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Human Events...
Bibi’s dilemma -- and
Barack’s
by Patrick J. Buchanan
04/17/2012
“Bibi” Netanyahu was disgusted.
“My initial reaction is that Iran has gotten a freebie. It has got five
weeks to continue enrichment without any limitation.”
The Israeli prime minister was referring to Saturday’s meeting in
Istanbul of the P5-plus-1 -- the five permanent members of the U.N.
Security Council and Germany -- with representatives from Iran.
Subject: Iran’s nuclear program. After a “constructive” meeting of one
day, all agreed to meet again in Baghdad, May 23, and departed.
For Bibi, it was a strategic defeat.
For Israel’s goal is a halt to Iran’s enrichment of uranium and the
removal of enriched uranium from that country.
But Catherine Ashton, the foreign minister for the European Union who
is leading the P5-plus-1, stated that the West accepts Iran’s position
that, as a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, she has a
right to a peaceful nuclear program and nuclear power.
“Iran’s right to the peaceful use of nuclear power” must be fully
respected, Ashton said. No one dissented.
If the United States assents to Iran’s enrichment of uranium, and Iran
gives assurances that the Ayatollah’s fatwa against the acquisition of
nuclear weapons is being observed, a Washington-Tehran deal may be in
the offing.
What would be the elements?
An end to Iran’s enrichment of uranium to 20 percent, once Iran has a
sufficient stock for its program of nuclear medicine.
Transfer of any excess 20 percent uranium outside the country to
prevent further enrichment to weapons grade.
Regular intrusive inspections of Iran’s nuclear facilities to ensure
there is no diversion of uranium to bomb-making.
What would Iran demand?
Step-by-step lifting of sanctions, as it demonstrates it is telling the
truth about not seeking nuclear weapons.
Such a deal would end the U.S.-Iran confrontation, yet allow Iran to
continue to gain the knowledge, experience, and technical capacity to
break out, should it ever decide to take the risk and build the weapons.
Netanyahu believes Israel’s security and survival mandate the nuclear
castration of Iran. Sunday, in a detailed report cleared by military
censors, Israeli TV showed how an attack would be mounted.
Yet reporter Alon Ben David conceded that the Israeli Air Force “does
not have the capacity to destroy the entire Iranian program.”
Unlike the Iraqi nuclear reactor and the Syrian reactor Israel bombed
in 1981 and 2007, Iran has many more nuclear facilities, spread over a
far larger country, farther away and better defended.
And given the public threats by Israel and test runs by the IAF as far
as Gibraltar, no attack on Iran will come as a total surprise. There
would be losses of planes and pilots.
What would be the results?
While it would destroy some of Iran’s nuclear facilities, it would not
end the program but rally Iranians behind the regime. And it might
trigger retaliation by Iran and Hezbollah, by missile, against Israel
itself.
An Israeli attack on Iran, which President Obama and the U.S. military
strongly oppose, would also put the issue of a U.S. war with Iran front
and center in the presidential election.
What would America do; what would Obama do?
The election of 2012 could turn on that decision.
Should Iran retaliate against Israel, the Israeli lobby and the neocons
would demand that America come to Israel’s defense. Mitt Romney, the
GOP hawks, evangelical Christians, conservative commentators and many
Democrats would echo the demand, no matter who started the shooting.
A clamor would arise for us to finish the job of smashing Iran’s
nuclear facilities.
As Israel is admired and Iran’s regime is detested, Obama could never
declare neutrality. And should he order the U.S. military to go to
Israel’s aid, his re-election might well be assured.
As commander in chief and first diplomat, Obama holds all the cards.
If Iran is accommodating, the sanctions he has imposed will be seen as
successful. If Iran balks in negotiations, he can impose new sanctions.
If Iran walks out of the talks, he can issue ultimata.
If Israel attacks Iran, he can come to Israel’s defense and finish the
job of destroying Iran’s nuclear facilities. If done close to the
election, this would assure Obama’s re-election. The “October surprise”
of 2012.
What are Iran’s interests and options?
Tehran cannot want war with the United States. For whatever the damage
done to U.S. interests, the destruction of Iran’s air, naval and
missile forces and nuclear program would be total.
The smartest course for Iran to pursue is to demonstrate to the West
that she is reasonable and anxious to prove she has no present or
future intention of building atomic weapons.
Which is what Iran was doing in Istanbul.
No wonder Bibi is frustrated. If there is no U.S. attack on Iran by
November, and Obama wins, there may never be a U.S. attack on Iran.
Israel cannot do to Iran what Bibi wants done to Iran. Only Obama can.
But how does Bibi get Obama to do it, before November?
Read this and other articles at Human
Events
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