Why Iran Distrusts the US in Nuke Talks
The mainstream U.S. media portrays the Iran nuclear talks as “our good guys”
imposing some sanity on “their bad guys.” But the real history of the West’s
dealings on Iran’s nuclear program shows bad faith by the U.S. government, as
ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern describes.By Ray
McGovern
April 02, 2015 "ICH"
- "Consortium
News" - The Iranians may be a bit paranoid but, as the
saying goes, this does not mean some folks are not out to get them. Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his knee-jerk followers in Washington
clearly are out to get them – and they know it.
Nowhere is this clearer than in the surreal set of
negotiations in Switzerland premised not on evidence, but rather on an
assumption of Iran’s putative “ambition” to become a nuclear weapons state –
like Israel, which maintains a secret and sophisticated nuclear weapons arsenal
estimated at about 200 weapons. The supposed threat is that Iran might build
one.
Israel and the U.S. know from their intelligence services that
Iran has no active nuclear weapons program, but they are not about to let truth
get in the way of their concerted effort to marginalize Iran. And so they
fantasize before the world about an Iranian nuclear weapons program that must be
stopped at all costs – including war.
Among the most surprising aspects of this is the fact that
most U.S. allies are so willing to go along with the charade and Washington’s
catch-all solution – sanctions – as some U.S. and Israeli hardliners open call
for a sustained bombing campaign of Iranian nuclear sites that could inflict a
massive loss of human life and result in an environmental catastrophe.
On March 26, arch-neocon John Bolton, George W. Bush’s
Ambassador to the United Nations, graced the pages of the New York Times with
his
most recent appeal for an attack on Iran. Bolton went a bit too far, though,
in citing the National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) of November 2007, agreed to
unanimously by all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies. Perhaps he reasoned that,
since the “mainstream media” rarely mentions that NIE, “Iran: Nuclear Intentions
and Capabilities,” he could get away with distorting its key findings, which
were:
“We judge with high confidence that in fall 2003, Tehran
halted its nuclear weapons program; we also assess with moderate-to-high
confidence that Tehran at a minimum is keeping open the option to develop
nuclear weapons. … We assess with moderate confidence 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. …
“Our assessment that Iran halted the program in 2003 primarily
in response to international pressure indicates Tehran’s decisions are guided by
a cost-benefit approach rather than a rush to a weapon irrespective of the
political, economic and military costs.”
An equally important fact ignored by the mainstream media is
that the key judgments of that NIE have been revalidated by the intelligence
community every year since. But reality is hardly a problem for Bolton. As the
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control, Bolton made quite a name for himself
by insisting that it was the proper function of a policy maker like him – not
intelligence analysts – to interpret the evidence from intelligence.
An ‘Embarrassment’
So those of us familiar with Bolton’s checkered credibility
were not shocked by his New York Times op-ed, entitled “To Stop Iran’s Bomb,
Bomb Iran.” Still less were we shocked to see him dismiss “the rosy 2007
National Intelligence Estimate” as an “embarrassment.”
Actually, an embarrassment it was, but not in the way Bolton
suggests. Highly embarrassing, rather, was the fact that Bolton was among those
inclined to push President Bush hard to bomb Iran. Then, quite suddenly, an
honest NIE appeared, exposing the reality that Iran’s nuclear weapons program
had been stopped in 2003, giving the lie not only to neocon propaganda, but also
to Bush’s assertion that Tehran’s leaders had admitted they were developing
nuclear weapons (when they had actually asserted the opposite).
Bush lets it all hang out in his memoir, Decision Points.
Most revealingly, he complains bitterly that the NIE “tied my hands on the
military side” and called its findings “eye-popping.”
A disgruntled Bush writes, “The backlash was immediate.
[Iranian President Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad hailed the NIE as a ‘great victory.’”
Bush’s apparent “logic” here is to use the widespread disdain for Ahmadinejad to
discredit the NIE through association, i.e. whatever Ahmadinejad praises must be
false.
But can you blame Bush for his chagrin? Alas, the NIE had
knocked out the props from under the anti-Iran propaganda machine, imported
duty-free from Israel and tuned up by neoconservatives here at home.
In his memoir, Bush laments: “I don’t know why the NIE was
written the way it was. … Whatever the explanation, the NIE had a big impact —
and not a good one.”
Spelling out how the Estimate had tied his hands “on the
military side,” Bush included this (apparently unedited) kicker: “But after the
NIE, how could I possibly explain using the military to destroy the nuclear
facilities of a country the intelligence community said had no active nuclear
weapons program?”
It seems worth repeating that the key judgments of the 2007
NIE have been reaffirmed every year since. As for the supposedly urgent need to
impose sanctions to prevent Iran from doing what we are fairly certain it is not
doing – well, perhaps we could take some lessons from the White Queen, who
bragged that in her youth she could believe “six impossible things before
breakfast” and counseled Alice to practice the same skill.
Sanctions, Anyway, to the Rescue
Despite the conclusions of the U.S. intelligence community,
the United States and other countries have imposed unprecedented sanctions
ostensibly to censure Iran for “illicit” nuclear activities while demanding the
Iran prove the negative in addressing allegations, including “intelligence”
provided via Israel and its surrogates, that prompt international community
concerns about Iran’s nuclear program.
And there’s the rub. Most informed observers share
historian/journalist Gareth Porter’s
conclusion that the main
sticking point at this week’s negotiations in Lausanne is the issue of how and
when sanctions on Iran will be lifted. And, specifically, whether they will be
lifted as soon as Iran has taken “irreversible” actions to implement core parts
of the agreement.
In Lausanne, the six-nation group (permanent members of the UN
Security Council plus Germany) reportedly want the legal system behind the
sanctions left in place, even after the sanctions have been suspended, until the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officially concludes that Iran’s
nuclear activities are exclusively peaceful – a process that could take many
years.
Iran’s experience with an IAEA highly influenced by the U.S.
and Israel has been, well, not the best – particularly since December 2009 under
the tenure of Director-General Yukiya Amano, a Japanese diplomat whom State
Department cables reveal to be in Washington’s pocket.
Classified cables released by Pvt. Bradley (now Chelsea)
Manning and WikiLeaks show that Amano credited his success in becoming
director-general largely to U.S. government support – and promptly stuck his
hand out for U.S. money.
Further, Amano left little doubt that he would side with the
United States in the confrontation with Iran and that he would even meet
secretly with Israeli officials regarding their purported evidence on Iran’s
hypothetical nuclear weapons program, while staying mum about Israel’s
actual nuclear weapons arsenal.
According to U.S. embassy cables from Vienna, Austria, the
site of IAEA’s headquarters, American diplomats in 2009 were cheering the
prospect that Amano would advance U.S. interests in ways that outgoing IAEA
Director General Mohamed ElBaradei never did.
In
a July 9, 2009, cable,
American chargé Geoffrey Pyatt – yes, the same diplomat who helped Assistant
Secretary Victoria Nuland choose “Yats” (Arseniy Yatsenyuk) to be the post-coup
prime minister of Ukraine – said Amano was thankful for U.S. support for his
election,” noting that “U.S. intervention with Argentina was particularly
decisive.”
A grateful Amano told Pyatt that as IAEA director-general, he
would take a different “approach on Iran from that of ElBaradei” and that he
“saw his primary role as implementing” U.S.-driven sanctions and demands against
Iran.
Pyatt also reported that Amano had consulted with Israeli
Ambassador Israel Michaeli “immediately after his appointment” and that Michaeli
“was fully confident of the priority Amano accords verification issues.” Pyatt
added that Amano privately agreed to “consultations” with the head of the
Israeli Atomic Energy Commission.
In other words, Amano has shown himself eager to bend in
directions favored by the United States and Israel, especially regarding Iran’s
nuclear program. His behavior contrasts with that of the more independent-minded
ElBaradei, who resisted some of Bush’s key claims about Iraq’s supposed nuclear
weapons program, and even openly denounced forged documents about “yellowcake
uranium” as “not authentic.” [For more on Amano, see Consortiumnews.com’s “America’s
Debt to Bradley Manning.”]
It is a given that Iran misses ElBaradei; and it is equally
clear that it knows precisely what to expect from Amano. If you were
representing Iran at the negotiating table, would you want the IAEA to be the
final word on whether or not the entire legal system authorizing sanctions
should be left in place?
Torpedoing Better Deals in 2009 and 2010
Little has been written to help put some context around the
current negotiation in Lausanne and show how very promising efforts in 2009 and
2010 were sabotaged – the first by Jundullah, a terrorist group in Iran, and the
second by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. If you wish to understand why Iran
lacks the trust one might wish for in negotiations with the West, a short review
may be helpful.
During President Barack Obama’s first year in office, the
first meeting of senior level American and Iranian negotiators, then-Under
Secretary of State William Burns and Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator Saeed
Jalili, on Oct. 1, 2009, seemed to yield surprisingly favorable results.
Many Washington insiders were shocked when Jalili gave
Tehran’s agreement in principle to send abroad 2,640 pounds (then as much as 75
percent of Iran’s total) of low-enriched uranium to be turned into fuel for a
small reactor that does medical research.
Jalili approved the agreement “in principle,” at a meeting in
Geneva of representatives of members of the U.N. Security Council plus
Germany. Even the New York Times acknowledged that this, “if it happens, would
represent a major accomplishment for the West, reducing Iran’s ability to make a
nuclear weapon quickly, and buying more time for negotiations to bear fruit.”
The conventional wisdom in Western media is that Tehran backed
away from the deal. That is true, but less than half the story – a tale that
highlights how, in Israel’s (and the neocons’) set of priorities, regime change
in Iran comes first. The uranium transfer had the initial support of Iran’s
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. And a follow-up meeting was scheduled for Oct.
19, 2009, at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna.
The accord soon came under criticism, however, from Iran’s
opposition groups, including the “Green Movement” led by defeated presidential
candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, who
has had ties to the American neocons
and to Israel since the Iran-Contra days of the 1980s when he was the
prime minister who collaborated on secret arms deals.
At first blush, it seemed odd that it was Mousavi’s
U.S.-favored political opposition that led the assault on the nuclear agreement,
calling it an affront to Iran’s sovereignty and suggesting that Ahmadinejad
wasn’t being tough enough.
Then, on Oct. 18, a terrorist group called Jundullah, acting
on amazingly accurate intelligence, detonated a car bomb at a meeting of top
Iranian Revolutionary Guards commanders and tribal leaders in the province of
Sistan-Baluchistan in southeastern Iran. A car full of Guards was also attacked.
A brigadier general who was deputy commander of the
Revolutionary Guards ground forces, the Revolutionary Guards brigadier
commanding the border area of Sistan-Baluchistan, and three other brigade
commanders were killed in the attack; dozens of other military officers and
civilians were left dead or wounded.
Jundullah took credit for the bombings, which followed years
of lethal attacks on Revolutionary Guards and Iranian policemen, including an
attempted ambush of President Ahmadinejad’s motorcade in 2005.
Tehran claims Jundullah is supported by the U.S., Great
Britain and Israel, and former CIA Middle East operations officer Robert Baer
has fingered Jundullah as one of the “good terrorist” groups benefiting from
American help.
I believe it no coincidence that the Oct. 18 attack – the
bloodiest in Iran since the 1980-88 war with Iraq – came one day before nuclear
talks were to resume at the IAEA in Vienna to follow up on the Oct. 1
breakthrough. The killings were sure to raise Iran’s suspicions about U.S.
sincerity.
It’s a safe bet that after the Jundullah attack, the
Revolutionary Guards went directly to their patron, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei,
arguing that the bombing and roadside attack proved that the West couldn’t be
trusted. Khamenei issued a statement on Oct. 19 condemning the terrorists, whom
he charged “are supported by certain arrogant powers’ spy agencies.”
The commander of the Guards’ ground forces, who lost his
deputy in the attack, charged that the terrorists were “trained by America and
Britain in some of the neighboring countries,” and the commander-in-chief of the
Revolutionary Guards threatened retaliation.
The attack was front-page news in Iran, but not in the United
States, where the mainstream media quickly consigned the incident to the memory
hole. The American media also began treating Iran’s resulting anger over what it
considered an act of terrorism and its heightened sensitivity to outsiders
crossing its borders as efforts to intimidate “pro-democracy” groups supported
by the West.
Despite the Jundullah attack and the criticism from the
opposition groups, a lower-level Iranian technical delegation did go to Vienna
for the meeting on Oct. 19, but Jalili stayed away. The Iranians questioned the
trustworthiness of the Western powers and raised objections to some details,
such as where the transfer should occur. The Iranians broached alternative
proposals that seemed worth exploring, such as making the transfer of the
uranium on Iranian territory or some other neutral location.
But the Obama administration, under mounting domestic pressure
to be tougher with Iran, dismissed Iran’s counter-proposals out of hand,
reportedly at the instigation of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel and
neocon regional emissary Dennis Ross.
If at First You Don’t Succeed
Watching all this, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da
Silva and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan saw parallels between
Washington’s eagerness for an escalating confrontation with Iran and the way the
United States had marched the world, step by step, into the invasion of Iraq.
In spring 2010, hoping to head off another such catastrophe,
the two leaders dusted off the Oct. 1 uranium transfer initiative and got Tehran
to agree to similar terms on May 17, 2010. Both called for sending 2,640 pounds
of Iran’s low-enriched uranium abroad in exchange for nuclear rods that would
have no applicability for a weapon. In May 2010, that meant roughly 50 percent
of Iran’s low-enriched uranium would be sent to Turkey in exchange for
higher-enriched uranium for medical use.
Yet, rather than embrace this Iranian concession as at least
one significant step in the right direction, U.S. officials sought to scuttle it
by pressing instead for more sanctions. The U.S. media did its part by insisting
that the deal was just another Iranian trick that would leave Iran with enough
uranium to theoretically create one nuclear bomb.
An editorial in the Washington Post on May 18, 2010, entitled
“Bad
Bargain,” concluded wistfully/wishfully: “It’s possible that Tehran
will retreat even from the terms it offered Brazil and Turkey — in which case
those countries should be obliged to support U.N. sanctions.”
On May 19, a New York Times’
editorial rhetorically
patted the leaders of Brazil and Turkey on the head as if they were rubes lost
in the big-city world of hardheaded diplomacy. The Times wrote: “Brazil and
Turkey … are eager to play larger international roles. And they are eager to
avoid a conflict with Iran. We respect those desires. But like pretty much
everyone else, they got played by Tehran.”
The disdain for this latest Iranian concession was shared by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who was busy polishing her reputation for
“toughness” by doing all she could to undermine the Brazil-Turkey initiative.
She pressed instead for harsh sanctions.
“We have reached agreement on a strong draft [sanctions
resolution] with the cooperation of both Russia and China,” Clinton told the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee on May 18, making clear that she viewed the
timing of the sanctions as a riposte to the Iran-Brazil-Turkey agreement.
“This announcement is as convincing an answer to the efforts
undertaken in Tehran over the last few days as any we could provide,” she
declared. Her spokesman, Philip J. Crowley, was left with the challenging task
of explaining the obvious implication that Washington was using the new
sanctions to scuttle the plan for transferring half of Iran’s enriched uranium
out of the country.
Obama Overruled?
Secretary Clinton got her UN resolution and put the kibosh on
the arrangement that Brazil and Turkey had worked out with Iran. The Obama
administration celebrated its victory in getting the UN Security Council on June
9, 2010, to approve a fourth round of economic sanctions against Iran. Obama
also signed on to even more draconian penalties sailing through Congress.
It turned out, though, that Obama had earlier encouraged both
Brazil and Turkey to work out a deal to get Iran to transfer about half its
low-enriched uranium to Turkey in exchange for more highly enriched uranium that
could only be used for peaceful medical purposes. But wait. Isn’t that precisely
what the Brazilians and Turks succeeded in doing?
Da Silva and Erdogan, understandably, were nonplussed, and da
Silva actually released a copy of an earlier letter of encouragement from Obama.
No matter. The tripartite agreement was denounced by Secretary
Clinton and ridiculed by the U.S. mainstream media. And that was kibosh
enough. Even after Brazil released Obama’s supportive letter, the President
would not publicly defend the position he had taken earlier.
So, once again. Assume you’re in the position of an Iranian
negotiator. Trust, but verify, was Ronald Reagan’s approach. We are likely to
find out soon whether there exists the level of trust necessary to start dealing
successfully with the issue of most concern to Iran – lifting the sanctions.
Ray
McGovern works with Tell the Word, a publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of
the Saviour in inner-city Washington. He was a CIA analyst for 27 years and now
serves on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity
(VIPS).