-Micah Zenko, Putting Iran’s Nuclear Program in Context,
Council on Foreign RelationsIt
always helps to start with the truth, and in Iran’s case, the truth is quite
simple. Iran has no nuclear weapons, it has no nuclear weapons program, and
it’s never been caught diverting nuclear fuel for other purposes. Iran has
pursued nuclear technology for peaceful purposes alone.
These are the facts. They may not jibe with the lies
propagated in the western media, but they are the facts all the same. Iran
is not guilty of anything. It’s merely a victim of Washington’s power-crazy
attempt to control vital resources in the Middle East and enhance Israel’s
regional hegemony. That’s what’s really going on. It’s all geopolitics. It
has nothing to do with nukes.
Media coverage of the so called nuclear negotiations in
Laussanne and now in Vienna has focused maniacally on the number of
centrifuges, IAEA monitoring programs, uranium enrichment capability, and
myriad other arcane topics that are meant to divert attention from the fact
that Iran has no nuclear weapons program and no interest in developing one.
By poring over the details of these issues in excruciating detail, the
reader is left feeling that Iran must be hiding something and therefore must
pose a real threat to US national security. But of course that’s precisely
what the authors of these articles hope to achieve, they want to pull the
wool over the public’s eyes and get people to believe something that is
transparently false.. The fact is, Iran is not doing anything underhanded or
illegal. They are merely demanding that their right to enrich uranium for
peaceful purposes under the terms of the NPT be respected. Iran will not
allow itself to be bullied by the US or treated like a second class citizen.
Iran has behaved honorably from the beginning, which is a helluva a lot more
than can be said of the US.
The media doesn’t want to discuss the “additional
protocols” that Iran accepted in order to build confidence among members on
the United Nations, because then people would realize that Iran has gone the
extra mile many times in the past only to be slapped with more spurious
accusations of noncompliance or foul play. But where’s the evidence of
noncompliance or foul play? There isn’t any. It’s all just fear-mongering
speculation and vitriolic BS spewed by the dissembling media. There’s not a
word of truth to any of it.
The media’s latest scam centers on the term “breakout
time”, which refers to the amount of time it would take for Iran to build a
nuclear weapon if it was so inclined, which it isn’t.
“Breakout time” is the new propaganda buzzword reiterated
thousands of times in the media suggesting that Tehran is just hours away
from building an atomic weapon that it will immediately use to annihilate
Israel. It’s a ridiculous fairy tale that assumes that–since the US is a
rouge-homicidal state that goes around bombing the bejesus out of anything
that moves–that other states are bound to behave the same if given half a
chance. This is wrong on many levels. First of all, Iran doesn’t want nukes
and, secondly, leaders in other countries are not power-mad megalomaniacs
whose only joy in life is reducing broad swathes of the planet to smoldering
rubble. That behavior is particular to US leaders alone. Others don’t suffer
from the same sociopathic disorder.
The nuclear issue has nothing to do Iran’s fictitious
nuclear weapons program. That’s just a smokescreen. The real problem is that
Iran is a sovereign country with an independent foreign policy. Washington
doesn’t like independent nations. Washington likes nations that shut up and
do what they’re told. Nations that refuse to take orders are Washington’s
enemies, they’re placed on a hit list. And that’s where the sanctions come
into play. Sanctions are the way that Washington weakens its enemies before
bombing them to kingdom come. They’re the stick the US uses to beat its
rivals into submission.
If you’ve been following the news lately, you know that
something very strange is going on. The US has done an about-face and
changed its policy towards Iran. It’s a shocking development. The US has
maintained the same savage policy towards Cuba for 60 years without changing
a thing. Whether the policy works or not, has never mattered; what matters
is inflicting maximum pain on the people Washington’s doesn’t like. So why
the sudden change with Iran? Why is Obama trying to reach an agreement with
a country that US elites openly despise?
And, keep in mind, that what Obama’s doing is extremely
unpopular with many powerful groups; the congress, the media, Israel and
even high ranking officials in his own State Department. Could it be that
the powerbrokers who pull Obama’s strings and tell him what to do have
suddenly seen the light and want to open a new era of reconciliation and
friendship with Iran?
Of course not. No one believes that. The only reason Obama
would strike a deal with Iran is because the US wants something in return.
And the US does want something in return. The US wants a substitute for
Russian gas flowing to the Europe so it can destroy Russia economically and
implement its strategic plan to spread US power across Asia so US
mega-corporations can maintain their dominant position in the global
economy. Obama is playing nice with Iran so he can pivot to Asia as easily
as possible.
So how plausible is it for Iran to replace Russian gas in
the lucrative EU market?
Check out this clip from an article written in 2014 that
anticipated the very scenario we see developing today, that is, the US
trying to prevent an integrated EU-Russian free trade zone that would dwarf
the US GDP and leave the exceptional nation to face years of precipitous
decline. The article is titled “EU turns to Iran as alternative to Russian
gas”:
The European Union is quietly increasing the urgency
of a plan to import natural gas from Iran, as relations with Tehran
thaw, while those with top gas supplier Russia grow colder…
“Iran is far towards the top of our priorities for
mid-term measures that will help reduce our reliance on Russian gas
supplies,” the source said. “Iran’s gas could come to Europe quite
easily and politically there is a clear rapprochement between Tehran and
the West.”….
While sanctioned itself, Iran has the world’s second
largest gas reserves after Russia and is a potential alternative given
talks between Tehran and the West to reach a deal over the Islamic
Republic’s disputed nuclear programme.
“High potential for gas production, domestic energy
sector reforms that are underway, and ongoing normalization of its
relationship with the West make Iran a credible alternative to Russia,”
said a paper prepared for the European parliament…
“Given Russia’s current strategy politically, which is
one of confrontation with Europe, I see the EU having little choice but
to find alternative gas supplies,” he added…
“Iran’s interest to deliver gas to Europe is very big.
Parts of Iran’s economical and political elite as well as Western
companies are preparing for an end of the sanctions,” said Frank Umbach,
energy research director at King’s College in London…
Iran has long lobbied to build a designated pipeline
that would connect its huge South Pars gas field with European customers
– the so-called Persian Pipeline.
“It’s an extremely ambitious project,” Handjani said.
“Even if half of it gets built it would be major accomplishment for both
Europe and Iran.”…
Independent feasibility studies show that if sanctions
were to be eased and investments started soon, Iran could supply 10-20
billion cubic metres (bcm) of gas a year to Turkey and Europe by the
early 2020s.
(EU
turns to Iran as alternative to Russian gas, euractiv.com)
This is why Obama wants to ease sanctions; it’s because he
needs to find an alternate source of gas for Europe while he prosecutes his
war on Russia. Defeating Russia has become Washington’s top strategic
priority. The United States is willing to risk everything –even nuclear war–
to maintain its stranglehold on global power and to extend its hegemony into
the next century.
Mike Whitney
lives in Washington state. He is a
contributor to Hopeless:
Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press). Hopeless is also
available in a Kindle
edition. He can be reached at fergiewhitney@msn.com.