|
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com/
- 19 April 2006 - For
the conservative hardliners who direct
America’s foreign policy, a looming war with
Iran is the result of their having
mollycoddled the mullahs in Tehran.
“One
of President George W. Bush’s most senior
foreign policy advisers” startled listeners
last week, the New York Times
reports, with the assertion that “the
problem is that our policy has been all
carrots and no sticks.”
All carrots? No sticks?
What can these people be talking about?
From almost the day
President Bush took office, dialogue even with
constructive elements in Iran has been off the
table.
The administration
slammed the brakes on the cautious movement
toward discreet post-9/11 cooperation against
a common enemy -- al Qaeda and its Taliban
clients in Afghanistan -- when the president
branded Iran the fulcrum of his imagined
“Axis of Evil.”
Thus did the United
States halt the tortuous movement, facilitated
by a reformist presidency in Iran, to ratchet
down a quarter-century of hostilities --
hostilities that grew out of the previous
quarter-century of autocracy installed by
American-engineered “regime change” in
Iran.
After a slow minuet
between the governments of Bill Clinton and
Mohammad Khatami, trying to find convergent
interests in places like the United Nations,
re-empowered conservatives in the United
States were back to talking about . . . regime
change in Iran.
Even before the
intoxicating success of an easily accomplished
mission in Iraq, conservative strategists were
crowing that “real men” had their eyes on
Tehran.
Far from looking for ways
to help embattled Iranian moderates show
concrete results for a cautious opening to the
West, Washington hardliners bet on ultimately
bringing down the Islamic regime.
Why settle for tinkering
reforms?
For three years, the
United States has been calling for UN
sanctions against Iran’s nuclear energy
program, threatened to stop shipping bound for
Iran to search for potential nuclear materiel,
and hinted at military “surgery” amid
nostalgic reminiscences of the Israeli attack
on Iraq’s Osirak reactor.
The administration never
suggested bilateral talks that could lead to
diplomatic relations.
Indeed, after its
saber-rattling alarmed the Europeans, it only
grudgingly acquiesced in a European-led
initiative aimed at keeping Iran’s nuclear
program from proceeding to weaponization.
Even as the
administration’s political project in Iraq
unraveled, it continued to resist including
Iran in discussions to guarantee Iraq’s
future.
It is not as if the
United States did not have some real carrots
to offer in a negotiation.
It has still not released
to Iran the assets President Carter froze as
leverage -- ultimately successful -- to force
release of the U.S. diplomats taken hostage in
1979.
As part of a
normalization agreement, it could lift
economic sanctions that inconvenience, though
hardly cripple, Iran’s international
trade.
It could support a
timetable for a nuclear-free Middle East, a
goal that a friendly Egypt has doggedly
promoted for years.
Of course, with enfeebled
moderates now replaced by hardline
conservatives in Tehran (as in Washington),
the politics have become much more
complicated:
It would be awkward to
strike terms with an Iranian leadership that
some UN inspectors privately call
“nutcases—one hundred percent totally
certified nuts,” as Seymour Hersh relates,
when Washington declined to deal with more
pragmatic Iranians.
But our own hardliners’
public brandishing of military sticks has
already weakened the U.S. case and undermined
international willingness to squeeze
Iran.
Indeed, the apparent
determination by conservative policymakers in
Washington to threaten Iranians with attack by
nuclear weapons is perhaps the
biggest boon to the Islamist forces around
President Mahmoud Ahmedinajad—and the most
potent threat to America’s nonproliferation
goals.
A threat by a nuclear
weapons state to use them legitimizes any
other country’s effort to acquire them.
The Joint Chiefs of
Staff, Hersh reports, strenuously resist the
nuclear option.
But with a new generation
of Dr. Strangeloves roosting inside the
administration, it will be hard for the
president to foreswear the threat of nuclear
attack—and thus impossible to maintain any
international coalition behind him.
The risks of Iran
acquiring a nuclear arsenal are still a decade
away; those of nuclear warfare, much more
immediate.
These are not just
concerns of the international community beyond
our shores. A large and growing share of
Americans share them as well.
Barely a third of the
public would support military action against
Iran over its nuclear program (and that is
before the likely cost in escalating gasoline
prices).
Meanwhile, the Congress
would do well to review the War Powers Act, as
well as the United Nations Charter, and remind
the president where the authority lies to
initiate an act of war -- and to punish it.
JeffreyLaurenti@MaximsNews.com
MaximsNews
Columns by Jeffrey Laurenti
IRAN:
CARROTS AND STICKS!!!
Avoiding
Defeat on Human Rights
Congressman
John Murtha on Iraq War
A
Security Council Numbers Game: All Bets Off
Bolton:
A New UN Phenomenon
Jeffrey Laurenti is a senior fellow in
international affairs at The Century
Foundation. He is an expert in
international security, international law and
multilateral institutions.
He
is the author of numerous monographs on
international peace and security, terrorism,
U.N. reform, and international narcotics
policy. He has authored articles for The
Christian Science Monitor, The Washington
Post, Chicago Tribune, New York Newsday, and
the Los Angeles Times, and international
policy journals.
As
a senior advisor to the United Nations
Foundation, Laurenti has served as deputy
director of the United Nations and Global
Security initiative the foundation
established, with backing from The Century
Foundation, to support the debate on
international security of the High-Level Panel
on Threats, Challenges, and Change
commissioned by the United Nations
Secretary-General.
Laurenti
was executive director of policy studies at
the United Nations Association of the United
States until 2003, currently serves on the
Association’s Board of Directors, and also
is a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations.
He
was candidate for the US House of
Representatives in 1986, senior issues advisor
to the Mondale/Ferraro campaign and from 1978
to 1984, was Executive Director of the New
Jersey Senate. Previously, he was a program
officer for The Century Foundation, then the
Twentieth Century Fund.
Jeffrey
Laurenti is a Contributor to MaximsNews.com.
|