The case for Iran
Alarmist assessments of Iran's nuclear program lack a
key component: evidence.
By M. Javad Zarif, M. JAVAD ZARIF is the Iranian
ambassador to the United Nations.
12/30/06 "Los
Angeles Times " -- -- WHEN THE U.N.
Security Council was forced to convene on the Saturday
before Christmas to vote on Resolution 1737 — against
Iran's nuclear program — it was only natural to ask what
the urgency was.
Iran had not attacked or threatened to use force against
any member of the United Nations; in fact, Iran has not
attacked any country for more than two centuries. Iran
was not on the verge of building a nuclear weapon. To
the contrary, as a study released this week by the
National Academy of Sciences concludes, Iran needs
nuclear energy in spite of its oil and gas reserves.
At the same time, Iran has categorically rejected the
development, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons on
both ideological and strategic grounds. It has remained
committed to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty — which
it ratified in 1970 — and was even prepared to provide
guarantees that it would never withdraw from the treaty.
All of Iran's nuclear facilities have been inspected by
the International Atomic Energy Agency. Iran has stated
its readiness to place them under an even more stringent
regime, as it did from December 2003 to February 2006,
when more than 2,000 person-days of scrutiny resulted in
repeated statements by the IAEA that there was no
evidence of a weapons program. As IAEA Director-General
Mohamed ElBaradei recently said, "A lot of what you see
about Iran right now is assessment of intentions."
Many such assessments have been produced by the
intelligence agencies of governments with agendas
hostile toward Iran. They are, as a result, misleading.
For instance, a draft National Intelligence Estimate by
the CIA in 1992 concluded that Iran could develop a
nuclear weapon by 2000. The Israelis have been saying
for many years that Iran will pass the "point of no
return" within six months or less.
But even these alarmist assessments concede that there
is no actual evidence that Iran is trying to build a
nuclear weapon and that, even if it wanted to do so, it
would not be capable of developing one before 2010 or
2015.
So: no urgency, no imminent threat. The real reason for
the pre-Christmas meeting was to take advantage of a
more favorable Security Council composition — before new
members arrive on Jan. 1 — and impose sanctions on Iran.
The sanctions aim to punish Iran for refusing to suspend
its peaceful and legal uranium enrichment activities.
However, suspension is not a solution in itself; it can
only provide time to search for one. A stopgap
suspension was already in place for two years, while
Iran engaged in negotiations. But over the last three
years, the United States and its European allies have
never proposed any long-term solution other than
insisting on an indefinite suspension of Iran's
enrichment activities.
In contrast, my country has proposed real alternatives
to ensure that its civilian nuclear program will remain
exclusively and indefinitely peaceful:
• On March 23, 2005, Iran offered a comprehensive and
far-reaching package to France, Germany and Britain,
including national legislation to permanently ban
developing or using nuclear weapons, technical
guarantees against proliferation and unprecedented,
around-the-clock IAEA inspections. It also envisaged
relations of mutual respect and cooperation in a wide
range of economic, political and counter-terrorism
areas. Despite their initial enthusiasm, the Europeans
refused to engage in negotiations on that package,
insisting instead on indefinite suspension, apparently
because of U.S. objections.
• On July 18, 2005, Iran offered to allow the IAEA "to
develop an optimized arrangement on numbers, monitoring
mechanism and other specifics" for an initial, limited
operation at the Natanz uranium enrichment facility,
"which would address our needs and allay [their]
concerns." The offer was not even considered.
• On Sept. 17, 2005, Iran expressed its readiness to
engage in serious partnerships with private and public
sectors of other countries for uranium enrichment in
Iran "in order to provide the greatest degree of
transparency." Again, the offer was rebuffed.
• On March 30, 2006, Iran proposed establishing regional
consortia for fuel-cycle development with countries
inside and outside the region, with joint ownership and
division of labor based on the expertise of the
participants. No one cared to respond to this proposal.
• During the September and October 2006 talks between
Iranian nuclear negotiators and the European Union, Iran
proposed an international consortium, an offer that was
initially considered very promising by the Europeans but
then was rapidly rejected as insufficient. Once again,
they insisted instead on suspension.
These offers were exact replicas of the IAEA's main
proposals on multinational fuel activities, including
enrichment, published Feb. 22, 2005. Iran's readiness to
implement them presents a unique opportunity not only to
remove concerns about our fuel-cycle activities but also
to strengthen the Nonproliferation Treaty by providing a
model for other countries with similar enrichment
programs. No other country with similar technology has
been prepared to be as flexible as Iran.
Neither suspension nor sanctions can achieve the stated
objective of ensuring nonproliferation because Iran has
now been compelled to develop nuclear technology on its
own. As many nonproliferation experts have already
pointed out, in countries with Iran's level of
technological achievement, only engagement, transparency
and international monitoring can provide assurances of
nonproliferation.
Iran remains eager to dispel any doubts. It is not too
late to reach an agreement on meaningful measures that
can serve our common objective of limiting the
proliferation of nuclear weapons.
Copyright 2006 Los Angeles Times
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