Friday, May 26, 2006

Iran's quest for power has deep roots

THURSDAY, MAY 25, 2006
NEW HAVEN, Connecticut It is easy to label Iran's quest for nuclear energy a dangerous adventure with grave regional and international repercussions. It is also comforting to heap scorn on President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for his earlier denial of the Holocaust and his odious call for the obliteration of the state of Israel. The rambling intransigence expressed in his recent letter to President George W. Bush offers ample insight into this twisted mindset. Yet there is something deeper in Iran's story than the extremist utterances of a messianic president and the calculated maneuvering of the hard-line clerical leadership that stands behind him.

We tend to forget that Iran's insistence on its sovereign right to develop nuclear power is in effect a national pursuit for empowerment, a pursuit informed by at least two centuries of military aggression, domestic meddling, skullduggery and, not least, technological denial by the West. Every schoolchild in Iran knows about the CIA- sponsored coup in 1953 that toppled Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh. Even an Iranian with little interest in his or her past is conscious of how Iran throughout the 19th and 20th centuries served as a playground for the Great Game.
Iranians also know that, hard as it may be for latter-day Americans and Europeans to believe, from the 1870s to the 1920s Russia and Britain deprived Iran of even basic technology like the railroad, which was then a key to economic development. At various times, both powers jealously opposed a trans-Iranian railroad because they thought it would threaten their ever-expanding imperial frontiers. When it was finally built, the British, Russian (and American) occupying forces during World War II made full use of it (free of charge), calling Iran a "bridge of victory" over Nazi Germany. They did so, of course, after Winston Churchill forced the man who built the railroad, Reza Shah Pahlavi, to abdicate and unceremoniously kicked him out of the country.

Not long after, a similar Western denial of Iran's economic sovereignty resulted in a dramatic showdown that had fatal consequences for the country's fragile democracy and left lasting scars on its national consciousness. The oil nationalization movement of 1951 to 1953 under Mossadegh was opposed by Britain, and eventually by its partner in profit, the United States, with the same self-righteousness that today colors their views of the Iranian yearning for nuclear energy.

Mossadegh was tried and sent into internal exile and Mohammed Reza Shah was reinstalled largely to safeguard American geopolitical interests and with little regard for the wishes of the Iranian people. A quarter- century later, Americans were "taken by surprise" when an Islamic revolution toppled the shah and transformed a country that seemed so friendly to the United States. But if Americans suffered from historical amnesia, for many Iranians, among them Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the thread of memory led clearly from the Great Game to the Great Satan.

For a country like the United States that is built on paradigms of progress and pragmatism, grasping the mythical and psychological dimensions of defeat and deprivation at the hands of foreigners is difficult. Yet the Iranian collective memory is infused with such themes. Since the early 18th century, Iran has been involved in four devastating civil wars. America's own highly traumatic Civil War was, notwithstanding Britain's sympathy for the South, a largely domestic affair. In the civil wars that Iran endured, however, the Turks, Afghans, Russians and British played major parts. And before the arrival of Western powers, Iranians held bitter memories of the Ottomans, the Mongols and the Arabs.

These intrusions punctuated the Iranians' modern historical narrative with conspiratorial fears and have helped to nurture a cult of the fallen hero, from the guerrilla leader Mirza Kuchak Khan to Amir Kabir, a 19th-century reformist prime minister, and later Mossadegh. Such painful collective memories have made Iran's pursuit of nuclear energy a national symbol of defiance that has transcended the motives of the current Islamic regime.

If the United States resorts to sanctions, or worse, to some military response, the outcome would be not only disastrous but, in the long run, transient. Just as the West did with Iran's railroad and oil industry, it can for a time deny Iran nuclear technology, but it cannot wipe out Iranians' haunting memories. And no doubt the Islamic regime will amply exploit these collective memories to advance its nuclear program even as it stifles voices of domestic dissent. Even more than before, Iranians will blame outside powers for their misfortunes and choose not to focus on their own troubled road to modernity.
If that course continues, Iran will most likely succeed, for ill or for good, in finding its own nuclear holy grail. Legend has it that the Persian king Hushang, an equivalent of Prometheus, introduced fire to the Iranians. But unlike his Greek mythological counterpart, who stole it from gods, he accidentally discovered it while fighting with a dragon.

Abbas Amanat is a professor of history at Yale and author of the forthcoming "In Search of Modern Iran."

Saturday, May 20, 2006

US spells out plan to bomb Iran

The Herald

IAN BRUCE, Defence Correspondent
May 16 2006

THE US is updating contingency plans for a non-nuclear strike to cripple Iran's atomic weapon programme if international diplomacy fails, Pentagon sources have confirmed.Strategists are understood to have presented two options for pinpoint strikes using B2 bombers flying directly from bases in Missouri, Guam in the Pacific and Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.
RAF Fairford in Gloucester also has facilities for B2s but this has been ruled out because of the UK's opposition to military action against Tehran.
The main plan calls for a rolling, five-day bombing campaign against 400 key targets in Iran, including 24 nuclear-related sites, 14 military airfields and radar installations, and Revolutionary Guard headquarters.
At least 75 targets in underground complexes would be attacked with waves of bunker-buster bombs.Iranian radar networks and air defence bases would be struck by submarine-launched Tomahawk cruise missiles and then kept out of action by carrier aircraft flying from warships in the Indian Ocean and Persian Gulf.
The alternative to an all-out campaign is a demonstration strike against one or two high-profile targets such as the Natanz uranium enrichment facility or the hexafluoride gas plant at Isfahan.UK sources say contingency plans have also been drawn up to cope with the inevitable backlash against the Basra garrison in neighbouring Iraq.

Monday, May 15, 2006

Preserve Life


Don't Wage War on Iran

To talk or to bomb? That is the question


05/16/2006
By Patrick Seale, Special to Gulf News

How real is the danger of war between the United States and Iran? This question is of enormous importance for the whole world, and especially for the US itself and for the peoples of the Middle East who would be the first victims of an armed clash. But it it not an easy question to answer.
On the one hand, evidence is mounting that the US, in close coordination with Israel, is actively planning military operations to destroy Iran's budding nuclear industry. Leaders in both the US and Israel have repeatedly declared that they will not accept an Iranian bomb. The US sees a nuclear-armed Iran as an intolerable challenge to its regional interests while Israel sees it as an "existential threat", more severe than any it has faced since the foundation of the state in 1948.
There has even been speculation that the US or Israel for that matter would be ready to use "bunker-busting" tactical nuclear weapons to destroy Iran's underground nuclear facilities.
When Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was rash enough to say that Israel should be "wiped off the map", much of the Western world reacted with shock and horror, although well aware that Iran had neither the capability, nor the suicidal urge and, very probably, not even the wish to translate such a threat into action.

In contrast and in yet another example of Western double-standards when Shimon Peres, Israel's veteran politician, responded that Iran itself might be destroyed, no cry of outrage was heard in the West, although Israel's formidable nuclear capability is well known.
Israel's destructive power
The simple truth is that Israel can indeed wipe Iran off the map, but that Iran has no such ability regarding Israel. Peres himself, when secretary-general of Israel's defence ministry in the 1950s, played a leading role in his country's acquisition of nuclear weapons.
Be that as it may, some pessimists would argue that war between the US and Iran has already begun in that the US is said to have infiltrated teams of special forces into Iran to identify targets and prepare sabotage operations. Iran, in turn, has claimed that dozens, if not hundreds, of would-be suicide bombers are ready to go into action against American and Israeli interests if Iran is attacked.
In contrast to such sabre-rattling in the two camps, there is a mounting chorus in the US urging Washington to engage in wide-ranging negotiations with Iran covering every aspect of their relations, which have been frozen in barren hostility for the past 27 years.
In recent days, a call for dialogue with Tehran has come from widely different parts of the US establishment from Sam Berger, former President Bill Clinton's national security adviser, from Zbigniew Brzezinski, former president Jimmy Carter's national security adviser, from Patrick J Buchanon, a leading conservative columnist, from George Perkovich, a vice-president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, among many others.
To men like these, not known for their pacifist views, an American war on Iran would be an act of supreme folly. Brzezinski has even gone so far as to predict that it would put an end to America's role in the world.
This is the context in which Ahmadinejad has chosen to write his open letter to President George W. Bush, surely one of the most extraordinary initiatives in the annals of diplomacy.
The first thing to say about Ahmadinejad's letter is that it is not couched in the usual language of diplomacy or politics. It is not a confrontational letter, still less any sort of declaration of war. It is not about weapons, whether nuclear or otherwise, or political differences, although there is a brief recital of Iran's historical grievances against the US: the toppling of Mohammad Mosaddeq by an American-sponsored coup d'etat in 1953; American support for Saddam Hussain in his eight-year war against Iran; the shooting down of an Iranian passenger plane; the freezing of Iranian assets; and the current attempt to prevent Iran's scientific progress.
But Ahmadinejad's real challenge to Bush is on the level of values and political morality. He has appealed to Bush to practice the principles which, as a born-again Christian, the American president claims to believe in.
"All prophets," Ahmadinejad wrote, referring explicitly to the prophets Moses, Jesus and Mohammad (Peace Be Upon Them), "speak of peace and tranquility for man ? Do you not think that if all of us came to believe in and abide by these principles that is monothesism, worship of God, respect for the dignity of man, belief in the Last Day we could overcome the present problems of the world?? Will you not accept this invitation??"
Little wonder, that the Iranian president's letter has caused bewilderment, even alarm, among Bush's advisers and colleagues, more used to talking the language of force than of philosophy.
Patrick Seale is a commentator and author of several books on Middle East affairs

US plans strike to topple Iran regime - report

· US 'intent on Iran attack'
· Bush accused of 'messianic' mission
Julian Borger in Washington and Bob Tait in Tehran
Monday April 10, 2006
The US is planning military action against Iran because George Bush is intent on regime change in Tehran - and not just as a contingency if diplomatic efforts fail to halt its suspected nuclear weapons programme, it was reported yesterday.
In the New Yorker magazine, Seymour Hersh, America's best known investigative journalist,
concluded that the Bush administration is even considering the use of a tactical nuclear weapon against deep Iranian bunkers, but that top generals in the Pentagon are attempting to take that option off the table.
Hersh, who helped break the story of the Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal, quoted an unnamed Pentagon adviser as saying the resurgence of interest in tactical nuclear weapons among Pentagon civilians was "a juggernaut that has to be stopped" and that some senior officers and officials were considering resignation over the issue.
There is also rising concern in the US military and abroad that Mr Bush's goal in Iran is not counter-proliferation but regime change, the article reports. The president and his aides now refer to the Iranian president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as a potential Adolf Hitler, according to a former senior intelligence official.
Another government consultant is quoted as saying Mr Bush believes he must do "what no Democrat or Republican, if elected in the future, would have the courage to do" and "that saving Iran is going to be his legacy".
"The word I'm hearing is messianic," Mr Hersh said yesterday on CNN. "[Bush] is politically free. He really thinks he has a chance and this is his mission."
There was no formal response from the White House yesterday but Fox News television quoted unnamed officials as saying Mr Hersh's article was "hyped, without knowledge of the president's thinking". In Britain, Jack Straw told the BBC that the idea of a US nuclear strike against Iran was "completely nuts".
Military action against Iran was "not on the agenda", the foreign secretary said. "They [the Americans] are very committed indeed to resolving this issue ... by negotiation and by diplomatic pressure."
An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman, Hamid Reza Asefi, dismissed the reports as "psychological war, launched by Americans because they feel angry and desperate regarding Iran's nuclear dossier".
Vincent Cannistraro, a former CIA counter-terrorism operations chief said Mr Bush had not yet made up his mind about the use of direct military action against Iran.
"There is a battle for Bush's soul over that," he said, adding that Karl Rove, the president's chief political adviser is adamantly opposed to a war.
However, Mr Cannistraro said covert military action, in the form of special forces troops identifying targets and aiding dissident groups, is already under way.
"It's been authorised, and it's going on to the extent that there is some lethality to it. Some people have been killed."
He said US-backed Baluchi Sunni guerrillas had been involved in an attack in Sistan-Baluchistan last month in which over 20 Iranian government officials were killed and the governor of the provincial capital was wounded. The Iranian government had blamed British intelligence for the incident.
Last week, the Iranian regime made a public show of its combat readiness by test-firing some of its missile technology during seven days of war games in the Gulf, images of which were broadcast repeatedly on state television.
The Washington Post reported yesterday that Pentagon and CIA planners had been exploring possible targets, including a uranium enrichment plant at Natanz and a uranium conversion site in Isfahan, as part of a broader strategy of "coercive diplomacy" aimed at forcing Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions. But that report made no mention of the possible use of a tactical nuclear bunker-buster, such as the B61-11, against deep underground targets, reported by Mr Hersh.
The UN security council has given Iran until the end of this month to suspend its uranium enrichment programme, which most western governments believe is intended to produce a nuclear warhead, not generate electric power as Tehran insists. There is no consensus in the security council over what steps to take if the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reports back that Iran has failed to comply. The IAEA director, Mohamed ElBaradei is due in Tehran this week for talks.
The US ambassador to the UN, John Bolton said last week the US would explore other diplomatic and economic options if the security council fails to agree. He has also told British parliamentarians that he believes that military action could halt or at least set back the Iranian nuclear programme by striking it at its weakest point.
The Washington Post reported that while no military action is likely in the short term, the possible targets went beyond suspected nuclear installations and included the option of a "more extensive bombing campaign designed to destroy an array of military and political targets".
It is a widespread belief in Washington's neo-conservative circles that a comprehensive air assault would disorient the Tehran government and galvanise the Iranian people into bringing it down. The departure of senior neo-conservatives from the administration after Mr Bush's 2004 re-election was thought to have weakened their clout, but Mr Hersh's report suggested that the president's personal convictions may yet prove decisive.

Saturday, May 13, 2006

Mushroom Talk Clouds Apartheid NPT Carcass

By K Gajendra Singh

Al-Jazeerah, May 13, 2006

Not belonging to the Chitpavan ( highest) Brahmins class of the Indian Diplomacy , who get posted at missions in New York , Geneva ,Vienna , Paris etc , I was not fully into the intricacies of 'the' , commas and full stops in resolutions . So the more I read on NPT and disarmament , the less I realized I knew . So it took me some serious reading to unveil the mysteries concocted in long mostly overnight sessions in smoky conference and committee rooms in these centres of multinational diplomacy.
In trying to remain clear and faithful to commas and full stops , this piece has become very long .But the US plans or the threat to use nuclear tactical weapons against Iran and hiding behind the veils of mushroom clouds by the irresponsible 5 nuclear weapons powers , who are also the permanent veto wielding members of the UNSC, needed some unraveling , even repetitive some times ,to emphasise the nuances and implications and the dangers to the world .
***
Mirror, mirror look on the wall , who are the greatest proliferators of them all!

"The present system for preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons is at an end, is bankrupt." Mohamed El Baradei , head of IAEA recently at Davos.
In most communities it is illegal to cry "fire" in a crowded assembly. Should it not be considered serious international misconduct to manufacture a general war scare in an effort to achieve local political aims?: Dwight D. Eisenhower.

The Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and its apartheid regime is but a carcass now. While the abhorrent South African regime is long gone, the major violators of NPT -an iniquitous, non universal thrust down regime –held in place by the five recognized nuclear weapons powers (NWPs) , who also occupy the permanent seats in the UN Security Council want this unethical and immoral regime to continue.

There is an unholy alliance of cover up by the NWPs , against the majority of the nations of the world , the non-nuclear weapon states and others ,who watch impotently this dangerous theatre of the absurd and brinkmanship, in trepidation . Something is seriously wrong with the political, economic and environmental health of planet Earth. And something might give in soon, with NWPs carrying out prohibited activities , among others deadly use of depleted uranium weapons. Mother Earth, already damaged could cross the Rubicon beyond redemption.
US has retched up the present conflict with Tehran, with ill considered support from Europeans ( who need Iranian gas as an alternative to Russian monopoly) . Russia and China would not allow a UNSC resolution for possible US abuse later for an attack on Iran, as was done in Yugoslavia and Iraq. US efforts for a mandatory UN resolution have been thwarted by Russia and China. U.N.S.C members have agreed to present Tehran with a choice of incentives or sanctions in deciding whether to suspend uranium enrichment.
While Sunni countries Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Egypt in the region are lukewarm to Shia Iran, Tehran has gained support from the biggest Muslim nation Indonesia .
USA and UK, with France and Germany, not always in unison , are dancing a macabre dance of death over NPT's carcass against Russia and China , which in tandem with Tehran is countering Western attempts to enter their strategic space.
But , when it comes to their obligations to NPT , the five NWPs close ranks against the rest of the humanity.
Mohamed El Baradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), has described as "unworkable" the way of thinking that it is "morally reprehensible for some counties to pursue weapons of mass destruction yet morally acceptable for others to rely on them for security and indeed to continue to refine their capacities and postulate plans for their use" (NYT Feb 12, 2004 )
Former president Jimmy Carter summed it up: "The United States is the major culprit in the erosion of the NPT. While claiming to be protecting the world from proliferation threats in Iraq, Libya, Iran and North Korea ... they also have abandoned past pledges and now threaten first use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states."
Russian President Vladimir Putin urged the international community on 10 May to pay attention to the fact that the arms race has reached a new technological level with U.S. defense spending 25 times higher than Russia's. He said "It is too early to speak about an end to the arms race. In fact, it is unfolding, and has reached a new technological level, thus posing a threat of the appearance of an arsenal of so-called destabilizing weapons,"
Obligations and responsibilities of Nuclear Weapons States;

Article VI of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons" which came into force on March 5, 1970 says ;
"Each of the Parties to the Treaty undertakes to pursue negotiations in good faith on effective measures relating to cessation of the nuclear arms race at an early date and to nuclear disarmament, and on a treaty on general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control."

The NPT signed in 1968 , based on a covenant between NPW's and non-NPWs is now subscribe to by 187 states , the four very notable exceptions being Israel ,India and Pakistan (north Korea left NPT in 2003), which possess nuclear weapons and Cuba, which does not. India has always criticized NPT as discriminatory and unequal. In 1995 , NPT's initial validity of 25 years was extended indefinitely, with a review conference to be held after every five years. The last dismal review was held in 2005.

"It is nonetheless the case that states not endowed with nuclear weapons and signatory to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) have always had a basis for considering that the international cooperation provided for in that treaty to develop civilian applications for the atom has stayed a dead letter, as has the compensation promised in exchange for their renunciation of nuclear weapons."

NPT is dead;
The Seventh Review of the NPT in 2005 , after futile deliberations lasting 4 months , was an unmitigated disaster with the Conference even failing to agree on a consensus document or adopt a common resolution or a substantive Chairman's statement ,fuelling cynicism if the world would ever be free from the fear of nuclear weapons holocaust. Any hopes to transform the existing international proliferation control regime and reduce, if not eliminate, the global nuclear danger promised in the 2000 review were just shattered. [USA and others in the West now use 911 as an excuse].
The review proved that on the point of disarmament and reduction of arsenals of nuclear weapons , the gang of five stick together aggressively led by USA– No concessions .Period .
While the 5 NWPs could be jointly held responsible for the ignominious end of the review , USA, specially under the Bush administration has been staunchly opposed to arms control and nuclear-arms reduction .Indeed it went back from the commitments made in 2000, where by they had agreed to 13 "Practical Steps" which would put some flesh on their "unequivocal undertaking" to fulfil their obligation towards complete nuclear disarmament under Article VI of the NPT.
Instead "USA argued in 2005 that the problem with the NPT regime lies not in the nuclear weapons-states' inaction over disarmament, but in the lack of compliance with it by states such as north Korea and Iran. The other four NWSs too colluded with the US in trying to shift attention away from their failure to begin negotiations on nuclear weapons reduction and ultimate abolition".
The US is now developing "usable low yield" mini-nukes and would redesign earlier bombs for bunker-busting of targets buried deep underground. Both US and UK are into further research on Hydrogen bombs and to place nukes and other new lethal weapons in space. In 1998 a Commission under Donald Rumsfeld had produced the pro-"Star Wars" (Missile Defence) Report of the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile Threat to the United States.
After Bush's election in 2000," Washington has walked out of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and 'unsigned' the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty. The 2001 "Nuclear Posture Review" recommended the revitalisation of US nuclear forces, and all the elements that support them, within a new triad of conventional and nuclear capabilities.
In 2006 USA adopted a production schedule of 250 nuclear warheads per year and promises to extend its nuclear hegemony over the earth to space. Under the cover of USA's never ending so called war on terror all kinds of lethal weapons are being developed.
UK has modernised its nuclear forces and assigned tactical missions to its Trident. Paris said that its security "is now and will be guaranteed above all by our nuclear deterrent."
So Russia and China are responding .President Putin said Russia was "carrying out research and missile tests of state-of-the-art nuclear missile systems" and that Moscow would "continue to build up firmly and insistently our armed forces, including the nuclear components". Moscow is also reportedly developing unique new-generation nuclear weapons "not possessed by any country in the world ," while China has diluted its no-first-use policy and is "upgrading" and modernising its missiles.
And after September 11, 2001, all of the 5 NWP have become even more addicted to nuclear weapons for 'security'."
El Baradei warned ,"In recent years, three phenomena—the emergence of a nuclear black market, the determined efforts by additional countries to acquire the technology to produce the fissile material useable to nuclear weapons, and the clearly expressed desired of terrorists to acquire weapons of mass destruction—have radically altered the security landscape."
A peace activist Praful Bidwai moaned after the failed 2005 review ,"The bargain is simple. The bulk of the world's states would foreswear nuclear weapons and accept a regime of inspections to ensure that nuclear materials are not diverted to military programmes. In return, the NWPs-5 would earnestly initiate negotiations to eliminate them, and meanwhile transfer no material/know how to allies such as Israel."
Rebecca Johnson, an independent expert and director of the Acronyn Institute for Disarmament Diplomacy, an NGO commented: "From start to finish, this conference did little more than go through the motions, and was one of the most shameful exhibitions of cynical time-wasting seen outside the Geneva Conference on Disarmament."
International legal position;

The non NWPs have tried all forums to make NWPs to implement their obligations under NPT .
International Court of Justice, Advisory Opinion on the Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons, July 8, 1996:
"There exists an obligation to pursue in good faith and bring to a conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control." Para. 105(2)(F).
"The legal import of [the NPT Article VI] obligation goes beyond that of a mere obligation of conduct; the obligation involved here is an obligation to achieve a precise result — nuclear disarmament in all its aspects — by adopting a particular course of conduct, namely, the pursuit of negotiations on the matter in good faith." Para. 99.
"States must never make civilians the object of attack and must consequently never use weapons that are incapable of distinguishing between civilian and military targets". Para. 78 (emphasis added). This "cardinal" rule of humanitarian law is "fundamental" and "intransgressible". Paras. 78, 79.
"[T]he threat or use of nuclear weapons would generally be contrary to the rules of international law applicable in armed conflict, and in particular the principles and rules of humanitarian law. However, in view of the current state of international law, and of the elements of fact at its disposal, the Court cannot conclude definitely whether the threat or use of nuclear weapons would be lawful or unlawful in an extreme circumstance of self-defence, in which the very survival of a State would be at stake." Para. 105(2)(E).
After the ICJ 1996 opinion the obligation to negotiate elimination of nuclear arsenals applies to all states , specially those with massive arsenals .
The "Principles and Objectives" after the 1995 review , reaffirmed the NPT disarmament obligations and showed a road map. It called for negotiation of a Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty by 1996, "immediate commencement and early conclusion of negotiation" of a ban on production of fissile materials for nuclear weapons use, and "the determined pursuit by the nuclear-weapon States of systematic and progressive efforts to reduce nuclear weapons globally, with the ultimate goals of eliminating those weapons, and by all States of general and complete disarmament under strict and effective international control."
" Since 1995, support for compliance with the NPT disarmament obligation has been expressed in forums of every kind and at every level, from organizations to professional associations to towns to cities to national parliaments to the European Parliament to the United Nations."
UN General Assembly resolutions:
Follow-up to the advisory opinion of the International Court Justice, res. 54/54 Q (1 December 1999, yes 114, no 28, abstain 22): "2. Calls once again upon all States to immediately fulfill [the nuclear disarmament obligation affirmed by the ICJ] by commencing multilateral negotiations in 2000 leading to an early conclusion of a nuclear weapons convention prohibiting the development, production, testing, deployment, stockpiling, transfer, threat or use of nuclear weapons and providing for their elimination."
Towards a nuclear-weapon-free world: the need for a new agenda, res. 54/54 G (1 December 1999, yes 111, no 13, abstain 39): "1. Calls upon the Nuclear-Weapon States to make an unequivocal undertaking to accomplish the speedy and total elimination of their nuclear arsenals and to engage without delay in an accelerated process of negotiations, thus achieving nuclear disarmament, to which they are committed under article VI of the NPT."
Declaration on the Prohibition of the Use of Nuclear and Thermonuclear Weapons, res. 1653 (1961, yes 55, no 20, abstain 26): Use of nuclear weapons is "contrary to the spirit, letter and aims of the United Nations and, as such, a direct violation of the Charter of the United Nations," "contrary to the rules of international law and to the laws of humanity," and "a crime against mankind and civilization".
According to journalist Seymour Herse US is even planning to use tactical nuclear weapons against Iran. Tehran has not flouted NPT and is asserting its right to enrich Uranium up to 4% as fuel for power generation which is allowed under the Treaty . For experimental reactors 6% purity is advised .But for making a nuclear bomb over 80% purity is required.

So Americans with corporate media 'manufactured consent 'when polled recently favoured attack on Iran ( to destroy its US media presumed Nuclear weapons program), even as a majority are against handling of US war on Iraq , with President Bush's approval ratings plummeting to 31%. Even the US experts give 3 to 10 years period for Iran to manufacture a bomb .The technical preparations, including power requirements can not be hidden.

But barring corporate media soaked US public and some Europeans , few now believe Western leaders because of their and media's blatant spins , half truths and lies on Iraq's WMD s, its nuclear bomb manufacture program and Iraq's relationship with Al Qaeda , with all lies now exposed .

The Germans were blamed for what the Nazis did to Jews , Gypsies and so called other inferior races .There is a similarity in the western discourse about their cultural superiority over non-Europeans . West claims to derive its civilization and culture from the Greeks and hence the Cretian civilisation , which itself was derived from Egyptian and Phoenician. Both are indebted to Mesopotamian, verily the mother of all civilizations , which evolved mostly in Iraq and southeast Turkey.

A North- South and racial divide on NPT has emerged .Like the rich Japanese , who were accepted as 'honorary whites' by South African apartheid regime , white Christian nations had to gulp China's entry in NWP s club. But China signed NPT after having violated NPT spirit and norms . Its role in proliferation to north Korea and Pakistan and of Western countries among themselves and to Pakistan needs an unbiased inquiry . Both Iran and Libya bought nuclear technology and material from Dr Khan's black market. But what about Saudi Arabia with its massive assistance to Pakistan in the project and their deep rooted defence ties .There were recently some reports to this effect in the German media .
Origins of the Nuclear Arms;
Scientists theorised that an atom could be broken down into a nucleus of positive protons and neutral neutrons circled by negatively charged electrons .If neutrons bombarded heavy metals like Uranium or Thorium , the latter would split releasing enormous energy according to Einstein's formula of E=MC2. E is energy released, M is the mass and C is speed of light ie 186,000 miles per second. It is immense.
Natural uranium is composed of two isotopes , Uranium-238 (99.3%) and Uranium 235 (0.7% ) and is the most suitable metal for energy release. When U235 is bombarded by a neutron ,it releases on average of 2.5 neutrons and enormous energy .But U238 absorbs neutrons and does not split like U235 thus stopping the chain( continuous) reaction . Hence enriching of U235 isotopes is necessary both for fuel and for Atomic bombs . This is done by using high velocity centrifuges to separate U235 isotopes.
The Manhattan Project during the 2nd world war for US Atomic bomb needed massive investment and was then the largest factory under one roof, employing thousands of persons at its peak. Hitler's march in Europe had led to many scientists to flee Europe and go over to USA and Britain , who helped these countries in their Atomic bomb projects.
The US Manhattan Project succeeded and led to the first and so far mercifully the last use of nuclear bombs , on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 . USSR soon developed its own bomb and soon erstwhile allies against Germany and Japan , retched up the destructive potential to fusion ( Hydrogen ) bombs , in which an atomic bomb is used to trigger fusion of two heavy hydrogen ( helium ) nuclei , which releases enormous energy .Soon they were helping out their allies. USSR cut its assistance to China only in late 1950s
Rockets, missiles and submarines were developed for delivering nuclear bombs and for a second strike back response . Many times the world stared at the on set of the Armageddon. U.S.A threatened to use nuclear weapons, and even went on full nuclear alert, to prevent any "Soviet aggression" in the Middle East, especially to protect Israel in its pre-emptive and defensive wars of 1956, 1958, 1967, 1973, 1979 and 1982. Had there been some sort of technical hardware or software accident, or misinterpretation of evidence, any of those alerts could have resulted in a full scale nuclear war
There have been (at least) four major false alarms, the most recent in 1995, that almost resulted in the US or Russia launching its weapons in retaliation for a supposed attack. Now there is an even more dangerous possibility with the use of nuclear material for a dirty bomb by terrorists. West has threatened to attack presumed 'rogue states' supporting such terrorist attacks ! Who will decide and how quickly ?
Israel , the Nuclear elephant in the room.

In all this international discourse , little notice has been taken of Israel's arsenal of reportedly 200-400 nuclear bombs .Israel did not sign NPT nor has it publicly proclaimed a nuclear explosion. And the West has never discussed this matter seriously in IAEA or UN or placed any sanctions against Israel. Why?. And it is the Israeli leaders who make the maximum noise against nuclear bombs.
"Before the 1967 Six-Day War, they (Israel) felt their nuclear facility threatened and reportedly assembled several nuclear devices. By the 1973 Yom Kippur War Israel had a number of sophisticated nuclear bombs, deployed them, and considered using them. The Arabs may have limited their war aims because of their knowledge of the Israeli nuclear weapons. Israel has most probably conducted several nuclear bomb tests."
In 1991 Seymour Hersh wrote a book 'The Samson Option ; Israel's nuclear Arsenal and American Foreign Policy" (The Biblical Samson, of course, brought down a temple that killed himself and his enemies.) , which derives from Israeli view that once they had the bomb they are in a position to bring it all down on everyone if they felt cornered .Israel used nuclear blackmail to force USA to airlift unlimited military supplies during the 1973 Yom Kippur war .The threat of blackmail continues to distort the US –Israeli relationship.
Reportedly , Israel uses its long-range missiles and nuclear capable aircraft (and, some say, submarines with nuclear armed cruise missiles) to deter both conventional and unconventional attacks, or to launch "the Samson Option ", an all-out attack against an adversary should defenses fail and population centers be threatened. In addition, despite Israel's insistence that it "will not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons into the Middle East," these systems represent an effective preemptive strike force.
A trigger happy nation , Deputy US Secretary of State Eagleburger had to stay put in Tel Aviv during the 1991 war on Iraq , to rein in the Israelis from joining in which would have quickly unraveled the coalition George Bush's father had assembled .
While the Israeli hawk Ariel Sharon said "Arabs may have the oil, but we have the matches," even dovish Shimon Peres feels ; "acquiring a superior weapons system (read nuclear ) would mean the possibility of using it for compellent purposes - that is forcing the other side to accept Israeli political demands, which presumably include a demand that the traditional status quo be accepted and a peace treaty signed."
Unlike George Bush , Bill Clinton, at least distanced himself from this 'Samson Option' , rightly . Defense analyst Zeev Schiff opined in independent Haaretz: "Too many senior Israeli officials have taken to issuing threatening statements vis-a-vis Iraq .... Off-the-cuff Israeli nuclear threats have become a problem, even before the onset of the Iraqi crisis.[ or Iran now]... Washington may decide it wants to distance itself from Israel in order to avoid being accused of having conspired with us on an action we planned exclusively by ourselves."
By late 2002 George Bush evidently approved Israel's nuclear response to an Iraqi attack with biological and nuclear weapons -- before the United States invasion , according to the Scotsman.news , " Sharon eyes Samson's option against Iraq." Israeli president Ezar Weissman said "The nuclear issue is gaining momentum (and the) next war will not be conventional."
At the very least, the unilateral possession of nuclear arsenal by Israel in the region is enormously destabilizing and remains the major problem .
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert urged the international community to oppose the Iranian nuclear program, saying Teheran's ambitions threaten not only Israel but all of Western civilization.
"The Iranian nuclear program should concern many countries, especially those with global responsibility." He added that the international front against Iran should include the United States, Europe and other Western countries.
Only this week the head of Israel's Military Intelligence, Major General Amos Yadlin, told the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee that Iran would have acquired nuclear bombs by 2010. Iran had succeeded in enriching uranium to 3.5 percent at the Natanz facility. "In order to manufacture nuclear weapons, they have to be able to produce 25 kilograms of enriched uranium and they are still at the stage of [producing] grams," he said.

Peres, referring to Iranian President Ahmedinejad's so called call for Israel to be "wiped off the map" , retorted this week that he should bear in mind that his own country[Iran] could also be destroyed. [ Surely Iran would not dream of taking on Israel with its nuclear arsenal ]

West as usual has misquoted and then misused Ahmedinejad's statement , who had actually quoted Imam Khomeini as saying, "This occupation regime over Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time," like Khomeini's prediction that the Soviet Union would one day vanish. It wasn't to kill Soviet citizens, but a desire for peaceful regime change, unlike what USA is doing in Iraq. Of course what the Israelis are doing to Palestinians in the latters' home land with western support since the 2nd world war is there to see for everyone.
"The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy"
As for a symbiotic relationship between USA and Israel, commenting on the furor caused by an article by two respected US professors , Stephen Walt of Harvard and John Mearsheimer of the University of Chicago on the "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy" , a well known Israeli journalist Uri Avnery commented - "If the Israeli government wanted a law tomorrow annulling the Ten Commandments, 95 [US] senators (at least) would sign the bill forthwith."
He related how his press conferences in USA , one on two state solution for Palestine , 27 years ago , were widely attended with questions and answers by the media for hours ,but there was not a word in the US media next day .Obviously the Israeli lobby had sent a word around .It shows pathetic US subservience to Israeli lobby and exposes the so called freedom of media in USA . But Uri Avnery said that the conclusion as to whether the tail wags the dog or the reverse may be less straightforward. "The US uses Israel to dominate the Middle East, Israel uses the US to dominate Palestine" [ Why , the whole region ! Iran and beyond! ]
The author has experience of successful Israeli attempts to blackout his articles in media in many countries, but my voice can not be silenced .It only confirms what has been called the long hand of the Jewish lobby .But it has done incalculable harm to Israel and credibility of the Jews , who are losing friends and supporters fast .Watch for this space!
Another US ally has also profited from this nuclear blackmail. Pakistan provides open support to Jihadis and terrorists , who regularly carry out terrorist acts in Indian cities including one against Indian Parliament in 2001 and in Jammu and Kashmir . Pakistan feels secure against any retaliation because of its nuclear bombs .Its open blackmail has not been condemned by NWPs. In fact West uses such blacmail to pressurize India for concessions.

Robert Scheer wrote in Creators Syndicate last month ." The grim irony in all this is that Pakistan never has been held accountable by the United States for Khan's black-market nuclear proliferation racket, even though such a bold scheme could not have thrived without significant support from Pakistan's powerful military leaders. Of course, Khan, who was pardoned by Pakistan's military dictator, doesn't have to worry that Bush is going to order the CIA to spirit him to Guantanamo Bay for some rough Dick Cheney-approved interrogations. Pakistan, like Saudi Arabia, is a tight ally of the White House, despite having previously supported bin Laden's old Afghan friends, the Taliban. Indeed, the Bush administration was so eager to secure the friendship of Pakistan after the Sept. 11 attacks, it perversely ended the boycott imposed on that country in response to its development of a nuclear weapon."

Iran's nuclear program;
Iran's nuclear program was started in the 1970s under the Shah with
U.SA co-operation. But after the Shah's overthrow following the 1979 Islamic revolution, the Nuclear Suppliers' Group, a 45-nation cartel, ceased any relationship with Iran , although Imam Khomeini had declared that making of atomic bombs was haram, ( illegal) and issued a Fatwa .This position has been reiterated by his successor Ayatollah Ali Khamenei .
During the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88, Iran was reportedly in touch with intermediaries of the nuclear parts black market run by Dr AQ Khan At a meeting with a Khan representative , Iran received a written offer for the delivery of the makings of a nuclear weapons program. Iran bought P-1 gas centrifuge designs to enrich uranium and a starter kit for uranium enrichment.
But Iran told the IAEA in 2003 that it decided not to pursue the offer of parts for the core of a bomb. ( Documents concerning the 1987 offer were made available to the UN inspectors later). In 1992-94 Iran bought a duplicate set of P-1 centrifuge designs, components for 500 used P-1 centrifuges and took delivery of a design for the advanced P-2
At the same time in 1992 , Iran and Russia signed a nuclear co-operation agreement followed by a 1995 deal for the Russians to construct a light-water civil reactor at Bushehr which is yet come on stream.
How ever , when Iran's deals with Dr AQ Khan became public ,Tehran put its enrichment of uranium program under international inspection in 2003, and started negotiations with EU team ; Britain, Germany and France ,in an attempt to end the U.S.-led Western freeze on technological transfers, including spare parts for civilian planes to Iran.

But the US nuclear Ayatollahs had little intention of an agreed solution, except total surrender by Iran. So Tehran removed the seals on nuclear material this year to resume low-level enrichment in the presence of the IAEA inspectors.
There might be some area of darkness about progress in its enrichment program prior to 2003 but US approach appears like that on Iraq , asking for more intrusive inspections , then for stricter monitoring , and then create conditions for an attack The Russian Foreign Minister described it as deja vue . Remember US and UK had declared that whatever Saddam Hussein might do , the UN sanctions would not be lifted .They also ensured that medicines and other health equipment did not reach Iraq .According to UN reports between half to a million Iraqis, mostly children and women died as a result .The two UN directors of this genocide like program resigned in sheer disgust .

Iran maintains that it is in fact fulfilling its obligations under the NPT. The IAEA found no smoking gun in its report to UNSC after the latest visit to Iran. Conclusion of the April, 2006 IAEA inspection report :
Under a Safeguards Agreement concluded with the IAEA – as required under NPT, Iran agreed to allow IAEA inspectors to "verify" that no "source or special nuclear materials" are being used in furtherance of a nuclear weapons program. During the last three years, every report El Baradei has made to the IAEA Board concluded that – as best as he can determine – no proscribed materials have been so used. Both NPT and the IAEA Statute and the Iranian Safeguards Agreement all guarantee Iran's "inalienable" right to conduct research into – and to enjoy all the benefits of the peaceful use of – nuclear energy. The IAEA Statute ensures – insofar as the IAEA is able – that "source or special nuclear materials" are not used in furtherance of a military purpose as a secondary mission. This what El Baradei has been saying. The crucial point of his 28 April, 2005 report are ;

' 33. All the nuclear material declared by Iran to the Agency is accounted for. Apart from the small quantities previously reported to the Board, the Agency has found no other undeclared nuclear material in Iran. However, gaps remain in the Agency's knowledge with respect to the scope andcontent of Iran's centrifuge programme. Because of this, and other gaps in the Agency's knowledge, including the role of the military in Iran's nuclear programme, the Agency is unable to make progress in its efforts to provide assurance about the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities in Iran.34. After more than three years of Agency efforts to seek clarity about all aspects of Iran's nuclearprogramme, the existing gaps in knowledge continue to be a matter of concern. ' "This ambiguity is being twisted by the Bush administration to make it seem as though Iran has done something illegal. The report can be read to say that there is no evidence that Iran is doing anything illegal."The UNSC President's statement which asked IAEA for the report was non-binding but listen to US hawkish Ambassador John Bolton ," This is a real test for the Security Council. There's just no doubt that for close to 20 years, the Iranians have been pursuing nuclear weapons through a clandestine program that we've uncovered."" If the U.N. Security Council can't deal with the proliferation of nuclear weapons, can't deal with the greatest threat we have with a country like Iran — that's one of the leading state sponsors of terrorism — if the Security Council can't deal with that, you have a real question of what it can deal with." Sounds familiar to what George Bush was saying before US led illegal invasion of Iraq.

Iran has made two offers: set up a consortium to let other nations partially own and operate its commercial enrichment facility, thereby removing the secrecy around it, or, alternatively, a small experimental facility, with little threat of nuclear proliferation, along with an ensured supply of nuclear fuel, plus security assurances that it won't be attacked by the U.S. or Israel.
But the U.S. is not agreeable.
The Chinese Ambassador to UN said on 28th April that his country was opposed to a tougher resolution which "would complicate" the situation and lead to "the start of a series of resolutions". Russia also expressed "reservations" about a Chapter VII resolution .Russians, the Chinese and some Europeans, who have played along so far with Washington are worried that US insistence on working under Chapter VII of the U.N. charter, which paves the way later to use sanctions or military force. A re-run of the Iraq war.
Afraid of the direction US was taking French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin told a media conference in Paris on May 4 that "My conviction is that military action is certainly no solution." He added that "You know as I do the situation in the Middle East, in Iraq and the Near East, the idea that by waving the magic wand for a military shortcut we are going to solve the Iranian problem doesn't seem to me today to be something to talk about."
Mohamed ElBaradei, has made clear his hope in conversations with diplomats that pragmatism will eventually dictate that Iran be allowed some limited form of enrichment, monitored constantly by his agency.
US , Israel and Iran;
On March 20 in Cleveland, to a question about the influence of apocalyptic Christian theology on his policies, Bush gave a long winded reply and the threat he saw from Iran. He said, "Now that I'm on Iran … the threat from Iran is, of course, their stated objective to destroy our strong ally Israel. It's a threat to world peace; it's a threat, in essence, to a strong alliance. I made it clear, I'll make it clear again, that we will use military might to protect our ally, Israel."
Bush has made Israel a focus, "because he is not very attuned to the history of the situation and he has some really strange advisers who do not understand the broader implications of this, in terms of the vast majority of the American public."
Rep. Gary Ackerman (D-L.I./Queens), said Bush's focus increases the likelihood of a backlash against Jews and Israel if a U.S.-led war on Iran turns sour. "It's a horrible thing to do, it's dangerous," he said. "If something goes wrong, it's a setup to say we did it for Israel and not for America, and to blame the Jews."
Asked if he thought that was President Bush's intent, Ackerman said "I don't believe in accidents and coincidences in this business. They choose their words very carefully. This is not the first time the president has said this, but now it looks like it's their whole program."Some in the Administration have even suggested that strong U.S. action could be necessary to keep Israel from acting on its own.
"One of the concerns people have is that Israel might [attack Iran] without being asked," said Vice President Dick Cheney in a radio interview, "that if, in fact, the Israelis became convinced the Iranians had significant nuclear capability, given the fact that Iran has a stated policy that their objective is the destruction of Israel, the Israelis might well decide to act first and let the rest of the world worry about cleaning up the diplomatic mess afterwards."
On the day IAEA submitted its report Bush said, "The Iranians should not have a nuclear weapon, the capacity to make a nuclear weapon, or the knowledge as to how to make a nuclear weapon." [What does it mean except to suggest to Americans that Iran is on the way .The same tactics were used against Iraq by spins, half truths and lies.]
After a show of national technical pride and bombast about joining "the nuclear group" ie enriching some grams of Uranium to 4% , Iran offered that IAEA could conduct spot inspections of its uranium-enrichment activities, but only if the threat of U.N. sanctions were lifted .But Secretary Rice scoffed at Iran's offer and said on ABC program , "I think they are playing games. But, obviously, if they are not playing games, [then] they should stop the enrichment," she said
"The international community's credibility is at stake here. And we have a choice, too. We can either mean what we say, when we say that Iran must comply," said Rice. "Or we can continue to allow Iran to defy [the international community's will]." Again the presumption to speak on behalf of the world !
In Washington, Robert Joseph, the State Department's top proliferation official, took a very strong line saying that US is determined to ensure that "not one centrifuge spins" in Iran.
General Powell commented: "I don't know that there is a very robust plan, or menu of sanctions. I think that the menu of sanctions would be quite limited ... mean those that could actually get through the Security Council." The Iranians can handle them.
Asked if the US would consider a nuclear strike, he said: "No, nuclear weapons have not been used since Hiroshima and Nagasaki. "I think it most unlikely that anybody would seriously contemplate use of a nuclear weapon in the 21st century and especially for such a purpose".
UNSG Kofi Annan told a Spanish newspaper, " I think the issue is being handled properly by the International Atomic Energy Agency .I still believe that the best solution is a negotiated one, and I don't see what a military operation would resolve. I hope that a negotiating spirit prevails and that the military option is just a fruit of speculation."
Significantly there have also been warnings from several prominent US politicians. Republican senator Richard Lugar , chairman of the influential senate foreign relations committee, urged less haste in taking action and suggested that direct talks between Washington and Tehran "would be useful". There was a need "to make more headway diplomatically", he added. Former White House counterterrorism chief Richard Clarke argued armed conflict with Iran could backfire and prove even more damaging to US interests than the war with Iraq.
But faithful Tony Blair said in the House of Commons: "It's important we send a signal of strength" against a regime that has "forsaken diplomacy" and is "exporting terrorism" and "flouting its international obligations". A British commentator observed "Coming from one who has exported terrorism to Iran's neighbour, scandalously reneged on Britain's most sacred international obligations and forsaken diplomacy for brute force, these are Alice-through-the-looking-glass words."
The new British Foreign Minister ,Mrs Margret Beckett , who probably replaced Jack Straw for the latter's statement that a military strike on Iran was "inconceivable", when she was in New York for SC consultation on the Iran question , told the media "it's [military strike on Iran ] not the intention".
In spite of a slap by the British electorate in recent municipal elections , and party pressure Blair refuses to resign .He is trying to improve his legacy. It would be a litany of spins , half truths and blatant lies .Some wannabe Winston Churchill!
Russian view ;
President Putin, warned against too great an intervention by the Security Council – a path Moscow feels could lead to confrontation. "We think that the IAEA must continue to play a key role and it must not shrug off its responsibilities to resolve such questions and shift them on to the UN Security Council," he said at a summit with Angela Merkel, the German chancellor.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said, "One can speak of sanctions only after the appearance of concrete facts proving that Iran is not engaged exclusively in peaceful nuclear activities," according to the ITAR-Tass news agency .

Reacting to Dick Cheney's recent accusation that Russia was using oil and gas exports to "intimidate and blackmail" European neighbours ,"interfering with democratic movements" in places such as Ukraine and "unfairly and improperly restricting" civil rights ,Sergei Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, replied, "I believe such statements won't undermine efforts we are making together with the United States ... to build a fair world without conflicts." He added, "Russia expects to be perceived as an equal partner in the world arena without whose involvement it is impossible to solve a single problem." [ There is a litany of overt and covert US interference and pressure and use of dollar power around the world which includes even on the US –Indian nuclear agreement .]

The cool response to Cheney's frustrated angst underlines that Russia has become a global player again , whether it is about Syria ,Iran or Hamas, global warming or energy security , with its coffers brimming with petro-dollars , a result of high crude prices , following the US entanglement in Iraqi quagmire and resurgent Russian nationalism .Russia is back in the middle east and is supplying arms and missiles to Syria and Iran .

Russian First Deputy Defense Minister Gen Yuri Baluyevsky confirmed that it would implement the contract to supply nearly 30 Tor-M1 complexes to Tehran to defend the key state and military facilities, foremost nuclear facilities in Isfahan, Bushehr, Tehran and in the east of the country. The contract, worth 1.4 billion U.S. dollars, is the biggest arms deal Iran and Russia have ever concluded. Tor-M1 is an all-weather air defense system which is intended to ensure effective protection from cruise missiles, guided bombs, warplanes, helicopters, and pilot less and remotely controlled attack aircraft.
Prominent US Physicists protest at US plans to use nukes against Iran ;
Following media reports of US plans to use tactical nuclear weapons against Iran ,13 of USA's most prominent physicists , including 5 Nobel laureates and three past presidents of the American Physical Society, wrote a letter to President Bush, calling U.S. plans to reportedly use nuclear weapons against Iran "gravely irresponsible" and warning that such action would have "disastrous consequences for the security of the United States and the world."
The letter was initiated by physics Prof Jorge Hirsch, of the University of California, San Diego, " who last fall put together a petition signed by more than 1,800 physicists that repudiated new U.S. nuclear weapons policies that include preemptive use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear adversaries"
The letter said , "We are members of the profession that brought nuclear weapons into existence, and we feel strongly that it is our professional duty to contribute our efforts to prevent their misuse. Physicists know best about the devastating effects of the weapons they created, and these eminent physicists speak for thousands of our colleagues."
"The fact that the existence of this plan has not been denied by the Administration should be a cause of great alarm, even if it is only one of several plans being considered. The public should join these eminent scientists in demanding that the Administration publicly renounces such a misbegotten option against a non-nuclear country like Iran ."
Even Pope Benedict XVI called for ``serious'' talks with Iran to reach a solution. The Pope, on his 79th birthday, urged ``serious and honest'' negotiations with Iran to reach an ``honorable'' solution for all parties. He also appealed for peace across the world including the Middle East.
Emerging Problems in Far East;

US continues to blow hot and cold on north Korea, which has declared that it has nuclear weapons . North Korea has escaped 'regime change' because Washington is afraid of retaliatory attacks on its 35,000 plus troops stationed in South Korea. When asked why Saddam Hussein was chosen for regime change from among dictatorial regimes , Dick Cheney told Prince Hassan of Jordan that it was "doable" ( as if it was USA's divine right).It sums up the US nuclear policy towards non-allies and sends a chilling message around.
Pyongyang has at the back of its mind half a century of US nuclear intimidation , beginning with the Korean War, when ' military commanders Douglas MacArthur and Matthew Ridgway, presidents Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, all at one time or other favored a nuclear attack on north Korea and were restrained only by the fear of possible Soviet retaliation.'
It has often been suggested that China could bring Pyongyang around to an agreement by simply withholding aid and trade. This is undoubtedly true, but Beijing has said more than once, openly and up front, that it will not so. Nothing two-faced about it! "The Chinese are not particularly worried whether north Korea has an atomic bomb. They don't believe Pyongyang would be stupid enough to drop one on them. Historically, China has not been concerned about nuclear non-proliferation. " As with Pakistan too.
The solitary nuclear bombs victim Tokyo proclaims "three non-nuclear principles" ie non-production, non-possession and non-introduction into Japan and has a "peace constitution". But the core of its defense are nuclear weapons, never mind they are American, assuring "that any enemy attacking or threatening it with nuclear weapons would be devastated by American nuclear counter-attack." But it is also in the process of becoming a nuclear superpower, as it has both enrichment and reprocessing facilities, and is developing a fast-breeder reactor." Its stocks of plutonium amount to more than 40 tons, the equivalent of 5,000 Nagasaki-type weapons. Its determined pursuit of a nuclear cycle, giving it the wherewithal to be able quickly to go nuclear should that Rubicon ever be reached,-- is in defiance of the February 2005 appeal from the IAEA director general for a five-year freeze on all enrichment and reprocessing works."
Almost half of Japan's population fears the country could face war again, with north Korea's nuclear program and China's massive military build-up considered major threats to peace, according to the Cabinet Office survey, published recently in all major Japanese newspapers It said that 45 per cent of respondents believed Japan may become caught up in a war with 63.7 per cent of respondents citing north Korea's nuclear threat as a possible cause of regional conflict, followed by terrorist attacks and the rapid modernisation of China's military.

How will Japan react , a country totally opposed to nuclear weapons but with technical capability to produce nuclear weapons with delivery vehicles within a short time .Without any satisfactory agreed law and regime on the nuclear question, the situation might get out of hand . Who knows ,with their expertise on miniaturization from tress to music systems what the Japanese might come up with.

Conclusions;
Phyllis Bennis wrote last month in 'Foreign Policy In Focus'.
" At the end of the day Iran has been pretty clear about what it wants. It doesn't seem to want an actual nuclear weapon (both the late Ayatollah Khomeini and his successor have issued religious prohibitions, or fatwas, against such weapons) although there's little doubt that President Ahmadinejad appears to believe that posturing aggressively about "going nuclear" will help his flagging domestic ratings. (Sounds familiar?) What Iran really wants, and has asked for, is serious negotiations with the U.S., based on equality, not humiliation. And at the end, a security guarantee that neither Europe nor the UN, but only the U.S. itself--the world's "sole super-power" and the only nuclear weapons state threatening to actually use its nuclear arsenal--can provide.
" For all sides, talk is crucial. Nuclear weapons--in anyone's hands--are a nightmare that should be abolished once and for all, as the now-fading Non-Proliferation Treaty anticipated so many years ago. Certainly Iran should abjure any search for nuclear weapons--but that's not going to happen alone. What we need--what we ALL need--is a weapons of mass destruction-free zone throughout the Middle East. So not only no nukes for Iran, but let's be sure Israel signs the NPT and places its unacknowledged but highly provocative Dimona arsenal of 200-400 high-density nuclear bombs under international supervision, and then allows the inspectors to destroy them. Let's be sure no country in the Middle East is running a chemical--or biological-weapons program--the poor countries' nuclear weapons substitute of choice and an unfortunate inevitability as long as Israel has a nuclear monopoly in the region.
"And it's way past time for the U.S. to make good on its own NPT obligations to move towards full and complete nuclear disarmament. As long as Washington laughs off that obligation, and officially rejects it, it is hard to imagine why any other countries should take seriously a U.S. demand that take nuclear weapons off their agenda.
" Ironically enough the U.S. is already on record supporting just such a WMD-free zone in the Middle East. Article 14 of UN Security Resolution 687, that ended the 1991 Gulf War and imposed crippling sanctions on Iraq, states that disarming Iraq should be viewed as part of "establishing in the Middle East a zone free of all weapons of mass destruction and the missiles to deliver them.
"The language was written by the U.S. It's time we held Washington accountable to that pledge."

Not with the current US administration .It will remain a pipe dream.
USA's Geopolitical Nightmare ;
Calling it "The US's Geopolitical Nightmare " , F. William Engdahl wrote in Asia Times this week that " In the space of 12 months, Russia and China have managed to move the pieces on the geopolitical chess board of Eurasia away from what had been an overwhelming US strategic advantage, to the opposite, where the US is increasingly isolated. It's potentially the greatest strategic defeat for the US power projection of the post-World War II period." This is the most apt summing up of US strategic debacles.
Iran has been invited to join Shanghai Cooperation Council as a full member .There are proposals to give the Council military teeth and make it a counterpoise to rampantly spreading Nato. Russia , China and other members from Central Asia carried out the biggest ever joint military maneuvers in August, 2005, along the Russian and Chinese coast to warn off USA after its attempts to usher in 'franchised street revolutions' in Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan had misfired .
In the latest maneuver President Ahmadinejad wrote to President Bush proposing "new ways" to resolve their differences. It was the first letter from so high an Iranian leader to a US president since Washington broke off relations after the 1979 hostage crisis. USA has derided the letter .But remember ,it was in Persia that the game of Chess was invented –checkmate stands for Shahmat ie the king is dead .
USA did not participate in 9 May elections for the UN Human Rights Council which was created on March 15 to replace its predecessor Human Rights Commission ,because Washington was opposed to its constitution .In the UN General Assembly vote for constituting the Council, which Washington opposed , USA had support from Israel, Palau and the Marshall Islands , while 170 nations voted for it . Countries like Cuba , Russia and China , much to US chagrin have now been elected with India getting the maximum number of 171 votes. This should be an eye opener to Washington of its isolation in the international community.
As with many geniuses , who hover between craziness and acute lucidity , after Hiroshima and Nagasaki , mercurial physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, who led the technical side of the Manhattan project for the Atomic bomb , refused to head the hydrogen bomb project. While the atomic bomb Oppenheimer had built represented destruction of 10,000 tons of TNT, the hydrogen bomb represented 10 million tons of TNT.
On defense against nuclear terrorism , Oppenheimer felt there was none . At a Senate hearing he was asked "whether three or four men couldn't smuggle units of an [atomic] bomb into New York and blow up the whole city", Oppenheimer responded, "Of course it could be done, and people could destroy New York." When a startled senator then followed by asking, "What instrument would you use to detect an atomic bomb hidden somewhere in a city?" Oppenheimer quipped, "A screwdriver" [to open each and every crate or suitcase].
In fact , Oppenheimer along with his mentor and friend Danish physicist Niels Bohr suggested to politicians in USA and UK that an international agency be created to handle nuclear technology and weapons. Political and military leaders in US and England thought the two physicists were mad . British Prime Minister Winston Churchill quipped that Bohr be locked up, while President Harry S Truman vowed never to see that expletives Oppenheimer again.
Perhaps the world has finally arrived at a very grave if not one of the gravest of the cross roads in its history .But the politicians still rule the world.
K Gajendra Singh, served as Indian Ambassador to Turkey and Azerbaijan in 1992 -96. Prior to that, he served as ambassador to Jordan (during the1990 - 91Gulf war), Romania and Senegal. He is currently chairman of the Foundation for Indo-Turkic Studies.

Thursday, May 11, 2006

Asymmetric Diplomacy

SPIEGEL ONLINE - May 11, 2006, 03:41 PM
Iran's Foreign Policy
By Henryk M. Broder
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has shown he knows how to keep the international community on its toes. But to put his unpredictability down to insufficient diplomatic experience is to miss the point -- he's simply improvising as he goes along.
Shortly after coming to power, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced that Israel should be wiped off the map and that Germany should provide a part of its national territory to the Jewish people as compensation for the Holocaust. Udo Steinbach, the director of Hamburg's Oriental Institute, immediately spoke out in defense of Ahmadinejad, citing the Iranian president's "lack of diplomatic experience." Steinbach would probably think twice about making such a statement today.
Ahmadinejad is proving, on an almost daily basis, that for all his lack of experience, he's a talented and inventive amateur, capable of baffling experienced politicians and political efforts time and time again. Ahmadinejad may not be a great theoretical thinker -- he's more like a spontaneous natural talent, with a feel for the right moment. One day he is threatening to withdraw from the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, the next he re-opens the nuclear facilities sealed off on the orders of the United Nations, announcing that his country isn't interested in international resolutions.
He does an about-face by saying foreign inspectors may be allowed back into Iran, and presents a list of conditions. And then goes on to urge the UN to take action against the USA and suggests Germany might serve as a mediator in the ongoing dispute over his country's nuclear ambitions. Then he goes back to threatening the UN Security Council, arguing that its actions are "changing the path of cooperation to confrontation." In short, Ahmadinejad improvises as the need arises.
Now he's given the US President George W. Bush the real scoop on how to get from confrontation to cooperation. In fact, the letter he sent -- and which he didn't even bother to have translated into English -- is not a letter at all, but a sermon. That's why it took longer than usual for the content to become public. The letter contains only familiar banalities and platitudes. Liberalism and Western democracy have failed, he says; the Sept. 11 attacks were carried out with the support of intelligence services; the state of Israel was created in defiance of international law and the invasion of Iraq justified by lies.
But it's not the content of the letter that's important; it's the fact that the Iranian president is directly addressing his American colleague for the first time in 27 years, in order to make suggestions that aren't suggestions at all -- like the one to stand up for a better world together. It's enough to make headlines all over the world.
Ahmadinejad's bravado
Ahmadinejad has done it again. He's controlling the rhythm of events. The world is confused, and Ahmadinejad -- who holds a doctorate in transportation planning, but whose diplomatic experience is nil -- is filled with the perverse joy of a driver speeding down the wrong lane so quickly that everyone moves out of his way at the last moment. Like him or not, you have to admire his bravado.
In the military world, this way of dealing with your enemy already has a name. It's called asymmetrical warfare. The best example is terrorism. They don't wear uniforms, spare civilians or respect the rules of warfare, but when terrorists are captured they ask to be treated according to the Hague Convention on the Laws and Customs of War. They know a constitutional state can't afford to treat them the way they deserve.
Ahmadinejad might be seen as practicing asymmetrical diplomacy. The European Union, the US and international organizations, such as the International Atomic Energy Agency and the UN, are bound by rules and have to carefully coordinate their decisions. But he does what he wants -- and manages to keep everyone in check. Like a child raised by believers in anti-authoritarian education, he knows he can treat everything as his toy, because his parents won't intervene until he starts playing with burning matches. Ahmadinejad is testing how far he can go.
So far everything has been going according to plan. The US, the West, the UN, even Russia are reacting in the same way that a therapist would faced with an out-of-control patient -- by keeping quiet, and trying not to provoke him.
But Ahmadinejad isn't crazy; he's just unpredictable. He doesn't have a master plan. He only thinks in the short term: one step at a time. That's his strength. One day he threatens the US, the next he proposes a diplomatic partnership to Bush. It's not important whether he'll really come to the soccer World Cup in Germany. He's made Germany nervous just by saying he would come.
And yet he has to be taken seriously. A man responsible for sending half a million Iranian children out to track down landmines during the Iran-Iraq war is surely capable of anything.

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Scientists, Politicians and Generals write to Tony Blair against any Military Intervention in Iran

8 May 2006 (source: CASMII)
The Rt. Hon. Tony Blair MP
The Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
10 Downing Street,
London, SW1A 2AA London, 8 May 2006

Dear Mr Prime Minister,

Articles in the New Yorker and Washington Post last month report that the US government has already put plans for a military attack against Iran into their operational phase, that the US military is already active inside Iran to prepare for surgical strikes against Iranian nuclear plants and that the use of tactical nuclear weapons against Iran is being actively considered by Pentagon planners and by the White House. President Bush has since then alarmingly refused to rule out the use of nuclear weapons against Iran.

The ex-Foreign Secretary, Mr Jack Straw, had stressed in his statements on the Iranian nuclear issue that there is no smoking gun, no proof that Iran has a weaponization programme, and therefore no justification for the use of force. According to the Independent on Sunday, these statements have reportedly cost him his job under pressure from the Bush Administration.

Any pre-emptive attack led by the US against Iran will no doubt take place without any explicit UN approval and thus in violation of the UN Charter and international law. It will lead to a major conflagration in that volatile region of the world and is bound to result in a sharp escalation in anti-Western sentiments as well as in extremism, fundamentalism and terrorism.

Military strikes will unite the people of Iran to rally behind their government in order to resist the West, will cause a prolonged war with massive loss of human life and destruction to the country, and will set back the cause of building civil society in that part of the world for decades.

The use of any tactical nuclear weapons will not only be catastrophic and criminal but will end the post Second World War international order, which can lead to a massive rise in nuclear arms race in all parts of the globe, threatening regional and global nuclear wars.

As individuals who come from different walks of life and as organisations campaigning for peace and justice in the world, we support the recent letter by a host of prominent US physicists to President George W. Bush urging him to rule out the option of using tactical nuclear strikes against Iran. We also urge you to publicly condemn any covert military operations by the US against Iran and use all the influence of the UK government to prevent the US from launching a military attack on that country.

We urge you to commit the UK to resolve all outstanding issues regarding the Iranian nuclear programme in a peaceful manner.

Signed,

Professor Haleh Afshar, University of York
General Sir Hugh Beach - former Deputy Commander-in-Chief United Kingdom Land Forces Tony Benn
Jeremy Corbyn MP
Dr. Stephanie Cronin, University of Northampton
Professor Abbas Edalat, Imperial College London, Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran
Professor Robert A. Hinde, CBE, FRS, FBA, Cambridge University - Chairman British Pugwash
Professor Christopher J. Isham, ARCS, Imperial College London
Professor Henrik J. Jensen, Imperial College London
Dr Ziba Mir-Hosseni, London Middle East Institute, SOAS
Professor Thomas Kibble, CBE, FRS, Imperial College London
Dr Omid Masoud, Kings College London
Dr Pirouz Mojtahed-Zadeh, Chairman Urosevic Research Foundation
Dr Elaheh Rostami-Povey, SOAS, University of London
Dr Babak Seyfe, Kings College London
Professor A. Reza Sheikholeslami, Oxford University
Professor Richard L. Tapper, SOAS, University of London
Professor Reza Tavakol, FRAS, Queen Mary University of London
Professor David Wand, University of Portsmouth

Sunday, May 07, 2006

The country that wouldn't grow up

w w w . h a a r e t z . c o m
By Tony Judt
By the age of 58 a country - like a man - should have achieved a certain maturity. After nearly six decades of existence we know, for good and for bad, who we are, what we have done and how we appear to others, warts and all. We acknowledge, however reluctantly and privately, our mistakes and our shortcomings. And though we still harbor the occasional illusion about ourselves and our prospects, we are wise enough to recognize that these are indeed for the most part just that: illusions. In short, we are adults.
But the State of Israel remains curiously (and among Western-style democracies, uniquely) immature. The social transformations of the country - and its many economic achievements - have not brought the political wisdom that usually accompanies age. Seen from the outside, Israel still comports itself like an adolescent: consumed by a brittle confidence in its own uniqueness; certain that no one "understands" it and everyone is "against" it; full of wounded self-esteem, quick to take offense and quick to give it. Like many adolescents Israel is convinced - and makes a point of aggressively and repeatedly asserting - that it can do as it wishes, that its actions carry no consequences and that it is immortal. Appropriately enough, this country that has somehow failed to grow up was until very recently still in the hands of a generation of men who were prominent in its public affairs 40 years ago: an Israeli Rip Van Winkle who fell asleep in, say, 1967 would be surprised indeed to awake in 2006 and find Shimon Peres and General Ariel Sharon still hovering over the affairs of the country - the latter albeit only in spirit.
But that, Israeli readers will tell me, is the prejudiced view of the outsider. What looks from abroad like a self-indulgent, wayward country - delinquent in its international obligations and resentfully indifferent to world opinion - is simply an independent little state doing what it has always done: looking after its own interests in an inhospitable part of the globe. Why should embattled Israel even acknowledge such foreign criticism, much less act upon it? They - gentiles, Muslims, leftists - have reasons of their own for disliking Israel. They - Europeans, Arabs, fascists - have always singled out Israel for special criticism. Their motives are timeless. They haven't changed. Why should Israel change? But they have changed. And it is this change, which has passed largely unrecognized within Israel, to which I want to draw attention here. Before 1967 the State of Israel may have been tiny and embattled, but it was not typically hated: certainly not in the West. Official Soviet-bloc communism was anti-Zionist of course, but for just that reason Israel was rather well regarded by everyone else, including the non-communist left. The romantic image of the kibbutz and the kibbutznik had a broad foreign appeal in the first two decades of Israel's existence. Most admirers of Israel (Jews and non-Jews) knew little about the Palestinian Nakba (catastrophe) of 1948. They preferred to see in the Jewish state the last surviving incarnation of the 19th century idyll of agrarian socialism - or else a paragon of modernizing energy "making the desert bloom."
I remember well, in the spring of 1967, how the balance of student opinion at Cambridge University was overwhelmingly pro-Israel in the weeks leading up to the Six-Day War - and how little attention anyone paid either to the condition of the Palestinians or to Israel's earlier collusion with France and Britain in the disastrous Suez adventure of 1956. In politics and in policy-making circles only old-fashioned conservative Arabists expressed any criticism of the Jewish state; even neo-Fascists rather favored Zionism, on traditional anti-Semitic grounds.
For a while after the 1967 war these sentiments continued unaltered. The pro-Palestinian enthusiasms of post-1960s radical groups and nationalist movements, reflected in joint training camps and shared projects for terrorist attacks, were offset by the growing international acknowledgment of the Holocaust in education and the media: What Israel lost by its continuing occupation of Arab lands it gained through its close identification with the recovered memory of Europe's dead Jews. Even the inauguration of the illegal settlements and the disastrous invasion of Lebanon, while they strengthened the arguments of Israel's critics, did not yet shift the international balance of opinion. As recently as the early 1990s, most people in the world were only vaguely aware of the "West Bank" and what was happening there. Even those who pressed the Palestinians' case in international forums conceded that almost no one was listening. Israel could still do as it wished.
The Israeli nakba
But today everything is different. We can see, in retrospect, that the victory of Israel in June 1967 and its continuing occupation of the territories it conquered then have been the Jewish state's very own nakba: a moral and political catastrophe. Israel's actions in the West Bank and Gaza have magnified and publicized the country's shortcomings and displayed them to a watching world. Curfews, checkpoints, bulldozers, public humiliations, home destructions, land seizures, shootings, "targeted assassinations," the separation fence: All of these routines of occupation and repression were once familiar only to an informed minority of specialists and activists. Today they can be watched, in real time, by anyone with a computer or a satellite dish - which means that Israel's behavior is under daily scrutiny by hundreds of millions of people worldwide. The result has been a complete transformation in the international view of Israel. Until very recently the carefully burnished image of an ultra-modern society - built by survivors and pioneers and peopled by peace-loving democrats - still held sway over international opinion. But today? What is the universal shorthand symbol for Israel, reproduced worldwide in thousands of newspaper editorials and political cartoons? The Star of David emblazoned upon a tank.
Today only a tiny minority of outsiders see Israelis as victims. The true victims, it is now widely accepted, are the Palestinians. Indeed, Palestinians have now displaced Jews as the emblematic persecuted minority: vulnerable, humiliated and stateless. This unsought distinction does little to advance the Palestinian case any more than it ever helped Jews, but it has redefined Israel forever. It has become commonplace to compare Israel at best to an occupying colonizer, at worst to the South Africa of race laws and Bantustans. In this capacity Israel elicits scant sympathy even when its own citizens suffer: Dead Israelis - like the occasional assassinated white South African in the apartheid era, or British colonists hacked to death by native insurgents - are typically perceived abroad not as the victims of terrorism but as the collateral damage of their own government's mistaken policies.
Such comparisons are lethal to Israel's moral credibility. They strike at what was once its strongest suit: the claim of being a vulnerable island of democracy and decency in a sea of authoritarianism and cruelty; an oasis of rights and freedoms surrounded by a desert of repression. But democrats don't fence into Bantustans helpless people whose land they have conquered, and free men don't ignore international law and steal other men's homes. The contradictions of Israeli self-presentation - "we are very strong/we are very vulnerable"; "we are in control of our fate/we are the victims"; "we are a normal state/we demand special treatment" - are not new: they have been part of the country's peculiar identity almost from the outset. And Israel's insistent emphasis upon its isolation and uniqueness, its claim to be both victim and hero, were once part of its David versus Goliath appeal.
Collective cognitive dysfunction
But today the country's national narrative of macho victimhood appears to the rest of the world as simply bizarre: evidence of a sort of collective cognitive dysfunction that has gripped Israel's political culture. And the long cultivated persecution mania - "everyone's out to get us" - no longer elicits sympathy. Instead it attracts some very unappetizing comparisons: At a recent international meeting I heard one speaker, by analogy with Helmut Schmidt's famous dismissal of the Soviet Union as "Upper Volta with Missiles," describe Israel as "Serbia with nukes."
Israel has stayed the same, but the world - as I noted above - has changed. Whatever purchase Israel's self-description still has upon the imagination of Israelis themselves, it no longer operates beyond the country's frontiers. Even the Holocaust can no longer be instrumentalized to excuse Israel's behavior. Thanks to the passage of time, most Western European states have now come to terms with their part in the Holocaust, something that was not true a quarter century ago. From Israel's point of view, this has had paradoxical consequences: Until the end of the Cold War Israeli governments could still play upon the guilt of Germans and other Europeans, exploiting their failure to acknowledge fully what was done to Jews on their territory. Today, now that the history of World War II is retreating from the public square into the classroom and from the classroom into the history books, a growing majority of voters in Europe and elsewhere (young voters above all) simply cannot understand how the horrors of the last European war can be invoked to license or condone unacceptable behavior in another time and place. In the eyes of a watching world, the fact that the great-grandmother of an Israeli soldier died in Treblinka is no excuse for his own abusive treatment of a Palestinian woman waiting to cross a checkpoint. "Remember Auschwitz" is not an acceptable response.
In short: Israel, in the world's eyes, is a normal state, but one behaving in abnormal ways. It is in control of its fate, but the victims are someone else. It is strong, very strong, but its behavior is making everyone else vulnerable. And so, shorn of all other justifications for its behavior, Israel and its supporters today fall back with increasing shrillness upon the oldest claim of all: Israel is a Jewish state and that is why people criticize it. This - the charge that criticism of Israel is implicitly anti-Semitic - is regarded in Israel and the United States as Israel's trump card. If it has been played more insistently and aggressively in recent years, that is because it is now the only card left.
The habit of tarring any foreign criticism with the brush of anti-Semitism is deeply engrained in Israeli political instincts: Ariel Sharon used it with characteristic excess but he was only the latest in a long line of Israeli leaders to exploit the claim. David Ben-Gurion and Golda Meir did no different. But Jews outside of Israel pay a high price for this tactic. Not only does it inhibit their own criticisms of Israel for fear of appearing to associate with bad company, but it encourages others to look upon Jews everywhere as de facto collaborators in Israel's misbehavior. When Israel breaks international law in the occupied territories, when Israel publicly humiliates the subject populations whose land it has seized - but then responds to its critics with loud cries of "anti-Semitism" - it is in effect saying that these acts are not Israeli acts, they are Jewish acts: The occupation is not an Israeli occupation, it is a Jewish occupation, and if you don't like these things it is because you don't like Jews.
In many parts of the world this is in danger of becoming a self-fulfilling assertion: Israel's reckless behavior and insistent identification of all criticism with anti-Semitism is now the leading source of anti-Jewish sentiment in Western Europe and much of Asia. But the traditional corollary - if anti-Jewish feeling is linked to dislike of Israel then right-thinking people should rush to Israel's defense - no longer applies. Instead, the ironies of the Zionist dream have come full circle: For tens of millions of people in the world today, Israel is indeed the state of all the Jews. And thus, reasonably enough, many observers believe that one way to take the sting out of rising anti-Semitism in the suburbs of Paris or the streets of Jakarta would be for Israel to give the Palestinians back their land.
Israel's undoing
If Israel's leaders have been able to ignore such developments it is in large measure because they have hitherto counted upon the unquestioning support of the United States - the one country in the world where the claim that anti-Zionism equals anti-Semitism is still echoed not only in the opinions of many Jews but also in the public pronouncements of mainstream politicians and the mass media. But this lazy, ingrained confidence in unconditional American approval - and the moral, military and financial support that accompanies it - may prove to be Israel's undoing.
Something is changing in the United States. To be sure, it was only a few short years ago that prime minister Sharon's advisers could gleefully celebrate their success in dictating to U.S. President George W. Bush the terms of a public statement approving Israel's illegal settlements. No U.S. Congressman has yet proposed reducing or rescinding the $3 billion in aid Israel receives annually - 20 percent of the total U.S. foreign aid budget - which has helped sustain the Israeli defense budget and the cost of settlement construction in the West Bank. And Israel and the United States appear increasingly bound together in a symbiotic embrace whereby the actions of each party exacerbate their common unpopularity abroad - and thus their ever-closer association in the eyes of critics.
But whereas Israel has no choice but to look to America - it has no other friends, at best only the conditional affection of the enemies of its enemies, such as India - the United States is a great power; and great powers have interests that sooner or later transcend the local obsessions of even the closest of their client states and satellites. It seems to me of no small significance that the recent essay on "The Israel Lobby" by John Mearsheimer and Stephen Walt has aroused so much public interest and debate. Mearsheimer and Walt are prominent senior academics of impeccable conservative credentials. It is true that - by their own account - they could still not have published their damning indictment of the influence of the Israel lobby on U.S. foreign policy in a major U.S.-based journal (it appeared in the London Review of Books), but the point is that 10 years ago they would not - and probably could not - have published it at all. And while the debate that has ensued may generate more heat than light, it is of great significance: As Dr. Johnson said of female preachers, it is not well done but one is amazed to see it done at all.
The fact is that the disastrous Iraq invasion and its aftermath are beginning to engineer a sea-change in foreign policy debate here in the U.S. It is becoming clear to prominent thinkers across the political spectrum - from erstwhile neo-conservative interventionists like Francis Fukuyama to hard-nosed realists like Mearsheimer - that in recent years the United States has suffered a catastrophic loss of international political influence and an unprecedented degradation of its moral image. The country's foreign undertakings have been self-defeating and even irrational. There is going to be a long job of repair ahead, above all in Washington's dealings with economically and strategically vital communities and regions from the Middle East to Southeast Asia. And this reconstruction of the country's foreign image and influence cannot hope to succeed while U.S. foreign policy is tied by an umbilical cord to the needs and interests (if that is what they are) of one small Middle Eastern country of very little relevance to America's long-term concerns - a country that is, in the words of the Mearsheimer/Walt essay, a strategic burden: "A liability in the war on terror and the broader effort to deal with rogue states."
That essay is thus a straw in the wind - an indication of the likely direction of future domestic debate here in the U.S. about the country's peculiar ties to Israel. Of course it has been met by a firestorm of criticism from the usual suspects - and, just as they anticipated, the authors have been charged with anti-Semitism (or with advancing the interests of anti-Semitism: "objective anti-Semitism," as it might be). But it is striking to me how few people with whom I have spoken take that accusation seriously, so predictable has it become. This is bad for Jews - since it means that genuine anti-Semitism may also in time cease to be taken seriously, thanks to the Israel lobby's abuse of the term. But it is worse for Israel.
This new willingness to take one's distance from Israel is not confined to foreign policy specialists. As a teacher I have also been struck in recent years by a sea-change in the attitude of students. One example among many: Here at New York University I was teaching this past month a class on post-war Europe. I was trying to explain to young Americans the importance of the Spanish Civil War in the political memory of Europeans and why Franco's Spain has such a special place in our moral imagination: as a reminder of lost struggles, a symbol of oppression in an age of liberalism and freedom, and a land of shame that people boycotted for its crimes and repression. I cannot think, I told the students, of any country that occupies such a pejorative space in democratic public consciousness today. You are wrong, one young woman replied: What about Israel? To my great surprise most of the class - including many of the sizable Jewish contingent - nodded approval. The times they are indeed a-changing.
That Israel can now stand in comparison with the Spain of General Franco in the eyes of young Americans ought to come as a shock and an eleventh-hour wake-up call to Israelis. Nothing lasts forever, and it seems likely to me that we shall look back upon the years 1973-2003 as an era of tragic illusion for Israel: years that the locust ate, consumed by the bizarre notion that, whatever it chose to do or demand, Israel could count indefinitely upon the unquestioning support of the United States and would never risk encountering a backlash. This blinkered arrogance is tragically summed up in an assertion by Shimon Peres on the very eve of the calamitous war that will in retrospect be seen, I believe, to have precipitated the onset of America's alienation from its Israeli ally: "The campaign against Saddam Hussein is a must."
The future of Israel
From one perspective Israel's future is bleak. Not for the first time, a Jewish state has found itself on the vulnerable periphery of someone else's empire: overconfident in its own righteousness, willfully blind to the danger that its indulgent excesses might ultimately provoke its imperial mentor to the point of irritation and beyond, and heedless of its own failure to make any other friends. To be sure, the modern Israeli state has big weapons - very big weapons. But can it do with them except make more enemies? However, modern Israel also has options. Precisely because the country is an object of such universal mistrust and resentment - because people expect so little from Israel today - a truly statesmanlike shift in its policies (dismantling of major settlements, opening unconditional negotiations with Palestinians, calling Hamas' bluff by offering the movement's leaders something serious in return for recognition of Israel and a cease-fire) could have disproportionately beneficial effects.
But such a radical realignment of Israeli strategy would entail a difficult reappraisal of every cliche and illusion under which the country and its political elite have nestled for most of their life. It would entail acknowledging that Israel no longer has any special claim upon international sympathy or indulgence; that the United States won't always be there; that weapons and walls can no more preserve Israel forever than they preserved the German Democratic Republic or white South Africa; that colonies are always doomed unless you are willing to expel or exterminate the indigenous population. Other countries and their leaders have understood this and managed comparable realignments: Charles De Gaulle realized that France's settlement in Algeria, which was far older and better established than Israel's West Bank colonies, was a military and moral disaster for his country. In an exercise of outstanding political courage, he acted upon that insight and withdrew. But when De Gaulle came to that realization he was a mature statesman, nearly 70 years old. Israel cannot afford to wait that long. At the age of 58 the time has come for it to grow up.
Tony Judt is a professor and the director of the Remarque Institute at New York University, and his book "Postwar: The History of Europe Since 1945" was published in 2005.
Free Website Counter
online college search