Why Bush should go to Tehran 
Stanley A. Weiss IHT Monday, May 24, 2004

The road less traveled 

WASHINGTON The road to Tehran, American neoconservatives argued before the invasion of 
Iraq, goes through Baghdad - first liberate Iraq, then Iran. But more than a year into 
the American occupation, it is clear that the road to a stable Iraq runs through Iran. 
.
The theocrats of the Islamic Republic can turn the U.S. mission in Iraq into a dream 
or a nightmare. The dream is that Washington and Tehran end 25 years of hostility and 
cooperate on Iraq. As Javad Zarif, Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, told me: 
"We have common interests. A chaotic Iraq ripped apart by ethnic and religious 
rivalries benefits no one." 
.
In this scenario, Iran and the United States work together, as they did in 
post-Taliban Afghanistan, to promote economic reconstruction and fashion a broad-based 
government that, in Zarif's words, is "peaceful, democratic, inclusive and 
representative." 
.
Tehran as a champion for a democratic, prosperous Iraq? In fact, democratic elections 
will empower Iraq's majority Shiites, Iran's religious brethren. A federal Iraq will 
prevent the emergence of an independent Kurdistan that would incite Kurds in Iran, 
Turkey and Syria. A prosperous Iraq is more likely to repay Tehran reparations owed 
from the Iran-Iraq war. 
.
Then there's the nightmare: Hard-line clerics in Tehran treating Iraqi instability as 
an opportunity to export Islamic revolution. Iran's powerful former president, Akbar 
Hashemi Rafsanjani, said recently of U.S forces in Iraq, "They know that if Iran 
wanted to, it could make their problems even worse." 
.
U.S. officials in Baghdad already point to "unhelpful" Iranian behavior. Before 
unleashing his revolt, the radical cleric Moktada al-Sadr met with military leaders in 
Tehran. Iran's Republican Guards trained and armed the 10,000-strong Badr Brigade, the 
now-dormant military wing of Iraq's largest Shiite party, the Supreme Council for 
Islamic Revolution in Iraq. 
.
Will Iraq be a stage for Iranian-American cooperation or confrontation? Realists on 
both sides constantly flirt with dialogue. After the devastating earthquake in Iran in 
December, Secretary of State Colin Powell said, "We should keep open the possibility 
of dialogue." Even as he warned of undermining the United States in Iraq, the 
ever-nimble Rafsanjani said, "For me, talking is not a problem." 
.
But ideologues on both sides constantly undermine any rapprochement. A British 
diplomat summed up the attitude of the Bush administration's neoconservatives during 
the buildup to the Iraq war: "Everyone wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to 
Tehran." Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has called U.S. attacks on 
Sadr's forces in Shiite holy cities "shameful" and has labeled talks with Washington 
"treason and stupidity." Given the stakes in Iraq, what is the best way to ensure that 
common interests trump outdated ideology? How can the realists on both sides come 
together? 
.
Seize the moment. For the first time in two decades, Washington can act from a 
position of unquestioned strength. With American forces to its east in Afghanistan and 
west in Iraq, the United States is Iran's newest neighbor and cannot be ignored. 
.
The real battle in the Islamic Republic is no longer between conservatives and the 
reformers who were sidelined in the phony parliamentary election in February. It is 
among the conservatives themselves. Religious zealots still chant "Death to America." 
But pragmatists like Rafsanjani can bargain with Washington without being labeled as 
traitors. With Iran perhaps less than a year from acquiring a nuclear weapon, there is 
not a moment to lose. 
.
Be bold. For years, Washington and Tehran have expressed a willingness to talk, but 
only after the other moves first - America lifting sanctions and ending its threat of 
"regime change"; Iran ending its support for terrorism, its nuclear ambitions, and its 
opposition to Arab-Israeli peace. It's time to call Tehran's bluff. 
.
If President Richard Nixon could go to China, and President Ronald Reagan could go to 
the Soviet Union, President George W. Bush can go to Iran, and should announce his 
willingness to do so. Taking the initiative with Tehran would show wavering U.S. 
voters that the bold wartime president can also be a courageous peacetime diplomat. 
.
Imagine the possibilities. The Iranian people, frustrated with their despotic rulers 
and favoring ties and trade with the United States, would rejoice. Americans opposed 
to ties with Iran may howl. But what is there to lose? The offer would put Khamenei 
and his extremist mullahs in a bind. Accept and they lose the Great Satan as a 
scapegoat. Decline and they are exposed as intransigents, further undermining their 
crumbling regime. 
.
Invite the neighbors. From Tehran, Bush should go to Baghdad for an international 
summit meeting on the future of Iraq. The UN envoy to Iraq, Lakhdar Brahimi, is 
reportedly considering such a conference under UN auspices. Since they all have a 
vital interest in a united Iraq, Iran, Syria, Turkey and Saudi Arabia should be 
invited to attend. 
.
It took U.S. forces just 21 days last spring to travel the road to Baghdad. The return 
trip - with a stable, peaceful Iraq in the rearview mirror - is taking much longer, 
and that road will run through Tehran. For Americans, this is a road less traveled. 
But it may well make all the difference. 
.
Stanley A. Weiss is chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a 
nonpartisan group based in Washington. This is a personal comment. 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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