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Analysis: Iranian Quickstep: 1 Step Forward, 2 Steps Back (Guest Voice)

Analysis: Iranian Quickstep: 1 Step Forward, 2 Steps Back
By Jonathan Spyer

Latest Ahmadinejad statement suggests that Teheran still believes it can find a few partners for the dance it has been performing since 2003.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad this week told Iranian state television that “we have no problem sending our enriched uranium abroad.”

In so doing, Ahmadinejad appeared to agree to the long-standing plan for the export of the greater part of Iran’s enriched uranium stocks.

Recent experience with the diplomatic methods of the Islamic Republic of Iran suggests that this statement is the latest instance of Teheran’s favored approach to diplomacy. The Iranian tendency is to seek to offset confrontation at the 11th hour by appearing to show flexibility. Once crisis is averted, the regime relies on differences over the details to make sure that nothing actually happens. It is the diplomacy of one step forward, two steps back. Thus is further time bought for the Iranian nuclear program.

The hitherto seemingly inexhaustible international patience at Iranian maneuvering, meanwhile, has recently been showing signs of at last wearing thin. British Prime Minister Gordon Brown is the latest convert to the cause of renewed sanctions. Brown said on Tuesday that “What we now, I think, have to do is accept that if Iran will not make some indication that it will take action – we have got to proceed with sanctions.”

It remains to be seen if the latest Iranian move will revive the spirits of the advocates of “engagement.” Ahmadinejad’s statement relates to the IAEA proposal that Iran should ship its low-enriched uranium abroad, where it would be converted into fuel rods for an Iranian research reactor producing medical isotopes.

The purpose of the IAEA proposal was to call Iran’s bluff. Iran has long claimed that its nuclear program is for purely peaceful purposes. Very well, then, said the IAEA – let other countries take charge of converting Iranian low-grade uranium into material fit only for domestic use. Of course, this proposal depends on the assumption that the Iranians have been entirely honest in revealing all their supplies of enriched uranium. If they have not, and if a substantial amount remains outside of the purview of international observers, then the exercise becomes meaningless. Still, let us assume in this regard that the Islamic Republic of Iran’s well-known tendency toward honesty and transparency has prevailed, and that as such the proposal to export a large percentage of Iran’s known supplies of low enriched uranium is not entirely devoid of content.

In considering the seriousness or otherwise of Ahmadinejad’s statement, it is worth looking back to October last year, when the export proposal was first tabled. The apparent Iranian flexibility at that time came two weeks after the revelation of a secret uranium enrichment plant in the town of Qom on September 21. At the time, there was international excitement as Iranian representatives in Geneva agreed “in principle” with the proposal for the export of uranium. It was agreed that the details would be worked out at a subsequent meeting in Vienna.

That was on October 2. At the meeting in Vienna on October 19, the proposal was further clarified. A draft proposal was formulated. At the end of that month, Iran began to retreat from its apparent acceptance of the proposal. On November 18, Iranian Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki unambiguously rejected it in the following terms: “Definitely, Iran will not send its 3.5 percent-enriched fuel out.”

The tentative December “deadline” came and went. On January 20, Iran confirmed that it rejected the export proposal as formulated in Vienna.

In other words, a skeptic might conclude, the international anger resulting from the Qom revelation made a bit of momentary cooperation from Iran advisable. Once the moment had passed, normal service could be resumed. The Iranian parliament and Guardian Council a week ago approved an Ahmadinejad endorsed bill to cut food and energy subsidies. The move, while significantly reducing government spending, stands to sharply increase prices and possibly lead to rising inflation. Political unrest is ongoing in Iran, and the regime is reported to be unnerved by the failure of its initial attempts at repression to douse the flame.

At such a moment, the last thing the regime needs is renewed sanctions. It is therefore an opportune moment for the reappearance of the reasonable Teheran of last October – to kick the ball down the road again for another few months.

Will the “international community” play ball? There are currently indications of a hardening US stance. A bill to target Iranian fuel imports is working its way through Congress. New sanctions may be discussed at the Security Council later this month. In the absence of renewed UNSC sanctions, the administration may set about trying to build a “coalition of the willing” for further moves against Iran.

But it is deeply questionable if any of this will prove sufficient to stop the Iranian nuclear drive.

Dr. Jonathan Spyer is a senior research fellow at the Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center, Herzliya, Israel. This is cross posted from that site.



2 Responses to “Analysis: Iranian Quickstep: 1 Step Forward, 2 Steps Back (Guest Voice)”

  1. JSpencer says:

    Any actions taken that inadverdently result in weakening the forces of unrest in Iran currently opposing Ahmadinejad will backfire on the USA, even if it's an effort by a “coalition of the willing”. This is a scenario that demands intelligence and skillful manipulation, not military ventures or poorly thought out sanctions.

  2. nshirazi says:

    The entire premise of this article is completely bogus and based on either false or intentionally omitted information. What's missing is the basic point that Iran's nuclear energy program is wholly legal and, in fact, an “inalienable right” of any signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (to which Iran has been a party to for over four decades). Nothing Iran is doing is illegal – remember that.

    Incidentally, the author of the piece, Jonathan Spyer, is writing from Israel which is not an NPT signatory and yet has a stockpile of about 400 nuclear warheads (and a despicable 60+ year history of attacking, invading, and occupying other countries, along with rampant militarism, aggressive expansionism, institutionalized apartheid, and has consistently committed war crimes and crimes against humanity – conversely, Iran has not attacked any other country in over two centuries). Israel's nuclear weapons are undeclared and not subject to any sort of monitoring, inspection, or regulation. Iran, on the other hand, is subject to intrusive inspection by the IAEA and has never – I repeat, never – been found to have diverted even a single atom of their enriched uranium to any sort of weaponization. Unsurprisingly, this vital information is conveniently left out of this article.

    Additionally, the author claims that September 2009 saw the “revelation of a secret uranium enrichment plant in the town of Qom,” without stating the obvious: It was Iran itself that announced the existence of the Qom site to the IAEA four days before Obama “revealed” it! That's not much of a revelation since Iran did exactly what the NPT and the IAEA require: the disclosure of any new enrichment sites 180 days before any nuclear material is introduced to the site. Except Iran disclosed the site at least 18 months before it would become operational. What does that mean? Iran actually beat the legal deadline by at least a year. Hardly sounds like a “secret,” as Spyer and the rest of the bellicose media would have us believe.

    Furthermore, the “proposal” offered to Iran was completely ridiculous from the start. It demanded that Iran send about 75% of its current low-enriched (3%) stockpile out of the country and to be given the higher-enriched (approx. 20%) fuel rods in return, at some undetermined time in the future.

    (The higher-enriched uranium is for essential medical isotopes, which Iran needs for its Tehran Research Reactor, built with the assistance and cooperation of the US back in 1967. The isotopes are used for cancer treatment. Uranium must be enriched to a level of at least 90% before it can be weaponized and, not only is Iran disinterested in this capability as it has repeated ad nauseum for years now, but even today, during his daily White House briefing, spokesman Robert Gibbs let lip this little contradictory nugget: “We do not believe they have the capacity to enrich to the degree to which they say they are now enriching.” So wait, we should believe that Iran is steps away from a nuclear “break out” scenario of being able to enrich uranium to over 90% when the US doesn't even think it can enrich to about 20%? Gotcha.)

    In response to the draft proposal (note: it's called a “draft” because it's subject to negotiation and is not “final), Iran offered to send its LEU out of the country in batches, not all at once, in order to guarantee that the P5+1 would keep to its side of the arrangement. Giving your entire nuclear stockpile to a hegemonic community that has been demonizing, sanctioning, and threatening your country for over three decades isn't a reasonable decision for Iran. That should be clear to anyone who knows anything about history. However, the US et al. refused to even consider Iran's proposal and issued a “take it or leave it” ultimatum regarding the initial offer of “all or nothing,” with no guarantees. Iran, which has still agreed to an exchange proposal “in principle,” and is trying to work out a deal that will suit both sides of the agreement. It is the US and company that has stonewalled Iran and refused to actually negotiate on the terms. That doesn't sound like Iranian intransigence or “maneuvering,” but more like the pouty whines of a frustrated Empire that can't force a sovereign country to give up its rights and bow down to American/European dictates.

    There is more garbage in this piece that what I have noted, but I refuse to waste anymore of my time on this drivel. Please learn the facts and you will see that the US drive to war with Iran is built on entirely falsified and mischaracterized claims. Don't believe the hype.

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