*What Happened in Geneva? What Does It Mean?*

Posted By *Michael Ledeen* On November 10, 2013

It’s not easy to make a deal with Iran (and even when you think you’ve made
one, you might be wrong).  The failure of the Geneva talks is just another
in a long series of such failures.  Even the public events are part of the
well-established pattern:  the secretary of state jumps on a plane and
flies to meet with the Iranians.  But when he gets there, he finds it’s not
quite a done deal.  And in the wee hours of the morning two days later,
there’s no deal at all.

Remember that something very similar happened in September 2006, when
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice jumped on a plane in Washington and
flew to New York, expecting to sign a deal at the United Nations with
Iran’s Ali Larijani.  The deal had been negotiated in secret over several
months, and both sides had agreed to the final language.  But Larijani
never showed up.  This time the deal had again been negotiated in secret
over several months, and, unlike 2006, the Iranians actually showed up,
smiling broadly and brandishing their signing pens.  But it turned out that
there was no deal.  What went wrong?

The headlines suggested that the French were to blame, that Foreign
Minister Laurent Fabius rejected some of the conditions, and his demands
were unacceptable, at a minimum to the Iranians and perhaps to some of the
Western countries as well.  The French
insist<http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/monde/20131110.OBS4853/nucleaire-fabius-a-t-il-empeche-un-accord-avec-l-iran.html>
[1] that this latter claim is false.  They say that Kerry and Fabius met
head-to-head on Saturday evening around six o’clock, and agreed on the
Western final proposal.  They go on to say that, on the basis of the
Franco-American agreement, Catherine Ashton of the EU wrote a 3-page text
that all members of the Western group agreed to and that was given to the
Iranians.  After some delay, the Iranians said that the text would have to
be approved by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and they were unable to sign
anything on the spot in Geneva.

No doubt we’re going to get more detail in the next few days, but if the
French account–which was given to the Socialist magazine *Le Nouvel
Observateur*–is anywhere near correct, then there’s an obvious series of
questions:

–First, when the Obama administration whispered to the press that the deal
was done, and that Kerry was showing up for the signing party in Geneva,
what, if any, were the differences between that deal and the one the
Iranians couldn’t sign then and there?

–Second, was the Obama administration totally unaware of the French
position?  How could Fabius’s proposal have come as a surprise?  It’s not
as if we are isolated from French diplomats, after all;

–Third, were the Iranians unaware of the French position?  Or did they
think that the Obama administration was going to force an agreement that
did not satisfy Paris?

Here and there, I’ve read claims that the Americans backtracked during the
negotiations in Geneva.  If true, it would help explain the snafu.  And if
the French account is correct, it would mean that the United States
backtracked twice, first to the Iranian demands, and then to French
conditions.  When the Iranians saw that their own proposed deal was not
accepted, they had to say that Khamenei would have to decide the matter.

However you explain it, I think the key to understanding lies in the 3-page
document Ashton gave the Iranians (if it indeed exists), and whether the
Western group approved it all.

Meanwhile, since all these negotiators are going back to Switzerland in ten
days, it behooves us to look carefully at the three matters to which the
French are said to object:

–The heavy-water reactor at Arak.  If the Iranians can continue work on it,
it’s hard to be enthusiastic, since that reactor provides Tehran with the
potential to construct a plutonium bomb;

–Language that states Iran has a “right” to enrich uranium.  The whole
point of any deal with Iran is to prevent the mullahs from amassing enough
enriched uranium to quickly assemble an atomic bomb, or warhead;

–The disposition of Iran’s “known” stockpile of enriched uranium.  If they
can keep it, that makes it much harder for the West to have any confidence
that we’ve made significant progress in preventing Iran going nuclear.

But whatever the answers to all these questions, one thing is luminously
clear:  the Obama administration certainly misspoke when it whispered to
journalists that the deal was done, and that Kerry was just showing up to
get his fair share of the champagne.  As usual, too much (misleading) talk
from Obama & Co, and too much amateurism in doing the real deal.

Reminds me of Obamacare, somehow.
------------------------------

Article printed from Faster, Please!: *http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen
<http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen>*

URL to article:
*http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen/2013/11/10/what-happened-in-geneva-what-does-it-mean/
<http://pjmedia.com/michaelledeen/2013/11/10/what-happened-in-geneva-what-does-it-mean/>*

URLs in this post:

[1] The French insist:
*http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/monde/20131110.OBS4853/nucleaire-fabius-a-t-il-empeche-un-accord-avec-l-iran.html
<http://tempsreel.nouvelobs.com/monde/20131110.OBS4853/nucleaire-fabius-a-t-il-empeche-un-accord-avec-l-iran.html>*




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