Why Iran Must Remain a US Enemy
The most important factor in shaping US policy towards Iran is domestic politics
- not Obama's own geopolitical vision.
By Gareth PorterMay 04, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Since the start of the US nuclear
negotiations with Iran, both Israeli and Saudi officials have indulged in highly
publicised handwringing over their belief that such a nuclear deal would
represent a fundamental strategic shift in US policy towards the region at the
expense of its traditional alliances with Israel and Saudi Arabia.
But the Obama administration is no more likely to lurch into a
new relationship with Iran than were previous US administrations. The reason is
very simple: The US national security state, which has the power to block any
such initiative, has fundamental long-term interests in the continuation of the
policy of treating Iran as an enemy.
Some in the Israeli camp have spun elaborate theories about
how the Obama administration's negotiations with Iran represent a strategic
vision of partnership with the Iranian regime.
Typical of the genre is former Bush administration official
Michael Doran's
speculation in February that US President Barack Obama based his policy of
outreach to Tehran on the assumption that Tehran and Washington are "natural
allies".
Saudi response
The Saudi response to the negotiations has been, if anything,
even more extreme. Prince Turki al-Faisal, the former head of Saudi
intelligence, who speaks more candidly in public than any other Saudi public
figure,
told an audience at London's Chatham House last month, "The Americans and
Iranians have been flirting with each other. Now it seems each side is anxious
to get over the flirtation and get to the consummation."
Behind the sexual metaphor lie
Saudi fears of a "grand bargain" under which Iran would forgo nuclear
weapons in return for ratification of Iranian hegemony over Iraq, Syria,
Lebanon, and the Gulf.
But these Israeli and Saudi imaginings are divorced from the
reality of the Obama administration's actual Iran policy. Far from the
Nixon-like fundamental strategic revision, as the Netanyahu camp and the Saudis
have suggested, the Obama administration's diplomatic engagement with Iran over
its nuclear programme represents a culmination of a series of improvised policy
adjustments within an overall framework of coercive diplomacy towards Iran.
Despite Obama's embrace of diplomatic engagement with Iran as
a campaign issue in 2008, when he entered the White House his real Iran policy
was quite different. In fact, Obama's aim during his first term was to induce
Iran to accept an end to its uranium enrichment programme.
'Unconditional talks'
Even as Obama was offering "unconditional talks" with Iran in
a letter to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in 2009, he was already pursuing a
strategy of multiple pressures on Iran to agree to that US demand.
Obama's strategy of coercive diplomacy involved plans for more
intrusive and punishing economic sanctions, a secret NSA programme of
cyber-attacks against the Natanz enrichment facility and political/diplomatic
exploitation of the threat of an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities by the
Netanyahu government in Israel.
Obama made no serious effort to negotiate with Iran until
2012, when he believed the new sanctions that were about to take effect would
force Iran to agree to suspend enrichment indefinitely. He dropped that demand
in 2013, only because Iran had increased the number of centrifuges in operation
from 4,000 to 10,000 and had begun enriching to 20 percent.
Since the beginning of the negotiations, moreover, senior
administration officials have repeatedly affirmed the policy of treating Iran as
a state sponsor or terrorism and a "troublemaker" and destabilising factor in
the Middle East.
In his April 7 interview with National Public Radio Obama
said, "I've been very forceful in saying that our differences with Iran don't
change if we make sure that they don't have a nuclear weapon - they're still
going to be financing Hezbollah, they're still supporting Assad dropping barrel
bombs on children, they are still sending arms to the Houthis in Yemen that have
helped destabilise the country."
At a deeper level, the most important factor in determining
the policy of the US towards Iran is domestic electoral and bureaucratic
politics - not Obama's personal geopolitical vision of the Middle East. The
power of the Israeli lobby obviously will severely limit policy flexibility
towards Iran for many years. And the interests of the most powerful institutions
in the US national security state remain tied to a continuation of the policy of
treating Iran as the premier enemy of the US.
Bigger bonanza
Since 2002 the US Department of Defense has spent roughly
$100bn on missile defence, most of which goes directly to its major military
contractor allies. That bonanza depends largely on the idea that Iran is intent
on threatening the US and its allies with ballistic missiles.
But an even bigger bonanza for the US arms industry is at
stake. Saudi Arabia and other Gulf regimes in the anti-Iran alliance have been
pouring big money into Pentagon arms contractor coffers for years. A deal with
Saudi Arabia for fighter planes and missile defence technology first announced
in 2010 was expected to yield
$100-150bn in procurement and service contracts over two decades. And that
tsunami of money from the Gulf depends on identifying Iran as a military threat
to the entire region.
These sales are now integral to the health of the leading US
military contractors. Lockheed, for example, now depends on foreign sales for as
much as 25-33 percent of its revenue, according to the Times story.
So the Israeli and Saudi fear of a supposed Obama shift in
alliances doesn't reflect fundamental domestic US political realities that are
not likely to change for the foreseeable future.
Gareth Porter is an
investigative journalist and historian specialising in US national security
policy. Source: Al
Jazeera