By Patrick J. Buchanan
In diplomacy, always leave your adversary an honorable
avenue of retreat.
Fifty years ago this October, to resolve a Cuban
missile crisis that had brought us to the brink of nuclear war, JFK did that.
He conveyed to Nikita Khrushchev, secretly, that if
the Soviet Union pulled its nuclear missiles out of Cuba, the United States
would soon after pull its Jupiter missiles out of Italy and Turkey.
Is the United States willing to allow Iran an
honorable avenue of retreat, if it halts enrichment of uranium to 20% and
permits intrusive inspections of all its nuclear facilities? Or are U.S.
sanctions designed to bring about not a negotiated settlement of the nuclear
issue, but regime change, the fall of the Islamic Republic, and its replacement
by a more pliable regime?
If the latter is the case, we are likely headed for
war with Iran, even as our refusal to negotiate with Tokyo, whose oil we cut
off in the summer of 1941, led to Pearl Harbor.
What would cause anyone to believe Iran is willing to
negotiate?
There are the fatwas by the ayatollahs against nuclear
weapons and the consensus by 16 U.S. intelligence agencies in 2007, reaffirmed
in 2011, that Iran has no nuclear weapons program.
Even the Israelis have lately concluded that the
Americans are right.
Nor has the United States or Israel discovered any
site devoted to the building of nuclear weapons. The deep-underground facility
at Fordow is enriching uranium to 20%. There are no reports of any enrichment
to 90%, which is weapons grade.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has lately
mocked the idea of Iran building a bomb in the face of a U.S. commitment to go
to war to prevent it: “Let’s even imagine that we have an atomic weapon, a
nuclear weapon. What would we do with it? What intelligent person would fight
5,000 American bombs with one bomb?”
Ahmadinejad did not mention that Israel has 200 to 300
nuclear weapons. He did not need to. The same logic applies.
And Tehran seems to be signaling it is ready for a
deal.
According to the United Nations’ watchdog agency, Iran
recently converted more than one-third of its 20% enriched uranium into U308,
or uranium oxide, a powder for its medical research reactor.
The New York Times also reported Thursday that Iran had
proposed to European officials a plan to suspend the enrichment of uranium in
return for the lifting of sanctions. By week’s end, Iran was denying it.
Yet common sense suggests that if Iran is not
determined to build a nuclear weapon, it will eventually come to the table.
Why? Because, if Iran is not seeking a weapon, no
purpose is served by continuing to enrich.
Iran already has enough 20% enriched uranium for
medical isotopes and more than enough 5% enriched uranium for its power plant.
Further enrichment gives Iran nothing in the way of added security, but it does
ensure that the severe sanctions will be sustained and perhaps tightened. And
those sanctions are creating tremendous hardships on the Iranian people.
In two weeks, Iran’s currency, the rial, has lost a
third of its value. It is at an all-time low against the dollar. Iran’s oil
exports are down to 800,000 barrels a day, a third of what they were a year
ago. The cost of food and medicine is soaring. Inflation is running officially
at 25%. Foreign travel is drying up. Workers are going unpaid.
“We’re close to seeing mass unemployment in cities and
queues for social handouts,” an Iranian-born economic adviser to the European
Union told Reuters. “There are few alternatives for those people, and many will
end up on the bread line.” Last week, merchants marched on parliament and had
to be driven back by police using tear gas.
An Iranian businessman in Dubai told Reuters:
“Business is drying up. Industry is collapsing. There’s zero investment.… I see
it with my own eyes.”
In short, the oil embargo and economic sanctions, what
Woodrow Wilson called the “peaceful, silent, deadly remedy,” are working, and
Ahmadinejad — who leaves office next year — is rapidly losing support.
So a new question is now on the table. If Iran
advances ideas to demonstrate convincingly that it has no weapons program, but
insists on what President Obama said he supports — Iran having a peaceful
nuclear program under U.N. inspection — will America accept that?
Or will we, seeing the economic crisis deepening, make
demands so humiliating no Iranian government can accept them, because our true
goal is and has always been regime change?
No one would weep if the Islamic Republic fell. But
this is a tough crowd that will not go quietly. If we give them no way out,
only a choice between national humiliation or escalation, the hard-liners in
the regime and Republican Guard will likely take the death-before-dishonor
course.
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