Iran Has Signed A Historic Nuclear Deal – Now It’s
Israel’s Turn
If the Vienna deal is to mean anything, the whole of the Middle East
must rid itself of weapons of mass destruction
By Javad Zarif
August 01, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
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"The
Guardian"
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We – Iran and its interlocutors in the group of
nations known as the P5+1 – have finally achieved the shared
objective of turning the Iranian nuclear programme from an
unnecessary crisis into a platform for cooperation on nuclear
non-proliferation and beyond. The
nuclear deal reached in Vienna this month is not a ceiling but a
solid foundation on which we must build. The joint comprehensive
plan of action, as the accord is officially known, cements Iran’s
status as a zone free of nuclear weapons. Now it is high time that
we expand that zone to encompass the entire Middle East.
Iran’s push for a ban on weapons of mass
destruction in its regional neighbourhood has been consistent. The
fact that it precedes
Saddam Hussein’s systematic use of WMDs against Iran (never
reciprocated in kind) is evidence of the depth of my country’s
commitment to this noble cause. And while Iran has received the
support of some of its Arab friends in this endeavour,
Israel – home to the Middle East’s only nuclear weapons programme
– has been the holdout. In the light of the historic nuclear deal,
we must address this challenge head on.
One of the many ironies of history is that
non-nuclear-weapon states, like Iran, have actually done far more
for the cause of non-proliferation in practice than nuclear-weapon
states have done on paper.
Iran and other nuclear have-nots have genuinely “walked the
walk” in seeking to consolidate the non-proliferation regime.
Meanwhile, states actually possessing these destructive weapons have
hardly even “talked the talk”, while completely brushing off their
disarmament obligations under the non-proliferation treaty (NPT) and
customary international law.
That is to say nothing of countries outside the
NPT, or
Israel, with an undeclared nuclear arsenal and a declared
disdain towards non-proliferation, notwithstanding its absurd and
alarmist campaign against the Iranian nuclear deal.
Today, in light of the Vienna deal, it is high
time that the nuclear “haves” remedied the gap by adopting serious
disarmament measures and reinforcing the non-proliferation regime.
It is time for the “haves” to finally come to
terms with a crucial reality; we live in a globalised security
environment. The cold war era asymmetry between states that possess
nuclear weapons and those that don’t is no longer remotely
tolerable.
For too long, it has been assumed that the insane
concept of mutually assured destruction would sustain stability and
non-proliferation. Nothing could be further from the truth. The
prevalence of this deterrence doctrine in international relations
has been the primary driving force behind the temptation by some
countries to acquire nuclear weapons, and by others to engage in
expanding and beefing up the strength of their nuclear arsenals. All
this in blatant violation of the disarmament objectives set by the
international community.
It is imperative that we change this dangerous and
erroneous security paradigm and move toward a better, safer and
fairer arrangement. I sincerely believe that the nuclear agreement
between my country – a non-nuclear-weapon state – and the P5+1
(which control almost all nuclear warheads on Earth) is symbolically
significant enough to kickstart this paradigm shift and mark the
beginning of a new era for the non-proliferation regime.
One step in the right direction would be to start
negotiations for a weapons elimination treaty, backed by a robust
monitoring and compliance-verification mechanism.
This could, in an initial phase, occasion the
de-alerting of nuclear arsenals (removing warheads from delivery
vehicles to reduce the risk of use) and subsequently engender the
progressive disarmament by all countries possessing such WMDs. It is
certainly a feasible goal to start this global project with a
robust, universal and really genuine push to establish a WMD-free
zone in the Middle East, if the relevant powers finally come to deem
it not just a noble cause but a strategic imperative.
Such a new treaty would revive and complement the
NPT for nuclear “haves”. It would codify disarmament obligations for
nuclear-armed regimes that are not party to the NPT – but that are
nonetheless bound – politically, by the international
non-proliferation regime and, legally, by preemptory norms of
customary international law to disarm.
Iran, in its national capacity and as current
chairman of the Non-Aligned Movement, is prepared to work with the
international community to achieve these goals, knowing full well
that, along the way, it will probably run into many hurdles raised
by the sceptics of peace and diplomacy. But we must endeavour to
convince and persist, as we did in Vienna.
Javad Zarif is the Iranian foreign minister