday to discuss Iran’s nuclear program.
In Israel—Obama Flip-Flops on Iran (…Again)
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jul2008/obam-j23.shtml
Obama ’virtually indistinguishable from any U.S. politician’
http://www.bloomberg.co..d=amiQZ8aYhNMM&refer=us
Filed under: 2008 olympics, Ahmadinejad, airstrikes, Britain, Coup, Dana Perino, diplomacy, dubai, Europe, european union, False Flag, George Bush, Iran, military strike, neocons, Nuke, Preemptive Strike, preemptive war, Propaganda, Psyops, Shock and Awe, Tehran, United Kingdom, War On Terror, White House, william burns, WW3, ww4 | Tags: Saeed Jalili
U.S. Seeks a Diplomatic Base in Iran
Ewen MacAskill
London Guardian
July 18, 2008
The Bush administration said yesterday that it welcomed the prospect of increased “people-to-people” contact between Americans and Iranians, as it pushed ahead at speed with plans to establish a diplomatic presence in Tehran.
The White House and the State Department refused to deny a Guardian report that a decision has been taken to set up a US-interests section in Tehran, marking the first return of its diplomats to the city since the 1979-81 Iranian revolution.
A source familiar with the decision-making said the Bush administration has either already, or would over the next few days, lodge a formal request with the Iranian government to set up an interests section, a halfway-house to an embassy.
Sean McCormack, the US state department spokesman, responded to questions from reporters by saying: “We are not going to discuss the internal workings of the US government.”
But he went on to pave the way for an announcement by saying that the US is keen to encourage “people-to-people exchanges” and listed a series of contacts between Americans and Iranians, including visits by artists and a planned trip by Iran’s Olympic team to the US.
Bush Sends Top Diplomat To Meet With Iran
AP
July 16, 2008
A top U.S. diplomat heading to Geneva has no plans to meet separately with Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, but the mere presence of the Bush administration official at talks between the Iranian negotiator and representatives of other world powers will be a sharp break with past administration policy.
William Burns, America’s third highest-ranking diplomat, will attend talks with the Iranian envoy, Saeed Jalili, in Switzerland on Saturday. The talks are aimed at persuading Iran to halt activities that could lead to the development of atomic weapons. It will be the first time such a high-ranking U.S. official has attended such talks.
Official contacts between Iran and the United States are extremely rare and although Washington is part of a six-nation effort to get Iran to stop enriching and reprocessing uranium, the administration has shunned contacts with Tehran on the matter.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/200807..PSyUojyOFktQwZYb.3QA
Filed under: Britain, China, CIA, Condoleezza Rice, Coup, Dick Cheney, diplomacy, False Flag, France, George Bush, IAEA, Iran, Israel, John Bolton, military strike, Mohamed ElBaradei, neocons, NIE, Norman Podhoretz, Nuke, Olmert, Propaganda, Psyops, putin, Ron Paul, Rudy Giuliani, Russia, Saber Rattling, Sanctions, Seymour Hersh, Shock and Awe, stephen hadley, Tehran, UN, White House, ww4
Israel warns Iran to co-operate or pay the price
The Age
December 7, 2007
ISRAEL has warned Iran to either co-operate with the West over its uranium enrichment program or face military action.
Ron Prosor, Israel’s newly appointed ambassador to Britain and one of his country’s leading experts on Iran’s nuclear program, said that Tehran could enrich enough uranium to make an atomic bomb by 2009.
“At the current rate of progress, Iran will reach the technical threshold for producing fissile material by 2009,” he said.
“This is a global threat and it requires a global response.
“It should be made clear that if Iran does not co-operate, then military confrontation is inevitable. It is either co-operation or confrontation.”
Mr Prosor, who served Ehud Olmert, the Israeli Prime Minister, as his senior adviser on Iran, said that time for resolving the nuclear issue was rapidly running out. But he was non-committal about the possibility of Israel launching military action.
“There needs to be full verification of what is happening in Iran,” Mr Prosor said. “In Israel, there is a belief that the Iranians are continuing with their nuclear weapons program.”
U.S. and allies continue to push for sanctions against Iran
RIA Novosti
December 5, 2007
The U.S. and its European allies are continuing to seek stronger sanctions against Iran despite an intelligence report that says the Islamic Republic halted efforts to build a nuclear weapon in 2003.
The U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE), published on Monday, stated that Tehran had put a stop to weapons production in 2003, although it was continuing to enrich uranium.
The report contradicted a previous U.S. intelligence assessment in 2005 which said that Iran was actively pursuing a nuclear bomb.
However, the U.S. envoy to the UN, Zalmay Khalilzad, said on Tuesday that he had received no new instructions from the Bush administration, and that he was preparing to complete work on a new sanctions resolution.
Commenting on the NIE at a news briefing, Khalilzad said, “Let me say what the NIE says and what it doesn’t say. The NIE says that there was a covert military dedicated nuclear weapons program. That in 2003 stopped because of international pressure… But, it does not say that Iran does not have the intention to develop a nuclear weapons capability, that it has abandoned the goal of acquiring a nuclear weapons capability permanently.”
The envoy’s words echoed those of President George W. Bush, who said on Tuesday that, “Iran was dangerous, Iran is dangerous and Iran will be dangerous if they have the know-how to make a nuclear weapon.”
When asked if military action remained an option, the president answered, “The best diplomacy – effective diplomacy – is one in which all options are on the table.”
“What’s to say they couldn’t start another covert nuclear weapons program?” the president told a news conference at the White House.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Mohamed ElBaradei welcomed the report, saying it was consistent with the agency’s own findings and that it “should prompt Iran to work actively with the IAEA to clarify specific aspects of its past and present nuclear program.”
“This would allow the agency to provide the required assurances regarding the nature of the program.”
Russia, which has previously stated its opposition to increased sanctions against Teheran, did not comment on the NIE, although President Vladimir Putin insisted that Iran’s nuclear program should be transparent and carried out under the supervision of the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA. Iran’s foreign minister was in Moscow on Tuesday for talks.
China has, however, demonstrated its opposition to new sanctions in more direct terms, saying that the UN Security Council would have to take into account the new information because “now things have changed”.
Britain and France, who have backed U.S. calls for sanctions in the past, reiterated their commitment to maintaining pressure on Iran.
“We must maintain pressure on Iran,” said French Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Pascale Andreani. “There is no new element that could make us change our position.”
British Foreign Secretary David Miliband told BBC Radio that, “None of us want to see Iran as a nuclear proliferator. … We have got to be clear there are negative consequences if they pursue enrichment which could lead to a nuclear weapons program.”
Two sets of mild UN sanctions are already in place against Iran. China and Russia have both so far blocked the imposition of any new round of punitive measures against the Islamic Republic.
Cheney Lied about Iranian Nuke Threat While Suppressing Intel For A Year That Iran Suspended Weapons Program in ’03
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3BLVyeUGiA
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http://www.buzzflash.com/articles/articles/editorblog/017
Iranian Attack on Hold Only Temporarily
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Podhoretz’s ‘Dark Suspicion’: Intel Community Trying To Sabotage Bush With NIE
http://thinkprogress.org/2007/12/04/podhoretz-nie-iran/
Former CIA Officials: Bush Iran Claims “Preposterous”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2007/…cials-bus_n_75518.html
Israel Insists Iran Still Seeks Bomb
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Bush told in Aug Iran may have halted nuclear program
http://www.reuters.com/art….USN0454599720071206
Bush: ‘[I]t’s the sovereign right of Iran to have civilian nuclear power’
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/Vote2008/story?id=3891196
Is Iran NIE a Blessing in Disguise for Israel?
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Bush told in Aug Iran may have halted nuclear program
http://www.reuters.com/article/newsOne/idUSN0454599720071206
Scarborough Rips Bush On Iran NIE: He’s Either ‘Lying’ Or ‘Is Stupid’
/http://mparent7777-2.blogspot.com/2007/12…e-hes.html
Bill O’Reilly Works Feverishly To Keep Iranian Threat Alive
http://www.newshounds.us/2007/12/04/b…_threat_alive.php
Bush says Iran still dangerous
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSWBT00802020071204
Ok. now we’re not going to bomb Iran
http://www.slate.com/id/2179084/
Bolton Calls For Congressional Witch-Hunt Into Anti-Bush ‘People In The Intelligence Community’
http://thinkprogress.org/2007/12/04/bolton-nie-iran/
Nuclear report a victory – Iran
Bolton Takes to Factor, Promises Neocon Objection to NIE
Paul right to oppose Iran war; intelligence report is the proof
Cheney Tried to Stifle Dissent in Iran NIE
Hadley: Bush Learned Of NIE’s Findings ‘In The Last Few Months,’ But Continued To Ratchet Up Rhetoric
Ritter: God has told Bush to attack Iran
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Report contradicts Bush on Iran nuclear program
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White House Still Won’t Answer When Bush First Learned Iran Halted Its Nuclear Weapons Program
Paul right to oppose Iran war; intelligence report is the proof
Analyst: New NIE shows US intelligence has ‘rediscovered its spine’
Debunking Iran’s Nuclear Program: Another ‘Intelligence Failure’ — On the Part of the Press
Young Pakistanis: Bin Laden Is A CIA Creation
For Congress to stop passing bills to fund the war on Iraq, or never pass a bill to fund an attack on Iran, wouldn’t matter to Bush and Cheney
Coup on Iran & False Flag News Archive
Filed under: China, CIA, Coup, Dick Cheney, diplomacy, False Flag, George Bush, IAEA, Iran, Iraq, Military, military strike, Mohamed ElBaradei, neocons, NIE, Nuke, pre-emptive strike, Propaganda, Psyops, putin, Russia, Saber Rattling, Saddam Hussein, Saeed Jalili, Sanctions, Sergey Lavrov, Shock and Awe, Spy, stephen hadley, Tehran, UN, WMD, WW3, ww4
Is the Iran NIE a Trojan Horse?
Russ Wellen
Huffington Post
December 5, 2007
The Iran NIE has elicited a range of emotions in those opposed to the Bush administration’s policies from gloating to discreet celebration. In the minds of many, it’s like V-Day: Let the church bells peal, kiss a girl in Times Square. Others, particularly Iranian commentators located in the US, are considerably less sanguine.
They fear, as Farideh Farhi writes at Juan Cole’s spin-off, Informed Comment: Global Affairs, that the NIE can “easily become an instrument in support of the Bush Administration’s current policy.”
In fact, according to Kaveh Afrasiabi at Asia Times Online, “The temporary freeze on the military option [resulting from] the new intelligence report has nested within it its exact opposite.” In other words, a Trojan horse.
Even though, he maintains, the nuclear programs that Iran halted in 2004-2005 were not weapons, the NIE and the administration painted them as such. If a follow-up report were to indicate that Iran planned to resurrect said weapons program, that would provide “ample justification for Washington’s planned ‘pre-emptive strikes’ on Iran, not to mention added sanctions.”
Thus leaving “the pendulum capable of swinging in wildly different directions almost at will.”
Meanwhile, at CASMII (Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Action Against Iran), Daniel Pourkesali writes, “Forgive this writer for being a spoiler.” But he too finds that the resurrection theme is like a ticking time bomb embedded in the NIE.
He mentions the “assertions on page 7 paragraph D [of the NIE] that ‘Iranian entities are continuing to develop a range of technical capabilities that could be applied to produce nuclear weapons if a decision is made to do so.'”
They leave “the door wide open for administration hawks like Mr. Cheney to abruptly accuse Iran of resurrecting its ‘nuclear weapons program much as he did back in 2002, claiming that Saddam Hussein had ‘resumed his effort to acquire nuclear weapons.'” In other words, the hawks are fixated on another bird, the phoenix.
At NIAC (National Iranian-American Council), Trita Parsi explains how the administration further unrolls the rock before the resurrection justification. “Rather than adjusting policy on Iran in accordance to the reality-check provided by the NIE, the President moved the goal post on Iran.
“As the NIE declared that Iran likely doesn’t have a weapons program, the President shifted the red line from weaponization to the mere knowledge of enriching uranium [which, of course] is not of a military nature and is permitted by the Non-Proliferation Treaty.”
“The President also pointed out, as though to justify military strikes, that Iran’s knowledge of the enrichment process would permit Tehran to have a clandestine program. [But, of course] a full suspension of the Iranian program would not eliminate the Iranian knowledge of the enrichment program and, as a result, the risk of a clandestine program would continue to exist.”
Unless, of course, the atomic scientists of Iran submitted to the erasure of their memories as if their minds were hard drives.
Finally, Farideh Farhi weighs in at Juan Cole’s spin-off, Informed Comment: Global Affairs on the “propitious convergence between the NIE and the Bush Administration’s current policy and the timing of the release of this report,” which was finished a year ago. (See Gareth Porter for a full explanation.)
First she reminds us of Stephen Hadley’s statement that “the President has the right strategy, intensified international pressure along with the willingness to negotiate. . . [and for it] to succeed, the international community has to turn up the pressure on Iran — with diplomatic isolation, United Nations Sanctions, and with other financial pressure.”
Then she frets that “this NIE can so easily become an instrument in support of the Bush Administration’s current policy.”
We’ll allow Dr. Afrasiabi to be the last to rain on the parade. “The bottom line. . . [is that the US] has now pre-positioned itself for yet another disastrous gambit in the volatile Middle East.”
Lavrov: There Is No Proof That Iran Ever Had a Nuclear Program
Larouche Pac
December 5, 2007
The recently released National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) report, which has sent a cat among Cheney’s killer pigeons, claims Iran has abandoned its nuclear program some time in 2003. However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who met with Iran’s top nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili this week, said Dec.5 there was no proof Iran ever had a weapons program, as claimed in the U.S. report. In Tehran, Iran’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Mohammad Ali Hosseini dismissed the U.S. report that said Tehran pursued nuclear weapons up to 2003.
Lavrov said Russia supports Iran’s determination to cooperate with the IAEA, and that Russian President Vladimir Putin this week urged Iran to answer all IAEA questions and suspend enrichment. Acting Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov last September told visiting French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner that neither military force nor unilateral sanctions were acceptable in dealing with Iran’s nuclear program.
Clandestine aims of NIE report
Parviz Esmaeili
Tehran Times
December 6, 2007
The latest U.S. National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) on Iran’s nuclear program was released on Monday and caused various reactions.
The report by the U.S. intelligence community is the consensus view of all 16 U.S. spy agencies, including the CIA.
Unfortunately, in Iran many people hastily responded positively, and even some government officials expressed the view that the report was favorable to Iran.
This case is similar to the recent report by International Atomic Energy Agency Director General Mohamed ElBaradei, which was called totally positive.
However, like always, ElBaradei’s report gave short shrift to Iran’s cooperation and the transparency of its nuclear activities but highlighted the alleged ambiguities cited by Western intelligence agencies and their unsubstantiated accusations.
In any case, the issue is not over the contents of ElBaradei’s report, because the IAEA director general’s claim that the process of Iran’s cooperation with the agency is slowing down should have given Iranian officials a signal to be more cautious in evaluating the Arab diplomat’s five-page report.
Now the U.S. intelligence agencies’ report is being treated in the same hasty and offhand manner as ElBaradei’s report was.
Although it is expected that the heavy challenges of the past few years would have made our diplomacy more proficient, it seems that the rashness in adopting stances, the novice diplomatic moves, and the misanalysis of the nature of such reports will cause some problems for us in the future.
What is the content of the U.S. intelligence report?
The intelligence agencies’ report can interestingly be divided into evaluations with “high confidence” and “moderate confidence”.
The conclusions that are made with high certainty are:
“In fall 2003 (September), Tehran halted its nuclear weapons program.”
Attention: The abovementioned time is exactly after an agreement was made with three European countries, and Iran suspended its uranium enrichment activities.
Moreover, contrary to what was declared in ElBaradei’s recent report (which indicated the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program had been peaceful), the U.S. intelligence report referred to an IAEA report that was issued on September 24, 2005 in which ElBaradei had violated the agency’s regulations by stating that the UN Security Council was authorized to investigate Iran’s motives behind 18 years of concealment!
In this way, ElBaradei created a pretext for referring Iran’s nuclear dossier to the UN Security Council, and he was then immediately appointed to serve a third four-year term as IAEA director general.
While the nuclear watchdog states that it has not observed any non-peaceful nuclear activities, the U.S. intelligence agencies have evaluated Iran’s nuclear program to be of a military nature, so that, unlike a technical approach, this political evaluation would influence public opinion.
“The halt, and Tehran’s announcement of its decision to suspend its declared uranium enrichment program and sign an Additional Protocol to its Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty Safeguards Agreement, was directed primarily in response to increasing international scrutiny and pressure…”
In this way they are trying to justify their decision to pressure Iran and implying that the country is not committed to the agreements.
“Until fall 2003, Iranian military entities were working under government direction to develop nuclear weapons.”
This big lie is not mentioned in any of the IAEA reports and is only an allegation made by the United States.
“Since fall 2003, Iran has been conducting research and development projects with commercial and conventional military applications”; “Iran’s civilian uranium enrichment program is continuing”; “Iran will not be technically capable of producing and reprocessing enough plutonium for a weapon before about 2015”; and “Iran has the scientific, technical and industrial capacity eventually to produce nuclear weapons if it decides to do so.”
These sentences suggest that the pressure that was put on Iran, under the leadership of the U.S. government, has been successful in halting the country’s efforts to produce nuclear weapons and thus should be continued.
The conclusions that were stated with “moderate confidence” are:
“Tehran at a minimum is keeping open the option to develop nuclear weapons”; “Tehran had not restarted its nuclear weapons program as of mid-2007, but we do not know whether it currently intends to develop nuclear weapons”; “Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapon”; “Iran probably would be technically capable of producing enough HEU (highly enriched uranium) for a weapon sometime during the 2010-2015 time frame”; and “Iran probably has imported at least some weapons-usable fissile material, but… it has not obtained enough for a nuclear weapon.”
But what are the unusual points of the report?
The timing for the release of the NIE is noteworthy.
ElBaradei’s report, which was released on October 30, 2007, states that some of the ambiguities should be cleared up through the modality plan devised by Iran and the IAEA.
In addition, China, Russia, and even other permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany have made it very clear to the United States that they adamantly believe that only diplomatic methods should be used in the nuclear standoff.
However, it is also important to examine their definition of diplomacy. We suppose that diplomacy means interaction through dialogue in order to reach an understanding, but in the conception of diplomacy of some members of the 5+1 group, any tool can be utilized to exert pressure except Article 42 of the United Nations Charter and the military option.
Moreover, after the Republicans lost the midterm congressional elections and the inconclusive occupation of Iraq, the people of the United States became weary of war. Even former U.S. ambassador to the UN John Bolton has talked about the need to revise the U.S. war policy.
In such a situation, the following points are significant:
(1) It seems that the time to release the report was deliberately chosen to influence public opinion in the United States and other countries in order to validate the policies of U.S. President George W. Bush.
Bush’s policies have in fact failed, and thus a scenario had to be devised which could turn a loser into a winner.
Is it a coincidence that immediately after the report was released, U.S. National Security Advisor Stephen Hadley said that the NIE supported Bush’s strategy of piling pressure on Iran?
(2) Apparently, another objective that the report seeks is to strengthen those who favor imposing sanctions on Iran by pretending that the U.S. is being logical and realistic in regard to the current nature of Iran’s nuclear program and is avoiding the military option.
This means it was meant to kill two birds with one stone. On the one hand, while the U.S. is not capable of handling a military confrontation with Iran, it can act as if avoiding the military option is a voluntary move by the neoconservatives and thus will obtain concessions from Russia, China, and also its domestic opponents.
On the other hand, the U.S. can use the report in its efforts to create an international consensus on the need to impose more illegal and unilateral sanctions on Iran.
Acknowledging this strategy, Hadley said the NIE report proves that the “international community has to turn up the pressure on Iran — with diplomatic isolation, United Nations sanctions, and with other financial pressure — and Iran has to decide it wants to negotiate a solution.”
In other words, since the report emphasizes that the previous U.S. pressure convinced Iran to abandon its alleged nuclear weapons program, continuing the pressures is necessary for international peace!
(3) Instead of pointing the finger at the neoconservative system of the United States, the report attempts to give the impression that the Islamic Republic of Iran is belligerent by nature and to justify Bush’s statements last month, when, probably in line with this report, he said, “If you’re interested in avoiding World War III, it seems like you ought to be interested in preventing them from having the knowledge necessary to make a nuclear weapon.”
In fact, the report was released to influence world public opinion and convince people that if there is going to be a third world war, Iran will be the instigator, not the U.S.!
Now, we expect high-ranking Iranian officials to avoid making hasty evaluations of such reports and adopting incautious stances toward them.
The fact is that ElBaradei’s report has not created any problems for U.S. objectives and was designed completely in line with the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate.
As mentioned before, it seems that the IAEA director general’s only responsibility is to provide the additional information needed by U.S. intelligence agencies.
Washington’s plot against the Iranian nation and their nuclear program has a technical phase and a political phase.
ElBaradei’s duty is to prepare the technical requirements under the auspices of an allegedly professional international organization, but the main job is put on the shoulders of the U.S. spy agencies and media outlets.
Therefore, we should be aware that ElBaradei’s mission is not yet completed, and in this situation, instead of praising him for making a few positive statements, it would be better for us to be more reasonable and wait until the end of autumn.
The question still remains: Which part of ElBaradei’s report and the NIE was positive