http://www.antiwar.com/ips/parsi.php?articleid=10408

What if Iran Suspends? A Western Dilemma
by Trita Parsi

As the Feb. 21 deadline for Iran to halt its uranium enrichment program 
fast approaches, both Iran and the West are scrambling to prepare 
themselves for all possible moves by the other side.

A scenario causing some discomfort among decision-makers in the George 
W. Bush administration would entail Iran succumbing to the Security 
Council request – but only after first giving its nuclear program a 
decisive push.

After more than two years of negotiations, inspections, threats and 
counter threats, the Security Council finally put the Western demand for 
Iran to halt its uranium enrichment program into a legally binding 
Chapter VII Security Council resolution. With a deadline of Feb. 21, 
UNSCR 1737 requires a suspension of "all enrichment-related and 
reprocessing activities, including research and development, to be 
verified by the IAEA," the International Atomic Energy Agency.

Though the sanctions imposed on Iran are relatively benign, markets in 
Iran have reacted negatively to the development and pragmatists in Iran 
are pressuring the country's top decision-maker, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 
to find a face-saving way out of this situation before the standoff with 
the West escalates further.

This has proven a difficult task. Khamenei is suspicious of the intent 
of Western governments and has little faith in their willingness to 
reciprocate potential Iranian concessions. In his view, sources close to 
his office reveal, a hardline stance against the West should be tried 
since the more conciliatory policies pursued by former President 
Mohammad Khatami failed to produce any gains for Iran.

The counter-argument, presented by the pragmatists, goes that the softer 
policy helped avoid a costly and potentially unmanageable confrontation 
with the West.

According to Nasser Hadian, a political analyst close to the Reformist 
camp, Iran will likely announce the connection and operation of six 
cascades of centrifuges within the next few weeks. Sources familiar with 
the debate in Tehran say that Iran is considering using the anniversary 
of the Iranian Revolution on Feb. 11 to announce this decision and 
celebrate it widely.

By doing so, Hadian explains, the Iranian government would become 
psychologically and politically prepared to accept a compromise on its 
enrichment program. It would be a face-saving exercise that could pave 
the way for a suspension and an agreement to permit much tougher IAEA 
inspections in order to avoid any escalation in the Security Council. It 
would also provide Iran with a stronger position in the ensuing 
negotiations with the P5+1 states – Britain, France, Russia, China, the 
United States and Germany.

Though Iran would agree to the UN Security Council demand and intrusive 
inspections, this move is still causing discomfort in Western capitals. 
In a standoff that increasingly has become about prestige and stature, 
and less and less about nonproliferation, the Iranian move might provide 
Tehran with a bit too much face-saving, in the view of some Europeans. 
It could be interpreted by Brussels as an insult and make the EU's 
efforts to find a resolution to the nuclear wrestling match appear 
irrelevant.

After all, speeding up the Iranian program would counter the spirit and 
letter of the Security Council resolution, even if Iran would manage to 
suspend the program before the resolution deadline is reached.

More importantly, the Iranian move would signal that Tehran has – in 
spite of US and EU efforts – managed to master the fuel cycle. For 
Washington, this would cause an additional headache; mastering the fuel 
cycle is the latest Israeli red line (previously, Israel regarded 
uranium enrichment as the nuclear point of no return). Israel has 
signaled Washington that if Iran crosses this line, and the Bush 
administration refuses to take action, Israel will be left with no 
choice but to attack Iran itself.

As a result, from Israel's perspective, the US policy will be proven a 
failure if Iran connects the cascades – even if it subsequently suspends 
its nuclear program and enters into negotiations with the US and the EU 
for a long-term solution.

The threat of an Israeli attack on Iran, however, is likely still viewed 
with some skepticism in Washington, even though Israeli officials have 
as of late warned Washington that an attack may be imminent. The Israeli 
Air force still lacks the capability to successfully take out the known 
Iranian facilities. More importantly, US war plans involve not only 
targeting the nuclear plants but also much of the infrastructure related 
to the nuclear program.

While the US has the capability to target these points, Israel does not. 
A rash and unsuccessful military campaign could turn the political 
momentum to Iran's favor and undermine efforts to stop Tehran.

Israeli military action would also spell disaster for Tel Aviv's efforts 
to use the perceived threat from Iran to forge closer ties with the 
pro-Washington Sunni dictatorships in the region, without necessarily 
acceding to the long-standing Arab condition for such a diplomatic 
shift: an Israeli recognition of a Palestinian state. As much as these 
Arab dictatorships loathe and fear Iran, they cannot gravitate towards 
Israel if it engages in a preemptive war against a fellow Muslim state.

Finally, Iran is the home to the largest community of Jews in the Middle 
East outside of Israel itself. Approximately 25,000 Iranian Jews 
continue to live in the Islamic republic, a country they have called 
home since the Persian King Cyrus the Great liberated the Jews from the 
Babylonian imprisonment 2,500 years ago. Military confrontation with 
Iran could jeopardize the security of this ancient community, a move the 
Jewish State would be reluctant to take.

Yet, even if Israel doesn't act on its threats, Washington will still be 
faced with a major political dilemma. On the one hand, it will be 
difficult for the US to refuse negotiations with Iran after having 
publicly repeated suspension of enrichment as its sole condition for talks.

"I myself have said I'll show up any place, any time, anywhere to talk 
with my Iranian counterpart, with other European leaders, if the 
Iranians will just do the one simple thing that the world has been 
asking them to do for almost three years: suspend their enrichment 
capabilities," Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told PBS News Hour 
earlier last month.

On the other hand, having defined a nuclear weapons capability as the 
mastering of the fuel cycle, and having vowed not to permit Iran to have 
such a capability, inaction by the Bush administration could come at the 
expense of appearing to backtrack on an important pledge to Israel. 
Washington hawks will no doubt accuse the president of letting Iran off 
the hook.

At some point, however, Washington, Brussels and Tehran must choose 
whether to win the battle for enrichment or the battle for prestige. 
Winning both may be outside the realm of possibility for all involved 
parties.

(Inter Press Service)

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