Iran, Israel and US
S P SETH
Having occupied, divided,
created apartheid-era Bantustans, and generally ruined Palestine, Israel is now
turning its attention to Iran to rally the world, especially the United States,
against that country. This has been going on for a number of years because
Iran’s nuclear energy program, according to Tel Aviv, is an “existential
danger” for Israel as well a threat to global peace. Therefore, it is not just
an Israeli issue, but also a global issue requiring a global response.
Israel doesn’t accept
Iranian proposition that its nuclear program is for peaceful purposes. It
believes that Tehran is actually working on a nuclear weapons program and
indeed is quite within reach of making a bomb, though there is no hard evidence
to back it up. It would therefore like the US, its most powerful ally, to stop
Iran from heading in that direction by destroying its nuclear facilities. If
the US were squeamish about it, Israel would do this on its own with the US
standing behind it if things were to go wrong. Short of actually attacking
Iranian facilities at this point of time, President Obama has said that the US
wouldn’t allow Iran to acquire nuclear weapons. In other words, the US will
keep all its options open including, if necessary, the military option. Which
is quite a tight undertaking but not entirely satisfactory to Israel.
Against this backdrop,
Israel’s additional worry now is that Iran’s new moderate President Dr Hassan
Rowhani might somehow be able to sway the United States and its allies into
constructive talks on the nuclear question. Rowhani has called for “serious and
substantive talks” to break the deadlock over Iran’s nuclear program. To quote
Rowhani, “As the president of the Islamic republic, I am announcing that there
is the political will to solve this issue and also take into consideration the
concerns of the other sides.” In other words, there is scope for compromise.
But he also made it clear that Iran will not give up its nuclear program for
peaceful uses as provided under international regulations. According to
Rowhani, “Iran’s peaceful nuclear program is a national issue…we will not give
up the rights of the Iranian people.” He added, “We will preserve our rights
based on the international regulations. In Iran, nobody has said we will give up
uranium enrichment, no one and at no time.”
But Israel, the US and its allies are aiming
for Iran to give up its nuclear program. And for that to happen, the US is
banking on the harshest sanctions it can impose and force other countries in
the world to do likewise to cripple Iran economically. In other words, it is
engaged in economic warfare against Iran; there is no other word for it. The
logic is that people’s economic hardship will turn them against the clerical
regime and replace it with a more responsive (to US pressure) political order.
And if that too doesn’t work, there is the ultimate threat of military
intervention (bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities).
But Israel wants urgent
action to destroy Tehran’s nuclear program. And it considers Rowhani an even
bigger danger being a “wolf in sheep’s clothing”, as Israel’s Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu has described him. Netanyahu warned a group of visiting US
congressmen against putting hopes in Rowhani as: “ He knows how to exploit
this, and yesterday he called for more talks. Of course, he wants more talks.
He wants to talk and talk and talk.” He added, “ And while everybody is busy
talking to him, he will be busy enriching uranium. The centrifuges will keep on
spinning.”
It is not just Netanyahu who
is warning against Rowhani. It would appear that much of the Israeli state
machinery has gone on the offensive. For instance, Yuval Steinitz, Israel’s
minister for international affairs, reportedly said, “Rowhani is charming, he
is cunning, and he will smile all the way to the bomb” And his advice to the US
and the world reportedly is that Iran should be told unmistakably that it had
only two choices: close its uranium enrichment program or “see it destroyed
with brute force” that, in his view, would take only “a few hours of
airstrikes, no more.” And he was very dismissive about a possible Iranian counter-attack,
which might involve firing “several hundred missiles” with “very little damage
because we can intercept many of them.” Therefore, as far as Israel is
concerned it is time to go after Iran with all guns blazing to destroy its
nuclear facilities. Indeed, according to some press reports, the US response to
an Israeli attack on Iran might be softening.
Iran’s new President Rowhani
is aware of the dangers. He has said, “Unfortunately, the war-mongering lobby
in the US is opposed to constructive [talks] and only protects the interests of
the foreign regime [Israel], and often receives orders from that regime…” If
such were the state of affairs, the only solution for Iran would be to
surrender and junk its nuclear program. Which, most probably, is unlikely to
happen.
But surely, there would be some
policy makers in the US worrying about stoking another conflict in the Middle
East, when the US is trying hard to extricate itself from Afghanistan and its
Iraq war project went so terribly wrong, with the country hit by bombs all too
often. If a recent article in the New
York Review of Books by William Luers, Thomas R. Pickering and Jim Walsh
entitled, “For a New Approach to Iran”, is any indication, there apparently is
concern at some levels about the dangerous drift in US-Iran relations that have
struggled since the 1979 Iranian revolution.
The article broadly favours
a diplomatic path to deal with the nuclear issue, complementing it with a
broader dialogue on a whole range of issues, involving the region. It rightly
evokes Obama’s March 2009 message that said, “My administration is now
committed to diplomacy… and to pursuing constructive ties among the United
States, Iran, and the international community. …We seek instead engagement that
is honest and grounded in mutual respect.” In the same way, Iran’s new
President has announced, “… there is political will to solve this [nuclear]
issue”, taking into consideration the “concerns of the other sides.”
The authors of the article
have called upon their government to recall what President Kennedy said fifty
years ago, in another context, urging his countrymen “not to see only a
distorted and desperate view of the other side, not to see conflict as
inevitable, accommodation as impossible and communication as nothing more than
an exchange of threats.” This message is as apposite today in the context of
US-Iran relations as it was in the era of Cold War. But to pursue this course,
the US will have to rid itself of Israel’s pernicious and self-serving influence
on its foreign policy.
Note: This article was first published in the Daily Times.
Contact: sushilpseth@yahoo.com.au
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