Why Do You Get Them But I
Can't?
by Tim Buchholz / July 16th,
2008
http://www.dissidentvoice.org/2008/07/why-do-you-get-them-but-i-can%E2%80%99t/
Every day we seem to be
inching more and more toward more war.
According to Ali Akbar Dareini's article in the AP, "Iran test-fired nine long- and medium-range
missiles Wednesday during war games that officials said aimed to show the
country can retaliate against any U.S. and Israeli attack." He
also says that "Israel's
military sent warplanes over the eastern Mediterranean for a large military
exercise in June that U.S.
officials described as a possible rehearsal for a strike on Iran's nuclear
facilities." Our boys too are running war games, preparing for a possible
attack on the Strait of Hormuz,
"a strategic waterway through which about 40 percent of the world's oil
passes." All this because we say Iran wants Nuclear Weapons.
The Nuclear Program in Iran is a long
story, and at the beginning, is US. The US, that is. In the 1950's the US was very friendly with the Shah
of Iran. We, well the CIA, helped put him in power in a coup that removed a
democratically elected prime minister. People in the Gerald Ford
Administration, names we see today saying Iran should not be allowed to pursue
enrichment (Dick Cheney, for one), suggested to the Shah that though Iran had
plenty of oil, some day it would run out and it was time to start preparing for
the future. According to Wikipedia, "President
Gerald Ford signed a directive in 1976 offering Tehran the chance to buy and operate a
U.S.-built reprocessing facility for extracting plutonium from nuclear reactor
fuel. The Ford strategy paper said the introduction of nuclear power will both
provide for the growing needs of Iran's economy and free remaining
oil reserves for export or conversion to petrochemicals." Now, 30 years
later, Dick Cheney says Iran
is "already sitting on an awful lot of oil and gas, nobody can figure why
they need nuclear as well to generate energy."
But back
to the beginning.
According
to "Iran's
Nuclear Program.
Part 1: Its History" by Mohammad Sahimi,
"History shows that the US
and her allies were in fact the driving force behind the birth of Iran's nuclear
program in the late 1960s and early 1970s. According to declassified
confidential US Government documents posted on the Digital National Security
Archive, in the mid-1970s, the US encouraged Iran to expand her non-oil energy
base, suggested to the Shah that Iran needed not one but several nuclear
reactors to acquire the electrical capacity that the Stanford Research
Institute had proposed, and expressed interest in the US companies
participating in Iran's nuclear energy projects." He says the Shah's
government was going to purchase eight nuclear reactors from the US for
generating electricity.
And according to "Bush
Spins Iran's Centrifuges" by Ray McGovern, "Cheney and Rumsfeld persuaded a hesitant President Ford to offer Iran a deal that would have meant at least $6.4
billion for U.S.
corporations like Westinghouse and
General Electric, had not the Shah been unceremoniously dumped three years
later. The offer included a reprocessing facility for a complete nuclear fuels
cycle — essentially the same capability that the U.S.
and Israel now insist Iran cannot be
allowed to acquire."
Dafna Linzer
says in her article "Past Arguments Don't Square with Current Iran
Policy," "Iran was
also willing to pay an additional $1 billion for a 20 percent stake in a
private uranium enrichment facility in the United States that would supply
much of the uranium to fuel the reactors." We also provided Iran with
"93% enriched uranium reactor fuel," in the 1960's, according to
Iranwatch.org. To make an atomic bomb, according to
"Uranium Enrichment – How to Make an Atomic Bomb" by Tim Dean,
"the uranium has to be enriched to more than 90 per cent and be produced
in large quantities." He says Iran claims it has "not
enriched uranium beyond 4.8 per cent and only on a limited scale (as of
2006)." Wikipedia says "Most reactor fuel
is enriched to only 3–4%." The International Atomic Energy Agency, or the
IAEA, who according to their website "works with its Member States and
multiple partners worldwide to promote safe, secure and peaceful nuclear
technologies," released a report on Iran in late May 2008 entitled
"Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement and relevant provisions of
Security Council resolutions 1737 (2006), 1747 (2007) and 1803 (2008) in the
Islamic Republic of Iran." It states, "The results of the
environmental samples taken at FEP
and PFEP indicate that the plants have been operated as declared. The samples
showed low enriched uranium (with up to 4.0% U-235), natural uranium and
depleted uranium (down to 0.4% U-235) particles. Iran declared enrichment levels in
FEP of up to 4.7% U-235. Since March 2007, fourteen unannounced inspections
have been conducted."
In a report issued in
November 2007 from The National Intelligence Council (NIC) of The United States
entitled "National Intelligence Estimate — Iran: Nuclear Intentions and
Capabilities" our government states "National Intelligence Estimates
(NIEs) are the Intelligence Community's (IC) most
authoritative written judgments on national security issues and designed to
help US civilian and military leaders develop policies to protect US national
security interests." They "ascribe high, moderate, or low levels of
confidence to our assessments," and define high confidence as "High
confidence generally indicates that our judgments are based on high-quality
information, and/or that the nature of the issue makes it possible to render a
solid judgment." They say with high confidence that, "in fall 2003, Tehran halted its nuclear
weapons program."
The NIC defines moderate as,
"Moderate confidence generally means that the information is credibly
sourced and plausible but not of sufficient quality or corroborated
sufficiently to warrant a higher level of confidence." They then say that,
"We assess with moderate confidence Tehran
had not restarted its nuclear weapons program as of mid-2007," and that,
"We continue to assess with moderate-to-high confidence that Iran does not
currently have a nuclear weapon." They also state, "We judge with
moderate confidence that the earliest possible date Iran would be technically capable
of producing enough HEU for a weapon is late 2009, but that this is very
unlikely." So why the big rush now to attack their nuclear facilities? And
isn't our system of law in the US
based on the principle "innocent until proven guilty?"
Perhaps the rush has
something to do with my favorite joke circulating before the Iraq war, "How does the US know Iraq has weapons of mass
destruction? They still have the receipt." According to "State of War," by James Risen,
the CIA had a secret plan they called "Merlin."
It was hatched under the
Clinton Administration, and was carried out in 2000 under the Bush
Administration. It involved a Russian scientist who had defected to the US years
earlier and had been kept on the CIA's payroll. He was given, "technical
designs for a TBA 480 high-voltage block, otherwise known as a "firing
set", for a Russian-designed nuclear weapon. He held in his hands the
knowledge needed to create a perfect implosion that could trigger a nuclear
chain reaction inside a small spherical core. It was one of the greatest
engineering secrets in the world, providing the solution to one of a handful of
problems that separated nuclear powers such as the United
States and Russia
from rogue countries such as Iran
that were desperate to join the nuclear club but had so far fallen short."
And he was told to take the blueprints, "to Vienna to sell them - or simply give them -
to the Iranian representatives to the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA)." The blueprints had a small error, but they hoped Iran wouldn't
notice and would try to build a bomb.
"Instead of a mushroom
cloud, the Iranian scientists would witness a disappointing fizzle. The Iranian
nuclear programme would suffer a humiliating setback,
and Tehran's
goal of becoming a nuclear power would have been delayed by several
years." The CIA wanted to see if Iran already had this technology,
and if not, they wanted to humiliate them. The only problem was the Russian
Scientist noticed the error.
When he told the CIA
officers of the error, they told him it didn't matter, but he feared the
Iranians wouldn't work with him if they noticed the flaw. So once he arrived in
Vienna he
opened the package and included a letter saying that there was a flaw, but he
could help them find it. He then got scared and instead of selling the report
to the Iranians, he slipped it under their door and ran. James Risen goes on to
say that, "Tehran
also obtained nuclear blueprints from the network of Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, and so already had workable blueprints against
which to compare the designs obtained from the CIA. Nuclear experts say that
they would thus be able to extract valuable information from the blueprints
while ignoring the flaws." Oops!
Another bit of information
left out of the current administrations speeches is that Iran's
spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has issued
a fatwa forbidding nuclear weapons. Wikipedia
describes a Fatwa as "a religious opinion on Islamic law issued by an Islamic
scholar.
In Sunni Islam any fatwa is
non-binding, whereas in Shia Islam it could be,
depending on the status of the scholar." Iran is predominately Shiite. Bill
Weinberg, in his story "Iran
issues anti-nuke fatwa," includes a portion of the statement Iran presented to the IAEA on the anniversary of
the Nagasaki
bombing. "The Leader of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has issued the Fatwa that the production,
stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons are forbidden under Islam and that the
Islamic Republic of Iran shall never acquire these weapons. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who took office just recently, in his
inaugural address reiterated that his government is against weapons of mass
destruction and will only pursue nuclear activities in the peaceful domain … It
is the most absurd manifestation of irony that the single state who caused this
single nuclear catastrophe in a twin attack on our earth now has assumed the
role of the prime preacher in the nuclear field while ever expanding its
nuclear weapons capability." Iran's
spiritual leader issued a similar fatwa against chemical weapons during the
Iran/Iraq war, and although Iraq
used chemical weapons, Iran
did not. Ali Khamenei says that Iran is committed to The Non-Proliferation
Treaty, which Iran
signed in 1968. According to Mohammed Sahimi, the
treaty "recognized Iran's
inalienable right to develop research, production and use of nuclear energy for
peaceful purposes without discrimination, and acquire equipment, materials, and
scientific and technological information." They are also permitted under
this treaty to enrich uranium, which the US
and its allies are now demanding Iran cease with threat of war. The US signed this
same treaty, and according to the UN's website, the NPT "represents the
only binding commitment in a multilateral treaty to the goal of disarmament by
the nuclear-weapon States." So isn't the United States in violation of this
treaty by not disarming? When is someone going to attack our nuclear reactors
and put sanctions on us?
Ria Novosti,
in the article "IAEA says Israel's nuclear status none of its
concern," says "The UN nuclear watchdog said it will not respond to
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's
remark implying that Israel has nuclear weapons, something the Jewish state has
never officially admitted.
Independent analysts have
said Israel
holds between 80 and 200 nuclear warheads, and may be the world's sixth-largest
nuclear power." Gerald M. Steinberg, in his article, "The
International Atomic Energy Agency and Israel,
A Realistic Agenda," defends Israel
saying, "As long as Jewish sovereignty and Israel's right to equality as a
state among the nations is denied, the need for a credible deterrent will not
end."
Israel bombed a nuclear reactor in
Syria in 2007 in an attempt
to keep them from acquiring nuclear weapons, and as mentioned above have
practiced an attack on Iran's
reactors. Israel's closest
ally, The United States, has gone to war with Iraq
and many people believe they did so for oil, which Iran happens to have a lot of. Is
not the sovereignty of Iran
at stake as well? Countries want to have nuclear weapons for the same reason
that the US
won't get rid of theirs, as a deterrent from the other countries that do have
them. It's kind of like the Second Amendment here in America, the right to bear arms. It
was created by our forefathers to guarantee that if the government becomes
corrupt, the people can stand up and fight back. I don't know what Iran's
intentions are, but I do know what is fair. And it is not fair for the only
country to ever use a nuclear weapon, who has more
than anyone else, to tell anybody else they can't have one, let alone threaten
war.
Henry Kissinger, who was
Secretary of State during the Ford Administration, now writes opinion articles
about why Iran
should not be allowed to go nuclear. During the Ford Administration he was one
of the major players in bringing nuclear power to Iran. In Dafna
Linzer's article mentioned above, she asked him why
he changed his mind. He said, "They were an allied country, and this was a
commercial transaction. We didn't address the question of them one day moving
toward nuclear weapons." Had they only just bought it all from us, maybe
we wouldn't be on the brink of World War III.
Tim Buchholz is a freelance
writer living in Ohio.