[lbo-talk] Iran Nervous Nuclearisation 2

Ulhas Joglekar uvj at vsnl.com
Wed Jun 18 17:56:36 PDT 2003


OutLookIndia.com

Web | Jun 10, 2003

Iran: Nervous Nuclearisation

George Perkovich

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Recognizing Iran's respect for the United Nations and its refusal to kowtow to Washington, the U.S. should quietly encourage Kofi Annan to call for such a dialogue. (The U.S. says it welcomes a UN role in the region; the dialogue suggested here is appropriate). The dialogue should aim to initiate a diplomatic process for devising principles, rules and confidence-building measures to structure security relations among Iraq, Iran, all the smaller regional states, and the U.S.

Still, Iran's fluid nationalist politics are as difficult to handle as nitroglycerine. The U.S. must squeeze Iran (and its suppliers) enough to block Iran's acquisition of nuclear weapon capabilities without shaking so hard that Iranian nationalists explode and say, essentially, "yes, we withdraw from the NPT, and you cannot stop us." Once that happens, Iranian nationalism will attach to the bomb, and the chances of persuading Iranians to give it up will become nil. Many Iranian democrats, it should be remembered, are as attracted to the bomb as the ayatollahs are.

Unfortunately, Washington's policies inflame Iranian nationalism. Nothing fuels nationalism like resistance to public diktat by arrogant, perhaps hypocritical outsiders. As the pre-revolutionary finance minister, Jahangir Amuzegar, noted recently, many Iranians took the "axis of evil" harangue "as a deep insult to their national dignity... Any U.S. strategy that even remotely raises the specter of foreign interference in Iran is doomed to fail." 2 Many moderate Iranian nationalists who oppose the hard line clerics would argue that if Israel, the arch-enemy of Iran, can have a large nuclear arsenal, other neighbors will want to have it too. De-nuclearizing the whole region is the best way to prevent an Iranian quest for the bomb, they say. In other words, Israel's nuclear and chemical weapons have to be brought into the picture, too. Secretary of State Colin Powell recently said, "It has always been a United States goal that conditions could be created in this part of the world where no nation would have a need for any weapons of mass destruction." This is necessarily a fairly long-term project but the US should start begin addressing the issue.

Iranians also need to see that they will gain from ending activities that now isolate them internationally. The hardliners who now control nuclear policy oppose direct negotiations with the U.S. and integration into the global economy. The conservative bazaar interests and rich religious "foundations" don't want economic competition. They largely prevent reformers from engaging with the U.S. A cunning U.S. policy - as opposed to an ineffective but moralistically pure one -would make an offer that no Iranian faction can refuse. Giving hardliners no realistic choice but to do business with the U.S. would unfreeze official relations with Iran and give reformers operating space.

The simplest first step would be for the U.S. to drop its objection to Iran's joining the World Trade Organization. Prospective WTO membership would give progressives a lever to push reforms necessary to satisfy WTO terms and integrate Iran more deeply into the international political economy.

Going further, the U.S. should unilaterally lift economic sanctions that impede development of oil and natural gas flows to Pakistan and India. Iran can be a wellhead source and/or a cost-effective pipeline route to bring natural gas through Pakistan to energy-starved India. The gravest challenge is to overcome Indo-Pak enmity and India's concerns about security of supply transiting through Pakistan. The U.S. could promote vital economic and security objectives in the Indo-Pak relationship by facilitating with Iran the development of a natural gas pipeline from or through Iran to India Because of the cross-hatched organization of power and authority in Iran, Washington should convey to the head of each important political institution that the U.S. is determined not to be the obstacle to Iran's integration into world civilization. Each of these overtures should be communicated directly to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamene'i, the chairman of the Expediency Council, Rafsanjani, President Khatami, and the speaker of the Majlis. The strategy is to give hardliners an unrefusable opportunity to satisfy the Iranian public's desire for relations with the U.S.

The U.S. and its friends should use every possible means to block nuclear weapon-related supplies coming into Iran. But ultimately the solution to the proliferation problem likes in persuading Iranians - reformers and hardliners alike -that they do not need nuclear weapons and will be better off without them.

References: 1 Oliver Burkeman, The Guardian, Feb. 6, 2002. 2 Jahangir Amuzegar, "Iran's Crumbling Revolution," Foreign Affairs, January/February 2003, p. 46

George Perkovich is vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and author of India's Nuclear Bomb and other studies on nuclear proliferation in Iran, Pakistan, and India. Rights: © Copyright 2003 Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, where this appeared first.

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