Dead-End Talks with Iran a Success? (COMMENTARY MAGAZINE) Max Boot 06/21/12)
Source: http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2012/06/21/dead-end-talks-with-iran-a-success/
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The talks with Iran have now concluded, at least for the time being,
after meetings in Istanbul, Baghdad and, most recently, Moscow that
failed to make any substantive progress. The Iranians showed no
willingness to give up their nuclear weapons program or even to admit
its existence. This might cause some observers to write off the talks
as a failure. Au contraire. They were a major success, if you assume
(as I do, cynically) that their major goal was not to stop the
Iranian nuclear program but to stop (or at least delay beyond
November) an Israeli strike on Iran.
Only a few months ago talk was reaching fever-pitch about the
likelihood of an Israeli strike this summer, calculated to occur at a
time when President Obama would be forced to back Israel if only to
avoid losing pro-Israel votes in the election. Now the conventional
wisdom is that, as the Wall Street Journal puts it, “Israel is
unlikely to launch a strike on Iran as long as sanctions on Tehran
intensify and diplomatic efforts continue, despite the failure of
international talks in Moscow this week.” The article quotes an
unnamed Israeli official on the talks: “As long as the international
community is willing to continue, Israel won’t say, ‘Stop.’ That’s
unthinkable. If the negotiations don’t bring Iran to concessions, at
least there will be a clear-cut case showing that Iran does not want
to cooperate.”
I have no way of reading President Obama’s mind and have no
connections to him (I’m a Romney defense adviser). But that, I bet,
is exactly what the president had in mind. He is seeking reelection,
after all, as the commander-in-chief who not only killed Osama bin
Laden but also “ended” the war in Iraq and is in the process
of “ending” the war in Afghanistan. It would be mighty inconvenient
for his narrative if, prior to the voting, the U.S. were to become
embroiled in another war. That helps to explain why he is so
reluctant to intervene in Syria–and why he is so eager to keep Israel
from bombing Iran, which could well involve the U.S. in hostilities
in the Persian Gulf.
So from the president’s perspective, pushing the Iranian problem down
the road makes sense. (In fairness, his much more hawkish
predecessor, George W. Bush, took much the same approach if for a
different reason–having gotten the U.S. embroiled in wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, he could not afford politically to have come off as the
warmonger-in-chief by starting another war in Iran.) But if one
ignores the politics and focuses solely on the underlying substance,
the reality is that Iran is moving ever-closer to acquiring nuclear
weapons and these dead-end talks have abetted the mullahs’ goals.
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