Iran’s Latest ‘Last Chance’ (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Jacob Laksin 04/10/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/04/10/irans-latest-last-chance/
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After years of failed talks, the international community has come up
with a familiar strategy to halt Iran’s rapidly growing nuclear
program: more talks.
On April 14, UN Security Council members Britain, China, France,
Russia, and the United States, along with Germany, will hold the
latest round of talks with Tehran over its nuclear program. As in
previous versions of these negotiations, the goal will be to convince
Iran to scale back its uranium enrichment program, and with it its
drive for a nuclear weapon. As in the past, too, there is little
evidence that Iran has come to the negotiating table in good faith.
The last time that the so-called P5+1 powers held talks with Iran, in
January 2011, the talks collapsed in an impasse. Despite a warning
from President Obama that the upcoming talks represent “perhaps the
last chance” for diplomacy to succeed, early signs suggest that this
outcome is likely to be repeated. Not only did Iran
reject “preconditions” for the talks, but it could barely bring
itself to agree on a venue for holding them.
Substantively, too, Iran is offering little in the way of compromise.
Iran’s nuclear chief, Fereidoun Abbasi, recently announced that Iran
could eventually stop its enrichment of uranium to the 20-percent
level, the highest level acknowledged by Iran, even as it would
continue to enrich uranium to lower levels of about 3.5 percent for
the purpose of generating power. On the surface at least, this is
supposed to address international concerns that Iran could continue
to increase its enrichment toward the more than 90-percent level
required for a nuclear warhead.
Yet there is less to this concession than meets the eye. Iran’s
insistence on keeping some level of enriched uranium is already a
hardening of its negotiating stance from 2009, when it agreed “in
principle” to export most of its low-enriched uranium in exchange for
foreign-made fuel rods. Today, Iran has reneged on that position,
refusing to transfer enriched uranium out of the country. Not only
that but last month it made a defiant display of inserting its first
domestically made fuel rod into a research reactor in northern
Tehran. The point was to show that Iran is fully capable of carrying
out the cycle of nuclear production on its own and in the face of
international pressure and sanctions.
Iran has also spurned demands another that it shutter its underground
enrichment facilities. Just this week, Iran announced that it would
not close its heavily fortified Fordo nuclear site. The site is built
in tunnels deep inside a mountain located about 20 mules from the
city of Qom, thus making it less vulnerable to destruction from bomb
strikes. Recent revelations that Iran has begun enriching uranium at
Fordo have further heightened concern that, left unchecked, it could
become the birthplace of Iran’s nuclear bomb.
That concern is particularly grave given Iran’s recent announcement
that it has powerful new centrifuges that allow it to enrich uranium
even faster, a move that could see Iran complete a nuclear bomb in a
matter of months. The news comes just as the annual CIA report to
Congress makes clear that Iran in the past year has expanded its
nuclear program, building new infrastructure an forging ahead with
uranium enrichment. The CIA’s conclusion is in line with the
International Atomic Energy Agency’s February report that Iran is
rapidly expanding its enrichment efforts. In its Natanz uranium
enrichment facility alone, according to the IAEA, Iran increased the
number of nuclear centrifuges from 6,000 last fall to 9,000 today.
All the available evidence suggests that Iran has not been deterred
from pursuing its nuclear project. Given that reality, Israeli
officials have pushed for a more aggressive response to Iran’s
nuclear activities than the talks that have failed in the past. In
Israel assessment, Iran is nearing a “zone of immunity” that could
see Iran complete its nuclear program inside bunkered facilities
beyond the reach of Israeli bombs, rendering any Israeli response in
vain. At that point, there would be no stopping Iran from obtaining a
nuclear weapon.
The Obama administration’s view is that point has not yet been
reached. The administration claims that U.S. intelligence will
clearly signal when Iran has decided to move from the enrichment
phase toward a full-fledged nuclear weapon. Considering the track
record of U.S. intelligence in recent years, that confidence seems
excessive at best. Nonetheless, the administration this week is
championing what it calls an “intelligence surge” inside Iran, part
of a continuing effort to expand surveillance and intelligence
gathering inside Iran. But however worthwhile, such intelligence is
not faultless. Many intelligence experts caution that Iran has become
increasingly skillful at hiding its nuclear program, particularly now
that it has more powerful centrifuges that can enrich uranium in
smaller facilities.
Ultimately, the major problem with this week’s talks is not that they
are unlikely to be successful, although that seems almost certain.
Rather, it is that, as in the past, they will afford Iran more time
to make continued progress with a nuclear program that it has no
intention of stopping. Absent the credible prospect of a military
response, Iran will have little reason to think that the latest “last
chance” of diplomacy will really be the last. (Copyright © 2012
FrontPageMagazine.com 04/10/12)
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