Thursday, October 01, 2009



Top Things you Think You Know about Iran that are not True 
Thursday is a fateful day for the world, as the US, other members of the United 
Nations Security Council, and Germany meet in Geneva with Iran in a bid to 
resolve outstanding issues. Although Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had 
earlier attempted to put the nuclear issue off the bargaining table, this 
rhetorical flourish was a mere opening gambit and nuclear issues will certainly 
dominate the talks. As Henry Kissinger pointed out, these talks are just 
beginning and there are highly unlikely to be any breakthroughs for a very long 
time. Diplomacy is a marathon, not a sprint.

But on this occasion, I thought I'd take the opportunity to list some things 
that people tend to think they know about Iran, but for which the evidence is 
shaky.

Belief: Iran is aggressive and has threatened to attack Israel, its neighbors 
or the US

Reality: Iran has not launched an aggressive war modern history (unlike the US 
or Israel), and its leaders have a doctrine of "no first strike." This is true 
of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, as well as of Revolutionary Guards commanders.

Belief: Iran is a militarized society bristling with dangerous weapons and a 
growing threat to world peace.

Reality: Iran's military budget is a little over $6 billion annually. Sweden, 
Singapore and Greece all have larger military budgets. Moreover, Iran is a 
country of 70 million, so that its per capita spending on defense is tiny 
compared to these others, since they are much smaller countries with regard to 
population. Iran spends less per capita on its military than any other country 
in the Persian Gulf region with the exception of the United Arab Emirates.


Belief: Iran has threatened to attack Israel militarily and to "wipe it off the 
map."

Reality: No Iranian leader in the executive has threatened an aggressive act of 
war on Israel, since this would contradict the doctrine of 'no first strike' to 
which the country has adhered. The Iranian president has explicitly said that 
Iran is not a threat to any country, including Israel. 

Belief: But didn't President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad threaten to 'wipe Israel off 
the map?'

Reality: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did quote Ayatollah Khomeini to the 
effect that "this Occupation regime over Jerusalem must vanish from the page of 
time" (in rezhim-e eshghalgar-i Qods bayad as safheh-e ruzgar mahv shavad). 
This was not a pledge to roll tanks and invade or to launch missiles, however. 
It is the expression of a hope that the regime will collapse, just as the 
Soviet Union did. It is not a threat to kill anyone at all.

Belief: But aren't Iranians Holocaust deniers?

Actuality: Some are, some aren't. Former president Mohammad Khatami has 
castigated Ahmadinejad for questioning the full extent of the Holocaust, which 
he called "the crime of Nazism." Many educated Iranians in the regime are 
perfectly aware of the horrors of the Holocaust. In any case, despite what 
propagandists imply, neither Holocaust denial (as wicked as that is) nor 
calling Israel names is the same thing as pledging to attack it militarily.

Belief: Iran is like North Korea in having an active nuclear weapons program, 
and is the same sort of threat to the world.

Actuality: Iran has a nuclear enrichment site at Natanz near Isfahan where it 
says it is trying to produce fuel for future civilian nuclear reactors to 
generate electricity. All Iranian leaders deny that this site is for weapons 
production, and the International Atomic Energy Agency has repeatedly inspected 
it and found no weapons program. Iran is not being completely transparent, 
generating some doubts, but all the evidence the IAEA and the CIA can gather 
points to there not being a weapons program. The 2007 National Intelligence 
Estimate by 16 US intelligence agencies, including the CIA and the Defense 
Intelligence Agency, assessed with fair confidence that Iran has no nuclear 
weapons research program. This assessment was based on debriefings of defecting 
nuclear scientists, as well as on the documents they brought out, in addition 
to US signals intelligence from Iran. While Germany, Israel and recently the UK 
intelligence is more suspicious of Iranian
 intentions, all of them were badly wrong about Iraq's alleged Weapons of Mass 
Destruction and Germany in particular was taken in by Curveball, a drunk Iraqi 
braggart.

Belief: The West recently discovered a secret Iranian nuclear weapons plant in 
a mountain near Qom.

Actuality: Iran announced Monday a week ago to the International Atomic Energy 
Agency that it had begun work on a second, civilian nuclear enrichment facility 
near Qom. There are no nuclear materials at the site and it has not gone hot, 
so technically Iran is not in violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation 
Treaty, though it did break its word to the IAEA that it would immediately 
inform the UN of any work on a new facility. Iran has pledged to allow the site 
to be inspected regularly by the IAEA, and if it honors the pledge, as it 
largely has at the Natanz plant, then Iran cannot produce nuclear weapons at 
the site, since that would be detected by the inspectors. Secretary of State 
Hillary Clinton admitted on Sunday that Iran could not produce nuclear weapons 
at Natanz precisely because it is being inspected. Yet American hawks have 
repeatedly demanded a strike on Natanz.


Belief: The world should sanction Iran not only because of its nuclear 
enrichment research program but also because the current regime stole June's 
presidential election and brutally repressed the subsequent demonstrations.

Actuality: Iran's reform movement is dead set against increased sanctions on 
Iran, which likely would not affect the regime, and would harm ordinary 
Iranians.

Belief: Isn't the Iranian regime irrational and crazed, so that a doctrine of 
mutally assured destruction just would not work with them?

Actuality: Iranian politicians are rational actors. If they were madmen, why 
haven't they invaded any of their neighbors? Saddam Hussein of Iraq invaded 
both Iran and Kuwait. Israel invaded its neighbors more than once. In contrast, 
Iran has not started any wars. Demonizing people by calling them unbalanced is 
an old propaganda trick. The US elite was once unalterably opposed to China 
having nuclear science because they believed the Chinese are intrinsically 
irrational. This kind of talk is a form of racism. 

Belief: The international community would not have put sanctions on Iran, and 
would not be so worried, if it were not a gathering nuclear threat.

Actuality: The centrifuge technology that Iran is using to enrich uranium is 
open-ended. In the old days, you could tell which countries might want a 
nuclear bomb by whether they were building light water reactors (unsuitable for 
bomb-making) or heavy-water reactors (could be used to make a bomb). But with 
centrifuges, once you can enrich to 5% to fuel a civilian reactor, you could 
theoretically feed the material back through many times and enrich to 90% for a 
bomb. However, as long as centrifuge plants are being actively inspected, they 
cannot be used to make a bomb. The two danger signals would be if Iran threw 
out the inspectors or if it found a way to create a secret facility. The latter 
task would be extremely difficult, however, as demonstrated by the CIA's 
discovery of the Qom facility construction in 2006 from satellite photos. 
Nuclear installations, especially centrifuge ones, consume a great deal of 
water, construction materiel, and so forth,
 so that constructing one in secret is a tall order. In any case, you can't 
attack and destroy a country because you have an intuition that they might be 
doing something illegal. You need some kind of proof. Moreover, Israel, 
Pakistan and India are all much worse citizens of the globe than Iran, since 
they refused to sign the NPT and then went for broke to get a bomb; and nothing 
at all has been done to any of them by the UNSC.
Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute
http://www.juancole .com/2009/ 10/top-things- you-think- you-know- about.html


 
















      

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