HERSH: THE IRAN PLANS
http://www.newyorker.com/printables/fact/060417fa_fact
THE
IRAN PLANS
by SEYMOUR M.
HERSH
Would President Bush go to war to stop
Tehran from getting the bomb?
Issue of
2006-04-17
Posted
2006-04-10
The Bush Administration,
while publicly advocating diplomacy in order to stop Iran from pursuing a
nuclear weapon, has increased clandestine activities inside Iran and intensified
planning for a possible major air attack. Current and former American military
and intelligence officials said that Air Force planning groups are drawing up
lists of targets, and teams of American combat troops have been ordered into
Iran, under cover, to collect targeting data and to establish contact with
anti-government ethnic-minority groups. The officials say that President
Bush is determined to deny the Iranian regime the opportunity to begin a pilot
program, planned for this spring, to enrich
uranium.
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http://www.newyorker.com/printables/fact/060417fa_fact
THE
IRAN PLANS
by SEYMOUR M.
HERSH
Would President Bush go to war to stop
Tehran from getting the bomb?
Issue of
2006-04-17
Posted
2006-04-10
The Bush Administration,
while publicly advocating diplomacy in order to stop Iran from pursuing a
nuclear weapon, has increased clandestine activities inside Iran and intensified
planning for a possible major air attack. Current and former American military
and intelligence officials said that Air Force planning groups are drawing up
lists of targets, and teams of American combat troops have been ordered into
Iran, under cover, to collect targeting data and to establish contact with
anti-government ethnic-minority groups. The officials say that President
Bush is determined to deny the Iranian regime the opportunity to begin a pilot
program, planned for this spring, to enrich
uranium.
American and European
intelligence agencies, and the International Atomic Energy Agency (I.A.E.A.),
agree that Iran is intent on developing the capability to produce nuclear
weapons. But there are widely differing estimates of how long that will take,
and whether diplomacy, sanctions, or military action is the best way to prevent
it. Iran insists that its research is for peaceful use only, in keeping with the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and that it will not be delayed or
deterred.
There is a growing conviction
among members of the United States military, and in the international community,
that President Bush’s ultimate goal in the nuclear confrontation with Iran
is regime change. Iran’s President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has challenged
the reality of the Holocaust and said that Israel must be “wiped off the
map.” Bush and others in the White House view him as a potential Adolf
Hitler, a former senior intelligence official said. “That’s the name
they’re using. They say, ‘Will Iran get a strategic weapon and
threaten another world war?’
”
A government consultant with
close ties to the civilian leadership in the Pentagon said that Bush was
“absolutely convinced that Iran is going to get the bomb” if it is
not stopped. He said that the President believes that he must do “what no
Democrat or Republican, if elected in the future, would have the courage to
do,” and “that saving Iran is going to be his
legacy.”
One former defense
official, who still deals with sensitive issues for the Bush Administration,
told me that the military planning was premised on a belief that “a
sustained bombing campaign in Iran will humiliate the religious leadership and
lead the public to rise up and overthrow the government.” He added,
“I was shocked when I heard it, and asked myself, ‘What are they
smoking?’ ”
The rationale
for regime change was articulated in early March by Patrick Clawson, an Iran
expert who is the deputy director for research at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy and who has been a supporter of President Bush. “So long
as Iran has an Islamic republic, it will have a nuclear-weapons program, at
least clandestinely,” Clawson told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
on March 2nd. “The key issue, therefore, is: How long will the present
Iranian regime last?”
When I
spoke to Clawson, he emphasized that “this Administration is putting a lot
of effort into diplomacy.” However, he added, Iran had no choice other
than to accede to America’s demands or face a military attack. Clawson
said that he fears that Ahmadinejad “sees the West as wimps and thinks we
will eventually cave in. We have to be ready to deal with Iran if the crisis
escalates.” Clawson said that he would prefer to rely on sabotage and
other clandestine activities, such as “industrial accidents.” But,
he said, it would be prudent to prepare for a wider war, “given the way
the Iranians are acting. This is not like planning to invade
Quebec.”
One military planner
told me that White House criticisms of Iran and the high tempo of planning and
clandestine activities amount to a campaign of “coercion” aimed at
Iran. “You have to be ready to go, and we’ll see how they
respond,” the officer said. “You have to really show a threat in
order to get Ahmadinejad to back down.” He added, “People think Bush
has been focussed on Saddam Hussein since 9/11,” but, “in my view,
if you had to name one nation that was his focus all the way along, it was
Iran.” (In response to detailed requests for comment, the White House said
that it would not comment on military planning but added, “As the
President has indicated, we are pursuing a diplomatic solution”; the
Defense Department also said that Iran was being dealt with through
“diplomatic channels” but wouldn’t elaborate on that; the
C.I.A. said that there were “inaccuracies” in this account but would
not specify them.)
“This is much
more than a nuclear issue,” one high-ranking diplomat told me in Vienna.
“That’s just a rallying point, and there is still time to fix it.
But the Administration believes it cannot be fixed unless they control the
hearts and minds of Iran. The real issue is who is going to control the Middle
East and its oil in the next ten
years.”
A senior Pentagon adviser
on the war on terror expressed a similar view. “This White House believes
that the only way to solve the problem is to change the power structure in Iran,
and that means war,” he said. The danger, he said, was that “it also
reinforces the belief inside Iran that the only way to defend the country is to
have a nuclear capability.” A military conflict that destabilized the
region could also increase the risk of terror: “Hezbollah comes into
play,” the adviser said, referring to the terror group that is considered
one of the world’s most successful, and which is now a Lebanese political
party with strong ties to Iran. “And here comes Al
Qaeda.”
In recent weeks, the
President has quietly initiated a series of talks on plans for Iran with a few
key senators and members of Congress, including at least one Democrat. A senior
member of the House Appropriations Committee, who did not take part in the
meetings but has discussed their content with his colleagues, told me that there
had been “no formal briefings,” because “they’re
reluctant to brief the minority. They’re doing the Senate, somewhat
selectively.”
The House member
said that no one in the meetings “is really objecting” to the talk
of war. “The people they’re briefing are the same ones who led the
charge on Iraq. At most, questions are raised: How are you going to hit all the
sites at once? How are you going to get deep enough?” (Iran is building
facilities underground.) “There’s no pressure from Congress”
not to take military action, the House member added. “The only political
pressure is from the guys who want to do it.” Speaking of President Bush,
the House member said,
“The
most worrisome thing is that this guy has a messianic
vision.”
Some operations, apparently
aimed in part at intimidating Iran, are already under way. American Naval
tactical aircraft, operating from carriers in the Arabian Sea, have been flying
simulated nuclear-weapons delivery missions—rapid ascending maneuvers
known as “over the shoulder” bombing—since last summer, the
former official said, within range of Iranian coastal
radars.
Last month, in a paper given at
a conference on Middle East security in Berlin, Colonel Sam Gardiner, a military
analyst who taught at the National War College before retiring from the Air
Force, in 1987, provided an estimate of what would be needed to destroy
Iran’s nuclear program. Working from satellite photographs of the known
facilities, Gardiner estimated that at least four hundred targets would have to
be hit. He added:
I don’t think a
U.S. military planner would want to stop there. Iran probably has two
chemical-production plants. We would hit those. We would want to hit the
medium-range ballistic missiles that have just recently been moved closer to
Iraq. There are fourteen airfields with sheltered aircraft. . . . We’d
want to get rid of that threat. We would want to hit the assets that could be
used to threaten Gulf shipping. That means targeting the cruise-missile sites
and the Iranian diesel submarines. . . . Some of the facilities may be too
difficult to target even with penetrating weapons. The U.S. will have to use
Special Operations units.
One of
the military’s initial option plans, as presented to the White House by
the Pentagon this winter, calls for the use of a bunker-buster tactical nuclear
weapon, such as the B61-11, against underground nuclear sites. One target is
Iran’s main centrifuge plant, at Natanz, nearly two hundred miles south of
Tehran. Natanz, which is no longer under I.A.E.A. safeguards, reportedly has
underground floor space to hold fifty thousand centrifuges, and laboratories and
workspaces buried approximately seventy-five feet beneath the surface. That
number of centrifuges could provide enough enriched uranium for about twenty
nuclear warheads a year. (Iran has acknowledged that it initially kept the
existence of its enrichment program hidden from I.A.E.A. inspectors, but claims
that none of its current activity is barred by the Non-Proliferation Treaty.)
The elimination of Natanz would be a major setback for Iran’s nuclear
ambitions, but the conventional weapons in the American arsenal could not insure
the destruction of facilities under seventy-five feet of earth and rock,
especially if they are reinforced with
concrete.
There is a Cold War precedent
for targeting deep underground bunkers with nuclear weapons. In the early
nineteen-eighties, the American intelligence community watched as the Soviet
government began digging a huge underground complex outside Moscow. Analysts
concluded that the underground facility was designed for “continuity of
government”—for the political and military leadership to survive a
nuclear war. (There are similar facilities, in Virginia and Pennsylvania, for
the American leadership.) The Soviet facility still exists, and much of what the
U.S. knows about it remains classified. “The ‘tell’
”—the giveaway—“was the ventilator shafts, some of which
were disguised,” the former senior intelligence official told me. At the
time, he said, it was determined that “only nukes” could destroy the
bunker. He added that some American intelligence analysts believe that the
Russians helped the Iranians design their underground facility. “We see a
similarity of design,” specifically in the ventilator shafts, he
said.
A former high-level Defense
Department official told me that, in his view, even limited bombing would allow
the U.S. to “go in there and do enough damage to slow down the nuclear
infrastructure—it’s feasible.” The former defense official
said, “The Iranians don’t have friends, and we can tell them that,
if necessary, we’ll keep knocking back their infrastructure. The United
States should act like we’re ready to go.” He added, “We
don’t have to knock down all of their air defenses. Our stealth bombers
and standoff missiles really work, and we can blow fixed things up. We can do
things on the ground, too, but it’s difficult and very dangerous—put
bad stuff in ventilator shafts and put them to
sleep.”
But those who are
familiar with the Soviet bunker, according to the former senior intelligence
official, “say ‘No way.’ You’ve got to know what’s
underneath—to know which ventilator feeds people, or diesel generators, or
which are false. And there’s a lot that we don’t know.” The
lack of reliable intelligence leaves military planners, given the goal of
totally destroying the sites, little choice but to consider the use of tactical
nuclear weapons. “Every other option, in the view of the nuclear
weaponeers, would leave a gap,” the former senior intelligence official
said. “ ‘Decisive’ is the key word of the Air Force’s
planning. It’s a tough decision. But we made it in
Japan.”
He went on,
“Nuclear planners go through extensive training and learn the technical
details of damage and fallout—we’re talking about mushroom clouds,
radiation, mass casualties, and contamination over years. This is not an
underground nuclear test, where all you see is the earth raised a little bit.
These politicians don’t have a clue, and whenever anybody tries to get it
out”—remove the nuclear option—“they’re shouted
down.”
The attention given to the
nuclear option has created serious misgivings inside the offices of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, he added, and some officers have talked about resigning. Late
this winter, the Joint Chiefs of Staff sought to remove the nuclear option from
the evolving war plans for Iran—without success, the former intelligence
official said. “The White House said, ‘Why are you challenging this?
The option came from you.’
”
The Pentagon adviser on the war
on terror confirmed that some in the Administration were looking seriously at
this option, which he linked to a resurgence of interest in tactical nuclear
weapons among Pentagon civilians and in policy circles. He called it “a
juggernaut that has to be stopped.” He also confirmed that some senior
officers and officials were considering resigning over the issue. “There
are very strong sentiments within the military against brandishing nuclear
weapons against other countries,” the adviser told me. “This goes to
high levels.” The matter may soon reach a decisive point, he said, because
the Joint Chiefs had agreed to give President Bush a formal recommendation
stating that they are strongly opposed to considering the nuclear option for
Iran. “The internal debate on this has hardened in recent weeks,”
the adviser said. “And, if senior Pentagon officers express their
opposition to the use of offensive nuclear weapons, then it will never
happen.”
The adviser added,
however, that the idea of using tactical nuclear weapons in such situations has
gained support from the Defense Science Board, an advisory panel whose members
are selected by Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld. “They’re
telling the Pentagon that we can build the B61 with more blast and less
radiation,” he said.
The chairman
of the Defense Science Board is William Schneider, Jr., an Under-Secretary of
State in the Reagan Administration. In January, 2001, as President Bush prepared
to take office, Schneider served on an ad-hoc panel on nuclear forces sponsored
by the National Institute for Public Policy, a conservative think tank. The
panel’s report recommended treating tactical nuclear weapons as an
essential part of the U.S. arsenal and noted their suitability “for those
occasions when the certain and prompt destruction of high priority targets is
essential and beyond the promise of conventional weapons.” Several signers
of the report are now prominent members of the Bush Administration, including
Stephen Hadley, the national-security adviser; Stephen Cambone, the
Under-Secretary of Defense for Intelligence; and Robert Joseph, the
Under-Secretary of State for Arms Control and International
Security.
The Pentagon adviser
questioned the value of air strikes. “The Iranians have distributed their
nuclear activity very well, and we have no clue where some of the key stuff is.
It could even be out of the country,” he said. He warned, as did many
others, that bombing Iran could provoke “a chain reaction” of
attacks on American facilities and citizens throughout the world: “What
will 1.2 billion Muslims think the day we attack
Iran?”
---
With
or without the nuclear option, the list of targets may inevitably expand. One
recently retired high-level Bush Administration official, who is also an expert
on war planning, told me that he would have vigorously argued against an air
attack on Iran, because “Iran is a much tougher target” than Iraq.
But, he added, “If you’re going to do any bombing to stop the nukes,
you might as well improve your lie across the board. Maybe hit some training
camps, and clear up a lot of other
problems.”
The Pentagon adviser
said that, in the event of an attack, the Air Force intended to strike many
hundreds of targets in Iran but that “ninety-nine per cent of them have
nothing to do with proliferation. There are people who believe it’s the
way to operate”—that the Administration can achieve its policy goals
in Iran with a bombing campaign, an idea that has been supported by
neoconservatives.
If the order were to
be given for an attack, the American combat troops now operating in Iran would
be in position to mark the critical targets with laser beams, to insure bombing
accuracy and to minimize civilian casualties. As of early winter, I was told by
the government consultant with close ties to civilians in the Pentagon, the
units were also working with minority groups in Iran, including the Azeris, in
the north, the Baluchis, in the southeast, and the Kurds, in the northeast. The
troops “are studying the terrain, and giving away walking-around money to
ethnic tribes, and recruiting scouts from local tribes and shepherds,” the
consultant said. One goal is to get “eyes on the
ground”—quoting a line from “Othello,” he said,
“Give me the ocular proof.” The broader aim, the consultant said, is
to “encourage ethnic tensions” and undermine the
regime.
The new mission for the combat
troops is a product of Defense Secretary Rumsfeld’s long-standing interest
in expanding the role of the military in covert operations, which was made
official policy in the Pentagon’s Quadrennial Defense Review, published in
February. Such activities, if conducted by C.I.A. operatives, would need a
Presidential Finding and would have to be reported to key members of
Congress.
“ ‘Force
protection’ is the new buzzword,” the former senior intelligence
official told me. He was referring to the Pentagon’s position that
clandestine activities that can be broadly classified as preparing the
battlefield or protecting troops are military, not intelligence, operations, and
are therefore not subject to congressional oversight. “The guys in the
Joint Chiefs of Staff say there are a lot of uncertainties in Iran,” he
said. “We need to have more than what we had in Iraq. Now we have the
green light to do everything we
want.”
---
The
President’s deep distrust of Ahmadinejad has strengthened his
determination to confront Iran. This view has been reinforced by allegations
that Ahmadinejad, who joined a special-forces brigade of the Revolutionary
Guards in 1986, may have been involved in terrorist activities in the late
eighties. (There are gaps in Ahmadinejad’s official biography in this
period.) Ahmadinejad has reportedly been connected to Imad Mughniyeh, a
terrorist who has been implicated in the deadly bombings of the U.S. Embassy and
the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, in 1983. Mughniyeh was then the security
chief of Hezbollah; he remains on the F.B.I.’s list of most-wanted
terrorists.
Robert Baer, who was a
C.I.A. officer in the Middle East and elsewhere for two decades, told me that
Ahmadinejad and his Revolutionary Guard colleagues in the Iranian government
“are capable of making a bomb, hiding it, and launching it at Israel.
They’re apocalyptic Shiites. If you’re sitting in Tel Aviv and you
believe they’ve got nukes and missiles—you’ve got to take them
out. These guys are nuts, and there’s no reason to back
off.”
Under Ahmadinejad, the
Revolutionary Guards have expanded their power base throughout the Iranian
bureaucracy; by the end of January, they had replaced thousands of civil
servants with their own members. One former senior United Nations official, who
has extensive experience with Iran, depicted the turnover as “a white
coup,” with ominous implications for the West. “Professionals in the
Foreign Ministry are out; others are waiting to be kicked out,” he said.
“We may be too late. These guys now believe that they are stronger than
ever since the revolution.” He said that, particularly in consideration of
China’s emergence as a superpower, Iran’s attitude was “To
hell with the West. You can do as much as you
like.”
Iran’s supreme
religious leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, is considered by many experts to be in a
stronger position than Ahmadinejad. “Ahmadinejad is not in control,”
one European diplomat told me. “Power is diffuse in Iran. The
Revolutionary Guards are among the key backers of the nuclear program, but,
ultimately, I don’t think they are in charge of it. The Supreme Leader has
the casting vote on the nuclear program, and the Guards will not take action
without his approval.”
The
Pentagon adviser on the war on terror said that “allowing Iran to have the
bomb is not on the table. We cannot have nukes being sent downstream to a terror
network. It’s just too dangerous.” He added, “The whole
internal debate is on which way to go”—in terms of stopping the
Iranian program. It is possible, the adviser said, that Iran will unilaterally
renounce its nuclear plans—and forestall the American action. “God
may smile on us, but I don’t think so. The bottom line is that Iran cannot
become a nuclear-weapons state. The problem is that the Iranians realize that
only by becoming a nuclear state can they defend themselves against the U.S.
Something bad is going to
happen.”
----
While
almost no one disputes Iran’s nuclear ambitions, there is intense debate
over how soon it could get the bomb, and what to do about that. Robert Gallucci,
a former government expert on nonproliferation who is now the dean of the School
of Foreign Service at Georgetown, told me, “Based on what I know, Iran
could be eight to ten years away” from developing a deliverable nuclear
weapon. Gallucci added, “If they had a covert nuclear program and we could
prove it, and we could not stop it by negotiation, diplomacy, or the threat of
sanctions, I’d be in favor of taking it out. But if you do
it”—bomb Iran—“without being able to show there’s
a secret program, you’re in
trouble.”
Meir Dagan, the head of
Mossad, Israel’s intelligence agency, told the Knesset last December that
“Iran is one to two years away, at the latest, from having enriched
uranium. From that point, the completion of their nuclear weapon is simply a
technical matter.” In a conversation with me, a senior Israeli
intelligence official talked about what he said was Iran’s duplicity:
“There are two parallel nuclear programs” inside Iran—the
program declared to the I.A.E.A. and a separate operation, run by the military
and the Revolutionary Guards. Israeli officials have repeatedly made this
argument, but Israel has not produced public evidence to support it. Richard
Armitage, the Deputy Secretary of State in Bush’s first term, told me,
“I think Iran has a secret nuclear-weapons program—I believe it, but
I don’t know it.”
In recent
months, the Pakistani government has given the U.S. new access to A. Q. Khan,
the so-called father of the Pakistani atomic bomb. Khan, who is now living under
house arrest in Islamabad, is accused of setting up a black market in nuclear
materials; he made at least one clandestine visit to Tehran in the late
nineteen-eighties. In the most recent interrogations, Khan has provided
information on Iran’s weapons design and its time line for building a
bomb. “The picture is of ‘unquestionable danger,’ ” the
former senior intelligence official said. (The Pentagon adviser also confirmed
that Khan has been “singing like a canary.”) The concern, the former
senior official said, is that “Khan has credibility problems. He is
suggestible, and he’s telling the neoconservatives what they want to
hear”—or what might be useful to Pakistan’s President, Pervez
Musharraf, who is under pressure to assist Washington in the war on
terror.
“I think Khan’s
leading us on,” the former intelligence official said. “I
don’t know anybody who says, ‘Here’s the smoking gun.’
But lights are beginning to blink. He’s feeding us information on the time
line, and targeting information is coming in from our own sources— sensors
and the covert teams. The C.I.A., which was so burned by Iraqi W.M.D., is going
to the Pentagon and the Vice-President’s office saying, ‘It’s
all new stuff.’ People in the Administration are saying,
‘We’ve got
enough.’ ”
The
Administration’s case against Iran is compromised by its history of
promoting false intelligence on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction. In a
recent essay on the Foreign Policy Web site, entitled “Fool Me
Twice,” Joseph Cirincione, the director for nonproliferation at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, wrote, “The unfolding
administration strategy appears to be an effort to repeat its successful
campaign for the Iraq war.” He noted several
parallels:
The vice president of the
United States gives a major speech focused on the threat from an oil-rich nation
in the Middle East. The U.S. Secretary of State tells Congress that the same
nation is our most serious global challenge. The Secretary of Defense calls that
nation the leading supporter of global
terrorism.
Cirincione called some
of the Administration’s claims about Iran “questionable” or
lacking in evidence. When I spoke to him, he asked, “What do we know? What
is the threat? The question is: How urgent is all this?” The answer, he
said, “is in the intelligence community and the I.A.E.A.” (In
August, the Washington Post reported that the most recent comprehensive National
Intelligence Estimate predicted that Iran was a decade away from being a nuclear
power.)
Last year, the Bush
Administration briefed I.A.E.A. officials on what it said was new and alarming
information about Iran’s weapons program which had been retrieved from an
Iranian’s laptop. The new data included more than a thousand pages of
technical drawings of weapons systems. The Washington Post reported that there
were also designs for a small facility that could be used in the
uranium-enrichment process. Leaks about the laptop became the focal point of
stories in the Times and elsewhere. The stories were generally careful to note
that the materials could have been fabricated, but also quoted senior American
officials as saying that they appeared to be legitimate. The headline in the
Times’ account read, “RELYING ON COMPUTER, U.S. SEEKS TO PROVE
IRAN’S NUCLEAR AIMS.”
I was
told in interviews with American and European intelligence officials, however,
that the laptop was more suspect and less revelatory than it had been depicted.
The Iranian who owned the laptop had initially been recruited by German and
American intelligence operatives, working together. The Americans eventually
lost interest in him. The Germans kept on, but the Iranian was seized by the
Iranian counter-intelligence force. It is not known where he is today. Some
family members managed to leave Iran with his laptop and handed it over at a
U.S. embassy, apparently in Europe. It was a classic
“walk-in.”
A European
intelligence official said, “There was some hesitation on our side”
about what the materials really proved, “and we are still not
convinced.” The drawings were not meticulous, as newspaper accounts
suggested, “but had the character of sketches,” the European
official said. “It was not a slam-dunk smoking
gun.”
----
The
threat of American military action has created dismay at the headquarters of the
I.A.E.A., in Vienna. The agency’s officials believe that Iran wants to be
able to make a nuclear weapon, but “nobody has presented an inch of
evidence of a parallel nuclear-weapons program in Iran,” the high-ranking
diplomat told me. The I.A.E.A.’s best estimate is that the Iranians are
five years away from building a nuclear bomb. “But, if the United States
does anything militarily, they will make the development of a bomb a matter of
Iranian national pride,” the diplomat said. “The whole issue is
America’s risk assessment of Iran’s future intentions, and they
don’t trust the regime. Iran is a menace to American
policy.”
In Vienna, I was told of
an exceedingly testy meeting earlier this year between Mohamed ElBaradei, the
I.A.E.A.’s director-general, who won the Nobel Peace Prize last year, and
Robert Joseph, the Under-Secretary of State for Arms Control. Joseph’s
message was blunt, one diplomat recalled: “We cannot have a single
centrifuge spinning in Iran. Iran is a direct threat to the national security of
the United States and our allies, and we will not tolerate it. We want you to
give us an understanding that you will not say anything publicly that will
undermine us. ”
Joseph’s
heavy-handedness was unnecessary, the diplomat said, since the I.A.E.A. already
had been inclined to take a hard stand against Iran. “All of the
inspectors are angry at being misled by the Iranians, and some think the Iranian
leadership are nutcases—one hundred per cent totally certified
nuts,” the diplomat said. He added that ElBaradei’s overriding
concern is that the Iranian leaders “want confrontation, just like the
neocons on the other side”—in Washington. “At the end of the
day, it will work only if the United States agrees to talk to the
Iranians.”
The central
question—whether Iran will be able to proceed with its plans to enrich
uranium—is now before the United Nations, with the Russians and the
Chinese reluctant to impose sanctions on Tehran. A discouraged former I.A.E.A.
official told me in late March that, at this point, “there’s nothing
the Iranians could do that would result in a positive outcome. American
diplomacy does not allow for it. Even if they announce a stoppage of enrichment,
nobody will believe them. It’s a dead
end.”
Another diplomat in Vienna
asked me, “Why would the West take the risk of going to war against that
kind of target without giving it to the I.A.E.A. to verify? We’re
low-cost, and we can create a program that will force Iran to put its cards on
the table.” A Western Ambassador in Vienna expressed similar distress at
the White House’s dismissal of the I.A.E.A. He said, “If you
don’t believe that the I.A.E.A. can establish an inspection
system—if you don’t trust them—you can only
bomb.”
----
There
is little sympathy for the I.A.E.A. in the Bush Administration or among its
European allies. “We’re quite frustrated with the
director-general,” the European diplomat told me. “His basic
approach has been to describe this as a dispute between two sides with equal
weight. It’s not. We’re the good guys! ElBaradei has been pushing
the idea of letting Iran have a small nuclear-enrichment program, which is
ludicrous. It’s not his job to push ideas that pose a serious
proliferation risk.”
The
Europeans are rattled, however, by their growing perception that President Bush
and Vice-President Dick Cheney believe a bombing campaign will be needed, and
that their real goal is regime change. “Everyone is on the same page about
the Iranian bomb, but the United States wants regime change,” a European
diplomatic adviser told me. He added, “The Europeans have a role to play
as long as they don’t have to choose between going along with the Russians
and the Chinese or going along with Washington on something they don’t
want. Their policy is to keep the Americans engaged in something the Europeans
can live with. It may be
untenable.”
“The Brits
think this is a very bad idea,” Flynt Leverett, a former National Security
Council staff member who is now a senior fellow at the Brookings
Institution’s Saban Center, told me, “but they’re really
worried we’re going to do it.” The European diplomatic adviser
acknowledged that the British Foreign Office was aware of war planning in
Washington but that, “short of a smoking gun, it’s going to be very
difficult to line up the Europeans on Iran.” He said that the British
“are jumpy about the Americans going full bore on the Iranians, with no
compromise.”
The European
diplomat said that he was skeptical that Iran, given its record, had admitted to
everything it was doing, but “to the best of our knowledge the Iranian
capability is not at the point where they could successfully run
centrifuges” to enrich uranium in quantity. One reason for pursuing
diplomacy was, he said, Iran’s essential pragmatism. “The regime
acts in its best interests,” he said. Iran’s leaders “take a
hard-line approach on the nuclear issue and they want to call the American
bluff,” believing that “the tougher they are the more likely the
West will fold.” But, he said, “From what we’ve seen with
Iran, they will appear superconfident until the moment they back
off.”
The diplomat went on,
“You never reward bad behavior, and this is not the time to offer
concessions. We need to find ways to impose sufficient costs to bring the regime
to its senses. It’s going to be a close call, but I think if there is
unity in opposition and the price imposed”—in
sanctions—“is sufficient, they may back down. It’s too early
to give up on the U.N. route.” He added, “If the diplomatic process
doesn’t work, there is no military ‘solution.’ There may be a
military option, but the impact could be
catastrophic.”
Tony Blair, the
British Prime Minister, was George Bush’s most dependable ally in the year
leading up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq. But he and his party have been racked
by a series of financial scandals, and his popularity is at a low point. Jack
Straw, the Foreign Secretary, said last year that military action against Iran
was “inconceivable.” Blair has been more circumspect, saying
publicly that one should never take options off the
table.
Other European officials
expressed similar skepticism about the value of an American bombing campaign.
“The Iranian economy is in bad shape, and Ahmadinejad is in bad shape
politically,” the European intelligence official told me. “He will
benefit politically from American bombing. You can do it, but the results will
be worse.” An American attack, he said, would alienate ordinary Iranians,
including those who might be sympathetic to the U.S. “Iran is no longer
living in the Stone Age, and the young people there have access to U.S. movies
and books, and they love it,” he said. “If there was a charm
offensive with Iran, the mullahs would be in trouble in the long
run.”
Another European official
told me that he was aware that many in Washington wanted action.
“It’s always the same guys,” he said, with a resigned shrug.
“There is a belief that diplomacy is doomed to fail. The timetable is
short.”
A key ally with an
important voice in the debate is Israel, whose leadership has warned for years
that it viewed any attempt by Iran to begin enriching uranium as a point of no
return. I was told by several officials that the White House’s interest in
preventing an Israeli attack on a Muslim country, which would provoke a backlash
across the region, was a factor in its decision to begin the current operational
planning. In a speech in Cleveland on March 20th, President Bush depicted
Ahmadinejad’s hostility toward Israel as a “serious threat.
It’s a threat to world peace.” He added, “I made it clear,
I’ll make it clear again, that we will use military might to protect our
ally
Israel.”
----
Any
American bombing attack, Richard Armitage told me, would have to consider the
following questions: “What will happen in the other Islamic countries?
What ability does Iran have to reach us and touch us globally—that is,
terrorism? Will Syria and Lebanon up the pressure on Israel? What does the
attack do to our already diminished international standing? And what does this
mean for Russia, China, and the U.N. Security
Council?”
Iran, which now
produces nearly four million barrels of oil a day, would not have to cut off
production to disrupt the world’s oil markets. It could blockade or mine
the Strait of Hormuz, the thirty-four-mile-wide passage through which Middle
Eastern oil reaches the Indian Ocean. Nonetheless, the recently retired defense
official dismissed the strategic consequences of such actions. He told me that
the U.S. Navy could keep shipping open by conducting salvage missions and
putting mine- sweepers to work. “It’s impossible to block
passage,” he said.
The
government consultant with ties to the Pentagon also said he believed that the
oil problem could be managed, pointing out that the U.S. has enough in its
strategic reserves to keep America running for sixty days. However, those in the
oil business I spoke to were less optimistic; one industry expert estimated that
the price per barrel would immediately spike, to anywhere from ninety to a
hundred dollars per barrel, and could go higher, depending on the duration and
scope of the conflict.
Michel Samaha, a
veteran Lebanese Christian politician and former cabinet minister in Beirut,
told me that the Iranian retaliation might be focussed on exposed oil and gas
fields in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. “They
would be at risk,” he said, “and this could begin the real jihad of
Iran versus the West. You will have a messy
world.”
Iran could also initiate
a wave of terror attacks in Iraq and elsewhere, with the help of Hezbollah. On
April 2nd, the Washington Post reported that the planning to counter such
attacks “is consuming a lot of time” at U.S. intelligence agencies.
“The best terror network in the world has remained neutral in the terror
war for the past several years,” the Pentagon adviser on the war on terror
said of Hezbollah. “This will mobilize them and put us up against the
group that drove Israel out of southern Lebanon. If we move against Iran,
Hezbollah will not sit on the sidelines. Unless the Israelis take them out, they
will mobilize against us.” (When I asked the government consultant about
that possibility, he said that, if Hezbollah fired rockets into northern Israel,
“Israel and the new Lebanese government will finish them
off.”)
The adviser went on,
“If we go, the southern half of Iraq will light up like a candle.”
The American, British, and other coalition forces in Iraq would be at greater
risk of attack from Iranian troops or from Shiite militias operating on
instructions from Iran. (Iran, which is predominantly Shiite, has close ties to
the leading Shiite parties in Iraq.) A retired four-star general told me that,
despite the eight thousand British troops in the region, “the Iranians
could take Basra with ten mullahs and one sound
truck.”
“If you
attack,” the high-ranking diplomat told me in Vienna, “Ahmadinejad
will be the new Saddam Hussein of the Arab world, but with more credibility and
more power. You must bite the bullet and sit down with the
Iranians.”
The diplomat went on,
“There are people in Washington who would be unhappy if we found a
solution. They are still banking on isolation and regime change. This is wishful
thinking.” He added, “The window of opportunity is
now.”
Posted: Sun - April 9, 2006 at 10:52 AM