Déjà vu all over again
The US is smearing IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei for not finding evidence of 
Iranian nuclear weapons. Sound familiar?

Ian Williams
Comment is Free
Guardian
November 3, 2007 2:00 PM
When it comes to Iran's nuclear capabilities, whose word would you rather take: 
that of a Nobel prize-winning head of an international agency specializing in 
nuclear issues who was proved triumphantly right about Iraq, or that of a bunch 
of belligerent neocons who make no secret of their desire to whack Iran at the 
earliest opportunity and who made such a pigs ear of Iraq?

That is the stark choice facing the sane people of the world, given the 
smearing of IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei for not joining the hysterical lynch 
mob building up against Iran. Criticised by Condoleezza Rice and others in the 
Bush administration, it is uncannily reminiscent of the slurs against him and 
UN weapons inspector Hans Blix in the run up to the invasion of Iraq - and we 
should remember that the US vindictively tried to unseat him afterwards for not 
joining in the lying game. 

ElBaradei is hardly acting as cheerleader for the Iranians. He says that his 
inspectors have not seen "any concrete evidence that there is a parallel 
military program," though he could not yet swear to its absence. But he does 
believe that our issues with Iran can be resolved through negotiations - in 
which it would help if the US were not implicitly threatening war. But it looks 
as though we have reached a similar stage to when Saddam let in the inspectors. 
When they found no WMDs Washington cried foul, ordered the UN inspectors out 
and sent the troops in. The US and its allies will not accept anything short of 
regime change in Teheran - no matter what ordinary Iranians might want and what 
the IAEA says.

The only difference from last time is that France has defected, and France's 
opposition to the war in Iraq was as much because of Saddam's oil contracts 
with Total and Elf-Aquitaine as any deep attachment to international law. 
Teheran should sign a contract immediately!

There are, of course, several separate issues here. One is whether Iran has the 
right to enrich uranium. The second is whether it is abusing the putative right 
to build nuclear weapons. A third is whether the nuclear issue is not just some 
sort of White House feint, since we all know that if the shooting starts, it 
will really be about fighting terrorism, liberating gays and women, restoring 
democracy and taking down a major rival in the region to both Saudi Arabia and 
Israel - or any permutation of the above. 

On the first question, stupid though it is, the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty 
does not ban countries from reprocessing and purifying uranium. It should have 
done, and it should have allowed more intrusive inspections, but it doesn't, 
and one reason for that is that the US, under the influence of the people who 
now want to cite non-proliferation against Iran, fought against attempts to 
strengthen the treaty. These are the same people, in fact, who have 
successfully fought against the senate ratifying the comprehensive test ban 
treaty.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's maladroit diplomacy led to Iran being 
outmanoeuvred. His comments on Israel and the Holocaust, no matter whether 
interpreted correctly or not, have made it difficult for many countries to 
support him. The US got a resolution against Iran through the IAEA council 
calling on Iran to stop its uranium reprocessing, largely by promising council 
member India a free pass for developing nuclear weapons outside the 
Non-Proliferation Treaty, and with the enthusiastic support of Israel, the only 
definite nuclear state in the Middle East. 

The US then took that IAEA council resolution to the UN security council, whose 
word, whether Iran likes it or not, is law under the UN charter, even though it 
is manifestly a political rather than a judicial body. (The law is not always 
just, and that goes for international law as well). It does not help Iran as 
much as it should that Washington, a major scofflaw in the international field, 
is once again talking piously about the need to enforce UN resolutions, with 
its own interpretation and its own timetable - just as was the case with Iraq. 

Iran is playing a dangerous game. Most countries have deep reservations about 
what the US, France and, to a lesser extent, the UK are up to, but few of them 
are prepared to go to the wall, diplomatically, let alone militarily, for the 
ayatollahs.

Iran should accept the additional and more intrusive inspections that it did 
before, and throw open its program to the IAEA inspectors, but the war talk in 
Washington and Jerusalem gives it a plausible excuse not to, since it would be 
tantamount to offering them a list of targets. 

Of course it is difficult to support someone like Ahmadinejad, even when he 
does for once have a point in the nuclear stand-off. But we can support 
ElBaradei and the IAEA, as the only sane voices around. With enemies such as 
ElBaradei has marshalling against him, he must be right.

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