A Catch-22 Nuclear World
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Dilip Hiro
by Tom Engelhardt and
Dilip Hiro
DIGG THIS
Here's the
strange thing: Since 2001, our media has been filled with terrifying
nuclear headlines. The Iraqi bomb (you remember those "mushroom
clouds" about to rise over American cities), the North Korean
bomb, and the Iranian bomb have been almost obsessively in the news.
Of course, the Iraqi bomb turned out to be embarrassingly nonexistent;
experts still consider the Iranian bomb years away (if it happens);
and the North Korean bomb, while quite real, remains a less than
impressive weapon, based on a less
than spectacular nuclear test in October 2006.
And yet these
are the nuclear weapons that have taken all our attention. How many
of you have ever heard of Complex 2030 or know that, as William
Hartung and Frida Berrigan pointed
out recently, the Bush administration is, on average, putting
more money into our nuclear arsenal (over $6 billion this year)
than went into it in the Cold War era? Or that, if all goes according
to administration projections, this figure should hit $7.4 billion
a year by 2012? And Complex
2030 aiming, as the name implies, at a thoroughly updated,
upgraded American arsenal 23 years from now involves producing,
among many other things, the Reliable Replacement Warhead, our first
new warhead in two decades. (The Energy Department just
selected its design.) In addition, the Bush administration has
worked hard to break down the barrier between nuclear and conventional
weapons, absorbing nuclear weapons into its plans for its new Global
Strike force, supposedly able to hit any target on the planet
"with a few hours' notice," and repeatedly leaking the news that
it might consider using the "nuclear
option" against Iran's nuclear facilities.
As Dilip Hiro,
Middle Eastern expert and author most recently of Blood
of the Earth: The Battle for the World's Vanishing Oil Resources,
makes clear, there are not two nuclear worlds that of the
nuclear "rogues" and that of the "nuclear club"; there is only one.
Our nuclear world and theirs are intimately linked by an ever more
volatile version of the old Cold War doctrine of deterrence. The
more we invest in, and maintain, a vast nuclear arsenal, the more
we slot those weapons into our strategic and tactical planning,
the more such weapons will proliferate elsewhere. The Bush administration
came into office ready to crush nuclear proliferators. Instead,
when its history is written, it will undoubtedly be seen as a nuclear
proliferation machine, threatening to bring its own nightmare scenario
such weaponry in the hands of a terrorist band for whom "deterrence"
would have no meaning whatsoever ever closer to reality.
Tom
Nuclear
Weapons Programs Are about Regime Survival:
The Iranian Bomb in a MAD world
By Dilip
Hiro
For countries
small, middling, or great acquiring nuclear weapons
is all about the most basic requirement: the survival of the regime
or nation. Joining the "nuclear club" has proved an effective strategy
for survival. The possession of city-busting, potentially planet-ending
weaponry threatens to bring about a MAD the Cold War acronym
for "Mutually Assured Destruction" world. While the "madness"
of this strategy is apparent, a rarely mentioned aspect of today's
geopolitics is that acquiring nuclear arms has proven a logical
step for a regime to take when its survival is at stake.
The United
States and the Soviet Union, the superpowers of the Cold War, stacked
up nuclear weapons by the thousands as "deterrents," well aware
that the use of even a tiny fraction of them would annihilate the
planet many times over. The doctrine worked, maintaining a precarious
peace until the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
When Communist
China acquired an atom bomb in 1964, it joined the four permanent
members of the United Nations Security Council with veto power
the United States, the Soviet Union, Britain, and France
which possessed nuclear arms, thus gaining an entry to the "nuclear
club."
The club's
monopoly was broken by a minor power, Israel, in 1967 stealthily,
because its leaders decided not to test the bomb they had built.
Even so, the Central Intelligence Agency got wind of it. What did
then-President Lyndon Johnson's administration do about it? Nothing.
And what about the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the
UN watchdog agency charged with administering the 1968 nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT)? It was empowered to act, but only in cases where a
UN member had signed on to the Treaty. Israel did not.
In June 1981,
when the UN Security Council's resolution 487 directed Israel to
place its nuclear facilities under IAEA safeguards anyway, Israel
simply ignored it. President Ronald Reagan's White House maintained
a thunderous silence on the matter.
Compare that
with the Bush administration's present stance in the case of Iran.
Unlike Israel, Tehran initialed the Non-Proliferation Treaty early
on and that treaty allows a signatory non-nuclear power to
enrich uranium for civilian purposes. By not informing the IAEA
when it started to do so in 2002, however, Tehran failed to meet
its treaty obligations. That "original sin," combined with the Bush
administration's strong animus toward a hostile regional power,
has in its trail brought UN sanctions against Tehran, with Washington
acting as the prime mover.
The Lure
of Deterrance
In 1998, four
years before Iran's push for nuclear power, India officially detonated
an atomic bomb and, soon after, its archrival Pakistan followed
suit. Like Israel, neither of them had signed on to the NPT. India
exploded a "nuclear device" in 1974, claiming it was for "peaceful
purposes." U.S. sanctions followed but did not impede Delhi's progress
in this field.
India had
embarked on this path after acquiring a bloody nose in its 1962
border war with China over disputed territories in the Himalayan
region. Following its defeat in a conventional war, its leaders
concluded that only possession of atomic weapons would deter Beijing
from invading again. By so doing, they underlined a growing belief
in the deterrent power of nuclear arms a route by which militarily
inferior countries could hope to deter their superior rivals or
enemies.
Pakistan,
engaged since 1947 in a bitter struggle with India over the status
of the disputed province of Kashmir, was a case in point. Well aware
of their country's inferiority to India in population and economic
development, Pakistan's leaders knew that it would be no match in
conventional warfare. The only way to achieve parity with their
larger, more powerful neighbor was by acquiring nuclear weapons.
So they started
a clandestine nuclear-arms program in the late 1970s, reaching their
goal a decade later. They waited, however, to test their first bomb
until after India had officially admitted to doing so in May 1998.
A year later, fighting between Indian and Pakistani troops in the
Kargil region of Indian-administered Kashmir did not escalate into
an all-out war because both sides were nuclear-armed, with their
leaders seemingly prepared to use their arsenals in extremis
. The episode, frightening as it was, reassured Pakistani officials
that their country was now secure from being overpowered by India.
In the mid-1950s,
the same reasoning had led Israeli leaders to pursue the nuclear
path. Uncertain about how long they could maintain their edge over
the combined forces of their Arab neighbors in conventional weaponry
and the quality of their troops, they concluded that an effective
deterrent for a beleaguered country was the atomic bomb.
Indeed, during
the early days of the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, when the Israelis were
caught off-guard and invading Arab armies made striking gains, the
government ordered its entire arsenal, then 25 atomic bombs, mounted
on specially adapted bombers. Those bombers never took off, in part,
because the swift airlifting of military hardware and ammunition
from the U.S. soon helped turn the tide in Israel's favor. In short,
Israeli leaders equipped their military with atomic arms to ensure
the survival of the State of Israel. Such a process, once started,
never ceases. By now, Israel reportedly has an arsenal of at least
200 nuclear bombs.
More recently,
North Korea's leader Kim Jong-Il has acted in a similar fashion.
In January 2002, he noted with alarm the way his country was included
in an "Axis of Evil" along with Iraq and Iran by George
W. Bush in his State of the Union Address. "States like these, and
their terrorist allies, constitute an axis of evil, arming to threaten
the peace of the world," the President said. "By seeking weapons
of mass destruction, these regimes pose a grave and growing danger."
Bush had already
reversed the Clinton administration's policy of engagement (launched
in conjunction with the South Korean government) on the issue of
the North Korean nuclear program and had overseen the virtual termination
of the 1994 agreement to supply North Korea with two light-water
nuclear reactors at the cost of $4.6 billion in return for a nuclear
freeze. North Korea retaliated by expelling IAEA inspectors and
withdrawing from the nuclear NPT in 2003 the year the Bush
administration launched its invasion of Iraq and overthrew Saddam
Hussein's regime, claiming it had an ongoing nuclear-weapons program
that endangered the United States. (It didn't.)
Kim Jong-Il
then accelerated his country's nuclear program, testing a device
in October 2006. By so doing, he strengthened his hand to ensure
the survival of his regime. Thus did another minor state in search
of survival insurance join the nuclear club.
Iran Plays
the Nuclear Card
With Saddam's
regime destroyed and North Korea armed and dangerous, Iran was the
member of that "axis" left exposed to the prospect of regime change.
Partly to avoid Saddam's fate, Iranian leaders signed the IAEA's
Additional Protocol in October 2003, giving the watchdog body authority
to conduct constant on-site inspections. A series of reports by
the agency followed.
In essence
what these said was: While the IAEA inspectors had not found evidence
proving that Iran was pursuing a nuclear-weapons program, they could
not give it a clean bill of health either because Iran had not answered
all questions satisfactorily. In the words of an IAEA official in
Vienna, "The facts don't support an innocent or guilty verdict at
this point."
The starting
point in the nuclear-fuel cycle is the enrichment of uranium, allowed
by the NPT. A low figure of 5% enrichment makes uranium suitable
for generating electricity; at the high end, 90% is needed to produce
a nuclear weapon. The same machine a centrifuge yields
results at both ends of the spectrum.
From the Iranian
leaders' viewpoint, surrendering their right to enrich uranium,
as demanded by the Bush administration and its allies, means giving
up the path to a nuclear weapon in the future. Yet, the history
of the past half century indicates that the only effective way to
deter Washington from overthrowing their regime is by developing
or, at least, threatening to develop nuclear weaponry.
Little wonder that they consider giving up the right to enrich uranium
tantamount to giving up the right to protect their regime. (Anyone
even suggesting that the U.S. give up this right would be laughed
off the premises. Indeed, the Bush administration continues to update
and upgrade its vast nuclear arsenal, attempting, for instance,
to develop bunker-busting atomic weapons for possible future use
against Iran's nuclear facilities.)
If the U.S.
were to give Iran cast-iron guarantees of nonaggression as well
as of noninterference in its domestic affairs just as North
Korea, armed with atomic bombs, is demanding that would undoubtedly
reassure Iran's leaders and form a real basis for resolving the
problem of that country's nuclear activities.
After receiving
the Nobel Peace Prize in December 2005, IAEA chief Muhammad El Baradei
said:
"Part
of the negotiations should be providing Iran with security assurances.
I hope…. that the United States at a certain point will become more
engaged. We look at the United States to do the heavy lifting in
the area of security."
Now, Baradei
is once more offering pragmatic advice. He has proposed that the
U.S. and its allies should consider allowing Iran limited enrichment
rights within its own boundaries. He argues that, since the Iranians
have already successfully enriched uranium, the Security Council's
demand that it stop doing so has become redundant. Instead, the
world body should focus on seeing that Iran conducts its enrichment
activities under IAEA supervision and that, unlike North Korea,
it does not withdraw from the nuclear NPT.
As it is,
U.S. credibility in Tehran is low. On the eve of the January 1981
release of the hostages taken at the U.S. embassy in November 1979,
the U.S. agreed in the Algiers Accord not to interfere in Iran's
internal affairs. In December 1995, however, it began violating
that agreement when, following the passage of a directive by Congress
sanctioning $18 million for a covert action program against Iran,
the Clinton White House announced that the sum would be spent inter
alia to cultivate new enemies of the Islamic regime.
Since then
that annual sum has risen to $75 million and the Bush White House
has launched a series of covert operations to undermine the Iranian
regime, dispatched aircraft-carrier strike forces through the Straits
of Hormuz in classic gunboat-diplomacy fashion, and had its Vice
President issue a series of warnings to Iran from the deck of the
USS John C. Stennis, floating barely 150 miles off the Iranian
coast.
The
Iranian response, despite public denials, has been to play the single
card that history has stamped "effective" since 1949 raising
the specter of a nuclear-armed Iran. It is a classic act of self-defense
guaranteed to spread nuclear arms to other countries in a MAD world
where Catch-22 is the nuclear rule of the day.
June
11, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Dilip Hiro is the author of many books on the Middle
East, including The Iranian Labyrinth (Nation Books). His
latest book is Blood
of the Earth: The Battle for the World's Vanishing Oil Resources
(Nation Books).
Copyright
© 2007 Dilip Hiro
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