Why Empower Iran?

T. Belman.  This is a great article. I have been saying this for a few weeks now, namely, the deal is so bad we must understand why it is being entered.  The only thing missing is a review of US/Iran relations since the Shah. You will see that the US policy was to nurture Iran, believe it or not.

by Alexander H. Joffe, The Times of Israel

sherman andUnless the US Congress votes in opposition, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) deal with Iran with go through. What really happened and why did it happen the way it did?

What happened is gradually becoming clear. It is revealed daily just how horrendous the deal really is. On every point — enrichment, centrifuges, stocks of fissile material, inspections, sanctions on the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps members and businesses, “snapback,” etc. — the Obama administration caved completely.

Concessions on ballistic missiles and arms sales were thrown in at the last minute; the administration lied about it all, while Iran touted its victories and American capitulation. All this went on amidst a background of Iranian chants of “death to Israel” and “death to America,” which entered not at all into American calculations.

Iran is thus empowered; it will shortly be gigantically richer, its proxies strengthened, its nuclear program at best slowed but fundamentally unimpeded, and its missile and terror programs shifted into overdrive.

But why this occurred is unclear. Clownish performance by the chief negotiator, Secretary of State John Kerry, a man driven equally by incompetence, ego, and pacifism, has long been the norm. But otherwise competent functionaries like Treasury Secretary Jack Lew and Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz were dragged into negotiating and defending the deal. They have been no less implausible.

But their presence, along with Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman, previously the midwife of the North Korean nuclear program, suggests the process was directed from the top. In contrast, the defense establishment was written out; protests by General Martin Dempsey, outgoing Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as well as retired leaders like Defense Intelligence Agency head General Michael Flynn and NATO commander Admiral James Stavridis, fell on deaf ears in the administration and have been ignored by a compliant media.

Three factors suggest why President Obama himself effectively guided the negotiations to this point. As with various other administration scandals — think the IRS targeting of conservative and pro-Israel groups, or the Justice Department’s eavesdropping of reporters — it was not necessary for him to make every decision, only to set a tone that was interpreted by underlings. What then were the strategic goals that Obama established?

First was American withdrawal from the Middle East and to diminish the possibility of a return to a Pax Americana. Withdrawal from Iraq was a stated campaign goal that was accomplished, and is now being slowly reversed as the threat of ISIS grows. American forces remain in Afghanistan to confront a growing Taliban threat. In both cases the number of troops will be deliberately inadequate to directly confront threats.

Re-escalation of fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan appears inevitable, but the larger reality of an American defense umbrella has been diminished by the administration’s alienation of traditional allies in the region, namely Israel, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states. This was done through its Iran policy and more broadly through US engagement with Islamists.

When coupled with enormous defense cuts at home, reducing the military to pre-World War II levels, any restoration of American influence, much less a defense presence in the Middle East, would be a protracted and expensive affair necessarily left to a future president, if ever.

A perverse pacifism is also at work. “There is no military solution” and “Ideologies are not defeated with guns”are pacifist mantras, repeated at the very top and used to avoid use of force, or the support of others using force, in Ukraine, Iraq, and Syria.

Obama has said the agreement offers Iran a path to being “a very successful regional power.”

This pacifist, non-interventionist policy is nominally offset by the administration’s machismo; the never ending reminders about killing Bin Laden, the continued leaks and sympathetic press accounts regarding the president’s involvement in approving targets for drone attacks and special forces raids, and the much-vaunted, but little seen, “pivot to Asia.”

But these narratives do not offset the reality that conventional forces, of the sort necessary, say, to fight ISIS in Syria, will never deployed, no matter how many Christians and Yazidis are kidnapped or killed. And despite utterances that a military option was “on the table,” it seems inconceivable that the administration ever contemplated using force against Iran.

But there are deeper reasons for the outreach to Iran. Some have suggested that the long-term Obama policy, from at least 2008, has been to reintegrate Iran into the Middle East, putting it on the path to becoming a “very successful regional power,” as Obama put it, against an even longer term bet that moderate forces will become ascendant.

The White House expects Iran to act as a bulwark against the very Sunni extremism it helps provoke.

Iran, as Obama admits, has “a track record of state-sponsored terrorism … [and] has engaged in disruptions to our allies,” while its “rhetoric is not only explicitly anti-American but also has been incendiary when it comes to its attitude towards the state of Israel.” It is nevertheless expected to act as a bulwark against the Sunni extremism it helps provoke, help resolve the Syria crisis its client Assad created, and abide by “international norms and international rules, and that would be good for everybody.”

The theory of Iranian reintegration, however, captures only part of the administration’s motives. At the root is something deeper still, reflected in Obama’s most personal and idiosyncratic policy statement; that “America is not — and never will be — at war with Islam,” that it is “part of [his] responsibility as President of the United States to fight against negative stereotypes of Islam wherever they appear,” that “Islam is not part of the problem in combating violent extremism — it is an important part of promoting peace,” and that “America does not presume to know what is best for everyone.”

These and other elements from Obama’s Istanbul and Cairo speeches are the core of policy towards Iran, the Middle East, and the Muslim world as a whole. They have been translated directly into policies to support and facilitate “authentically” Islamic regimes in order to prove they can govern.

This was the theory behind support of the Muslim Brotherhood’s short-lived election to rule Egypt, and the distance the US created when Egypt’s military overthrew the increasingly tyrannical rule of Brotherhood President Muhammad Morsi. It has been the foundation of American support for the oppressive and bizarre rule of Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan and the AKP party. And it accounts for the constant disclaimers from administration spokespersons denying any connection between Islam and terror, the incessant “religion of peace” rhetoric, and support for the “Islamophobic” mindset of victimization among American Muslims.

Other policies as large as outreach to Iran, as dangerous as purging mentions of jihad from US counterterrorism training, and as absurd as the President’s order to NASA “to reach out to the Muslim world and engage much more with dominantly Muslim nations to help them feel good about their historic contribution to science, math and engineering,” reflect the administration’s goal of inculcating Islamic authenticity, self-esteem and good will.

In contrast to authentic Islam is “violent extremism.” In this view Al Qaeda and ISIS are not Islamic at all but have, as the president stated in Cairo, “exploited these tensions in a small but potent minority of Muslims.” They are simply groups with no real relationship to Islam, despite their resolute Islamic self-conception and careful textual exegesis. Fatwas from Obama, Kerry and others, painstakingly separating Islam from the terror done in its name, are both perplexing, unpersuasive, and grist for ISIS and domestic Islamic terrorism. But they are self-satisfying.

The non-nuclear consequences of the Iran deal are already coming into view. European businesses are rushing for deals worth billions. Hamas has announced that Iran is financing new attack tunnels into Israel. Hezbollah, though badly bloodied from its defense of Iran’s client, Syria’s Assad regime, is reemphasizing its anti-Israel rhetoric and capabilities before what will be a horrifically violent war. Iran’s subversion in Yemen, the Balkans, South America and the Gulf is at new heights. International legitimacy has brought neither Iranian moderation nor domestic development. It is unlikely to do so soon.

At the end of the day, an American administration led by social justice ideologues was fated to understand nothing about a revolutionary Islamist regime with global aspirations. The favor done Iran in the name of Islamic authenticity and regional reintegration will be a curse on the world for generations.

Alexander H. Joffe, a Shillman-Ginsburg fellow at the Middle East Forum, is a historian and archaeologist.

August 14, 2015 | 3 Comments »

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  1. ran very likely has been able to create a bomb for a while. They have been working to shrink the the size of the uranium warhead for ballistic missiles for quite a while. That is why they did not mind for a while reducing enrichment. As long a they kept equipment so they could enrich more uranium when they were ready with the warhead.

    Next goal was to get sanctions lifted. Mission nearly accomplished.

    It is easier to have a ballistic missile sized warhead made from a plutonium bomb. That is why they need the heavy water facility. This also will not be destroyed per the “deal”.

    Obama and his stupid negotiators walked into giving the Iranians everything they wanted. Iran kept the nuclear facilities and bought time to make the warhead, which is technically the most difficult part of the weapon. This is most likely what they were testing at the Parchin site. That is why they would not let anyone inspect there.

    The deal allows them to back out of it with 35 days notice. So once the sanctions are completely broken and they have met their technical milestone they can just say International community is violating the deal. 35 Days later if the situation is not resolved to their satisfaction, the deal is over. So this is not ten year or fifteen year deal as Obama claims but a 35 day deal.

    It appears Obama is trying to get Iran to work against ISIS and does not care about Israel or the Sunni Gulf States. Somehow he has deluded himself that Iran will act like the Soviets and show rationality and never use the bomb against the USA or Europe.

  2. Sorry, Joffe is insufficiently Machiavellian in his analysis by many miles. Strengthening Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood makes no sense unless the goal is serious future conflict. That conflict would either take place between Shi’a and Sunni or between Islam and the West or East (China and/or Russia). Also, Joffe fails to take account of the seemingly suicidal sucking of Muslims into Europe, the United States and South America.

    The abetting of Iran’s nuclear program and the military strengthening of the dedicated Muslim Brotherhood suggests the Western desire for conflict, not its amelioration.

    Along the same lines, the squelching of Israeli military operations that would successfully eliminate Iran’s nuclear program is a setup for a later much larger confrontation that would likely eliminate both Iran and Israel. Again, we see efforts to strengthen Israel’s military by the US, while squelching Israel’s attempts to defend itself. Whether Israel tries to defend itself against Sunni Hamas or against the Shi’a of Iran, she is not permitted to make progress that would leave her more secure.

    What appears to be at play here is that Islam is viewed as a destructive force in the world that must be destroyed. Chief among the reasons for destroying it is its mentality toward women. The use of Islam’s attitude toward women strengthens Islam by supporting child-bearing as a military and geo-political weapon. Short of wiping Islam off the map by military means, the only way to weaken it is by reducing their family size. This insight explain many of the other seemingly incongruous moves such as integrating Muslims into NASA. Educated men have no need for sprawling families and educated women are unlikely to remain at home to raise large families.

    Short of Western engagement in direct conflict with Islam that would strengthen Islam as through ISIS, setting them against each other seems the best way to modernize or eliminate misogynistic Islam. The most Machiavellian among Western policy makers look to population control – through peace or war – as the means to defusing threats aimed at the West. Iran has controlled its own population. It is then a model to be supported by the West.

    Israel’s population increases because people are happy with their children and for nationalistic and religious reasons. Thus, it must be compressed geographically to make future expansion less likely and less costly. If Israel were to be eliminated, this too would sooth Islam and make their own population control less threatening.

    In short, anything that will make Muslims less angry and more subject to population control is to be supported. Direct, head-on conflict is to be avoided because it strengthen memes associated with militant Islam. In the end, it is all about population control – through peace or war. No difference!

  3. I received this email from a very knowledgeable person

    Hi, Ted – hate to break this to you, but in my assessment, Iran already has nuclear bombs….they’ve been building & testing warheads in clandestine sites for a number of years now (that’s what Parchin is all about – that’s what all the IAEA’s questions about ‘Possible Military Dimensions’ are about).

    It is also very likely that the Iranian regime has worked w/the North Koreans on testing (2006, 2009, 2013). Those were for Super-EMP weapons, by the way.

    All that’s left is for the regime to master the miniaturization that we know from open Congressional testimony in Feb 2015 from BG Wm Gortney that North Korea already has mastered – and then to fit its warheads onto ICBMs.

    Now, as to why the USG would allow this, I think there are several parts to that answer:

    US intelligence on Iran is not very good on Iran & they refuse to work with the Iranian opposition, which is very good.
    Obama admin has made it an element of policy since 2009 that Iran would be sole hegemonic power in the Persian Gulf area (yes, IS has challenged that to some extent) – but – I think WH calculus is that only with a deliverable nuclear weapons capability will Iran be able to dominate the (globally) much more numerous Sunnis – and – this is critical: check mate Israel.
    So, it is my personal assessment that this current US admin intends for Iran to go nuclear – and – that checkmating Israel is a big part of that
    Happy Thursday!