Iran Proposal to U.S. Offered Peace with Israel
By Gareth Porter
WASHINGTON, May 24
IPS) - Iran offered in 2003 to accept peace
with Israel and to cut off material assistance to Palestinian
armed groups and pressure them to halt terrorist attacks within
Israel's 1967 borders, according to the secret Iranian proposal
to the United States.
The two-page proposal for a broad Iran-U.S. agreement covering
all the issues separating the two countries, a copy of which was
obtained by IPS, was conveyed to the United States in late April
or early May 2003. Trita Parsi, a specialist on Iranian foreign
policy at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced
International Studies who provided the document to IPS, says he
got it from an Iranian official earlier this year but is not at
liberty to reveal the source.
The two-page document contradicts the official line of the
George W. Bush administration that Iran is committed to the
destruction of Israel and the sponsorship of terrorism in the
region.
Parsi says the document is a summary of an even more detailed
Iranian negotiating proposal which he learned about in 2003 from
the U.S. intermediary who carried it to the State Department on
behalf of the Swiss Embassy in late April or early May 2003. The
intermediary has not yet agreed to be identified, according to
Parsi.
The Iranian negotiating proposal indicated clearly that Iran was
prepared to give up its role as a supporter of armed groups in
the region in return for a larger bargain with the United
States. What the Iranians wanted in return, as suggested by the
document itself as well as expert observers of Iranian policy,
was an end to U.S. hostility and recognition of Iran as a
legitimate power in the region.
Before the 2003 proposal, Iran had attacked Arab governments
which had supported the Israeli-Palestinian peace process. The
negotiating document, however, offered "acceptance of the Arab
League Beirut declaration", which it also referred to as the
"Saudi initiative, two-states approach."
The March 2002 Beirut declaration represented the Arab League's
first official acceptance of the land-for-peace principle as
well as a comprehensive peace with Israel in return for Israel's
withdrawal to the territory it had controlled before the 1967
war.. Iran's proposed concession on the issue would have aligned
its policy with that of Egypt and Saudi Arabia, among others
with whom the United States enjoyed intimate relations.
Another concession in the document was a "stop of any material
support to Palestinian opposition groups (Hamas, Jihad, etc.)
from Iranian territory" along with "pressure on these
organizations to stop violent actions against civilians within
borders of 1967".
Even more surprising, given the extremely close relationship
between Iran and the Lebanon-based Hizbollah Shiite organisation,
the proposal offered to take "action on Hizbollah to become a
mere political organization within Lebanon".
The Iranian proposal also offered to accept much tighter
controls by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in
exchange for "full access to peaceful nuclear technology". It
offered "full cooperation with IAEA based on Iranian adoption of
all relevant instruments (93+2 and all further IAEA protocols)".
That was a reference to protocols which would require Iran to
provide IAEA monitors with access to any facility they might
request, whether it had been declared by Iran or not. That would
have made it much more difficult for Iran to carry out any
secret nuclear activities without being detected.
In return for these concessions, which contradicted Iran's
public rhetoric about Israel and anti-Israeli forces, the secret
Iranian proposal sought U.S. agreement to a list of Iranian
aims. The list included a "Halt in U.S. hostile behavior and
rectification of status of Iran in the U.S.", as well as the
"abolishment of all sanctions".
Also included among Iran's aims was "recognition of Iran's
legitimate security interests in the region with according
defense capacity". According to a number of Iran specialists,
the aim of security and an official acknowledgment of Iran's
status as a regional power were central to the Iranian interest
in a broad agreement with the United States.
Negotiation of a deal with the United States that would advance
Iran's security and fundamental geopolitical political interests
in the Persian Gulf region in return for accepting the existence
of Israel and other Iranian concessions has long been discussed
among senior Iranian national security officials, according to
Parsi and other analysts of Iranian national security policy.
An Iranian threat to destroy Israel has been a major propaganda
theme of the Bush administration for months. On Mar. 10, Bush
said, "The Iranian president has stated his desire to destroy
our ally, Israel. So when you start listening to what he has
said to their desire to develop a nuclear weapon, then you begin
to see an issue of grave national security concern."
But in 2003, Bush refused to allow any response to the Iranian
offer to negotiate an agreement that would have accepted the
existence of Israel. Flynt Leverett, then the senior specialist
on the Middle East on the National Security Council staff,
recalled in an interview with IPS that it was "literally a few
days" between the receipt of the Iranian proposal and the
dispatch of a message to the Swiss ambassador expressing
displeasure that he had forwarded it to Washington.
Interest in such a deal is still very much alive in Tehran,
despite the U.S. refusal to respond to the 2003 proposal.
Turkish international relations professor Mustafa Kibaroglu of
Bilkent University writes in the latest issue of Middle East
Journal that "senior analysts" from Iran told him in July 2005
that "the formal recognition of Israel by Iran may also be
possible if essentially a 'grand bargain' can be achieved
between the U.S. and Iran".
The proposal's offer to dismantle the main thrust of Iran's
Islamic and anti-Israel policy would be strongly opposed by some
of the extreme conservatives among the mullahs who engineered
the repression of the reformist movement in 2004 and who backed
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in last year's election.
However, many conservative opponents of the reform movement in
Iran have also supported a negotiated deal with the United
States that would benefit Iran, according to Paul Pillar, the
former national intelligence officer on Iran. "Even some of the
hardliners accepted the idea that if you could strike a deal
with the devil, you would do it," he said in an interview with
IPS last month.
The conservatives were unhappy not with the idea of a deal with
the United States but with the fact that it was a supporter of
the reform movement of Pres. Mohammad Khatami, who would get the
credit for the breakthrough, Pillar said.
Parsi says that the ultimate authority on Iran's foreign policy,
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was "directly
involved" in the Iranian proposal, according to the senior
Iranian national security officials he interviewed in 2004.
Kamenei has aligned himself with the conservatives in opposing
the pro-democratic movement.
Gareth Porter is an historian and national security policy
analyst. His latest book, "Perils of Dominance: Imbalance of
Power and the Road to War in Vietnam", was published in June
2005. (END/2006)
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