Lagniappe
Scott
Sullivan :
Bush-Ahmadinejad
coalition will backfire
Seymour
Hersh in the New Yorker ( below) has another of his sensational
"exposes"
about an imminent US military attack on Iran to destroy Iran's
fledgling
nuclear capability Hersh's article also alleges that the Pentagon
is attempting to overthrow Iran's government via covert support
for Iran's Kurdish, Azeri and Baluchi separatists.
Finally, Hersh alleges that Robert Gates, who in his recent writings
has
favored a US-Iran détente and US concessions to gain Iran's
cooperation in
Iraq, is in reality secretly anti-Iran and is being brought on
board to fool
Congress and the US public that the VP Cheney hard-liners have
lost control
of the Iran policy.
My goodness,
if anti-Iran "Cheney hardliners" are still in control
of the
Bush administration, and are preparing to take imminent action,
Iran should
be trembling in its boots, correct?
Far from trembling
in its boots, Iran is acting as though the US no longer
exists. In Lebanon, Iran has unleashed Hezbollah to bring down
the
democratic, pro-US government, eliciting only pro-forma protests
from the
US. As far as Iran's nuclear program is concerned, Teheran's policy
is full
speed ahead with Iran making no pretense whatsoever of further
cooperation
with the UN.
Moreover,
the Us has encouraged Iran's obduracy by liberalizing US sanctions
in the strategic area of technological upgrades for Iran's Airbus
fleet.
The US has readily granted Ahmadinejad and Khatami visas without
political
preconditions to visit the US. Rumsfeld, who genuinely disliked
Adhmdinejad, is out, while the genuinely pro-Iran Gates is in.
The
anti-Iran Republican House of Representatives is out, while the
relatively
more pro-Iran Democrat-controlled House is in, with the pro-ran
"dialogue"
(i.e. US concessions) in charge of the policy.
Best of all,
it seems as though the pro-Iran James Baker gang, with full
Democratic Party support, has commandeered President Bush's stagecoach
and
is holding him prisoner.
At this point a skeptic would say that the Bush administration
seems eager
to meet all
of Iran's terms to get its 147,000 hostages back.
It is no surprise
that Iran's fuehrer Ahmadinejad smiles all the time.
However, three
hard-nosed countries will wipe that smile off Ahmadinejad's
face: Syria, Lebanon and Iraq (Israel has been co-opted into a
pro-Iran
stance) Unlike Czechoslovakia in 1938, which did what it was told
and
surrendered, Syria, Lebanon, and Iraq are resisting. More than
that, they
will prevail over Iran.
This is because
Iran has made three irretrievable mistakes. First, Iran
would find it difficult to subdue Syria, Lebanon, or Iraq, but
to subdue all
three, and in the same time frame, is well beyond Iran's reach.
In this
regard, today's press reports that anti-Iran Shia leader Muqtada
Al-Sadr,
who is pro-Syrian, has made several recent visits to Damascas,
including one
lasting two weeks. Iran, watch out. Iraq's resistance is getting
organized.
Iran second
big mistake is underestimating the Arab states that will defend
Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. In fact, Iran is crazy if it think the
Sunni Arabs
will give way, like the UK and France in 1938. They cannot give
way when a
coalition between them and Iran's intended victims would dominate
the Middle
East. Iran, in contrast, will have no allies as it sets out to
create a
Persian empire.
Iran's third
big mistake is to choose the US as a partner. Not only is the
US a political liability for Iran, the US cannot be seen as a
reliable
Iranian ally, especially in Iraq, where the US Congress, even
under
Democratic Party control, will shrink back from turning over Basra
and
southern Iraq to Iran.
This brings
us back to the original question. Why is the Bush
administration leaking anti-Iran war fantasies to Seymour Hersh?
That's
easy. Such fantasies constitute "red meat for the red states,"
and also
constitute a US gift to Ahmadinejad, who can use them to shore
up support
for his Nazi regime.
The
Annals of National Security: The Next Act
Is a damaged
Administration less likely to attack Iran, or more?
by
Seymour M. Hersh
A month before the November elections, Vice-President Dick Cheney
was sitting in on a national-security discussion at the Executive
Office Building. The talk took a political turn: what if the Democrats
won both the Senate and the House? How would that affect policy
toward Iran, which is believed to be on the verge of becoming
a nuclear power? At that point, according to someone familiar
with the discussion, Cheney began reminiscing about his job as
a lineman, in the early nineteen-sixties, for a power company
in Wyoming. Copper wire was expensive, and the linemen were instructed
to return all unused pieces three feet or longer. No one wanted
to deal with the paperwork that resulted, Cheney said, so he and
his colleagues found a solution: putting "shorteners"
on the wire-that is, cutting it into short pieces and tossing
the leftovers at the end of the workday. If the Democrats won
on November 7th, the Vice-President said, that victory would not
stop the Administration from pursuing a military option with Iran.
The White House would put "shorteners" on any legislative
restrictions, Cheney said, and thus stop Congress from getting
in its way.
The White
House's concern was not that the Democrats would cut off funds
for the war in Iraq but that future legislation would prohibit
it from financing operations targeted at overthrowing or destabilizing
the Iranian government, to keep it from getting the bomb. "They're
afraid that Congress is going to vote a binding resolution to
stop a hit on Iran, à la Nicaragua in the Contra war,"
a former senior intelligence official told me.
In
late 1982, Edward P. Boland, a Democratic representative, introduced
the first in a series of "Boland amendments," which
limited the Reagan Administration's ability to support the Contras,
who were working to overthrow Nicaragua's left-wing Sandinista
government. The Boland restrictions led White House officials
to orchestrate illegal fund-raising activities for the Contras,
including the sale of American weapons, via Israel, to Iran. The
result was the Iran-Contra scandal of the mid-eighties. Cheney's
story, according to the source, was his way of saying that, whatever
a Democratic Congress might do next year to limit the President's
authority, the Administration would find a way to work around
it. (In response to a request for comment, the Vice-President's
office said that it had no record of the discussion.)
In interviews,
current and former Administration officials returned to one question:
whether Cheney would be as influential in the last two years of
George W. Bush's Presidency as he was in its first six. Cheney
is emphatic about Iraq. In late October, he told Time, "I
know what the President thinks," about Iraq. "I know
what I think. And we're not looking for an exit strategy. We're
looking for victory." He is equally clear that the Administration
would, if necessary, use force against Iran. "The United
States is keeping all options on the table in addressing the irresponsible
conduct of the regime," he told an Israeli lobbying group
early this year. "And we join other nations in sending that
regime a clear message: we will not allow Iran to have a nuclear
weapon."
On November
8th, the day after the Republicans lost both the House and the
Senate, Bush announced the resignation of Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld, and the nomination of his successor, Robert Gates,
a former director of Central Intelligence. The move was widely
seen as an acknowledgment that the Administration was paying a
political price for the debacle in Iraq. Gates was a member of
the Iraq Study Group-headed by former Secretary of State James
Baker and Lee Hamilton, a former Democratic congressman-which
has been charged with examining new approaches to Iraq, and he
has publicly urged for more than a year that the U.S. begin direct
talks with Iran. President Bush's decision to turn to Gates was
a sign of the White House's "desperation," a former
high-level C.I.A. official, who worked with the White House after
September 11th, told me. Cheney's relationship with Rumsfeld was
among the closest inside the Administration, and Gates's nomination
was seen by some Republicans as a clear signal that the Vice-President's
influence in the White House could be challenged. The only reason
Gates would take the job, after turning down an earlier offer
to serve as the new Director of National Intelligence, the former
high-level C.I.A. official said, was that "the President's
father, Brent Scowcroft, and James Baker"-former aides of
the first President Bush-"piled on, and the President finally
had to accept adult supervision."
Critical
decisions will be made in the next few months, the former C.I.A.
official said. "Bush has followed Cheney's advice for six
years, and the story line will be: 'Will he continue to choose
Cheney over his father?' We'll know soon." (The White House
and the Pentagon declined to respond to detailed requests for
comment about this article, other than to say that there were
unspecified inaccuracies.)
A retired
four-star general who worked closely with the first Bush Administration
told me that the Gates nomination means that Scowcroft, Baker,
the elder Bush, and his son "are saying that winning the
election in 2008 is more important than the individual. The issue
for them is how to preserve the Republican agenda. The Old Guard
wants to isolate Cheney and give their girl, Condoleezza Rice"-the
Secretary of State-"a chance to perform." The combination
of Scowcroft, Baker, and the senior Bush working together is,
the general added, "tough enough to take on Cheney. One guy
can't do it."
Richard Armitage,
the Deputy Secretary of State in Bush's first term, told me that
he believed the Democratic election victory, followed by Rumsfeld's
dismissal, meant that the Administration "has backed off,"
in terms of the pace of its planning for a military campaign against
Iran. Gates and other decision-makers would now have more time
to push for a diplomatic solution in Iran and deal with other,
arguably more immediate issues. "Iraq is as bad as it looks,
and Afghanistan is worse than it looks," Armitage said. "A
year ago, the Taliban were fighting us in units of eight to twelve,
and now they're sometimes in company-size, and even larger."
Bombing Iran and expecting the Iranian public "to rise up"
and overthrow the government, as some in the White House believe,
Armitage added, "is a fool's errand."
"Iraq
is the disaster we have to get rid of, and Iran is the disaster
we have to avoid," Joseph Cirincione, the vice-president
for national security at the liberal Center for American Progress,
said. "Gates will be in favor of talking to Iran and listening
to the advice of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but the neoconservatives
are still there"-in the White House-"and still believe
that chaos would be a small price for getting rid of the threat.
The danger is that Gates could be the new Colin Powell-the one
who opposes the policy but ends up briefing the Congress and publicly
supporting it."
Other sources
close to the Bush family said that the machinations behind Rumsfeld's
resignation and the Gates nomination were complex, and the seeming
triumph of the Old Guard may be illusory. The former senior intelligence
official, who once worked closely with Gates and with the President's
father, said that Bush and his immediate advisers in the White
House understood by mid-October that Rumsfeld would have to resign
if the result of the midterm election was a resounding defeat.
Rumsfeld was involved in conversations about the timing of his
departure with Cheney, Gates, and the President before the election,
the former senior intelligence official said. Critics who asked
why Rumsfeld wasn't fired earlier, a move that might have given
the Republicans a boost, were missing the point. "A week
before the election, the Republicans were saying that a Democratic
victory was the seed of American retreat, and now Bush and Cheney
are going to change their national-security policies?" the
former senior intelligence official said. "Cheney knew this
was coming. Dropping Rummy after the election looked like a conciliatory
move-'You're right, Democrats. We got a new guy and we're looking
at all the options. Nothing is ruled out.' " But the conciliatory
gesture would not be accompanied by a significant change in policy;
instead, the White House saw Gates as someone who would have the
credibility to help it stay the course on Iran and Iraq. Gates
would also be an asset before Congress. If the Administration
needed to make the case that Iran's weapons program posed an imminent
threat, Gates would be a better advocate than someone who had
been associated with the flawed intelligence about Iraq. The former
official said, "He's not the guy who told us there were weapons
of mass destruction in Iraq, and he'll be taken seriously by Congress."
Once
Gates is installed at the Pentagon, he will have to contend with
Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, the Rumsfeld legacy-and Dick Cheney.
A former senior Bush Administration official, who has also worked
with Gates, told me that Gates was well aware of the difficulties
of his new job. He added that Gates would not simply endorse the
Administration's policies and say, "with a flag waving, 'Go,
go' "-especially at the cost of his own reputation. "He
does not want to see thirty-five years of government service go
out the window," the former official said. However, on the
question of whether Gates would actively stand up to Cheney, the
former official said, after a pause, "I don't know."
Another critical
issue for Gates will be the Pentagon's expanding effort to conduct
clandestine and covert intelligence missions overseas. Such activity
has traditionally been the C.I.A.'s responsibility, but, as the
result of a systematic push by Rumsfeld, military covert actions
have been substantially increased. In the past six months, Israel
and the United States have also been working together in support
of a Kurdish resistance group known as the Party for Free Life
in Kurdistan. The group has been conducting clandestine cross-border
forays into Iran, I was told by a government consultant with close
ties to the Pentagon civilian leadership, as "part of an
effort to explore alternative means of applying pressure on Iran."
(The Pentagon has established covert relationships with Kurdish,
Azeri, and Baluchi tribesmen, and has encouraged their efforts
to undermine the regime's authority in northern and southeastern
Iran.) The government consultant said that Israel is giving the
Kurdish group "equipment and training." The group has
also been given "a list of targets inside Iran of interest
to the U.S." (An Israeli government spokesman denied that
Israel was involved.)
Such
activities, if they are considered military rather than intelligence
operations, do not require congressional briefings. For a similar
C.I.A. operation, the President would, by law, have to issue a
formal finding that the mission was necessary, and the Administration
would have to brief the senior leadership of the House and the
Senate. The lack of such consultation annoyed some Democrats in
Congress. This fall, I was told, Representative David Obey, of
Wisconsin, the ranking Democrat on the House Appropriations subcommittee
that finances classified military activity, pointedly asked, during
a closed meeting of House and Senate members, whether "anyone
has been briefing on the Administration's plan for military activity
in Iran." The answer was no. (A spokesman for Obey confirmed
this account.)
The Democratic
victories this month led to a surge of calls for the Administration
to begin direct talks with Iran, in part to get its help in settling
the conflict in Iraq. British Prime Minister Tony Blair broke
ranks with President Bush after the election and declared that
Iran should be offered "a clear strategic choice" that
could include a "new partnership" with the West. But
many in the White House and the Pentagon insist that getting tough
with Iran is the only way to salvage Iraq. "It's a classic
case of 'failure forward,'" a Pentagon consultant said. "They
believe that by tipping over Iran they would recover their losses
in Iraq-like doubling your bet. It would be an attempt to revive
the concept of spreading democracy in the Middle East by creating
one new model state."
The view that
there is a nexus between Iran and Iraq has been endorsed by Condoleezza
Rice, who said last month that Iran "does need to understand
that it is not going to improve its own situation by stirring
instability in Iraq," and by the President, who said, in
August, that "Iran is backing armed groups in the hope of
stopping democracy from taking hold" in Iraq. The government
consultant told me, "More and more people see the weakening
of Iran as the only way to save Iraq."
The consultant
added that, for some advocates of military action, "the goal
in Iran is not regime change but a strike that will send a signal
that America still can accomplish its goals. Even if it does not
destroy Iran's nuclear network, there are many who think that
thirty-six hours of bombing is the only way to remind the Iranians
of the very high cost of going forward with the bomb-and of supporting
Moqtada al-Sadr and his pro-Iran element in Iraq." (Sadr,
who commands a Shiite militia, has religious ties to Iran.)
In
the current issue of Foreign Policy, Joshua Muravchik, a prominent
neoconservative, argued that the Administration had little choice.
"Make no mistake: President Bush will need to bomb Iran's
nuclear facilities before leaving office," he wrote. The
President would be bitterly criticized for a preëmptive attack
on Iran, Muravchik said, and so neoconservatives "need to
pave the way intellectually now and be prepared to defend the
action when it comes."
The main Middle
East expert on the Vice-President's staff is David Wurmser, a
neoconservative who was a strident advocate for the invasion of
Iraq and the overthrow of Saddam Hussein. Like many in Washington,
Wurmser "believes that, so far, there's been no price tag
on Iran for its nuclear efforts and for its continuing agitation
and intervention inside Iraq," the consultant said. But,
unlike those in the Administration who are calling for limited
strikes, Wurmser and others in Cheney's office "want to end
the regime," the consultant said. "They argue that there
can be no settlement of the Iraq war without regime change in
Iran."
The Administration's
planning for a military attack on Iran was made far more complicated
earlier this fall by a highly classified draft assessment by the
C.I.A. challenging the White House's assumptions about how close
Iran might be to building a nuclear bomb. The C.I.A. found no
conclusive evidence, as yet, of a secret Iranian nuclear-weapons
program running parallel to the civilian operations that Iran
has declared to the International Atomic Energy Agency. (The C.I.A.
declined to comment on this story.)
The
C.I.A.'s analysis, which has been circulated to other agencies
for comment, was based on technical intelligence collected by
overhead satellites, and on other empirical evidence, such as
measurements of the radioactivity of water samples and smoke plumes
from factories and power plants. Additional data have been gathered,
intelligence sources told me, by high-tech (and highly classified)
radioactivity-detection devices that clandestine American and
Israeli agents placed near suspected nuclear-weapons facilities
inside Iran in the past year or so. No significant amounts of
radioactivity were found.
A current
senior intelligence official confirmed the existence of the C.I.A.
analysis, and told me that the White House had been hostile to
it. The White House's dismissal of the C.I.A. findings on Iran
is widely known in the intelligence community. Cheney and his
aides discounted the assessment, the former senior intelligence
official said. "They're not looking for a smoking gun,"
the official added, referring to specific intelligence about Iranian
nuclear planning. "They're looking for the degree of comfort
level they think they need to accomplish the mission." The
Pentagon's Defense Intelligence Agency also challenged the C.I.A.'s
analysis. "The D.I.A. is fighting the agency's conclusions,
and disputing its approach," the former senior intelligence
official said. Bush and Cheney, he added, can try to prevent the
C.I.A. assessment from being incorporated into a forthcoming National
Intelligence Estimate on Iranian nuclear capabilities, "but
they can't stop the agency from putting it out for comment inside
the intelligence community." The C.I.A. assessment warned
the White House that it would be a mistake to conclude that the
failure to find a secret nuclear-weapons program in Iran merely
meant that the Iranians had done a good job of hiding it. The
former senior intelligence official noted that at the height of
the Cold War the Soviets were equally skilled at deception and
misdirection, yet the American intelligence community was readily
able to unravel the details of their long-range-missile and nuclear-weapons
programs. But some in the White House, including in Cheney's office,
had made just such an assumption-that "the lack of evidence
means they must have it," the former official said.
Iran is a
signatory to the non-proliferation treaty, under which it is entitled
to conduct nuclear research for peaceful purposes. Despite the
offer of trade agreements and the prospect of military action,
it defied a demand by the I.A.E.A. and the Security Council, earlier
this year, that it stop enriching uranium-a process that can produce
material for nuclear power plants as well as for weapons-and it
has been unable, or unwilling, to account for traces of plutonium
and highly enriched uranium that have been detected during I.A.E.A.
inspections. The I.A.E.A. has complained about a lack of "transparency,"
although, like the C.I.A., it has not found unambiguous evidence
of a secret weapons program.
Last
week, Iran's President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, announced that Iran
had made further progress in its enrichment research program,
and said, "We know that some countries may not be pleased."
He insisted that Iran was abiding by international agreements,
but said, "Time is now completely on the side of the Iranian
people." A diplomat in Vienna, where the I.A.E.A. has its
headquarters, told me that the agency was skeptical of the claim,
for technical reasons. But Ahmadinejad's defiant tone did nothing
to diminish suspicions about Iran's nuclear ambitions.
"There
is no evidence of a large-scale covert enrichment program inside
Iran," one involved European diplomat said. "But the
Iranians would not have launched themselves into a very dangerous
confrontation with the West on the basis of a weapons program
that they no longer pursue. Their enrichment program makes sense
only in terms of wanting nuclear weapons. It would be inconceivable
if they weren't cheating to some degree. You don't need a covert
program to be concerned about Iran's nuclear ambitions. We have
enough information to be concerned without one. It's not a slam
dunk, but it's close to it."
There are, however, other possible reasons for Iran's obstinacy.
The nuclear program-peaceful or not-is a source of great national
pride, and President Ahmadinejad's support for it has helped to
propel him to enormous popularity. (Saddam Hussein created confusion
for years, inside and outside his country, about whether Iraq
had weapons of mass destruction, in part to project an image of
strength.) According to the former senior intelligence official,
the C.I.A.'s assessment suggested that Iran might even see some
benefits in a limited military strike-especially one that did
not succeed in fully destroying its nuclear program-in that an
attack might enhance its position in the Islamic world. "They
learned that in the Iraqi experience, and relearned it in southern
Lebanon," the former senior official said. In both cases,
a more powerful military force had trouble achieving its military
or political goals; in Lebanon, Israel's war against Hezbollah
did not destroy the group's entire arsenal of rockets, and increased
the popularity of its leader, Hassan Nasrallah.
The former
senior intelligence official added that the C.I.A. assessment
raised the possibility that an American attack on Iran could end
up serving as a rallying point to unite Sunni and Shiite populations.
"An American attack will paper over any differences in the
Arab world, and we'll have Syrians, Iranians, Hamas, and Hezbollah
fighting against us-and the Saudis and the Egyptians questioning
their ties to the West. It's an analyst's worst nightmare-for
the first time since the caliphate there will be common cause
in the Middle East." (An Islamic caliphate ruled the Middle
East for over six hundred years, until the thirteenth century.)
According
to the Pentagon consultant, "The C.I.A.'s view is that, without
more intelligence, a large-scale bombing attack would not stop
Iran's nuclear program. And a low-end campaign of subversion and
sabotage would play into Iran's hands-bolstering support for the
religious leadership and deepening anti-American Muslim rage."
The Pentagon
consultant said that he and many of his colleagues in the military
believe that Iran is intent on developing nuclear-weapons capability.
But he added that the Bush Administration's options for dealing
with that threat are diminished, because of a lack of good intelligence
and also because "we've cried wolf" before.
As the C.I.A.'s
assessment was making its way through the government, late this
summer, current and former military officers and consultants told
me, a new element suddenly emerged: intelligence from Israeli
spies operating inside Iran claimed that Iran has developed and
tested a trigger device for a nuclear bomb. The provenance and
significance of the human intelligence, or HUMINT, are controversial.
"The problem is that no one can verify it," the former
senior intelligence official told me. "We don't know who
the Israeli source is. The briefing says the Iranians are testing
trigger mechanisms"-simulating a zero-yield nuclear explosion
without any weapons-grade materials-"but there are no diagrams,
no significant facts. Where is the test site? How often have they
done it? How big is the warhead-a breadbox or a refrigerator?
They don't have that." And yet, he said, the report was being
used by White House hawks within the Administration to "prove
the White House's theory that the Iranians are on track. And tests
leave no radioactive track, which is why we can't find it."
Still, he said, "The agency is standing its ground."
The
Pentagon consultant, however, told me that he and other intelligence
professionals believe that the Israeli intelligence should be
taken more seriously. "We live in an era when national technical
intelligence"-data from satellites and on-the-ground sensors-"will
not get us what we need. HUMINT may not be hard evidence by that
standard, but very often it's the best intelligence we can get."
He added, with obvious exasperation, that within the intelligence
community "we're going to be fighting over the quality of
the information for the next year." One reason for the dispute,
he said, was that the White House had asked to see the "raw"-the
original, unanalyzed and unvetted-Israeli intelligence. Such "stovepiping"
of intelligence had led to faulty conclusions about nonexistent
weapons of mass destruction during the buildup to the 2003 Iraq
war. "Many Presidents in the past have done the same thing,"
the consultant said, "but intelligence professionals are
always aghast when Presidents ask for stuff in the raw. They see
it as asking a second grader to read 'Ulysses.' "
HUMINT
can be difficult to assess. Some of the most politically significant-and
most inaccurate-intelligence about Iraq's alleged weapons of mass
destruction came from an operative, known as Curveball, who was
initially supplied to the C.I.A. by German intelligence. But the
Pentagon consultant insisted that, in this case, "the Israeli
intelligence is apparently very strong." He said that the
information about the trigger device had been buttressed by another
form of highly classified data, known as MASINT, for "measuring
and signature" intelligence. The Defense Intelligence Agency
is the central processing and dissemination point for such intelligence,
which includes radar, radio, nuclear, and electro-optical data.
The consultant said that the MASINT indicated activities that
"are not consistent with the programs" Iran has declared
to the I.A.E.A. "The intelligence suggests far greater sophistication
and more advanced development," the consultant said. "The
indications don't make sense, unless they're farther along in
some aspects of their nuclear-weapons program than we know."
In early 2004,
John Bolton, who was then the Under-Secretary of State for Arms
Control (he is now the United Nations Ambassador), privately conveyed
to the I.A.E.A. suspicions that Iran was conducting research into
the intricately timed detonation of conventional explosives needed
to trigger a nuclear warhead at Parchin, a sensitive facility
twenty miles southeast of Tehran that serves as the center of
Iran's Defense Industries Organization. A wide array of chemical
munitions and fuels, as well as advanced antitank and ground-to-air
missiles, are manufactured there, and satellite imagery appeared
to show a bunker suitable for testing very large explosions.
A senior diplomat
in Vienna told me that, in response to the allegations, I.A.E.A.
inspectors went to Parchin in November of 2005, after months of
negotiation. An inspection team was allowed to single out a specific
site at the base, and then was granted access to a few buildings
there. "We found no evidence of nuclear materials,"
the diplomat said. The inspectors looked hard at an underground
explosive-testing pit that, he said, "resembled what South
Africa had when it developed its nuclear weapons," three
decades ago. The pit could have been used for the kind of kinetic
research needed to test a nuclear trigger. But, like so many military
facilities with dual-use potential, "it also could be used
for other things," such as testing fuel for rockets, which
routinely takes place at Parchin. "The Iranians have demonstrated
that they can enrich uranium," the diplomat added, "and
trigger tests without nuclear yield can be done. But it's a very
sophisticated process-it's also known as hydrodynamic testing-and
only countries with suitably advanced nuclear testing facilities
as well as the necessary scientific expertise can do it. I'd be
very skeptical that Iran could do it."
Earlier this
month, the allegations about Parchin reëmerged when Yediot
Ahronot, Israel's largest newspaper, reported that recent satellite
imagery showed new "massive construction" at Parchin,
suggesting an expansion of underground tunnels and chambers. The
newspaper sharply criticized the I.A.E.A.'s inspection process
and its director, Dr. Mohamed ElBaradei, for his insistence on
"using very neutral wording for his findings and his conclusions."
Patrick
Clawson, an expert on Iran who is the deputy director for research
at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a conservative
think tank, told me that the "biggest moment" of tension
has yet to arrive: "How does the United States keep an Israeli
decision point-one that may come sooner than we want-from being
reached?" Clawson noted that there is evidence that Iran
has been slowed by technical problems in the construction and
operation of two small centrifuge cascades, which are essential
for the pilot production of enriched uranium. Both are now under
I.A.E.A. supervision. "Why were they so slow in getting the
second cascade up and running?" Clawson asked. "And
why haven't they run the first one as much as they said they would?
Do we have more time?
"Why
talk about war?" he said. "We're not talking about going
to war with North Korea or Venezuela. It's not necessarily the
case that Iran has started a weapons program, and it's conceivable-just
conceivable-that Iran does not have a nuclear-weapons program
yet. We can slow them down-force them to reinvent the wheel-without
bombing, especially if the international conditions get better."
Clawson added
that Secretary of State Rice has "staked her reputation on
diplomacy, and she will not risk her career without evidence.
Her team is saying, 'What's the rush?' The President wants to
solve the Iranian issue before leaving office, but he may have
to say, 'Darn, I wish I could have solved it.' "
Earlier this
year, the government of Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert created
a task force to coördinate all the available intelligence
on Iran. The task force, which is led by Major General Eliezer
Shkedi, the head of the Israeli Air Force, reports directly to
the Prime Minister. In late October, Olmert appointed Ephraim
Sneh, a Labor Party member of the Knesset, to serve as Deputy
Defense Minister. Sneh, who served previously in that position
under Ehud Barak, has for years insisted that action be taken
to prevent Iran from getting the bomb. In an interview this month
with the Jerusalem Post, Sneh expressed skepticism about the effectiveness
of diplomacy or international sanctions in curbing Iran:
The danger
isn't as much Ahmadinejad's deciding to launch an attack but Israel's
living under a dark cloud of fear from a leader committed to its
destruction. . . . Most Israelis would prefer not to live here;
most Jews would prefer not to come here with families, and Israelis
who can live abroad will . . . I am afraid Ahmadinejad will be
able to kill the Zionist dream without pushing a button. That's
why we must prevent this regime from obtaining nuclear capability
at all costs.
A similar
message was delivered by Benjamin Netanyahu, the Likud leader,
in a speech in Los Angeles last week. "It's 1938 and Iran
is Germany. And Iran is racing to arm itself with atomic bombs,"
he said, adding that there was "still time" to stop
the Iranians.
The Pentagon
consultant told me that, while there may be pressure from the
Israelis, "they won't do anything on their own without our
green light." That assurance, he said, "comes from the
Cheney shop. It's Cheney himself who is saying, 'We're not going
to leave you high and dry, but don't go without us.' " A
senior European diplomat agreed: "For Israel, it is a question
of life or death. The United States does not want to go into Iran,
but, if Israel feels more and more cornered, there may be no other
choice."
A nuclear-armed
Iran would not only threaten Israel. It could trigger a strategic-arms
race throughout the Middle East, as Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and
Egypt-all led by Sunni governments-would be compelled to take
steps to defend themselves. The Bush Administration, if it does
take military action against Iran, would have support from Democrats
as well as Republicans. Senators Hillary Clinton, of New York,
and Evan Bayh, of Indiana, who are potential Democratic Presidential
candidates, have warned that Iran cannot be permitted to build
a bomb and that-as Clinton said earlier this year-"we cannot
take any option off the table." Howard Dean, the chairman
of the Democratic National Committee, has also endorsed this view.
Last May, Olmert was given a rousing reception when he addressed
a joint session of Congress and declared, "A nuclear Iran
means a terrorist state could achieve the primary mission for
which terrorists live and die-the mass destruction of innocent
human life. This challenge, which I believe is the test of our
time, is one the West cannot afford to fail."
Despite
such rhetoric, Leslie Gelb, a former State Department official
who is a president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations,
said he believes that, "when push comes to shove, the Israelis
will have a hard time selling the idea that an Iranian nuclear
capability is imminent. The military and the State Department
will be flat against a preëmptive bombing campaign."
Gelb said he hoped that Gates's appointment would add weight to
America's most pressing issue-"to get some level of Iranian
restraint inside Iraq. In the next year or two, we're much more
likely to be negotiating with Iran than bombing it."
The
Bush Administration remains publicly committed to a diplomatic
solution to the Iranian nuclear impasse, and has been working
with China, Russia, France, Germany, and Britain to get negotiations
under way. So far, that effort has foundered; the most recent
round of talks broke up early in November, amid growing disagreements
with Russia and China about the necessity of imposing harsh United
Nations sanctions on the Iranian regime. President Bush is adamant
that Iran must stop all of its enrichment programs before any
direct talks involving the United States can begin.
The senior
European diplomat told me that the French President, Jacques Chirac,
and President Bush met in New York on September 19th, as the new
U.N. session was beginning, and agreed on what the French called
the "Big Bang" approach to breaking the deadlock with
Iran. A scenario was presented to Ali Larijani, the chief Iranian
negotiator on nuclear issues. The Western delegation would sit
down at a negotiating table with Iran. The diplomat told me, "We
would say, 'We're beginning the negotiations without preconditions,'
and the Iranians would respond, 'We will suspend.' Our side would
register great satisfaction, and the Iranians would agree to accept
I.A.E.A. inspection of their enrichment facilities. And then the
West would announce, in return, that they would suspend any U.N.
sanctions." The United States would not be at the table when
the talks began but would join later. Larijani took the offer
to Tehran; the answer, as relayed by Larijani, was no, the diplomat
said. "We were trying to compromise, for all sides, but Ahmadinejad
did not want to save face," the diplomat said. "The
beautiful scenario has gone nowhere."
Last week,
there was a heightened expectation that the Iraq Study Group would
produce a set of recommendations that could win bipartisan approval
and guide America out of the quagmire in Iraq. Sources with direct
knowledge of the panel's proceedings have told me that the group,
as of mid-November, had ruled out calling for an immediate and
complete American withdrawal but would recommend focussing on
the improved training of Iraqi forces and on redeploying American
troops. In the most significant recommendation, Baker and Hamilton
were expected to urge President Bush to do what he has thus far
refused to do-bring Syria and Iran into a regional conference
to help stabilize Iraq.
It is not
clear whether the Administration will be receptive. In August,
according to the former senior intelligence official, Rumsfeld
asked the Joint Chiefs to quietly devise alternative plans for
Iraq, to preëmpt new proposals, whether they come from the
new Democratic majority or from the Iraq Study Group. "The
option of last resort is to move American forces out of the cities
and relocate them along the Syrian and Iranian border," the
former official said. "Civilians would be hired to train
the Iraqi police, with the eventual goal of separating the local
police from the Iraqi military. The White House believes that
if American troops stay in Iraq long enough-with enough troops-the
bad guys will end up killing each other, and Iraqi citizens, fed
up with internal strife, will come up with a solution. It'll take
a long time to move the troops and train the police. It's a time
line to infinity."
In a subsequent
interview, the former senior Bush Administration official said
that he had also been told that the Pentagon has been at work
on a plan in Iraq that called for a military withdrawal from the
major urban areas to a series of fortified bases near the borders.
The working assumption was that, with the American troops gone
from the most heavily populated places, the sectarian violence
would "burn out." "The White House is saying it's
going to stabilize," the former senior Administration official
said, "but it may stabilize the wrong way."
One
problem with the proposal that the Administration enlist Iran
in reaching a settlement of the conflict in Iraq is that it's
not clear that Iran would be interested, especially if the goal
is to help the Bush Administration extricate itself from a bad
situation.
"Iran
is emerging as a dominant power in the Middle East," I was
told by a Middle East expert and former senior Administration
official. "With a nuclear program, and an ability to interfere
throughout the region, it's basically calling the shots. Why should
they coöperate with us over Iraq?" He recounted a recent
meeting with Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who challenged Bush's right
to tell Iran that it could not enrich uranium. "Why doesn't
America stop enriching uranium?" the Iranian President asked.
He laughed, and added, "We'll enrich it for you and sell
it to you at a fifty-per-cent discount."
Copyright
© 2006 The New Yorker
Scott Sullivan is
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