With lunatics in charge of Iran since 1979, everyone in the West has been sceptical of anything Iran does and says, not least its claim that its nuclear power program is for peaceful energy production only. Everyone knows that president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (who was forced out of office in 2013) wanted Israel wiped off the map and that he saw his nuclear arms intentions as the means of doing that.
As noted earlier, however, the problems in the Middle East aren't confined to Muslim-Jewish conflict, but also involve sectarian Muslim conflict between the Sunnis and the Shiites (Iran is predominately Shiite) -- and both are equally violent. Nuclear weapons development in the region has to be prevented.
The following piece arrived in our in-box today and it is reproduced without comment, simply because it represents a detailed viewpoint, which is certain to be debated over the next few months.
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The nuclear agreement with Iran announced Tuesday is an astoundingly good deal,
far surpassing the hopes of anyone . . . in Tehran. It requires Iran to reduce
the number of centrifuges enriching uranium by about half, to sell most of its
current uranium stockpile or “downblend” it to lower levels of enrichment, and
to accept inspections (whose precise nature is yet to be specified) by the
International Atomic Energy Agency, something that Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
had wanted to avoid.
But the agreement also permits Iran to
phase out the first-generation centrifuges on which it now relies and focus its
research and development by exclusively using a number of advanced centrifuge
models many times more efficient, which has been Tehran’s plan all along. The
deal will also entirely end the United Nations’ involvement in Iran’s nuclear
program in 10 years, and in 15 years will lift most restrictions on the program.
Even that, though, is not Tehran’s
biggest win. The main achievement of the regime’s negotiators is striking a deal
that commits the West to removing almost all sanctions on Iran, including most
of those imposed to reduce terrorism or to prevent weapons proliferation. Most
of the sanctions are likely to end in a few months. Thus the agreement ensures
that after a short delay Iran will be able to lay the groundwork for a large
nuclear arsenal and, in the interim, expand its conventional military
capabilities as much as the regime pleases. The supreme leader should be very
proud of his team.
The agreement consists of 159 pages of
opaque prose, and key sections are referred to but are not clearly marked. Even
figuring out the timeline embodied in the deal is hard, but it appears to run
about as follows:
“Finalization Day” was July 14. The
agreement stipulates that a resolution will be submitted to the United Nations
Security Council “promptly after the conclusion of the negotiations . . . for
adoption without delay” that will “terminate” all preceding U.N. Security
Council resolutions against Iran. The document doesn’t mention the 60-day window
for review by the U.S. Congress, and the language in this section suggests that
action in the U.N. will not await any congressional vote.
“Adoption Day” is the next major
milestone, coming either 90 days after the approval of the Security Council
resolution or “at an earlier date by mutual consent.” If the Security Council
moves smartly, Adoption Day could come in October. At that point Iran commits to
apply the Additional Protocol of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which
governs enhanced international inspections. But this commitment is provisional,
“pending ratification by the Majlis”—the Iranian parliament. It is again
noteworthy that no mention is made of any action to be taken by the U.S.
Congress, despite the nod to Iran’s legislature.
Determining when “Implementation Day”
happens is even more difficult, since it depends on the completion of a series
of negotiations between Iran and the International Atomic Energy Agency. The
timeline for those negotiations, however, is spelled out in a separate document:
Discussions are to be complete by Oct. 15, 2015, and the IAEA director general
will submit a final report to his board of governors by Dec. 15.
Iran at this point will be rewarded.
The European Union will end a large number sanctions; President Obama will issue
waivers for a number of U.S. sanctions or rescind the executive orders that
imposed them. Iranian banks will be allowed back into the Society for Worldwide
Interbank Financial Telecommunications system, or Swift, allowing Iran to
reintegrate into the dollar economy and move money freely.
The agreement also specifies that the
EU will lift sanctions against the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps; the Quds
Force and possibly its commander, Maj. Gen. Qasem Soleimani; and a large number
of other individuals and entities sanctioned not simply for their roles in the
nuclear program but for terrorism and human-rights abuses. This sanctions relief
will come by 2023 at the latest. The agreement does not appear to oblige the
U.S. to lift sanctions on those people and entities.
The survival of the international arms
embargo against Iran, however, depends entirely on the U.N. Security Council
resolution passed to implement this agreement. Nothing in the text of the
agreement itself supports President Obama’s assertion that the embargo will last
for another five years, although he may have that time frame in mind.
The current embargo was implemented by
two resolutions: No. 1696 (2006) and No. 1929 (2010). The first bars the sale or
transfer to Iran of any material or technology that might be useful to a
ballistic-missile program, and the second does the same for “battle tanks,
armored combat vehicles, large caliber artillery systems, combat aircraft,
attack helicopters, warships, missiles, or missile systems.”
A new resolution that simply terminates
all of the previous sanctions would allow Russia and China to provide Iran with
any military technology they choose. To preserve the embargo, the U.S. would
need to add the appropriate language to the resolution that must be passed by
the Security Council this summer. But that means getting agreement from the
Russians, who have already said that the embargo should be ended immediately.
The U.S. is not in a very strong position to engage the Russians on this point,
since the Obama administration must get the resolution through the Security
Council quickly or risk having the entire nuclear deal fall
apart.
Experts will debate the value of the
concessions Iran has made on the nuclear front, but the value to Iran of the
concessions the U.S. has made on nonnuclear issues is immeasurable. It is hard
to imagine any other circumstance under which Tehran could have hoped to get an
international, U.N. Security Council-backed commitment to remove the Republican
Guard and Quds Force from any sanctions list, or to have the fate of the arms
embargo placed in the hands of Vladimir Putin.
It is still more remarkable that the
agreement says nothing about Iran’s terrorist activities, human-rights
violations or role in regional weapons proliferation—all of which were drivers
of the embargo in the first place. Iran makes no commitment to change its
terrorist or oppressive ways, but the international community promises to
eliminate those sanctions anyway.
Nor is there much mystery about what
Iran will do with these concessions. Tehran has recently concluded an agreement
giving Syria’s Bashar Assad a $1 billion line of credit. The Iranian regime has
announced that it is preparing to take delivery of the Russian S-300
antiaircraft missile system. The supreme leader has released a five-year
economic plan calling for a significant expansion of Iran’s ballistic-missile
and cyberwar programs and an increase in Iran’s defense
capabilities.
The Obama administration seems to be
betting that lifting sanctions will cause Iran to moderate its behavior in both
nuclear and nonnuclear matters. The rhetoric and actions of the regime’s leaders
provide little evidence to support this notion and much evidence to the
contrary. The likelihood is, therefore, that this agreement will lead to a
significant expansion in the capabilities of the Iranian military, including the
Republican Guard and the Quds Force. It comes just as Iran is straining to keep
Bashar Assad in power, dominate the portions of Iraq not controlled by Islamic
State and help the Houthis fight Saudi Arabia in Yemen. That makes it a very
good deal for Iran.
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