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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Iran's Nuclear Coup
2010-05-18
Ahmadinejad and Lula expose Obama's hapless diplomacy.
I called it ...
What a fiasco. That's the first word that comes to mind watching Mahmoud Ahmadinejad raise his arms yesterday with the leaders of Turkey and Brazil to celebrate a new atomic pact that instantly made irrelevant 16 months of President Obama's "diplomacy." The deal is a political coup for Tehran and possibly delivers the coup de grace to the West's half-hearted efforts to stop Iran from acquiring a nuclear bomb.

Full credit for this debacle goes to the Obama Administration and its hapless diplomatic strategy. Last October, nine months into its engagement with Tehran, the White House concocted a plan to transfer some of Iran's uranium stock abroad for enrichment. If the West couldn't stop Iran's program, the thinking was that maybe this scheme would delay it. The Iranians played coy, then refused to accept the offer.

But Mr. Obama doesn't take no for an answer from rogue regimes, and so he kept the offer on the table. As the U.S. finally seemed ready to go to the U.N. Security Council for more sanctions, the Iranians chose yesterday to accept the deal on their own limited terms while enlisting the Brazilians and Turks as enablers and political shields. "Diplomacy emerged victorious today," declared Brazil's President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, turning Mr. Obama's own most important foreign-policy principle against him.

The double embarrassment is that the U.S. had encouraged Lula's diplomacy as a step toward winning his support for U.N. sanctions. Brazil is currently one of the nonpermanent, rotating members of the Security Council, and the U.S. has wanted a unanimous U.N. vote. Instead, Lula used the opening to triangulate his own diplomatic solution. In her first game of high-stakes diplomatic poker, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is leaving the table dressed only in a barrel.

So instead of the U.S. and Europe backing Iran into a corner this spring, Mr. Ahmadinejad has backed Mr. Obama into one. America's discomfort is obvious. In its statement yesterday, the White House strained to "acknowledge the efforts" by Turkey and Brazil while noting "Iran's repeated failure to live up to its own commitments." The White House also sought to point out differences between yesterday's pact and the original October agreements on uranium transfers.

Good luck drawing those distinctions with the Chinese or Russians, who will now be less likely to agree even to weak sanctions. Having played so prominent a role in last October's talks with Iran, the U.S. can't easily disassociate itself from something broadly in line with that framework.

Under the terms unveiled yesterday, Iran said it would send 1,200 kilograms (2,646 lbs.) of low-enriched uranium to Turkey within a month, and no more than a year later get back 120 kilograms enriched from somewhere else abroad. This makes even less sense than the flawed October deal. In the intervening seven months, Iran has kicked its enrichment activities into higher gear. Its estimated total stock has gone to 2,300 kilograms from 1,500 kilograms last autumn, and its stated enrichment goal has gone to 20% from 3.5%.

If the West accepts this deal, Iran would be allowed to keep enriching uranium in contravention of previous U.N. resolutions. Removing 1,200 kilograms will leave Iran with still enough low-enriched stock to make a bomb, and once uranium is enriched up to 20% it is technically easier to get to bomb-capable enrichment levels.

Only last week, diplomats at the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency reported that Iran has increased the number of centrifuges it is using to enrich uranium. According to Western intelligence estimates, Iran continues to acquire key nuclear components, such as trigger mechanisms for bombs. Tehran says it wants to build additional uranium enrichment plants. The CIA recently reported that Iran tripled its stockpile of uranium last year and moved "toward self-sufficiency in the production of nuclear missiles." Yesterday's deal will have no impact on these illicit activities.

The deal will, however, make it nearly impossible to disrupt Iran's nuclear program short of military action. The U.N. is certainly a dead end. After 16 months of his extended hand and after downplaying support for Iran's democratic opposition, Mr. Obama now faces an Iran much closer to a bomb and less diplomatically isolated than when President Bush left office.

Israel will have to seriously consider its military options. Such a confrontation is far more likely thanks to the diplomatic double-cross of Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Brazil's Lula, and especially to a U.S. President whose diplomacy has succeeded mainly in persuading the world's rogues that he lacks the determination to stop their destructive ambitions.
Posted by:ryuge

#4  Bringing forth the 12th Imam would force their god to institute their judgement day and end times. Which would mean that any physical damage to the pious would be fixed by their god in the process, according to their understanding of their scriptures, and so is of no moment anyhow.

That's the real issue -- these people are not operating in the same reality as the rest of us. I think that's an adequate description of "batshit crazy", yes?
Posted by: trailing wife   2010-05-18 17:05  

#3  They firmly believe that it will bring the 12th Iman from his hidey-hole in the bottom of a well someplace to bring about the Islamic Goals....

The cost to themselves, not to mention other muslims or their own citizens is acceptable to them. This is why they are much, much, more dangerous than the Soviets ever were.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2010-05-18 16:55  

#2  http://www.princeton.edu/sgs/publications/articles/effects/

The fallout (residual radiation) from a few primitive nukes would not render the MidEast uninhabitable for 50 years.
Posted by: rwv   2010-05-18 15:53  

#1  Is there any hope that the CIA and the Israeli Intelligence (I know they have agencies far more secretive than the Mossad) could arrange a little old "training accident" in Iran, like those car bombs that go bad in the West Bank or those tunnels that collapse in Gaza?

HOWEVER, when you look at the prevailing wind patterns, the circumference of the blast area and the amount of fallout from even a low grade nuke, If Iran lit one off in Tel Aviv, the fall out plume would render large areas of Jordan, Iraq and Iran uninhabitable for a minimum of 50 years. If the hot westerlies are blowing, you could get fall out in Northern Saudi Arabia and the UAE, maybe even Pakastain....Which tells me all I need to know. They are either completely illogical and fanatical about destroying Israel for some 13th Imam revival belief or they are going to package these things up for a major event in a western city near you...are you listing Paris, Bonn, Rome, Moscow, Madrid, London? Washington DC, LA, Chicago and NY for sure. Is Russia really going to go along with this when the Czechnians would love to park one of these at Putin's Dacha.

The fact that they talk about using one of these on Israel tells me they are so fanatical in their ideas that this is doubly dangerous.
Posted by: James Carville   2010-05-18 11:57  

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