Iran Nuclear Conflict Is
About U.S. Dominance
Analysis by Gareth Porter*
WASHINGTON, May 11 (IPS) - As the George W. Bush administration pushes for a
showdown over Iran's nuclear programme in the U.N. Security Council, it has
presented the issue as a matter of global security -- an Iranian nuclear threat
in defiance of the international community.
But the history of the conflict and the private strategic thinking of both sides
reveal that the dispute is really about the administration's drive for greater
dominance in the Middle East and Iran's demand for recognition as a regional
power.
It is now known that the Iranian leadership, which was convinced that Bush was
planning to move against Iran after toppling Saddam Hussein in Iraq, proposed in
April 2003 to negotiate with the United States on the very issues which the
administration had claimed were the basis for its hostile posture toward Tehran:
its nuclear programme, its support for Hizbollah and other anti-Israeli armed
groups and its hostility to Israel's existence.
Tehran offered concrete, substantive concessions on those issues. But on the
advice of U.S. Vice Pres. Dick Cheney and Secretary of Defence Donald Rumsfeld,
Bush refused to respond to the negotiating proposal. Nuclear weapons were not,
therefore, the primary U.S. concern about Iran. In the hierarchy of the
administration's interests, the denial of legitimacy to the Islamic Republic
trumped a deal that could provide assurances against an Iranian nuclear weapon.
For insight into the real aims of the administration in pushing the issue of
Iranian access to nuclear technology to a crisis point, one can turn to Tom
Donnelly of the neoconservative think-tank the American Enterprise Institute.
Donnelly was the deputy executive director of the neoconservative Project for
the New American Century from 1999 to 2002, and was the main author of
"Rebuilding America's Defences".
That paper was written for Cheney and Rumsfeld during the transition following
Bush's election and had the participation of four prominent figures who took
positions in the administration: Stephen A. Cambone, Lewis Libby, Paul Wolfowitz
and John Bolton.
Donnelly's analysis of the issue of Iran and nuclear weapons, published last
October in the book "Getting Ready for a Nuclear-Ready Iran", makes it clear
that the real objection to Iran becoming a nuclear power is that it would impede
the larger U.S. ambitions in the Middle East -- what Donnelly calls the
administration's "project of transforming the Middle East".
Contrary to the official U.S. line depicting Iran as a radical state threatening
to plunge the region into war, Donnelly refers to Iran as "more the status quo
power" in the region in relation to the United States. Iran, he explains,
"stands directly athwart this project of regional transformation". Up to now, he
observes, the Iranian regime has been "incapable of stemming the seeping U.S.
presence in the Persian Gulf and in the broader region". And the invasion of
Iraq "completed the near-encirclement of Iran by U.S. military forces".
Donnelly writes that a "nuclear Iran" is a problem not so much because Tehran
would employ those weapons or pass them on to terrorist groups, but mainly
because of "the constraining effect it threatens to impose upon U.S. strategy
for the greater Middle East".
The "greatest danger", according to Donnelly, is that the "realists" would
"pursue a 'balance of power' approach with a nuclear Iran, undercutting the Bush
'liberation strategy'". Although Donnelly doesn't say so explicitly, it would
undercut that strategy primarily by ruling out a U.S. attack on Iran as part of
a strategy of "regime change".
Instead, in Donnelly scenario, a nuclear capability would incline those outside
the neoconservative priesthood to negotiate a "détente" with Iran, which would
bring the plan for the extension of U.S. political-military dominance in the
Middle East to a halt.
What is really at stake in the confrontation with Iran from the Bush
administration's perspective, according to this authority on neoconservative
strategy, is the opportunity to reorder the power hierarchy in the Middle East
even further in favour of the United States, by pursuing the overthrow of the
Islamic republic of Iran.
Meanwhile, Iran has not acknowledged its real interest in pushing its position
on nuclear fuel enrichment to the point of confrontation with the United States
either. Instead it has focused in public pronouncements on the enormously
popular position that Iran will not give up its right to have civilian nuclear
power.
According to observers familiar with their thinking, senior Iranian national
security officials have long been saying privately that Iran should try to reach
an agreement with the United States that would normalise relations and
acknowledge officially Iran's legitimate role in the security of the Persian
Gulf.
Trita Parsi, a specialist on Iran's foreign policy at the John Hopkins School of
Advanced International Studies, who conducted extensive interviews with senior
Iranian national security officials in 2004, says Iran "is now primarily trying
to become rehabilitated in the political order of the region".
Najmeh Bozorgmehr, an Iranian journalist now at the Brookings Institution as a
visiting scholar, agrees. Based on several years of covering Iran's national
security policy, she says, "Iran wants to bargain with the United States on
Iran's regional role," as well as on removal of sanctions and assurances against
U.S. attack. Tehran has been looking for any source of leverage with which to
bargain with the United States on those issues, she says, and "enrichment has
become a big bargaining chip."
Bozorgmehr says the Iranians have become convinced that they have to do
something to show the United States "we can give you a hard time" to induce the
Bush administration to negotiate. And Parsi says the prevailing view among
Iranian officials after the 2003 U.S. rejection of diplomacy was that they had
to have the capability to inflict some pain on the United States in order to get
their attention.
According to Parsi, that rejection confirmed Iranian suspicions that the U.S.
problem is not with Iran's policies but with its power. That Iranian conclusion
precisely parallels Donnelly's insider analysis of the Bush administration's
aims.
But what the Iranians really want, according to these observers of Iranian
national security thinking, is not nuclear weapons but the recognition of Iran's
status in the power hierarchy of the Persian Gulf. The Iranian demand for
regional status can only be achieved through a broad diplomatic agreement with
the United States.
The Bush administration's insistence on extending its dominance in the Middle
East even further can only be achieved, however, by the threat of force, and if
that fails, war against Iran.
*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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