Return
of the War Party
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
"Real
men go to Tehran!" brayed the neoconservatives, after the success
of their propaganda campaign to have America march on Baghdad and
into an unnecessary war that has forfeited all the fruits of our
Cold War victory.
Now they
are back, in pursuit of what has always been their great goal: an
American war on Iran. It would be a mistake to believe they and
their collaborators cannot succeed a second time. Consider:
On being
chosen by Israel's President Shimon Peres to form the new regime,
Likud's "Bibi" Netanyahu declared, "Iran is seeking to obtain a
nuclear weapon and constitutes the gravest threat to our existence
since the war of independence."
Echoing
Netanyahu, headlines last week screamed of a startling new nuclear
breakthrough by the mullahs. "Iran ready to build nuclear weapon,
analysts say," said CNN. "Iran has enough uranium to make a bomb,"
said the Los Angeles Times. Armageddon appeared imminent.
Asked
about Iran's nukes in his confirmation testimony, CIA Director Leon
Panetta blurted, "From all the information I've seen, I think there
is no question that they are seeking that capability."
Tuesday,
Dennis Ross of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, a
front spawned by the Israeli lobby AIPAC, was given the Iranian
portfolio. AIPAC's top agenda item? A U.S. collision with Iran.
In the
neocon Weekly Standard, Elliot Abrams of the Bush White House
parrots Netanyahu, urging Obama to put any land-for-peace deals
with the Palestinians on a back burner. Why?
"The Israeli-Palestinian
conflict is now part of a broader struggle in the region over Iranian
extremism and power. Israeli withdrawals now risk opening the door
not only to Palestinian terrorists but to Iranian proxies."
The campaign
to conflate Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria as a new axis of evil, a
terrorist cartel led by Iranian mullahs hell-bent on building a
nuclear bomb and using it on Israel and America, has begun. The
full-page ads and syndicated columns calling on Obama to eradicate
this mortal peril before it destroys us all cannot be far off.
But before
we let ourselves be stampeded into another unnecessary war, let
us review a few facts that seem to contradict the war propaganda.
First,
last week's acknowledgement that Iran has enough enriched uranium
for one atom bomb does not mean Iran is building an atom bomb.
To construct
a nuclear device, the ton of low-enriched uranium at Natanz would
have to be run through a second cascade of high-speed centrifuges
to produce 55 pounds of highly enriched uranium (HUE).
There
is no evidence Iran has either created the cascade of high-speed
centrifuges necessary to produce HUE or that Iran has diverted any
of the low-enriched uranium from Natanz. And the International Atomic
Energy Agency inspectors retain full access to Natanz.
And rather
than accelerating production of low-enriched uranium, only 4,000
of the Natanz centrifuges are operating. Some 1,000 are idle. Why?
Dr. Mohamed
El-Baradei, head of the IAEA, believes this is a signal that Tehran
wishes to negotiate with the United States, but without yielding
any of its rights to enrich uranium and operate nuclear power plants.
For, unlike
Israel, Pakistan and India, none of which signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and all of which ran clandestine programs and built atom
bombs, Iran signed the NPT and has abided by its Safeguards Agreement.
What it refuses to accept are the broader demands of the U.N. Security
Council because these go beyond the NPT and sanction Iran for doing
what it has a legal right to do.
Moreover,
Adm. Dennis Blair, who heads U.S. intelligence, has just restated
the consensus of the 2007 National Intelligence Estimate that Iran
does not now possess and is not now pursuing a nuclear weapons program.
Bottom
line: Neither the United States nor the IAEA has conclusive evidence
that Iran either has the fissile material for a bomb or an active
program to build a bomb. It has never tested a nuclear device and
has never demonstrated a capacity to weaponize a nuclear device,
if it had one.
Why,
then, the hype, the hysteria, the clamor for "Action This Day!"?
It is to divert America from her true national interests and stampede
her into embracing as her own the alien agenda of a renascent War
Party.
None
of this is to suggest the Iranians are saintly souls seeking only
peace and progress. Like South Korea, Japan and other nations with
nuclear power plants, they may well want the ability to break out
of the NPT, should it be necessary to deter, defend against or defeat
enemies.
But that
is no threat to us to justify war. For decades, we lived under the
threat that hundreds of Russian warheads could rain down upon us
in hours, ending our national existence. If deterrence worked with
Stalin and Mao, it can work with an Iran that has not launched an
offensive war against any nation within the memory of any living
American.
Can we
Americans say the same?
February
28, 2009
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2009 Creators Syndicate
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