You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran may play oil card
2006-03-11
With the stage set for a high stakes U.N. Security Council debate next week on possible sanctions for Iran's nuclear program, Tehran on Wednesday warned the United States that it too can inflict "harm and pain" and hinted its weapon could be oil.

The sharp statement, which followed a warning this week by Vice President Dick Cheney that Iran could face "meaningful consequences," came on a day when the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency concluded a series of meetings on Iran and forwarded its report to the Security Council.

The report by the International Atomic Energy Agency's director general Mohamed ElBaradei found that after nearly three years of inspections, the nuclear agency remains unable to rule out the possibility that Iran still has secret nuclear activities, which could include work related to uranium enrichment and efforts to adapt weapons to carry a nuclear bomb.

The IAEA board of governors last month reported Iran to the Security Council pending ElBaradei's report. The IAEA demanded, among other things, that Tehran cease all nuclear enrichment activities, answer all outstanding questions about its nuclear program and ratify a protocol that allows more wide-ranging inspections. But Iran ignored the demands.

Economic actions are unlikely in the near-term from the Security Council. And on Wednesday, the foreign minister of Russia, which has veto power, disparaged their use as a diplomatic tool.

However, the referral of Iran's case to the U.N. council in New York opens a chapter Iran has sought to avoid.

A.H. Soltanieh, Iran's ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, told the gathered ambassadors in Vienna on Wednesday: "The United States has the power to cause harm and pain, but the United States is also susceptible to harm and pain."

Asked if Iran, the world's fourth largest oil supplier, would use its oil exports as a weapon to punish the West, Javad Vaeedi, deputy head of Iran's National Security Council said that "if the situation changes we will have to review our oil policies."

Meanwhile, Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns, testifying before Congress, said Iran "directly threatens vital American interests" and Washington planned "a concerted approach (in the council) Â… that gradually escalates pressure on Iran."

At the same hearing, Robert Joseph, undersecretary of state for arms control and international security, was asked whether the administration was prepared to launch a military effort. Joseph replied that President Bush "has made clear that there are no options off the table."
Posted by:Dan Darling

#17  Iran has a joker dealing from the bottom of the deck.
Posted by: Captain America   2006-03-11 22:04  

#16  Israeli General: We could take out Iran N-sites.


GENERAL Moshe Ya'alon, a former chief of staff of the Israel Defence Forces, has revealed that Israel could neutralise the Iranian threat for several years by hitting dozens of targets spread around the country.

General Ya'alon told the Hudson Institute in Washington on Thursday that the Iranian sites could be struck with greater accuracy than was achieved by the air force in its frequent "targeted assassinations" of Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip.

His remarks, the most explicit yet about Israel's capacity to strike at Iran's nuclear sites, drew sharp criticism from officials in Israel who have been attempting to maintain a low profile on the issue in order to leave it as a matter for the international community.
Posted by: doc   2006-03-11 18:47  

#15  Oooooooohhhhhhh, NS! Where can I buy a pack?
Posted by: Bobby   2006-03-11 17:55  

#14  Two can play these card games. DoD should issue American troops a pack of 52 cards with Khameni as the Ace of Spades.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-11 17:03  

#13  If the Shiite Arabs are nice, maybe we can award them the oil rich lands currently owned by Iran. They already live there anyhow.
Posted by: Throlugum Shuter9373   2006-03-11 16:59  

#12  assign a card to a mullah. When his card comes up, wipe his house(s), his family (if they refuse to leave) his assets (that BMW/Mercedes dealership in Tehran) his entire existence. Off the world. Then announce "next?"

These Mullahs are mostly thugs who've used Khomeini's revolution for power and wealth. Take both away and their shysters selling snake oil and hate. The true believers™ like ahmadinijad.... should be assassinated first wave
Posted by: Frank G   2006-03-11 16:10  

#11  or, we could choose a card that's a bit more ... targetted ...
Posted by: lotp   2006-03-11 15:22  

#10  Everytime they play oil card, we should play blow shit up card.
Posted by: djohn66   2006-03-11 15:21  

#9  Yeah, its not like they have the [b]Pistachio Card[/b] to play any more with so many California Pistachios on the market.
Posted by: 3dc   2006-03-11 13:29  

#8  The Iranians assume that they have the oil card. They also assume that the world will play nice. They keep tickling the dragon's tail, and the dragon stirs a bit. Inductive M² logic sez, since nothing happened, it's ok to keep tickling the dragon's tail. There will be a point where the dragon(s) will have had enough. Keep tickling M²s and you will find that tipping point.
Posted by: Alaska Paul in Hooper Bay, AK   2006-03-11 13:00  

#7  The oil card, like a nuke, is much more useful to them as a threat than a weapon. The cost of actually using either is quite high, but successful bluffs are free for as long as fools fall for it. And the population has grown quite a bit since Barnum said there was a sucker born every minute.
Posted by: VAMark   2006-03-11 12:50  

#6  Iran's only real export is oil. That money runs the entire country. How the hell could they quit selling it, even for a day? I bet oil futures prices in the Iranian stock market are doing well today.
Posted by: Angung Omoling9114   2006-03-11 10:22  

#5  Silly Iranians.

They forget who excels at poker. Although, I must admit, GWB has to use a stacked deck at this point.
Posted by: lotp   2006-03-11 09:59  

#4  it always amuses me this 'card playing' talk - do all the leaders meet up with various packs of assorted cards and role dice and flip cards over a big map of the world, kinda like dungeons and dragons the board game or warhammer is it?
Posted by: ShepUK   2006-03-11 09:55  

#3  Don't forget Iran imports 2/3 of its gasoline. So it will be interesting to see who suffers more from playing with cards.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-11 08:17  

#2  Better yet, just take the oil producing area away from them. Permanently.
Posted by: DanNY   2006-03-11 06:30  

#1  oh well if they want to use oil as a weapon then we might as well destroy all their refinerys and oil industry facilities so as to stop these silly games - kinda like a kid mis-behaving with a toy , if he carries on he'll have his toy taken from his cot. :)
Posted by: ShepUK   2006-03-11 05:53  

00:00