US ‘Olive
Branches’
Aren’t
What
They Seem
By Linda
Heard
22/07/08
"Arab
News"
- -- OPENING
the
newspaper
last week
turned out
to be a
surreal
experience.
One day “the
Great Satan”
and the
poster
country for
the “Axis of
Evil” were
daggers
drawn as per
usual and
the next day
US Secretary
of State
Condoleezza
Rice had
turned into
a female
version of
Nelson
Mandela
(apologies
to Mandela):
All
forgiveness
and
reconciliation.
Not only was
the State
Department
publicly
mulling over
whether to
open a
special
interests
section or
even a US
mission in
Tehran for
the first
time since
Iran’s 1979
Islamic
Revolution,
an almost
cuddly
official
William
Burns was
dispatched
to Geneva
for
face-to-face
talks with
his Iranian
counterparts.
Curious, to
say the
least!
Just in case
we haven’t
slipped into
some kind of
parallel
universe
while we
were
sleeping
what on
earth is
going on?
The
chronically
naïve might
be tempted
to believe
that
Washington
has packed
away its
sabers and
shrouded its
deadly toys
with dust
covers...at
least for
now. There
are those
who are
sincerely
convinced
that the
neoconservative
cabal
responsible
for the
invasions of
Afghanistan
and Iraq are
losing the
argument
while their
head honcho
Vice
President
Dick Cheney
is losing
his
influence
over the
last-minute
legacy-seeking
White House
incumbent.
And this
soft and
rosy
turnabout is
all thanks
to Ms. Rice,
who has
morphed from
hawk into
Mary Poppins
almost
overnight,
they say.
“We are
always
looking for
a way to
relate to
the Iranian
people and
to make it
easier for
them to
relate to
us,” said
Ms. Rice
becoming
warmer and
fuzzier by
the hour.
Problem is
if those
same La-La
Land
dwelling
souls
thought that
the Iranian
President
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad
would
release
white doves
or break
into a Farsi
rendition of
Kumbaya in
response to
such warm US
overtures,
they’ve been
sorely
disappointed.
This is
probably
because
Iran’s
leader is
probably
savvy enough
to recognize
a scam when
he sees one.
He is not
about to
relinquish
his
country’s
rights under
the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation
Treaty to
enrich
uranium just
because Ms.
Rice’s envoy
deigns to
sit down at
a table with
his
countrymen
in silence
while
managing to
refrain from
treating
them as
reviled
pariahs. And
he’s
unlikely to
declare,
“our house
is yours”
and mean it
in answer to
the special
interests or
US mission
proposals.
Naturally,
Ms. Rice is
feigning
utter
disappointment
over Iran’s
response to
her nation’s
gnarled and
calloused
hand of
friendship.
But did she
really
expect the
Iranians to
embrace this
seeming US
change of
heart at
face value?
Methinks
not. Just as
I read those
snippets in
the paper
saying to
myself:
Hello...
Hello...
What do we
have here
then?
I would
suspect
members of
the Iranian
leadership
experienced
a similar
reaction
prior to
fretting
over ways to
keep US
diplomats
safe or
spooks
posing as
diplomats
from poking
around and
stirring up
trouble. And
I can almost
hear the
groans of
Tehran-based
Swiss
diplomats in
whose
embassy a US
special
interest
section
would
probably be
housed if it
were,
indeed, a
serious
proposition.
During this
present
climate,
they might
as well
hoist a
giant bull’s
eye atop
their
building.
In reality,
America’s
“hug an
Iranian”
announcements
were put out
for effect.
It was a PR
stunt for
the benefit
of the
American
public,
which is fed
up to the
teeth with
wars
overall, and
it also
served as a
message for
the more
dovish among
Washington’s
European
partners as
well as
China and
Russia on
the lines of
“See! We
tried the
diplomatic
option and
it hasn’t
worked.
There’s
nothing more
we can do.
Now it’s up
to you to
get
wholeheartedly
on board
with our
plans.”
The US
attempts at
rapprochement
with Iran
last week
should be
viewed as
nothing more
than a
spoonful of
sugar before
the medicine
goes down.
Indeed, the
meeting in
Geneva
between Iran
and the
sextet of
world powers
had hardly
broken up
when US
officials
and their
allies began
administering
unpleasant
tasting cod
liver oil as
part of what
looked like
an
orchestrated
response.
Ms. Rice
quickly cast
of her
sugary alter
ego and
reverted to
type with
accusations
that Iran
was
indulging in
small talk
to waste
time and
threats of
renewed US,
European and
UN
sanctions.
And,
yesterday,
during a
visit to
Israel,
British
Prime
Minister
Gordon Brown
accused Iran
of making
“abhorrent
threats
toward
Israel”
while
warning
Tehran of
Britain’s
determination
to prevent
an Iranian
nuclear
weapons
program.
To be fair,
though,
Washington
isn’t the
only player
in this
diplomatic
game of
musical
chairs. Iran
has toned
down the
rhetoric and
adopted a
softly,
softly
approach
too.
President
Ahmadinejad
has
characterized
the Geneva
talks as “a
step
forward”
saying he
would
welcome
direct talks
with the US.
He has also
pronounced
favorably on
a possible
US mission
in Tehran.
But so far
he’s given
absolutely
nothing away
when it
comes to his
nuclear
ambitions —
whatever
they may be
— apart from
a few
well-placed
smiles. The
jury is
still out as
to who will
be still
left on the
seat once
the music
finally
stops.
Linda Heard
-
Sierra12th@yahoo.co.uk
