(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of
India (Marxist)
Vol. XXXV
No. 46
November 13, 2011
No Smoking Gun in IAEA
Report on Iran
Media
Hype for Ratcheting up Pressure
Prabir Purkayastha
WITH the new
IAEA report
on Iran,
the international
media is abuzz with reports of its gravity and the possibility
of air strikes
by the US,
UK and Israel.
The pitch has been raised
further with reports emanating from Israeli media that Prime
Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu has been trying to muster a majority in the Israeli
cabinet for even
a unilateral attack. This has been accompanied by news about
air drills being
conducted by Israeli Air Force in a NATO base in Sardinia, Italy,
and long-range missile tests. Obviously, the temperature on Iran
is being
raised for something, if not a military strike.
PREDICTABLE
PATTERN
The Iran
issue had
fallen into a predictable pattern: every time there is a new
IAEA report on
Iran, a flurry of newspaper reports are planted about the
gravity of the
nuclear threat and the need for military strikes to stop Iran.
The end result
of all this is to turn the screws further on for UN sanctions,
and if
unsuccessful, at least increased sanctions by the US
and its allies.
The media
campaign
starts even before a report is published; unnamed western
sources leak “new
evidence” of Iran's
nuclear weapons programme. Once the report is public as it is
now, very few
people actually check up to see what the IAEA is actually
saying – what sticks
in public mind is that the IAEA has unearthed new evidence on
Iran's nuclear
weapons programme.
Recently, a
similar
exercise was done regarding Syria
and the Basher Al Assad regime there. An IAEA investigation
was quoted by
unnamed western sources, claiming that the Al Hasakah textile
factory in Syria
was the
cover for a uranium fuel processing facility. The “proof”
using satellite
imagery of the plant “showed” that it matched the blueprint of
a uranium
reprocessing plant, which AQ Khan had provided Libya.
It needed only two
individuals – Jeffrey Lewis from ArmsControlWonk
(ArmsControlWonk.com) and
German journalist Paul-Anton Krueger to debunk this claim.
They found
incontrovertible evidence that it is, and always was, a
textile plant, even
locating the 62-year old German engineer who had built this
plant in the early 1980s.
Once the
story is shown
to be false, that news is however buried in some small corner
of the papers, if
it is published at all. Remember Niger
yellow cake story which was
paraded as proof of Saddam's nuclear programme? New York Times did print the refutation of its
earlier front-page
stories, but it was buried so deep in the paper that hardly
anybody noticed it.
This time
also the same
game seems to be in progress. As I go through all the reports
that are
appearing in the international media, from the more strident
ones to the more
apparently reasonable ones, the orchestra is the same. IAEA
has found “new
evidence” and this will be disclosed shortly – this is the
song that unnamed
western sources who have “seen” the report are singing. So
what is allegedly
“new” in this IAEA report?
DUBIOUS CLAIM,
DUBIOUS REPORTS
The major
claim is that Iran is
developing a nuclear trigger and IAEA has undeniable proof of
this. I went
through various IAEA reports from 2008; all of them have
referred to Iran's possible
development of high explosive testing and have referred to
dubious member
states’ intelligence reports. In May 2008, the DG IAEA had
submitted a 9-page
report and in the Annex, it talked of documents in its
possession:
1) A
“Exploding
Bridgewire (EBW) Detonator Test Results,”
2) A
“schematic diagram
for an underground testing arrangement,”
3) A “five
page document
in English describing experimentation undertaken with a
complex multipoint
initiation system to detonate a substantial amount of high
explosive in
hemispherical geometry.”
This was
repeated in
subsequent IAEA reports. In the current report, the only new
evidence is
satellite imagery of a “bus-sized container” in Parchin, a
military base near Tehran,
which IAEA
believes could be used in tests for such explosive testing.
Why Iranians should
use an overground container for this when they have schematic
for an
underground testing arrangement, when they have buried much of
their nuclear
facilities underground, beats me completely. The Syrian fiasco
clearly shows
how misleading such satellite imagery can be. The proof that Iran
is building
nuclear bombs because there is a large container in Parchin
must strain the
credulity of the most gullible.
Individually
taken, all
the elements that IAEA believes is a part of Iran's
nuclear weapons programme
have also other uses. For example, such multipoint ignition
systems and
coordinated explosions are used for making industrial grade
nano diamonds. The
Ukrainian scientist, Vyacheslav Danilenko, a nuclear scientist
according to
western media, who is supposed to have parted with this
technology when he was
teaching in Iran,
is a part of a Czech establishment which does precisely this.
And he never was
a nuclear expert – all his work has been on production of nano
diamonds by
coordinated explosions.
If we look
at the
stories that are being planted by the so-called “western
sources,” clearly a
part of a massive media operation by western countries, none
of it is neither
new nor does it provide any smoking gun. The key issue would
be a breach of NPT
provisions if Iran
proceeded to withdraw fissile material out of safeguards and
reprocess it to
weapons grade. This, IAEA admits, Iran
has not done. The report says
there is no evidence that Iran
has made a strategic decision to actually build a nuclear
bomb.
GLOBAL ISSUE
HOSTAGE TO US
The question
of identifying
what is nuclear weapons technology and what is not is not
easy, nor is there
physically a clear defining line. A missile system that can
carry conventional
warheads can also carry a nuclear warhead. Each of the items
described above
can be used for different purposes. The issue is: how do we
then say whether a
country is in breach of Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty
(NPT)?
The western
campaign on Iran
and NPT seeks to cloud whether Iran's fuel
cycle violates NPT provisions. It does not if the fuel cycle
is for nuclear
energy, which Iran
has always claimed it is. The problem for the west is that the
same fuel
enrichment technology – centrifuging – that can enrich uranium
to fuel level –
3.5 per cent or medical imaging level –19.75 per cent or
weapons level of 90
per cent. The western arguments on denying Iran
the fuel cycle crucially hinges on the two IAEA Board
resolutions – the ones on
which that India
broke ranks
with the non-aligned nations on and voted with the US
– that pronounced Iran
in breach of NPT and referred it to the UN Security Council.
The legal position
of US and other western powers is that by this breach, Iran
has
forfeited its rights under NPT and must get them back by only
by
“satisfactorily” resolving this breach. And as we know, a
satisfactory
resolution will only take place if there is a regime change in
Iran – a
regime that the US “likes.”
That is why the two IAEA resolutions were so dangerous – it
has made global
policy on Iran
now a hostage
to the US.
The second
issue of NPT
violations is regarding the other steps that Iran
is taking, e.g. the high
explosive hemispherical testing and missile capability. Here
again, the NPT
explicitly bars only “manufacture of nuclear weapons.” Does
research on high
explosive testing come under manufacture? Does computer
simulation? The western
spin doctors are fully aware that, individually, none of these
can be held in
breach of NPT provisions. Particularly, all of these are also
dual use
technologies – they have other non-nuclear weapon uses.
Therefore, the argument
that all of these must be taken together and if a country is
developing
breakout capability, then it should be held to be in breach of
nuclear weapons
manufacture clause of NPT, even though it is not manufacturing
any nuclear
weapon.
Both these
are very
flimsy arguments. However, as we have seen in the past, a
tenuous legal
argument does not inhibit the western powers. We have seen in
Libya how a
right-to-protect civilians mandate
in Libya
was converted to a mission of regime change. The barbaric
killing of Gaddafi
was done with the full participation of NATO forces – they
were the ones that
struck Gaddafi's convoy when it had broken out of Sirte, the
so-called National
Transitional Council forces only performing the final act of
lynching.
The gameplan
on Iran
is clear.
First, use the IAEA to prepare a report reiterating various
things it has said
in the past regarding Iran's
nuclear programme. IAEA, under the current director, General
Yukiya Amano, is
far more willing to bend to the US
demands and do what the US
wants. While it will not contain any smoking gun regarding Iran's
nuclear
weapon ambitions, it can be dressed up through a media blitz
as a new threat. A
campaign on the need for a military strike and how Israel
may do it unilaterally can
then be used to stampede the international community to impose
much harsher
sanctions. The extremely dubious US claims on the Iranian plot
for
assassinating the Saudi ambassador also falls into place as a
precursor to the
current media hype.
TIME FOR TOTAL
DISARMAMENT
Why does not
Iran
give up
working on any technology that may be construed as
constituting breakout
capability? The problem is: Gaddafi did precisely that in 2003
and had
assurances that the west would not seek a regime change in Libya
as a quid
pro quo. We have seen how much such assurances are worth. Does
anybody doubt
that Libya
would have
reinforced the position in Iran
that having nuclear weapons capability can be a possible
deterrent to the US, giving it
up achieves nothing?
Avner Cohen,
an expert
on Israel's
nuclear arsenal
and a professor at the Monterey Institute of International
Studies has said
that no one in Israel
seriously believes that Iran
would use a nuclear weapon against Israel,
but they believe it might be necessary to go to war to
preserve its relative
power in the Middle East.
"Ultimately
this is a fight over the Israeli nuclear monopoly in the
region," Cohen
said (Iran Working on Advanced Nuclear Warhead, Guardian, November 7, 2011). A country of six
million should have a
sole nuclear monopoly over a region containing 400 million
people. This is what
Israel
wants and the US and western
powers back. This is the crux of the issue.
It is time
we put not
only Iran's
nuclear
disarmament but global nuclear disarmament back on the agenda.
A state
that has some states with nuclear weapon and the vast majority
without them,
can last only when the technology for developing nuclear
weapons is difficult.
Once this is seen to be easy – and it increasingly will be –
such a disequilibrium
cannot last. One cannot use NPT provisions against Iran
while wilfully flouting NPT's
other provision calling for universal nuclear disarmament and
good faith
negotiations.