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http://www.antiwar.com/prather/?articleid=3648
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September 25, 2004
Iran's Golden Offer
by Gordon Prather
The Pentagon has just conducted war games, modeling a preemptive
attack against the Iranian uranium-enrichment facility at Natanz –
which is still several years from becoming operational – and the
Russian nuclear power plant nearing completion at Bushehr.
The result? Not only would the attack be ineffective, but it might
well plunge the entire Persian Gulf into a bloody, protracted war,
perhaps involving nukes, perhaps escalating into World War III.
Of course the neo-crazies wouldn't mind plunging the entire Persian
Gulf into war. They're convinced "they" could win that war, just as
easily and quickly as "they" won Gulf Wars I and II.
And if a U.S.-Israeli attack on Iran gets us into a nuke war with
Russia and/or China? No problem. Sooner or later, the neo-crazies
plant to have us at war with Russia over Chechnya and with China over
Taiwan, anyway.
Bummer.
Oh, well. Maybe the upcoming presidential debates can turnon what to
do about Iran's "nuclear programs."
You see, our old allies (UK-France-Germany) and our potential allies
(Russia and China) watched in absolute horror the unfolding of
Operation Iraqi Freedom. They want to prevent an even more horrific
Operation Iranian Freedom. But, even more than that, they want to
preserve the viability of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)
Safeguards regime.
Neo-crazies to the contrary, the NPT Safeguards regime – administered
by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) – has been effective,
even when the IAEA only had authority to inspect facilities subject to
a Safeguards Agreement. Now that the French-Germans-Brits-Russians
have got Iran to sign an Additional Protocol to their Safeguards
agreement – giving the IAEA unlimited unannounced access to any and
every suspicious-looking facility in Iran – Iran has little "wiggle
room." Virtually no chance to hide from the IAEA the construction of
illicit facilities for nuke programs or the transforming of existing
ones.
Even the neo-crazies have been forced to admit that Iran could only
effect such constructions or transformations after following the
example of North Korea and withdrawing from the NPT.
So, according to Secretary of State Colin Powell, "The time has come
to move the Iranian case to the Security Council in order to put an
end to this nightmare. We know that the Europeans are trying, now, to
'engage' with the Iranians, but we know that the Iranians will never
abandon their plans to develop nuclear weapons."
You see, even if the IAEA continues to give Iran's nuclear programs a
"clean bill of health" – much like the one they gave Iraq in the
months immediately preceding Bush's misuse of a Security Council
resolution to launch a "war of aggression" – if Bush can get Iran's
"refusal to abandon plans to develop nuclear weapons" before the
Security Council, then maybe he can get some kind of similar
resolution passed that he can similarly misuse to launch a "war of
aggression" against Iran.
The Bush Doctrine worked when applied to Iraq; why not apply it to
Iran?
But hold on. The mullahs may have just outsmarted Bush and the
neo-crazies
You see, for some time IAEA Director General ElBaradei has been
pushing for "multilateralization of the fuel cycle."
Article IV recognizes the inalienable right of every NPT signatory to
acquire any and all nuclear technology and to utilize it for peaceful
purposes. But ElBaradei believes that dual-use facilities – such as
uranium-enrichment plants that can be transformed from making fuel for
power reactors into making fissile material for nukes – "should be
under international control or, at the very least, some sort of
multilateral process."
Last week Iran appeared to embrace ElBaradei's multilateralization.
Speaking to the Asia Times in Vienna, Mohammad Hossein Mousavian, the
right-hand man of Hasan Rohani, Iran's top nuclear negotiator with
both the IAEA and UK-France-Germany, announced Iran was willing to
multilateralize all their nuclear programs.
Came the Islamic Revolution, Germany (Siemens) was almost finished
building the nuclear power plant at Bushehr. France (Framatome) had
begun the construction of two nuclear power plants at Darkhovin. In
1992 China also contracted for – but never built – two nuclear power
plants at Darkhovin.
France already operates a large uranium-enrichment plant in France
(EURODIF), but it uses half-century-old gaseous-diffusion technology.
The Russians signed a contract – canceled by Clinton – to provide Iran
a turnkey gas-centrifuge plant.
So the Iranians may have plenty of takers on their offer.
Besides, Iran is also offering, as part of a golden package, full
cooperation in fighting international terrorism and restoring peace
and security in the Persian Gulf.
And lots of oil.
Now that's an offer that Kerry can't refuse. But Bush?
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