>From the Guardian via my friends blog............

This high-octane rocket-rattling against Tehran is unlikely to succeed

Ringed by nuclear states, Iran's atomic programme is scarcely unreasonable.
So why has Washington manufactured this crisis?

Tariq Ali

Wednesday May 3, 2006

Till now, what has prevented the crisis in Iraq from becoming a total
debacle for the United States has been the open collaboration of the Iranian
clerics. Iranian foreign policy - fragmentary and opportunist - has always
been determined by the needs and interests of the clerical state rather than
any principled anti-imperialist strategy. In the past, this has led to a de
facto collaboration with Washington in Afghanistan and Iraq. During the
Iran-Iraq war, the clerics had no hesitation in buying arms from the Israeli
regime to fight Iraq, then backed by Britain and the US. In the wake of the
Anglo-American invasion of Iraq - hoping, no doubt, that clearing the path
for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein and Mullah Omar might have won them a
respite - the regime took a tougher stance on the nuclear question.

The Bush administration appears to be psyching itself up for a safe strike
against Iran either by itself or via the Israelis, whose new leaders have
referred to the Iranian president as a psychopath and a new Hitler. Why has
Washington manufactured this crisis? The hypocrisy of Bush, Blair, Chirac or
Olmert - their own states armed with thousands of nuclear weapons - making a
casus belli of what are, by all accounts, primitive gropings on Iran's part
towards the technology necessary for the lowest grade of nuclear
self-defence, hardly needs to be spelled out. So long as these powers are
allowed to enlarge their nuclear armouries unimpeded, why should Tehran not?

The country is not only ringed by atomic states (India, Pakistan, China,
Russia, Israel), it also faces a string of American bases with potential or
actual nuclear stockpiles in Qatar, Iraq, Turkey, Uzbekistan and
Afghanistan. Nuclear-armed US aircraft carriers and submarines patrol the
waters off its southern coast. Historically, Iran has every reason to fear
outside threats. Its elected government was overthrown with covert
Anglo-American aid in 1953, and the secular opposition destroyed. From 1980
to 1988, the western powers abetted Saddam Hussein's onslaught, in which
hundreds of thousands of Iranians died. More than 300 Iraqi missiles were
launched at Iranian cities and economic targets, especially the oil
industry. In the war's final stages, the US destroyed nearly half the
Iranian navy in the Gulf and, for good measure, shot down a crowded civilian
passenger plane.

For the clerical state, the war on terror has been the best and the worst of
times. Oil prices have soared. Enemy regimes on both sides, Baghdad and
Kabul, have been overthrown. The Iraqi Shia parties that they have been
fostering for years are now in office. Washington has been reliant on their
help to sustain its occupations both there and in Afghanistan. Yet social
tensions in Iran are high. In this context, the nuclear issue is one of the
regime's few unifying projects. It is worth recalling that the Iranian
nuclear programme began under the Shah with technology offered by the
Americans. Khomeini put the project on hold, considering it un-Islamic.
Operations were restarted, with Russians later taking over construction of
the light-water reactors at Bushehr begun by the West Germans in the 1970s.
>From the start, Iran, like Germany, the Netherlands or Japan, has wanted its
programme to take in the full nuclear cycle, including uranium enrichment;
Russia has several times threatened to impose conditions on fuel deliveries.
Enrichment centrifuges were surreptitiously imported from neighbouring
Pakistan; not the process, but the failure to report it, was in
contravention of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) agreements.

There is no evidence that Iran is much closer to nuclear weapons now than
was Iraq in September 2002, when Blair and Cheney assured the world that
Baghdad represented a "genuine nuclear threat". Reports in 2003 by a
somewhat demented sect, the Mojahedin e-Khalq, of preliminary nuclear
research at the Natanz installation were no such proof. But in the
competitive scramble by European powers to enhance their standing with
Washington after the invasion of Iraq, France, Germany and Britain were keen
to prove their mettle by forcing extra agreements on Tehran. The Khatami
regime immediately capitulated. In December 2003, they signed the
"Additional Protocol" demanded by the EU3, agreeing to a "voluntary
suspension" of the right to enrichment guaranteed under the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

Within three months, the IAEA was condemning them for having failed to
ratify it; in June 2004, its inspectors produced examples of Iranian
enrichment work, perfectly legal under the NPT, but ruled out by the
Additional Protocol. Israel has boasted of its intention to "destroy Natanz"
- the contrast to its stealth bombing of Iraq's Osirak reactor in 1981 a
measure of the new balance of forces. In the summer of 2004, a large
bi-partisan majority in the US Congress passed a resolution for "all
appropriate measures" to prevent an Iranian weapons programme and there was
speculation about an "October surprise" before the 2004 presidential poll.
Plans were thus well advanced before Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's victory in the
June 2005 Iranian presidential election.

Ahmadinejad reaped the vote against Khatami's miserable record between 1997
and 2005. Economic conditions had worsened and Khatami was prepared to
defend the rights of foreign investors, but not those of independent
newspapers or protesting students. Manoeuvring ineffectually between
contradictory pressures, he exhausted his moral credit. Contrary to some
reports, Ahmadinejad has not so far imposed any new puritanical clampdown on
social mores. Instead, the most likely constituency to be disappointed is
Ahmadinejad's

own: the millions of young, working-class jobless, crammed into overcrowded
living conditions, in desperate need of a national development policy that
neither neoliberalism nor Islamist voluntarism will provide.

Nor is fundamentalist backwardness exhibited in the denial of the Nazi
genocide against the Jews and the threat to obliterate Israel, a basis for
any foreign policy. To face up to the enemies ranged against Iran requires
an intelligent and far-sighted strategy - not the current rag-bag of
opportunism and manoeuvre, determined by the immediate interests of the
clerics.

Clearing the way for the overthrow of the Iraqi Ba'ath and Afghan Taliban
regimes and backing the US occupations has bought no respite. The US
undersecretary of state has spoken of "ratcheting up the pressure". Israeli
defence minister Shaul Mofaz has said that "Israel will not be able to
accept an Iranian nuclear capability, and it must have the capability to
defend itself with all that this implies, and we are preparing." Hillary
Clinton accused the Bush administration of "downplaying the Iranian threat"
and called for pressure on Russia and China to impose sanctions on Tehran.
Chirac has spoken of using French nuclear weapons against such a "rogue
state". Perhaps it is simply high-octane rocket-rattling, the aim being to
frighten Tehran into submission. Bullying is unlikely to succeed. Will the
west then embark on a new war? If so, the battlefield might stretch from the
Tigris to the Oxus and without any guarantee of success.

Tariq Ali is the author of Clash of Fundamentalisms: Crusades, Jihads and
Modernity [EMAIL PROTECTED]


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