There is no nuclear threat – but if we attack Iran, there soon will be

An attack on Iran would prompt an enraged Iranian government, backed by a united Iranian public, to

It has become an annual event in international affairs: the "Iran crisis". Belligerent politicians and febrile commentators refer to the "drumbeat of war", the "ticking clock" and how "all options are on the table". My own, oft-repeated favourite is "the window of opportunity" - to thwart Iran's nuclear programme through military means - "is closing". Is it? Is it really? For more than a decade now, the alarmists have warned that Iran is - take your pick - "one year", "two years" or "four to five years" away from acquiring nuclear weapons. Wrong, wrong, wrong. These random deadlines have come and gone without Iran building the bomb. The window is jammed wide open.

As the leading US arms control expert, Jeffrey Lewis, of the Monterey Institute of International Studies, asked on his blog on 7 November, in the wake of the latest bout of feverish commentary on Iran's nuclear programme: "Just what technical or political fact has brought the deadline to the crossroads?"

“The driver in all of this is Israel," a former senior MI6 official tells me. As long ago as November 2002, the then Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, demanded that the Bush administration turn its full attention to Iran "the day after" the Iraq invasion was over. The Israelis now have the backing of (Sunni) Arab states, alarmed by the prospect of (Shia) Iranian nukes. According to a WikiLeaks cable, Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah urged the US to "cut off the head of the [Iranian] snake".

Iranian uranium

However, consider three very important issues. First, there is no hard evidence that Iran is in possession of nuclear weapons or working on a nuclear weapons programme. The Iranian government insists that its enrichment of uranium is for domestic energy only. And you might not have guessed it from the coverage on CNN or Fox News but, in 2007, the US intelligence community estimated with "high confidence" that Iran had halted its alleged nuclear weapons programme in 2003 - a view reiterated in testimony to Congress by the US director of national intelligence, James Clapper, in March.

Even the International Atomic Energy Agency's (IAEA) report of 8 November on Iran, which prompted the latest bout of sabre-rattling, failed to produce a "smoking gun". There were some ominous references to weapons-related research and development, high explosives, computer simulations and assistance from foreign scientists - much of this based on "secret intelligence" from western governments. But the IAEA's report provided no new information on whether Iran is building - or intends to build - a nuclear weapon.

The UN nuclear watchdog's credibility is at stake here. Under its former director general Mohamed ElBaradei - who once described the Iranian nuclear threat as "hyped" - the IAEA stood up to US pressure in the run-up to the 2003 Iraq invasion. Yet, according to State Department cables released by WikiLeaks, ElBaradei's replacement, the Japanese diplomat Yukiya Amano, told the US government in 2009 that "he was solidly in the US court on every key strategic decision, from high-level personnel appointments to the handling of Iran's alleged nuclear weapons programme".

For the sake of argument, however, let's assume Iran is indeed bent on acquiring nuclear weapons. The second key issue to consider is whether or not such intent would merit a military response. In a world where nine nations - the US, the UK, France, China, Russia, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea - are believed to possess nuclear weapons, would a tenth make a such a difference (beyond a slight shift in the balance of power in the Middle East)?

No threat

I'd prefer to see a global ban on nuclear weapons but, in the absence of such a utopian measure, are we expected to believe that Iran would behave any more irrationally or irresponsibly with its (hypothetical) nukes than North Korea? Or Pakistan? Paul Pillar, the CIA's national intelligence officer for the Middle East between 2000 and 2005, wrote last month that, contrary to conventional wisdom, there is nothing "in the record of behaviour by the Islamic Republic that suggests irrationality".

In spite of the claims from the Israeli prime minister, Benajmin Netanyahu, and his neocon allies in Washington DC, the truth is that a nuclear-armed Iran wouldn't be an "existential" threat to the (nuclear-armed) state of Israel. According to the former Mossad chief Ephraim Halevy, in a speech on 3 November: Iran's nuclear capabilities are still "far from posing an existential threat to Israel".

And the Israeli defence minister, Ehud Barak, who visited the UK earlier this month to build support for a military attack on Iran, has admitted that the ayatollahs in Tehran are unlikely to order the dropping of a nuclear bomb on the Jewish state. "Not on us and not on any other neighbour," Barak told Haaretz in May.

Above all else, however, an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities would be self-defeating. It would prompt an enraged Iranian government, backed by a united Iranian public, to speed up the country's nuclear programme and drive it deeper underground - and outside the IAEA's purview. As Robert Gates, the then US defence secretary, conceded in May 2009: "A military attack will only buy us time and send the [nuclear] programme deeper and more covert."

Hans Blix, the UN's former chief weapons inspector, agrees. "You cannot scare a country away from going down the path of [building] nuclear weapons," he tells me. Diplomacy is the only viable option. In a warning that should set off alarm bells inside foreign and defence ministries across the west, he adds: "If the Iranians haven't yet made up their minds to make a nuclear weapon, then they will certainly do so once they have been attacked."

65 comments

Des Demona's picture

@ Finley

I said - as you quoted - '' even if it is too late in some cases.''

I'm not arguing balance of power or domino effect.
I'd prefer if there were no nuclear weapons - the least worst option is to prevent the further spread to more countries than already have them .

LZ's picture

Of course i have an answer

Id prefer that that un-corrupted international body had control over the issue

Dont give that U.N rubbish mate It severly underlines your stance
Does the U.S gov (OR Israel for that matter) care what the U.N think? No they dont.....

LZ's picture

undermines*

Jim Scott's picture

The Invisible Giant Points the Way

The drumbeats are growing louder summoning the howling dogs of war to assemble on the borders of Persia. These are not Assyrians whose spears gleam in the moonlight but Americans astride black vultures carrying cannisters of death.

They have been called to assembly by the Invisible Giant of Jerusalem who points his menacing finger accusingly at Tehran and through deceptive lips breathes the great lie that is not permitted to be questioned.

The Persians have a great weapon and are a threat to me and the whole world he says, while concealing his secret arsenal of annihilation under a blanket of ancient guilt. Directing attention away from a history of kidnapping and murder and theft of lands, carried out in the name persecution.

This is the same great lie that saw death rain down on Baghdad and infected America with disbelief and loss of trust in its own destiny. This is the lie that enrages and motivates its victims and enemies to seek a bloody revenge.

While its leaders begin the chant of war and the captains of industry line their treasuries with Persian gold America’s people are on the streets demanding truth and justice. And the invisible giant points the way.

Jim Scott Nov 14

Thomas Devine's picture

Maria, Israel's foes want the extinction of the people of Israel. And let's remember that Israel has a multi-religious and multiethnic society. Israel's foes have made it clear that not even the surrender of all of Israel's land would be enough, they want all Iraelis and all Jews (distinct groups) dead.

If you were facing a madman who wanted to kill all of your family and friends, no exceptions, would you just knee down and offer your neck?

Ian5's picture

Iran nuking Israel, but avoiding any damage to the rock or mount? Hmmm nice concept. No Islamic sect would contemplate that option. Its sacred to them all. Israel nuking Iran..no problem on the religious front..

Des Demona's picture

@LZ

You work with what you have. Yes wouldn't it be super if there was an 'un-corrupted international body' . We'd all be rejoicing in the streets.

But it is what it is. The IAEA report to the UN Security Council on which Russia and China sit as permanent members and have the power of Veto.

If anyone takes unilateral action then the UN should be held to take them to account - including Israel, the US and anyone else.

If the UN fails to do that then that is another matter - but wishful thinking isn't going to solve anything.

Jim Scott's picture

Remember Saddams weapons of mass destruction, his atomic bomb making. Remember how he was responsible for the destruction of the twin towers and remember how Iraq was harbouring Al Qaeda terrorists. Well remember none of that was true, it was a construct to have us lay down our lives to protect US hegemony in the oil fields of the Middle East. Lie upon lie death upon death when will we learn to be less gullible? Sure Iran is not Disneyland but the make believe world created by Western leaders entrenching privilege and by the repression of all of us Western and Eastern North and South is a fantasy of sick minds.

Nilsey105's picture

Press TV are reporting similar conclusions regarding no reliable evidence whatsoever.
They go on to show interviews with eminent western experts who back up such claims of lack of evidence.

Yet again we , the western public, are being treated as idiots by the alliance of western governments, who seek to use their shock tactics to bolster their claims in the build up to yet a further extension of war in the middle east.

Indu Pendent's picture

"No Threat"
"are we expected to believe that Iran would behave any more irrationally or irresponsibly with its (hypothetical) nukes than North Korea"

The Iranian leadership hates Israel pathologically. The whole reason Iran is trying to so hard to get nuclear weapons is to flatten as many Israeli cities as it can. The West is sleep walking into this.

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