Have the multinational ruling classes who fear energy costs going out
of control finally spoken? Washington's offer to Tehran has
significantly improved.

<blockquote>The confidential diplomatic package backed by Washington
and formally presented to Iran on Tuesday leaves open the possibility
that Tehran will be able to enrich uranium on its own soil, U.S. and
European officials said.

That concession, along with a promise of U.S. assistance for an
Iranian civilian nuclear energy program, is conditioned on Tehran
suspending its current nuclear work until the U.N.'s International
Atomic Energy Agency determines with confidence that the program is
peaceful. U.S. officials said Iran would also need to satisfy the U.N.
Security Council that it is not seeking a nuclear weapon, a benchmark
that White House officials believe could take years, if not decades,
to achieve.

But the Bush administration and its European allies have withdrawn
their demand that Iran abandon any hope of enriching uranium for
nuclear power, according to several European and U.S. officials with
knowledge of the offer. The new position, which has not been
acknowledged publicly by the White House, differs significantly from
the Bush administration's stated determination to prevent Iran from
mastering technology that could be used to develop nuclear weapons.
(Karl Vick and Dafna Linzer, "Proposal Would Let Iran Enrich Uranium:
Tehran Must Meet U.N. Guidelines," Washington Post, 7 June 2006,
A01)</blockquote>

Tehran may be able to extract even more concessions, if Washington
continues to fail to manufacture multinational ruling-class consensus.
That will be a significant challenge to Tel Aviv, as Trita Parsi
explained earlier this year:

<blockquote>Instead, the real danger a nuclear-capable Iran brings
with it for Israel is twofold. First, an Iran that does not have
nuclear weapons--but that can build them--will significantly damage
Israel's ability to deter militant Palestinian and Lebanese
organizations. It will damage the image of Israel as the sole
nuclear-armed state in the region and undercut the myth of its
invincibility. Gone would be the days when Israel's military supremacy
would enable it to dictate the parameters of peace and pursue
unilateral peace plans. "We cannot afford a nuclear bomb in the hands
of our enemies, period. They don't have to use it; the fact that they
have it is enough," Member of Knesset Ephraim Sneh explained to me.

This could force Israel to accept territorial compromises with its
neighbors in order to deprive Iran of points of hostility that it
could use against the Jewish state. Israel simply would not be able to
afford a nuclear rivalry with Iran and continued territorial disputes
with the Arabs at the same time. "I don't want the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations to be held under the shadow of an Iranian nuclear bomb,"
Sneh continued.

Second, the deterrence and power Iran would gain by mastering the fuel
cycle could compel Washington to cut a deal with Tehran in which Iran
would be recognized as a regional power and gain strategic
significance in the Middle East at the expense of Israel. This has
been a major Israeli fear since the end of the Cold War, when Israel's
strategic utility to Washington lost considerable justification due to
the absence of a Soviet threat. Under these circumstances, US-Iran
negotiations could damage Israel's strategic standing, since common
interests shared by Iran and the US would overshadow Israel's concerns
with Tehran and leave Israel alone in facing its Iranian rival. The
Great Satan will eventually make up with the ayatollahs and forget
about the Jewish state, Israeli officials fear.

A US-Iran breakthrough would alter the order of the Middle East in
favor of Israel's strategic rival, Iran. Over the past 15 years,
Israeli-Iranian tensions have peaked at every opportunity to
reconfigure the Middle East's geopolitical map. The end of the Cold
War and the launch of the peace process made Iran a front-line state
against Israel, a position it had actively avoided during the first
decade of the revolution. The tremors that shook the Middle East
system after the 9/11 attacks, in turn, put Israel again in a position
in which it risked becoming a burden rather than an asset to the US,
while Iran's help in Afghanistan was sorely needed.

The recent plethora of leaks and hints of Israel's readiness to take
out the Iranian nuclear facilities should be seen in light of Israel's
fear of a US-Iran deal. The Israeli leaks have not coincided with
major advances in Iran's nuclear program, but rather with hints of an
American preparedness to strike a compromise with Tehran that would
grant it the dreaded know-how and limit Israel's strategic
maneuverability.

Since Israel itself is incapable of neutralizing Iran's program
through air strikes, the veiled threats coming out of Tel Aviv are
aimed at pressuring Washington not to moderate its stance, by warning
it about the real consequences of an Israeli assault on Iran: a major
escalation of the violence in the region that ultimately would fall
into America's lap. Whether it liked it or not, Washington would get
sucked into the ensuing mess. And whether Washington gave a green
light to the assault or not, it would escape neither the blame nor the
responsibility to restore order.

Using this as leverage against the US, Israel is playing hardball to
prevent Washington from cutting a deal with Tehran that could benefit
America, but deprive Israel of its military and strategic supremacy.
(Trita Parsi, "A Challenge to Israel's Strategic Primacy,"
Bitterlemons-International.org, Edition 1 Volume 4, 5 January
2006)</blockquote>

Will Washington make peace with Tehran, stiffing Tel Aviv? That's an
interesting test case that allows us to evaluate if Washington still
regards Tel Aviv as a strategic asset that must be protected at all
costs or if influential members of the US power elite have come to
believe it necessary to subordinate Tel Aviv's -- and its US
supporters' (Carol Giacomo, "Pro-Israel Group Pushes Tough U.S. Policy
on Iran," Reuters, 7 June 2006) -- interests to the multinational
ruling class's.

<http://montages.blogspot.com/2006/06/will-washington-make-peace-with-tehran.html>

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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