http://www.ichblog.eu/content/view/419/2/
Chirac's nuclear talk fallout

Wednesday, 07 February 2007
By Gwynne Dyer  

Maybe Chirac's gaffe was not as accidental as it seemed. Maybe he 
wanted people to re-examine all the lies and half-truths we are told 
about Iran as Washington seems to be gearing up for another attack.
 
02/07/06 "New Zealand Herald" -- -- For over two years all the big 
Western powers have insisted Iran's nuclear power programme is 
secretly intended to produce nuclear weapons. And the minute it gets 
them, it will launch them at Israel.

But last Thursday France's President Jacques Chirac said something 
very different. He said Iran would never use them first.

"I would say that what is dangerous about this situation is not the 
fact of [Iran] having a nuclear bomb," Chirac said in reply to a 
journalist's question, during an interview originally meant to be 
about climate change.

"[Iran] having one [bomb], or perhaps a second bomb a little later, 
well, that's not very dangerous."

Shock! Horror! Chirac is bucking the party line, which is that Iran 
is run by a bunch of fanatical crazies who would immediately use 
their new nuclear weapons against Israel.

Didn't Iran's own president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, say Iran would wipe 
Israel from the map? (No, he didn't, actually, but a little creative 
licence in the translation of his speech from the Farsi can make it 
sound like he did.)

 "Where will [Iran] drop it, this bomb?" Chirac asked scornfully. "On 
Israel? [The missile] would not have gone 200m into the air before 
Tehran would be razed to the ground."

He spoke as if deterrence would work even against Iran. As if the 
country were run by sane human beings who don't want their children 
to be burned, crushed and vaporized by Israeli and American nuclear 
weapons. He's not supposed to talk like that in public.

"Chirac gave us a moment of honesty," said Alireza Nourizadeh, chief 
researcher at the London-based Centre for Arab-Iranian Studies. "His 
comment was basically what I believe to be the position of Britain, 
the United States and much of the West. That is if Israel is 
attacked, there will be no hesitation in bringing retaliation and 
destruction to Iran."

And that, Chirac concluded, meant Iran would not use its nuclear 
weapons to attack Israel, should it ever acquire them.

In Chirac's view, the danger is not that Iran would be irresponsible 
with its nuclear weapons, but that they would lead to a general 
proliferation of such weapons in the Middle East.

"Why wouldn't Saudi Arabia do it?" he asked. "Why wouldn't it help 
Egypt to do it as well? That is the real danger."

But he's not supposed to say that either. Those are the West's 
allies, the very countries the United States is trying to mobilise as 
the leaders of an anti-Iranian alliance of Sunni Arab countries.

Chirac was simply stating the truth as he (and many others) see it, 
but his comments completely undermined the joint Western position, so 
the following day he was forced to retract them.

He still didn't say that he was wrong, however. Just that he had 
thought he was "off the record" when discussing Iran.

France is clearly worried by the drumbeat of anti-Iranian propaganda 
in Washington, which sounds alarmingly similar to the campaign of 
misinformation waged by the Bush Administration before it attacked 
Iraq.

Last month Chirac was forced to cancel a visit to Tehran by the 
French foreign minister, Philippe Douste-Blazy, because his allies 
did not trust France to stick to the party line. They were doubtless 
right in their suspicions - but France is right, too.

France is right to argue that Iranian nuclear weapons, if they 
existed, would be primarily defensive and would not be used to attack 
Israel, because nuclear deterrence still works and Iranians do not 
want their country to commit suicide.

It is also right to worry that an Iranian bomb would create pressures 
for further proliferation, as Arab countries that have lived under 
the threat of Israeli nuclear weapons for 40 years decide that living 
under the threat of Iranian nuclear weapons as well, with no means of 
deterrence or retaliation, is simply intolerable.

France is utterly hypocritical in worrying about Middle Eastern 
countries owning nuclear weapons when it has had them for almost half 
a century, but that is equally true for all the other great powers.

And it is jumping to conclusions when it assumes Iran's stated (and 
quite legal) desire to enrich uranium for nuclear power generation 
conceals a drive to get a nuclear weapon as soon as possible.

The truth may be that Iran is seeking only a "threshold" nuclear 
weapons capacity - a level of technological expertise from which it 
could, in an emergency, develop nuclear weapons in only six months or 
so. Such a position is entirely legal, and some 40 countries 
currently occupy it.

The truth may also be that the nuclear-armed neighbour Iran really 
worries about is not Israel but Pakistan, whose 1998 nuclear tests 
scared Iranian strategists half to death.

Iranians don't worry about the intentions of Pakistan's dictator, 
General Pervez Musharraf, but they know it is a one-bullet regime and 
they worry a great deal about what kind of fanatics might succeed him.

So maybe Chirac's gaffe was not as accidental as it seemed. Maybe he 
wanted people to re-examine all the lies and half-truths we are told 
about Iran as Washington seems to be gearing up for another attack.

And maybe we should. 


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