I FRONT PAGE I 2006 PREVIOUS COVERS I CONTENTS OF MARCH 2006 I CONTENTS OF FEBRUARY 2006 ISSUE I CONTENTS OF JANUARY 2006 I APRIL I MAY I JUNE I JULY I AUGUST I SEPTEMBER I OCTOBER I NOVEMBER I DECEMBER I
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IN-DEPTH ANALYSIS What If Iran Gets the Bomb?
The elected institutions in Iran - the presidency, the parliament, many municipal councils - were in the hands of reformists, moderates who wanted change, while the unelected institutions - the army, the revolutionary guards, the legal system, the economic system, and, above all, the spiritual leadership - remained in the hands of the radical wing of the regime. There were many expectations. Immediately after his election, former president Khatami referred to his admiration of Western culture and suggested a dialogue between the Iranian people and the American people.
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The feeling was that things were moving
toward further important changes inside Iran and in its foreign policy,
but this has not happened. During the last two years, change has occurred
in the other direction, which means the reformists lost their strongholds
one by one. They lost a majority in many municipal councils; last year
they lost the majority in the parliament; and this year they lost their
last stronghold, the presidency, when a radical president was elected. The
election of a radical as the new president of Iran was not a surprise
because there was no chance that a reformist would be elected this time.
The surprise was that an unknown politician like Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the
former mayor of Teheran and an ultra-radical, won. He won because he
managed to deliver a message that he's going to take care of the poor and
transfer money from the rich to the poor. Many of the poor people voted
for him. The other reason he won is that the radical establishment and
spiritual leader Ali Khamenei himself supported him. What are the reasons
for the failure of the reformists in the last two years? Although they had
a leader, former president Khatami, he was not determined enough to lead
the struggle and eventually many of those who wanted change despaired of
the current situation and didn't come to the polls to vote. In the short
run, the election of the new president is a clear victory for the radical
establishment and for Khamenei, but the president doesn't have much
ability to change foreign policy. Even with eight years of Khatami as
president, he did not manage to advance his call for improving relations
with the United States. He did not differ with regard to Iran's nuclear
policy, and he never said one positive word with regard to Israel.
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Consideration of a
Pre-emptive Strike Any country that attacks Iran will have to pay a political price, especially Israel. Even those who may benefit from such an attack will condemn it. In addition, Iran can respond to an attack, unlike Iraq in 1981. It can respond, for example, by using Hizballah to fire its large rocket system against the north of Israel. It can try to disrupt the oil flow from the Gulf area. It can act against American targets in the Middle East and the Gulf area. And Iran says explicitly that if Israel attacks Iranian nuclear sites, it will respond by using its new operational missile, the Shihab III, which can reach Israeli targets. The bottom line is that to carry out such an attack is a huge mission. It may be necessary to repeat such an attack two or three times because one attack may not be enough. In my judgment, it's a matter for a superpower to consider, not a local power, even if its name is Israel.
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COMMENTARY This was not accurate because it is difficult to make a really accurate assessment. But three to five years is the timetable we have to think about until Iran acquires its first atomic bomb. Iran is under heavy pressure emanating from American military moves around Iran, mostly in Afghanistan and more importantly in Iraq. Iran is now encircled by pro-American regimes and in some of the countries bordering on Iran there are American troops. The message of the American move into Iraq is very clear to the Iranians. The Americans conducted a large-scale operation in Iraq in order to bring down a regime which was engaged, it was thought at the time, in supporting terrorism and having weapons of mass destruction programs. Iran is clearly in the same category. According to the American definition, Iran is the country most involved in terrorism around the world.
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Since 2003 the International Atomic
Energy Agency, with the encouragement of the European governments and the
blessing of the American government, has been sending inspectors to the
Iranians' known nuclear sites, and the agency publishes a report every
three months about the Iranian nuclear program. All of these reports very
harshly criticize the Iranians for hiding their activities. On the other
hand, the agency has failed to declare that the Iranians are violating
their commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and that
they are really aiming to acquire the bomb.
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Can a Political
Deal be Struck? They want agreements on large-scale technological assistance by the West, especially with regard to the oil sector. Iran would also like to have greater influence on what happens in its neighborhood, especially in the Persian Gulf area, and recognition of their interests in that area. Yet despite the fact that there has been some dialogue between the Iranians and the American administration for the past five years, there is no trust between the parties and without that, no real dialogue has developed. The key obstacle is the position of the Iranian regime. The radical wing of the regime is refusing to negotiate with the Americans on substantial issues because the lack of a relationship with the United States is one of the last symbols of their revolution. If they initiate a real dialogue with the United States, or even with Israel, what is left of the revolution? So they are not willing to give this up.
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