http://www.weeklystandard.com


------------------------------
Abject Surrender by the United States What does Israel do now?John Bolton

November 24, 2013 8:50 AM



Negotiations for an “interim” arrangement over Iran’s nuclear weapons
program finally succeeded this past weekend, as Security Council foreign
ministers (plus Germany) flew to Geneva to meet their Iranian counterpart.
After raising expectations of a deal by first convening on November 8-10,
it would have been beyond humiliating to gather again without result.  So
agreement was struck despite solemn incantations earlier that “no deal is
better than a bad deal.”

This interim agreement is badly skewed from America’s perspective.  Iran
retains its full capacity to enrich uranium, thus abandoning a decade of
Western insistence and Security Council resolutions that Iran stop all
uranium-enrichment activities. Allowing Iran to continue enriching, and
despite modest (indeed, utterly inadequate) measures to prevent it from
increasing its enriched-uranium stockpiles and its overall nuclear
infrastructure, lays the predicate for Iran fully enjoying its “right” to
enrichment in any “final” agreement.  Indeed, the interim agreement itself
acknowledges that a “comprehensive solution” will “involve a mutually
defined enrichment program.”  This is not, as the Obama administration
leaked before the deal became public, a “compromise” on Iran’s claimed
“right” to enrichment. This is abject surrender by the United States.

In exchange for superficial concessions, Iran achieved three critical
breakthroughs. First, it bought time to continue all aspects of its
nuclear-weapons program the agreement does not cover (centrifuge
manufacturing and testing; weaponization research and fabrication; and its
entire ballistic missile program). Indeed, given that the interim agreement
contemplates periodic renewals, Iran may have gained all of the time it
needs to achieve weaponization not of simply a handful of nuclear weapons,
but of dozens or more.

Second, Iran has gained legitimacy. This central banker of international
terrorism and flagrant nuclear proliferator is once again part of the
international club.  Much as the Syria chemical-weapons agreement
buttressed Bashar al-Assad, the mullahs have escaped the political deep
freezer.

Third, Iran has broken the psychological momentum and effect of the
international economic sanctions. While estimates differ on Iran’s precise
gain, it is considerable ($7 billion is the lowest estimate), and presages
much more.  Tehran correctly assessed that a mere six-months’ easing of
sanctions will make it extraordinarily hard for the West to reverse
direction, even faced with systematic violations of Iran’s nuclear
pledges.  Major oil-importing countries (China, India, South Korea, and
others) were already chafing under U.S. sanctions, sensing President Obama
had no stomach either to impose sanctions on them, or pay the domestic
political price of granting further waivers.

Benjamin Netanyahu’s earlier warning that this was “the deal of the
century” for Iran has unfortunately been vindicated. Given such an
inadequate deal, what motivated Obama to agree?  The inescapable conclusion
is that, the mantra notwithstanding, the White House actually did prefer a
bad deal to the diplomatic process grinding to a halt. This deal was a
“hail Mary” to buy time. Why?

Buying time for its own sake makes sense in some negotiating contexts, but
the *sub silentio* objective here was to jerry-rig yet another argument to
wield against Israel and its fateful decision whether or not to strike
Iran. Obama, fearing that strike more than an Iranian nuclear weapon,
clearly needed greater international pressure on Jerusalem. And Jerusalem
fully understands that Israel was the real target of the Geneva
negotiations. How, therefore, should Israel react?

Most importantly, the deal leaves the basic strategic realities unchanged.
Iran’s nuclear program was, from its inception, a weapons program, and it
remains one today. Even modest constraints, easily and rapidly reversible,
do not change that fundamental political and operational reality.  And
while some already-known aspects of Iran’s nuclear program are returned to
enhanced scrutiny, the undeclared and likely unknown military work will
continue to expand, thus recalling the drunk looking for his lost car keys
under the street lamp because of the better lighting.

Moreover, the international climate of opinion against a strike will only
harden during the next six months. Capitalizing on the deal, Iran’s best
strategy is to accelerate the apparent pace of rapprochement with the
all-too-eager West. The further and faster Iran can move, still making only
superficial, easily reversible concessions in exchange for dismantling the
sanctions regime, the greater the international pressure against Israel
using military force. Iran will not suddenly, Ahmadinejad-style, openly
defy Washington or Jerusalem and trumpet cheating and violations. Instead,
Tehran will go to extraordinary lengths to conceal its activities, working
for example in new or unknown facilities and with North Korea, or shaving
its compliance around the edges.   The more time that passes, the harder it
will be for Israel to deliver a blow that substantially retards the Iranian
program.

Undoubtedly, an Israeli strike during the interim deal would be greeted
with outrage from all the expected circles.  But that same outrage, or
more, would also come further down the road.  In short, measured against
the expected reaction even in friendly capitals, there is never a “good”
time for an Israeli strike, only bad and worse times.  Accordingly, the
Geneva deal does not change Israel’s strategic calculus even slightly,
unless the Netanyahu government itself falls prey to the psychological
warfare successfully waged so far by the ayatollahs. That we will know only
as the days unfold.

Israel still must make the extremely difficult judgment whether it will
stand by as Iran maneuvers effortlessly around a feckless and weak White
House, bolstering its economic situation while still making progress on the
nuclear front, perhaps less progress on some aspects of its nuclear work
than before the deal, but more on others.

And what can critics of the Geneva deal, in Washington and other Western
capitals, do? They can try to advance the sanctions legislation pending in
the Senate over administration objections, for the political symbolism if
nothing else. Unfortunately, they’re unlikely to succeed over the
administration’s near-certain opposition. Tehran judges correctly that they
have Obama obediently moving in their direction, with the European Union
straining at the bit for still-more relaxation of the sanctions regimes.

Instead, those opposing Obama’s “Munich moment” in Geneva (to borrow a
Kerry phrase from the Syrian crisis), should focus on the larger and more
permanent strategic problem: A terrorist, nuclear Iran still threatens
American interests and allies, and almost certainly means widespread
nuclear proliferation across the Middle East. A nuclear Iran would also be
essentially invulnerable, providing a refuge that al Qaeda leaders hiding
in Afghan and Pakistani caves could only dream of.

So in truth, an Israeli military strike is the only way to avoid Tehran’s
otherwise inevitable march to nuclear weapons, and the proliferation that
will surely follow. Making the case for Israel’s exercise of its legitimate
right of self-defense has therefore never been more politically important.
Whether they are celebrating in Tehran or in Jerusalem a year from now may
well depend on how the opponents of the deal in Washington conduct
themselves.

*John Bolton, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, served
as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations in 2005-06.*


__._,_.___






__,_._,___

-- 
-- 
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"PoliticalForum" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.

Reply via email to