US officials believe Iran sanctions will fail, making military action likely (GUARDIAN UK) Chris McGreal in Washington 02/18/12)
Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/feb/17/us-officials-iran-sanctions-military-action
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Growing view that strike, by Israel or US, will happen
´Sweet spot´ for Israeli action identified as September-October
White House remains determined to give sanctions time
Officials in key parts of the Obama administration are increasingly
convinced that sanctions will not deter Tehran from pursuing its
nuclear programme, and believe that the US will be left with no
option but to launch an attack on Iran or watch Israel do so.
The president has made clear in public, and in private to Israel,
that he is determined to give sufficient time for recent measures,
such as the financial blockade and the looming European oil embargo,
to bite deeper into Iran´s already battered economy before retreating
from its principal strategy to pressure Tehran.
But there is a strong current of opinion within the administration
including in the Pentagon and the state department that believes
sanctions are doomed to fail, and that their principal use now is in
delaying Israeli military action, as well as reassuring Europe that
an attack will only come after other means have been tested.
"The White House wants to see sanctions work. This is not the Bush
White House. It does not need another conflict," said an official
knowledgeable on Middle East policy. "Its problem is that the guys in
Tehran are behaving like sanctions don´t matter, like their economy
isn´t collapsing, like Israel isn´t going to do anything.
"Sanctions are all we´ve got to throw at the problem. If they fail
then it´s hard to see how we don´t move to the ´in extremis´ option."
The White House has said repeatedly that all options are on the
table, including the use of force to stop Iran obtaining a nuclear
weapon, but that for now the emphasis is firmly on diplomacy and
sanctions.
But long-held doubts among US officials about whether the Iranians
can be enticed or cajoled into serious negotiations have been
reinforced by recent events.
"We don´t see a way forward," said one official. "The record shows
that there is nothing to work with."
Scepticism about Iranian intent is rooted in Iran´s repeated spurning
of overtures from successive US presidents from Bill Clinton to
Barack Obama, who appealed within weeks of coming to office
for "constructive ties" and "mutual respect" .
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad´s claim this week that Iran loaded its
first domestically-made fuel rod into a nuclear reactor, and Iran´s
threat to cut oil supplies to six European countries, were read as
further evidence that Tehran remains defiantly committed to its
nuclear programme. That view was strengthened by the latest Iranian
offer to negotiate with the UN security council in a letter that
appeared to contain no significant new concessions.
If Obama were to conclude that there is no choice but to attack Iran,
he is unlikely to order it before the presidential election in
November unless there is an urgent reason to do so. The question is
whether the Israelis will hold back that long.
Earlier this month, the US defence secretary, Leon Panetta, told the
Washington Post that he thought the window for an Israeli attack on
Iran is between April and June. But other official analysts working
on Iran have identified what one described as a "sweet spot", where
the mix of diplomacy, political timetables and practical issues come
together to suggest that if Israel launches a unilateral assault it
is more likely in September or October, although they describe that
as a "best guess".
However, the Americans are uncertain as to whether Israel is serious
about using force if sanctions fail or has ratcheted up threats
primarily in order to pressure the US and Europeans in to stronger
action. For its part, the US is keen to ensure that Tehran does not
misinterpret a commitment to giving sanctions a chance to work as a
lack of willingness to use force as a last resort.
American officials are resigned to the fact that the US will be seen
in much of the world as a partner in any Israeli assault on Iran
whether or not Washington approved of it. The administration will
then have to decide whether to, in the parlance of the US
military, "pile on", by using its much greater firepower to finish
what Israel starts.
"The sanctions are there to pressure Iran and reassure Israel that we
are taking this issue seriously," said one official. "The focus is on
demonstrating to Israel that this has a chance of working. Israel is
sceptical but appreciates the effort. It is willing to give it a go,
but how long will it wait?"
Colin Kahl, who was US deputy assistant secretary of defence for the
Middle East until December, said: "With the European oil embargo and
US sanctions on the central bank, the Israelis probably have to give
some time now to let those crippling sanctions play out.
"If you look at the calendar, it doesn´t make much sense that the
Israelis would jump the gun. They probably need to provide a decent
interval for those sanctions to be perceived as failing, because they
care about whether an Israeli strike would be seen as philosophically
legitimate; that is, as only having happened after other options were
exhausted. So I think that will push them a little further into 2012."
The White House is working hard to keep alive the prospect that
sanctions will deliver a diplomatic solution. It has pressed the
Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, to quieten the
belligerent chatter from his own cabinet about an attack on Iran. The
chairman of the US joint chiefs of staff, general Martin Dempsey, was
dispatched to Jerusalem last month to talk up the effect of sanctions
and to press, unsuccessfully, for a commitment that Israel will not
launch a unilateral attack against Iran.
Dennis Ross, Obama´s former envoy for the Middle East and Iran, this
week said that sanctions may be pushing Tehran toward negotiations.
But in other parts of the administration, the assumption is that
sanctions will fail, and so calculations are being made about what
follows, including how serious Israel is in its threat to launch a
unilateral attack on Iran´s nuclear installations, and how the US
responds.
But Iran´s increasingly belligerent moves such as the botched
attempts, laid at Tehran´s door, to attack Israeli diplomats in
Thailand, India and Georgia are compounding the sense that Iran is
far from ready to negotiate.
Feeding in to the considerations are the timing of the American
election, including its bearing on Israeli thinking, as well as the
pace of Iranian advances in their nuclear programme.
Obama has publicly said that there are no differences with Israel on
Iran, describing his administration as in "lock step" with the Jewish
state.
But the US and Israel are at odds over the significance of Iran´s
claim to have begun enriching uranium at the underground facility at
Fordow, near the holy city of Qom, and therefore the timing of any
military action.
Israel´s defence minister, Ehud Barak, has warned that Iran cannot be
allowed to establish a "zone of immunity" at Fordow where it is able
to work on a nuclear weapon deep underground protected from Israel´s
conventional weapons. Earlier this month, Barak said Israel must
consider an attack before that happens.
The Americans say there is no such urgency because the facility is
just one among many Tehran needs to build a nuclear weapon, and that
other sites are still vulnerable to attack and sabotage in other
ways. The US also has a more powerful military arsenal, although it
is not clear whether it would be able to destroy the underground
Fordow facility.
Kahl said part of Washington´s calculation is to judge whether Israel
is seriously contemplating attacking Iran, or is using the threat to
pressure the US and Europe into confronting Tehran.
"It´s not that the Israelis believe the Iranians are on the brink of
a bomb. It´s that the Israelis may fear that the Iranian programme is
on the brink of becoming out of reach of an Israeli military strike,
which means it creates a ´now-or-never´ moment," he said.
"That´s what´s actually driving the timeline by the middle of this
year. But there´s a countervailing factor that [Ehud] Barak has
mentioned that they´re not very close to making a decision and that
they´re also trying to ramp up concerns of an Israeli strike to drive
the international community towards putting more pressure on the
Iranians."
Israeli pressure for tougher measures against Tehran played a leading
role in the US Congresss passing sanctions legislation targeting
Iran´s financial system and oil sales. Some US and European officials
say those same sanctions have also become a means for Washington to
pressure Israel not to act precipitously in attacking Iran.
The presidential election is also a part of Israel´s calculation, not
least the fractious relationship between Obama and Netanyahu, who has
little reason to do the US president any political favours and has
good reason to prefer a Republican in the White House next year.
There is a school of thought a suspicion, even within the
administration that Netanyahu might consider the height of the US
election campaign the ideal time to attack Iran. With a hawkish
Republican candidate ever ready to accuse him of weakness, Obama´s
room to pressure or oppose Netanyahu would be more limited than after
the election.
"One theory is that Netanyahu and Barak may calculate that if Obama
doesn´t support an Israeli strike, he´s unlikely to punish Israel for
taking unilateral action in a contested election year," said
Kahl. "Doing something before the US gives the Israelis a bit more
freedom of manoeuvre."
Obama is also under domestic political pressure from Republican
presidential contenders, who accuse him of vacillating on Iran, and
from a Congress highly sympathetic to Israel´s more confrontational
stance.
Thirty-two senators from both parties introduced a resolution on
Thursday rejecting "any policy that would rely on efforts
to ´contain´ a nuclear weapons-capable Iran". The measure was dressed
up as intended to protect the president´s back, but it smacked of yet
more pressure to take a firmer stand with Iran.
One of the sponsors, senator Joe Lieberman, said that he did not want
to discount diplomatic options but if the president ordered an attack
on Iran he would have strong bipartisan support in Congress. Other
senators said there needed to be a greater sense of urgency on the
part of the administration in dealing with Iran and that sanctions
are not enough.
Others are critical of sanctions for a different reason. Congressman
Dennis Kucinich said this week he fears sanctions are less about
changing Tehran´s policy than laying the ground for military action.
He warned that "the latest drum beat of additional sanctions and war
against Iran sounds too much like the lead-up to the Iraq war".
"If the crippling sanctions that the US and Europe have imposed are
meant to push the Iranian regime to negotiations, it hasn´t worked,"
he said. "As the war of words between the United States and Iran
escalates it´s more critical than ever that we highlight alternatives
to war to avoid the same mistakes made in Iraq." (guardian.co.uk ©
Guardian News and Media Limited 2012 02/18/12)
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