--------------------------------------------
Letter To The Iranian
/ Persian People
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Overthrow Of Mullah's
Regime
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* * * * The Future Iran * *
* *
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* A Chance For Referendum
*
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New Iranian Constitution
- Intro
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New Iranian Constitution
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Building
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Iran
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Enough Day
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Kar
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*
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The New Russian - Toys
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It Was All About Iran
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Who's Behind The Coming
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Top Ten War Profiteers
of 2004
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* * Depleted
Uranium: * *
The Trojan Horse of Nuclear War
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The Separatist - Al-Ahwaz
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The EU, US, Israel And
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Aren't - THEY - Doing Something?
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Foundation Of Iranian
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Islamic Sharia Court
In Canada
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Islam's Tolerance OR
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of Doom
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* Pan-Arabism's
Legacy *
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In The Abolition
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Foreknowledge Of Natural
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Political Right - Left
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Mercenaries & Soldiers of Fortune
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Geneva Conventions, 1949 &
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Introduction To Iran / Persia
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Perfectly Legal - By David Johnston
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What Is Instant Run-Off
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Nov. 2004
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Oct. 2004
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The Non-Toxic Times,
June 2004
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Re: Terror - Racial Profile
Yourself
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Again?
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Worlds' Defenseless Public
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Univ. Declaration of
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The Mercury Scandal
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Depleted Uranium 236
- Transcript
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Depleted Uranium 236 -
Reports
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Arundhati Roy And Howard Zinn
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Do Turkeys Enjoy Thanksgiving?
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April 25, March for Women's
Rights
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Those Friendly Iranians
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A Letter To Mankind -
By Ali Sina
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Isaac Newton And
The Coming Invasion Of Iran
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Pentagon Zionists, AIPEC
& Israel
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Neocons Blast Bush's
Inaction
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The World of Mega-Terrorism
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Iran Downfall - And
Jimmy Carter
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Iranian Regime Downfall
- 1979
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Iranian Regime Downfall
- 1953
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* Mullahs' Credibility & Legitimacy *
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Islamic Republic's
Torture Masters
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Islamic Republic's Job
Opportunity
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From Iran
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Propagating Seeds of Democracy
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William Blum
Books And Essays
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* The Sorrows of Empire
*
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Race & Slavery In The
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Sunni & Shiite Ruling Mullahs
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The Goal of Sunni
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England's Royal Gift
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The Rise & Fall of
Political Islam
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Religions Are Major Global
Threat
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1 - Genocide, By Europe
& U.S.A
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& U.S.A
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Daily Mail - The Murderous
Mullahs
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Letter To The American People,
Richard Cheney, J. Dennis Hastert & Members of The 108th U.S. Congress
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Mullahs In Strong Position
To Steer
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Mullahs,
Al Qaeda & Hezbollah
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Officially Launched
"Holy Terror"
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Mullah's Plan To Force
U.S.A. Out
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Mullahs Delivering Armageddon
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Mullah's Global Nuclear
Ambitions
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Mullahs Human Rights Practices
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Going Soft On Iran
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Tariq Ali vs. Christopher
Hitchens
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Americans Appeasing
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Richard Clarke Top 7 Questions
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What Is A Billion And A Trillion
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The True Origins Of
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Definition of Patriotism
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List of Nonfiction Informative
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|
The Temptation
of America's Foreign Policy "realists."
- By Reuel Marc Gerecht
03/08/2004, Volume 009, Issue 25
ACCORDING
TO THE NEWSPAPERS and the CIA, Iranian "hard-liners" dealt their
country's reform movement and fledgling democracy a heavy, perhaps lethal,
blow on February 20. With over 2,000 candidates "disqualified"
before the parliamentary elections even took place, the ruling clerical
elite ensured that the reformers, who've won office and national attention
since the presidential election of Mohammad Khatami in May 1997, would
no longer dominate the parliament, or Majles, which has become a forum
for public discontent and frustration with the ruling mullahs. With a
majority of seats in the next parliament, and already firmly in control
of the country's internal security organizations and courts, the "hard-liners"
will be able to fracture and silence, so the reporting goes, the political
parties, newspapers, and organizations that left-wing clerics, like Khatami,
had used to create a national movement for change.
According
to many American "realists"--the school of foreign policy most
often associated with such men as former national security advisers Brent
Scowcroft and Zbigniew Brzezinski, former diplomats James Baker, Richard
Murphy, Thomas Pickering, and Richard Haass, and institutions like the
Nixon Center and the Council on Foreign Relations--there may be a silver
lining in the bad news. Iran's "hard-liners" may in fact be
"pragmatic conservatives," to borrow a phrase often heard now
in the colloquies of Washington's think tanks where the intellectual laborers
of American realism are trying to devise a new strategy for Iran and the
Greater Middle East. In the post-9/11 world, the fear of weapons of mass
destruction in the wrong hands dominates public policy debates, and a
growing number of American realists believe that Iran's "pragmatic
mullahs"--in Persian translation, this means former Iranian president
Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the major-domo of the clerical establishment,
and Ali Khamenei, the "spiritual leader" of the country--are
the men to cut a deal to halt Iran's WMD programs.
There is
even a sense in certain quarters that we might actually be lucky that
Khatami and the parliamentary reformers have been whipped. Rafsanjani
and Khamenei may play a very rough game domestically--Hezbollah thugs
beat dissidents, "rogue" intelligence agents knife and run down
liberal intellectuals, the judiciary jails any dangerous political opposition
figure too prominent to off, and the Council of Guardians preemptively
disqualifies troublemakers from office--but externally they are, so the
theory goes, responsible, rational actors who are principally motivated
by geopolitics and economics (and, in the case of Rafsanjani, lucre).
They are, in other words, real men, not distracted by all the leftist
intellectual debates that consumed so many on the Khatami side of the
political house.
It's worthwhile
to remember that not that long ago prominent American realists made a
different argument. In May 2001, just before President Khatami won his
second term, Brent Scowcroft wrote in the Washington Post that we should
unilaterally engage the Islamic Republic by lifting sanctions--specifically
those targeted against the energy sector--even before talking about the
clerical regime's fondness for terrorism, its development of nuclear arms
and other weapons of mass destruction, or its unrelenting hostility to
a peace process between the Israelis and Palestinians. According to Scowcroft,
such a unilateral move was not to be viewed as "a sign of weakness
in light of continued predations by an obnoxious and repressive regime."
Such a charge would "miss the central point, which is that an active
struggle is underway to determine the future course of Iran. The key is
to speak to the people of Iran, not to their oppressors." Thus, for
the Bush administration to give "a signal from the United States
showing the desire for a better bilateral relationship might provide encouragement
and impetus to reformers and the people who so eagerly seek change."
Of course,
Scowcroft didn't explain how exactly an oil deal with Conoco or ExxonMobil
would empower Iran's democratic forces. (One wonders whether Scowcroft,
who has been a paid consultant to U.S. energy companies, would have made
this argument to the shah of Iran, or whether American oil executives
have ever made this case to the energy-rich princes and dictators of the
Middle East, post-Soviet Central Asia, or the Caucasus.) Neither he nor
the other heavy hitters who cochaired a major review of U.S.-Iran policy
in 2001 (former secretary of defense James Schlesinger and Democratic
congressman Lee Hamilton) explained why Rafsanjani and Khamenei, two clerics
who have excelled at machtpolitik, would not view unilateral American
concessions as unilateral American concessions.
Needless
to say, the realist case has evolved with events, and now it is time for
the United States to engage "an obnoxious and repressive regime"
since Iran's nuclear program, which is much more advanced than we'd guessed,
gives us no choice. Thomas Pickering, the perennial ambassador and former
undersecretary of state for political affairs, has also underscored Iran's
"capacity for making life uncomfortable and messy for the United
States and its allies in Iraq" as a reason to seek a modus vivendi
with Tehran's clerical overlords.
From the
realists' perspective, the reformers had their day, they lost, and now
America must deal with the facts on the ground. And, fortunately, Iran's
rulers are corrupt divines who no longer believe in their hearts they
have a mandate from heaven. First and foremost, they want to stay in power,
within secure borders, unthreatened by the United States, Israel, or its
neighbors, recognized as a legitimate regional power with accepted interests
in Iraq and the Persian Gulf. If we let them be a member of the club,
if we make Rafsanjani and Khamenei feel safe, in their own country and
in others', then they might give up the bomb.
This realist
American diplomacy would be complemented by the efforts of the British,
French, and Germans--the "E.U. three" who are responsible for
the European Union's Iranian relations. Simultaneously, the Europeans
would suggest to Tehran that they might bring the Islamic Republic before
the United Nations Security Council for censure for its nuclear prevarications.
And if the Iranians continue to misbehave, the Europeans would hint with
increasing frankness the possibility of economic sanctions against Tehran--the
type of sanctions that American realists want first to lift as a carrot
to induce better clerical behavior.
Though not
known for using economic sanctions as political tools--Paris just announced
a $2 billion oil exploration deal with the Islamic Republic even though
its diplomats and spooks have long known that the clerical regime has
been blatantly lying to the International Atomic Energy Agency about its
nuclear "research" program--the Europeans will, this time, so
the theory goes, get serious. After all, they, too, dread the spread of
nuclear weapons. They, too, view the Non-Proliferation Treaty as a cornerstone
of the liberal internationalist order. Perhaps most of all, they wouldn't
want George Bush untethered from adult European supervision, possibly
inclined to bomb Iran to keep Rafsanjani and Khamenei from getting a nuclear
weapon.OF COURSE, none of the above makes much sense. Not the understanding
of what happened in Iran on February 20. Not the realist position on the
ruling clerical elite. Not the likelihood of effective joint action between
the Americans and the Europeans. What does make sense, however, is the
coming realist assault on President Bush's post-9/11 foreign policy. The
realist temptation in the American foreign-policy establishment is always
powerful, principally because it is the path of least resistance and least
action, and it dovetails nicely with the status-quo reflexes of the State
Department, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the military brass at
the Pentagon. Senator John Kerry appears to have embraced the realist
cause.
But if the
Bush administration opts for a variation of the realist approach to Iran--and
fatigue from rebuilding Iraq certainly reinforces the administration's
hitherto pronounced preference to avoid gaming out worst-case contingency
plans for dealing with Iran's nuclear weapons programs or the clerical
regime's "detention" of senior members of Osama bin Laden's
al Qaeda--it will gut what is left of its post-9/11 "axis of evil"
doctrine. It will effectively deny the primary transcendent lesson that
President Bush has drawn from 9/11: that the Middle East is politically
dysfunctional, that U.S.-backed tyranny in Muslim lands was an essential
element in the development of the holy-warriorism of al Qaeda, and that
the spread of democracy in the Muslim Middle East remains the only cure
for the sacred terror of 9/11.
American
realists want none of this. Even after 9/11, they don't really want to
be involved in other people's "internal affairs." By nature,
they hate Promethean missions. They don't like for America's transatlantic
relations--and most realists are pretty devout transatlanticists--to be
roiled by a terrorist threat so defined that it mandates a doctrine of
preemption. Ideological combat is always an ugly, unmanageable affair,
which is why many realists tried so hard to read ideology out of the Cold
War. If the Bush administration is serious about transforming the Muslim
Middle East--and the jury is still out on whether it is--it will inevitably
unsettle, if not alienate, every single "pro-American" king,
emir, and dictator in the region.
The issue
of weapons of mass destruction is thus an ideal wedge for the realist
camp. If Libya can become, as the British Foreign Office is obviously
hoping, the template for approaching the rulers of the Middle East--that
is, if stopping WMD trumps spreading democracy--then the realists have
an excellent chance of stifling the Bush administration's post-9/11 rhetoric.
President Bush's pro-democracy speeches have been driving U.S. foreign
policy in the Middle East. They have been driving the efforts, feeble
though they may be, by the rulers of the Middle East to open their political
systems. The national dialogues of Saudi Arabia's Prince Abdullah are
a direct result of President Bush's words and actions (the invasion of
Iraq and the inevitable empowerment of Iraq's Shiites certainly encouraged
Prince Abdullah to have his first dialogue about Saudi Arabia's oppressed
Shiites, who happen to live on top of Saudi Arabia's oil in the Eastern
Province). Silence those Reaganite speeches, and the foreign affairs bureaucracies
will take over.
Then Bush
II could start looking like Bush I a lot faster than Brent Scowcroft or
Zbigniew Brzezinski has ever dreamed. Because Iran's nuclear weapons program
is so damnably hard to delay without preemptive American or Israeli airstrikes,
and the Bush administration remains understandably loath to contemplate
military action against another Middle Eastern state, the realists within
the administration and without could lock the White House into exploring
some kind of dialogue with Rafsanjani and Khamenei, who would, of course,
approve of any American effort to lift unilaterally economic sanctions
on the Islamic Republic. (They know, even if the realists do not, that
these sanctions have seriously cramped Iran.)
There is
a big hurdle coming up for those who want to believe (or to pretend to
believe) that diplomacy offers a solution to Iran's WMD aspirations. The
International Atomic Energy Agency must issue another report on Iran's
compliance in June--the same time the Bush administration is supposed
to release its Greater Middle East Initiative, which will show how serious
the administration is about pushing democracy in a region where the leaders
hate it. It has become obvious to all concerned that the Iranians have
been willfully trying to deceive IAEA officials and the European diplomats
who are responsible for maintaining the WMD dialogue with the clerical
regime. European officials, including the French, don't bother even in
private to deny Iran's nuclear weapons objectives, its continuing deceit,
and the difficulty they are going to have in verifying Iranian compliance.
The clerical
regime has yet to sign the more intrusive protocol to the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, despite its promise to do so. (The Europeans, of course, have
not yet seriously threatened the clerics with any penalty for their failure
to sign.) Hassan Rohani, the secretary of the Supreme National Security
Council--a long-time bastion of power for Rafsanjani--recently declared,
in one of those delightful and not infrequent moments when Iranian hubris
betrays the revolutionary clergy's bent for mendacity and deception, that
the Iranian use of polonium, an element applicable in both power-generation
and weapons, and P2 centrifuges, which are designed for enriching uranium,
"is not the only research we are doing. . . . We have other projects
which we have not declared to the IAEA and we see no need to do so."
It is very likely that the Europeans, including the British, will be able
to walk round Rohani's prevarications.
Anyone who
has dealt with the Europeans involved in this process, particularly the
French, knows that the odds of Paris agreeing to threaten Tehran with
sanctions that would truly hurt--for example, an oil embargo--are virtually
nil. In all probability, nuclear proliferation in Iran, or elsewhere,
will not prove to be an issue where Western Europeans can collectively
agree to use force. Ethically they are simply operating, as Robert Kagan
has very politely pointed out, in a different realm. And as the Nixon
Center's Geoffrey Kemp has remarked, "the Europeans have to play
their part" for a realist foreign policy to be credible. However,
the Bush administration is hoping to punt this problem down the road,
at least until after the November elections. The Europeans will have at
least one more chance to devise "imaginative diplomacy" to dismantle
Iran's nuclear weapons program without threatening the use of force.
But the
Europeans won't be the only ones working against the Americans who desperately
want to find a "credible" diplomatic process for dealing with
Iran's quest for nuclear arms. The Iranians are very unlikely to play
the roles realists envision for them. Rafsanjani and Khamenei may well
be "pragmatic" mullahs--I have certainly long argued that they
are. But they have also been among the godfathers of Iranian terrorism.
From Beirut to Buenos Aires to Paris to Berlin and to the Khobar Towers
barracks in Saudi Arabia, Rafsanjani and Khamenei put terrorism into the
foreign policy lexicon of the Iranian clergy. When Iranian intelligence
officials or their surrogates surveilled American diplomatic facilities
and personnel around the world in the 1990s, it was on their orders. (Whatever
these exercises were for, it is unlikely they were innocent in intent.)
These same
gentlemen have, of course, always wanted to buy American. Conoco, ExxonMobil,
Boeing, GE--it would be hard to find an American firm that Rafsanjani
wouldn't welcome. It also beggars the imagination to believe that these
two gentlemen don't control the fate of al Qaeda inside Iran. The Bush
administration has chosen to play down the issue of al Qaeda in the Islamic
Republic. The Pentagon and State Department remonstrated with the Iranians
when they first realized that al Qaeda forces had fled into Iran after
the fall of the Taliban in Afghanistan. News leaks about worrisome intercepts
surfaced. And then the subject disappeared until official leaks again
surfaced in 2003 suggesting that al Qaeda was in Iran and had possibly
plotted from there attacks into Saudi Arabia. Al Qaeda in the Islamic
Republic again returned to the back burner.
This was
a serious mistake. Regardless of whether al Qaeda members in Iran were
operationally involved in terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia or elsewhere,
these individuals are among the most wanted men in American history. We
have never had worse enemies, yet we did nothing when Iran prevaricated
about whether they were in the country when we clearly knew they were.
Remember, Rafsanjani and Khamenei are master chess players of power politics.
If Americans don't rise in righteous indignation over the "detention"
of possibly active al Qaeda members--and the key component of President
Bush's Axis of Evil doctrine is that countries that harbor terrorists
will be treated as terrorists--why shouldn't Rafsanjani and Khamenei,
with their nuclear weapons, tempt America's wrath?
KHAMENEI
and especially Rafsanjani have nurtured Iran's nuclear program from its
infancy. More than anyone else, they are the will and mind behind this
program. It is not unreasonable to conjecture that their very identity--who
they are as leaders, clerics, and Muslims--is wrapped up in Iran's bomb
program. And they are supposed to give it away to Americans, who don't
threaten them over al Qaeda, and to Europeans, who keep offering the Iranians
more time after the clergy has blatantly lied to them? If you were a "pragmatic"
mullah who had beaten the shah, survived the American-aided legions of
Saddam Hussein, and eaten alive your revolutionary colleagues-turned-enemies,
would you be intimidated by such folks?
And the
realists shouldn't count out the fallen clerical left in Iran. Neither
the clerical left nor the vastly greater number of ordinary Iranians who
are disgusted by the ruling clergy are likely to remain quiescent. They
may not go into violent counterrevolution--the Iranians still remember
the violence of the first revolution and the Iran-Iraq war, and many obviously
hope that they can find some peaceful way to real democracy. But patience
is not a well-known Iranian virtue. Sooner not later, the discontent will
boil forth. Rafsanjani and Khamenei know that many Iranians have more
backbone than Khatami. Iranian prisons are full of such men. The Special
Clerical Court, where the regime discreetly intimidates dissident mullahs,
remains a busy place. The left-wing clergy were right to believe that
they were riding an unstoppable democratic wave in Iranian history. They
were wrong to think that their erstwhile brethren, who cling more tightly
to the notion that the nation will go to hell without an indomitable clerical
vanguard, would simply roll over when confronted with devastating election
results.
But the
die is now cast. The anti-climactic nonelection on February 20 at least
confirmed that. The clerical opposition that has more fire in its belly--and
the numerous disciples of Grand Ayatollah Hosein Ali Montazeri, Iran's
premier dissident cleric, certainly appear to be made of sterner stuff
than Khatami--won't make the same mistake twice. Neither will the students
and other young Iranian men of the streets who've grown disgusted with
the regime.
The ideas
of constitutional government and democracy have been driving Iranian political
thought for a hundred years. Rafsanjani, if not Khamenei, is sufficiently
educated to know that he is a product of this movement. More protests
are inevitable. They will undoubtedly be enough to make it politically
unacceptable, if not morally distasteful, for even the most true-blue
American realist to deal with such "an obnoxious and repressive regime."
The realist
vision of Iranian politics and U.S.-Iranian relations has zero chance
of providing a solution to the WMD conundrum. The Bush administration
needs to hang tough and be guided by the golden rule of Iranian clerical
politics: Do unto them before they have a chance to do unto you. Give
the Europeans a chance--several chances--to prove themselves serious.
Let the French ruin the Non-Proliferation Treaty. And then decide whether
you want Rafsanjani and Khamenei to have the bomb. In the end, only democracy
in Iran will finally solve the nuclear and terrorist problems. Ditto for
the rest of the Middle East. Whether the Bush administration understands
this come June is, of course, a different matter.
Reuel Marc
Gerecht is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and
a contributing editor to The Weekly Standard.
|