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Chatham House speaker: Iran will make nuke

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Israeli elections, the US and Iran

Israeli elections, the US and Iran


On Jan. 22 Israelis go to the polls for parliamentary elections. Earlier this week, I joined a roundtable on the likely outcome of the elections and the implications for Israel’s relations with the US.

The main speaker was a prominent Israeli academic but as the meetings were held under Chatham House rules, I cannot name him.

According to the speaker, current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will be reelected as he faces no serious challenge. He claimed that foreign policy and security issues have not been a significant factor in the election campaign. The reason for this being the other runners are not as “tough” as Netanyahu on security-related issues. What is clear is that with Netanyahu remaining at the helm, Israeli-US relations will enter a very difficult period with a serious clash between Barack Obama and Netanyahu likely; we have already seen a taste of it in the media over recent days. The two are at odds over Netanyahu’s policy vis-à-vis the Palestinians, with Obama apparently becoming increasingly fed up with Israel’s defiant settlement policy. Obama is increasingly irritated by the very hard-line and uncompromising policies of Netanyahu more broadly.

Israel is panicked about developments in the region. The future shape of Syria; the situation in Lebanon, which the speaker labeled a failed state; the role of Turkey; and what the speaker cited as the Islamification of Egypt, labeling Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi as anti-Semitic and set on making Egypt an Islamic dictatorship.

Iran remains Israel’s number one foreign policy issue and Obama’s recent nominations of John Kerry as secretary of state and Chuck Hagel for secretary of defense has freaked Israel out, casting another shadow over relations. While Kerry is viewed as “soft,” our speaker labeled Hagel as an “isolationist” who would damage the image of the US. Hagel has been against sanctions on Iran, favoring a broader diplomatic approach. To Israel, this sort of policy only serves to encourage Iran to continue doing what it is doing.

Round after round of sanctions have been slapped on Iran, yet Tehran remains defiant. While the EU embargo on Iran’s oil hit its economy hard and has had a negative effect on the lives of ordinary people, it has not resulted in the slowing of Iran’s nuclear program. When society complains about the hardship, Iran’s leadership blames the West. Moreover, as long as countries like India and China continue to purchase Iranian oil, the regime will survive. According to a Chinese academic I spoke to, China has no intention of stopping trade with Iran, with which Beijing has strong ties.

Iranian society has suffered continually from sanctions and embargoes. Most memorable to me is the embargo that was placed during the premiership of Iran’s former Prime Minister, Mohammed Mosaddegh in 1951. The UK was furious over Mosaddegh’s nationalization of Iran’s oil industry and imposed a worldwide embargo on the purchase of Iranian oil. This crippled Iran’s economy. Ultimately, Mosaddegh was overthrown by a joint Anglo-American operation, code-named Operation Ajax. These developments had a profound impact on the path that the country took thereafter and its view of the West.

For Israel, the clock is ticking. If the new round of 5+1 talks fails, Obama is going to find himself in a very difficult situation with Israel pushing him to choose between a nuclear Iran and a military operation. The speaker at the meeting believed Obama would choose a nuclear Iran because of the huge consequences of a military strike: catastrophic for the region with no guarantee that it would end Iran’s nuclear program. Yet if Israel decided to go ahead anyway, the US would probably find itself sucked in. And even if there is no military strike, the consequences of a nuclear Iran are huge. Until now, the world seems to have avoided discussing how it would deal with this eventuality. To avoid this “choice,” the negotiation pattern must change: no pre-conditions and a deal which Iran will not lose face over. If this does not happen, I fear Obama will be facing this “between a rock and a hard place choice” sooner rather than later.
 
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My own opinion is:
1. Iran and US will make a deal to limit the enrichment in place of removal of (major) sanctions.
(or less likely)
2. Iran will make nukes but will not test it. No nuke test has ever failed so far, so not necessary. Iran will receive some carrots for not testing it, since a nuke test will encourage the others!
 
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Iran must get nuclear power. Hegemony of US should be rejected by Muslim world

What the hell U.S wants......to murder the target without a fight??this is cowardness!
U.S is clearly well aware that Iran will become his HARD TARGET if she will have nuke.
Go Iran...you are doing perfectly well..show your cards!:woot:
 
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first we need ICBM .......... then nuke ...... a nuke without ICBM is only an excuse for USA to attack us ...

and we can put fear in heart of most Americans with only 1 nuke .... thank to their Iran phobia propaganda ...
 
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Simple, when we've paid its cost (nuke) then why we shouldn't have to possess one?
 
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