The Gravest
Threat to World Peace
January 04, 2013 "Information Clearing House" - Reporting on the final U.S. presidential campaign debate, on foreign policy, The Wall Street Journal observed that "the only country mentioned more (than Israel) was Iran, which is seen by most nations in the Middle East as the gravest security threat to the region."
January 04, 2013 "Information Clearing House" - Reporting on the final U.S. presidential campaign debate, on foreign policy, The Wall Street Journal observed that "the only country mentioned more (than Israel) was Iran, which is seen by most nations in the Middle East as the gravest security threat to the region."
The two
candidates agreed that a nuclear Iran is the gravest
threat to the region, if not the world, as Romney
explicitly maintained, reiterating a conventional
view.
On Israel, the
candidates vied in declaring their devotion to it,
but Israeli officials were nevertheless unsatisfied.
They had "hoped for more 'aggressive' language from
Mr. Romney," according to the reporters. It was not
enough that Romney demanded that Iran not be
permitted to "reach a point of nuclear capability."
Arabs were
dissatisfied too, because Arab fears about Iran were
"debated through the lens of Israeli security
instead of the region's," while Arab concerns were
largely ignored – again the conventional treatment.
The Journal
article, like countless others on Iran, leaves
critical questions unanswered, among them: Who
exactly sees Iran as the gravest security threat?
And what do Arabs (and most of the world) think can
be done about the threat, whatever they take it to
be?
The first
question is easily answered. The "Iranian threat" is
overwhelmingly a Western obsession, shared by Arab
dictators, though not Arab populations.
As numerous
polls have shown, although citizens of Arab
countries generally dislike Iran, they do not regard
it as a very serious threat. Rather, they perceive
the threat to be Israel and the United States; and
many, sometimes considerable majorities, regard
Iranian nuclear weapons as a counter to these
threats.
In high places
in the U.S., some concur with the Arab populations'
perception, among them Gen. Lee Butler, former head
of the Strategic Command. In 1998 he said, "It is
dangerous in the extreme that in the cauldron of
animosities that we call the Middle East," one
nation, Israel, should have a powerful nuclear
weapons arsenal, which "inspires other nations to do
so."
Still more
dangerous is the nuclear-deterrent strategy of which
Butler was a leading designer for many years. Such a
strategy, he wrote in 2002, is "a formula for
unmitigated catastrophe," and he called on the
United States and other nuclear powers to accept
their commitment under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty (NPT) to make "good faith" efforts to
eliminate the plague of nuclear weapons.
Nations have a
legal obligation to pursue such efforts seriously,
the World Court ruled in 1996: "There exists an
obligation to pursue in good faith and bring to a
conclusion negotiations leading to nuclear
disarmament in all its aspects under strict and
effective international control." In 2002, George W.
Bush's administration declared that the United
States is not bound by the obligation.
A large
majority of the world appears to share Arab views on
the Iranian threat. The Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
has vigorously supported Iran's right to enrich
uranium, most recently at its summit meeting in
Tehran last August.
India, the
most populous member of the NAM, has found ways to
evade the onerous U.S. financial sanctions on Iran.
Plans are proceeding to link Iran's Chabahar port,
refurbished with Indian assistance, to Central Asia
through Afghanistan. Trade relations are also
reported to be increasing. Were it not for strong
U.S. pressures, these natural relations would
probably improve substantially.
China, which
has observer status at the NAM, is doing much the
same. China is expanding development projects
westward, including initiatives to reconstitute the
old Silk Road from China to Europe. A high-speed
rail line connects China to Kazakhstan and beyond.
The line will presumably reach Turkmenistan, with
its rich energy resources, and will probably link
with Iran and extend to Turkey and Europe.
China has also
taken over the major Gwadar port in Pakistan,
enabling it to obtain oil from the Middle East while
avoiding the Hormuz and Malacca straits, which are
clogged with traffic and U.S.-controlled. The
Pakistani press reports that "Crude oil imports from
Iran, the Arab Gulf states and Africa could be
transported overland to northwest China through the
port."
At its Tehran
summit in August, the NAM reiterated the
long-standing proposal to mitigate or end the threat
of nuclear weapons in the Middle East by
establishing a zone free of weapons of mass
destruction. Moves in that direction are clearly the
most straightforward and least onerous way to
overcome the threats. They are supported by almost
the entire world.
A fine
opportunity to carry such measures forward arose
last month, when an international conference was
planned on the matter in Helsinki.
A conference
did take place, but not the one that was planned.
Only nongovernmental organizations participated in
the alternate conference, hosted by the Peace Union
of Finland. The planned international conference was
canceled by Washington in November, shortly after
Iran agreed to attend.
The Obama
administration's official reason was "political
turmoil in the region and Iran's defiant stance on
nonproliferation," the Associated Press reported,
along with lack of consensus "on how to approach the
conference." That reason is the approved reference
to the fact that the region's only nuclear power,
Israel, refused to attend, calling the request to do
so "coercion."
Apparently,
the Obama administration is keeping to its earlier
position that "conditions are not right unless all
members of the region participate." The United
States will not allow measures to place Israel's
nuclear facilities under international inspection.
Nor will the U.S. release information on "the nature
and scope of Israeli nuclear facilities and
activities."
The Kuwait
news agency immediately reported that "the Arab
group of states and the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM)
member states agreed to continue lobbying for a
conference on establishing a Middle East zone free
of nuclear weapons and all other weapons of mass
destruction."
Last month,
the U.N. General Assembly passed a resolution
calling on Israel to join the NPT, 174-6. Voting no
was the usual contingent: Israel, the United States,
Canada, Marshall Islands, Micronesia and Palau.
A few days
later, the United States carried out a nuclear
weapons test, again banning international inspectors
from the test site in Nevada. Iran protested, as did
the mayor of Hiroshima and some Japanese peace
groups.
Establishment
of a nuclear weapons-free zone of course requires
the cooperation of the nuclear powers: In the Middle
East, that would include the United States and
Israel, which refuse. The same is true elsewhere.
Such zones in Africa and the Pacific await
implementation because the U.S. insists on
maintaining and upgrading nuclear weapons bases on
islands it controls.
As the NGO
meeting convened in Helsinki, a dinner took place in
New York under the auspices of the Washington
Institute for Near East Policy, an offshoot of the
Israeli lobby.
According to
an enthusiastic report on the "gala" in the Israeli
press, Dennis Ross, Elliott Abrams and other "former
top advisers to Obama and Bush" assured the audience
that "the president will strike (Iran) next year if
diplomacy doesn't succeed" – a most attractive
holiday gift.
Americans can
hardly be aware of how diplomacy has once again
failed, for a simple reason: Virtually nothing is
reported in the United States about the fate of the
most obvious way to address "the gravest threat" –
Establish a nuclear-weapon-free zone in the Middle
East.
© 2012
Noam Chomsky
Distributed by
The
New York Times Syndicate
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