Saturday, February 26, 2005

This Week in Review

DoctorZin provides a review of this past week's [2/20-2/26] major news events regarding Iran.

The EU3 Negotiations with Iran:
  • Iran wants to follow the Japan/Germany model, which means they would be permitted to develop nuclear fuel cycle capabilities three months short of a bomb.
  • Iranians are having problems in their negotiations with the EU3. They want the EU to guarantee their security.
  • The Iranians do not want the US to participate in the negotiations. Then they do.
  • The US wants an agreement with the EU3 on the definition of failure if the EU3/Iran talks do not succeed.
  • The US has given the EU3 and Iran until June to complete its negotiations. I expect the US to aggressively push for regime change in Iran in June, if not before. Thus this is well timed and to be expected.
  • The European Parliament is censuring Iran for its human rights violations and recommending the UN act. They even quote President Bush's call for liberty. They also call for declassifying the MEK from their terrorist lists. [The NY Time's exposes the MEK attempts to legitimize itself to the US Congress.]
  • The French want the US to offer the Iranians trade incentives. They also want to sell the Iranians more technology. Is it all about selling the AirBus?
  • The Russians head off to Iran to sign its nuclear fuel deal. But suddenly the signing has been postponed.
  • Iran says it does not fear being brought before the UN Security Council.
Bush's road trip:
Tuesday's earthquake in Iran:
An earthquake in Iran Tuesday and killed in excess of 500 people. Iranians are angry at their government’s poor response to the tragedy. Pejamesque takes a look at the political consequences of the earthquake. The US offers help with Iran's latest earthquake. Iran says no thanks.
Popular struggle inside of Iran.
  • Iranian youth used one of the holiest Shiite days in the calendar, to dance, whistle and clap rather than observing the somber mourning rituals.
  • Iranian journalist and blogger sentenced to 14 years in prison.
  • A Iranian blogger shares his experience in prison for blogging.
  • Blog campaign launched to support jailed Iranian bloggers.
  • An Iranian court sentences a young woman to 100 lashes.
  • According to Iran Focus a recent secret report to the Iranian regime's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps pointed out that were a demonstration or rebellion to last more than six hours in Tehran, the security apparatus would no longer be able to control the situation.
Iran's Neighbors:
Odd and Ends:
Must Read Reports:
And finally, The Quote of the Week:
Walid Jumblatt, head of Lebanon's Druze Muslim community and hardly a friend of the U.S. said yesterday:

"It's strange for me to say it, but this process of change has started because of the American invasion of Iraq. I was cynical about Iraq. But when I saw the Iraqi people voting three weeks ago, 8 million of them, it was the start of a new Arab world." ... "The Syrian people, the Egyptian people, all say that something is changing. The Berlin Wall has fallen. We can see it."

Saturday’s Daily Briefing on Iran

DoctorZin reports, 2.26.2005:

Jeffrey Bergner, writing for the Weekly Standard in an article called: The Least Bad Iran Option makes a compelling argument that the present EU3/Iran negotiations will end with the US being blamed for its failure. He ends regrettably with the military option as the likely alternative.

But there is a fourth option.

Upon failure of the negotiations the US and Europe adopt a "regime change policy" and begin supporting the Iranian people who are calling for a referendum on their form of government. The people of Iran have been seeking this kind of support for years now and with the recent events in the Ukraine and Lebanon appear to be a real option.

This summer the world will witness the lack of support the regime has inside of Iran. The people of Iran will likely refuse to participate in their so called elections, just as they did in their last elections where only 12% bothered to participate. With united international support the people can take to the streets and bring down this government.

This is exactly what the Iranian people have been pleading for. Will we continue to turn a deaf ear? I think not. In fact, I believe this is exactly the course the President has laid out for Iran, as I have predicted earlier.

I believe it will be a very hot summer in Iran.

Here are a few of items you may have missed.

  • While members of the screen actor’s guild celebrate with “Iranian caviar after the Oscars, an Iranian reminds us of the cost to the Iranian people.
  • The Russians head off to Iran to sign it’s nuclear fuel deal. But suddenly the signing has been postponed. Once again, Iran is making it clear that its nuclear enrichment program is not negotiable.
  • Iranians want the US to join the EU3/Iran negotiations.
  • The US has given the EU3 and Iran until June to complete its negotiations. I expect the US to aggressively push for regime change in Iran in June, if not before. Thus this is well timed and to be expected.
  • Middle East Quarterly profiles one of the most famous Iranian Student dissidents.
  • The Wall Street Journal thinks President Bush is following in Reagan’s footsteps.
  • The European Parliament is censuring Iran for its human rights violations and recommending the UN act. They even quote President Bush’s call for liberty. They also call for declassifying the MEK from their terrorist lists.
  • And finally, Iran Focus has published some interesting letters to President Bush from Iranian students.

No to Permanent Uranium Enrichment

Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting, IRIB News:
Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council Hassan Rowhani here Friday evening ruled out once again a permanent uranium enrichment stop as demanded by the three European countries and the US. "We have no such intention. We have said in our very first meeting with the three European foreign ministers in October 2003 that such a permanent cessation is not on our agenda," Rowhani said at a news conference at the new Iranian embassy in Berlin.

"I have said at that time that should any Iranian government ever accept an uranium enrichment stop, it would collapse on the very same day," added Iran's top nuclear negotiator. ...

Iran, Russia Postpone Signing of Nuclear Deal

The Associated Press, MSNBC News:
Last-minute disputes Saturday forced Iran and Russia to postpone the signing of an agreement to supply Iran with fuel for its first nuclear reactor, a deal strongly opposed by the United States.

The countries’ top nuclear officials had been set to sign the agreement on Saturday morning, a day after a summit between the U.S. and Russian presidents.

But after hours of delay, Yacoub Jabbarian, an official at Iran’s Atomic Energy Agency, told reporters that talks had been prolonged and it was not clear when the signing would take place. He did not give the reason for the delay.

An Iranian nuclear official speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity said “deep differences” had arisen, but would not elaborate.

The agreement would pave the way for Tehran to open its nuclear reactor at Bushehr, with Russia providing it fuel then taking back the spent uranium, a safeguard meant to banish fears Iran would use it to build nuclear weapons.

Still, Washington has pressed Moscow to call off the deal, saying the Iranians could use the Bushehr reactor as part of a nuclear weapons program. ...

The Least Bad Iran Option

Jeffrey Bergner, The Weekly Standard:
During his recent trip to Europe, President Bush sent mixed signals about U.S. policy with regard to Iran's development of nuclear weapons. At one point he dismissed the prospect of military action as ridiculous; immediately after, he emphasized all options were on the table; then at another point he suggested there might be "convergence" between U.S. and European views on how to address the problem. If the president seemed to be all over the lot, that may be because the policy choices with respect to Iran are complex, and none is without its drawbacks.

Currently we are pursuing a "good cop, bad cop" option. While France, Germany, and Great Britain negotiate directly with Iran, the United States stands to the side. Washington endorses the negotiations, supports the European trio, and hopes the negotiations might find an opening to end Iran's weapons program in a way that is verifiable. Indeed, there may even be a thought that the occasional American statement that "all options are on the table" will strengthen the European negotiating position.

What are the likely consequences of this scenario? First, the negotiations will fail. They will fail because, despite claims to the contrary, Iran is not seeking a peaceful nuclear energy program. Iran has no need of such a program, and its actions to date are not consistent with that end. Iran is seeking to develop a nuclear weapons capability, and there is nothing the European trio can offer it to compensate for the perceived security benefits nuclear weapons would bring.

When the talks fail, what then? Will European negotiators acknowledge that negotiations were insufficient to deter Iran, and move toward economic or political sanctions? No, they won't: The negotiations are not a means to an end, they are the end itself.

We will then see the second consequence of this option: European governments will argue that only the United States can offer the security guarantees that might tempt Iran to end its program, and therefore America should not absent itself from the negotiations. Iran will point out that leaks about U.S. war planning, deployment of aerial drones, and alleged Special Forces activities all confirm its need for self-defense. It will be said, again, that America faces two kinds of adversaries--those with nuclear weapons that it does not invade, and those without nuclear weapons that it does invade. Under the "good cop, bad cop" option, Iran's weapons program continues, Western unity is strained, and Iran lays the blame on a party not even present at the negotiations. In all, not such an attractive option.

There are now calls for the United States to move to a second option, which we might call the "united front" option. Here the United States would join France, Germany, and Great Britain and engage directly with Iran. But what could Washington offer that the European trio could not? The United States maintains ground forces in both Iraq and Afghanistan and considerable naval assets nearby. Perhaps a security guarantee from the United States would assuage the anxieties of the Iranian government. But such a pledge would be completely unwise, given the many other issues--including support for terrorism, interference in Iraq, and the Iranian regime's human rights record--that animate U.S.-Iran relations.

Moreover, to assume that Iran's quest for nuclear weapons has to do with the current force posture of the United States in the region is to forget that Iran has been pursuing nuclear weapons for at least 18 years, since long before even the first Gulf War. And it is to ignore that Israel, Russia, and Pakistan all possess nuclear capabilities in the region. The consequence is that "united front" negotiations would also fail. What's more, since the United States, if it joined direct talks with Iran, would immediately become the senior negotiating partner, American diplomacy would be blamed for the failure.

What then? Would Europe be more willing to adopt follow-on sanctions against Iran as a result of a perceived failure of collective U.S. and European diplomacy than it is as a result of the failure of its own diplomacy? The question answers itself. The "united front" option would permit the continuation of Iran's nuclear program and foster disagreement over follow-on measures among the allies.

This suggests a third option, which we might call a "united front with pre-agreed follow-on measures." Under this option the United States and Europe would agree in advance on a set of consequences to ensue if negotiations failed to dislodge Iran from its position. For example, they might agree that if negotiations had not successfully concluded within six months, the United States and Europe would jointly press for economic sanctions against Iran in the U.N. Security Council.

It is difficult to believe that Europe would commit itself to such a course of action, especially if the United States were in a position to judge what amounted to a successful negotiating outcome. Europe might surmise that Russia or China or both would block action by the Security Council in any event. Thus, for the "united front with pre-agreed follow-on measures" option to be meaningful, Europe would have to commit itself in advance to join in sanctioning Iran with or without the blessing of the Security Council. This would require Europe to overturn its long-standing views on the U.N., and to do so in an instance where Europe alone would bear most of the new costs, as the United States already has sanctions in place against Iran.

So this third option turns out to be a pipe dream, predicated on the hope that Europe would ever adopt economic and/or political sanctions against Iran, over and against the procedures of the U.N., in response to a perceived failure of American diplomacy. While musing on this cascade of unlikely events, moreover, we might remind ourselves that there is no evidence that the imposition of joint U.S. and European economic sanctions against Iran would cause it to terminate its nuclear weapons program.

Is there no other option short of invasion? There is a "military strike" option, which would consist of a strike against all known and suspected Iranian nuclear weapons development facilities. In the wake of such a strike, the United States would no doubt be condemned for riding roughshod over European and world diplomacy and for taking Iranian lives. A military strike could also alienate a great swath of moderate, and especially younger, Iranians who are inclined to be friendly toward the United States and in whom we repose hope for the creation one day of a more decent, secular regime in Iran. Moderate Iranians may oppose clerical rule, but they do not necessarily oppose an Iran with nuclear capabilities. Losing the natural affection of these people would be a genuine setback.

A "military strike" option is thus fraught with risk for the United States from friend and foe. It does, though, have one critical difference from the other options examined here: If it were executed properly, it would eliminate or seriously retard Iran's nuclear weapons program.

Jeffrey Bergner is a senior transatlantic fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States. The views expressed here are his own.
The author provides a clear analysis as far as it goes. But there is a fourth option.

Upon failure of the negotiations the US and Europe adopt a "regime change policy" and begin supporting the Iranian people who are calling for a referendum on their form of government. The people of Iran have been seeking this kind of support for years now and with the recent events in the Ukraine and Lebanon appear to be a real option.

This summer the world will witness the lack of support the regime has inside of Iran. The people of Iran will likely refuse to participate in their so called elections, just as they did in their last elections where only 12% bothered to participate. With united international support the people can take to the streets and bring down this government.

This is exactly what the Iranian people have been pleading for. Will we continue to turn a deaf ear? I think not. In fact, I believe this is exactly the course the President has laid out for Iran, as I have predicted earlier.

I believe it will be a very hot summer in Iran.

Friday, February 25, 2005

Letters To President Bush from Iran

Iran Press News:
What kind of support do the people of Iran however, especially the youth request from President Bush?

To answer to this query a few young Iranians (inside Iran) were asked to provide short hand-written responses so that their concerns can be submitted to the President. Below, are translations of just a few of notes they sent us here at Iran Press News.

Mohammad - High School Senior writes President Bush:

- High School Senior writes President Bush: We are grateful that you have repeatedly supported us, the oppressed people of Iran who face the bloodthirsty Islamic regime of the Mullahs, daily. However, this is not enough. A serious solution must be devised. We, the Iranian people will not be able to succeed in achieving our freedom unless we have support from the international community. At this juncture, everyone recognizes that "Reform" was nothing more than a ruse. So what are you waiting for? This is the same regime that has supported terrorism from it's inception; it's the same regime that has done nothing but imprisoning and suffocating it's opposition...So what is the basis for your adjournment and procrastination on the one hand and European support on the other? ...

Maryam - Young writer and activist blogger offers the President an option other than war:

We the people of Iran are quite capable of toppling the Islamic regime and in this cause, we do indeed require your support. However, support without war! I am aware of the fact that you have radio broadcasting capabilities in the Middle East and Persian Gulf countries. I understand that these are able to deliver the freedom-seeking message of the people of Iran. However, these broadcasting stations, which have been created [with sizable budgets, approved by the government of the U.S.] in order to deliver the news and messages of freedom for the people of Iran, unfortunately do nothing but play music, deliver extremely shallow reports and often even deliver regime-supporting commentary. Radio Farda is not that voice of freedom that we were hoping to hear from the United States. Instead, many of the activists, freedom fighters and Iranian media members who reside in the U.S. haven't the means to broadcast inside Iran; the ones who are in fact able to broadcast into Iran cannot be heard by everyone as satellite dishes and such other such means are not available to the greater public. How wonderful it would have been that instead of playing music and songs [from short wave radios], which are useless, the voices of freedom fighters were broadcast regularly and around the clock. We are sure that you are able to make this happen and that it would be effective.

Gloria also has a similar suggestion for the President:

Mr. Bush, please support the voices of Iranian freedom seekers. We don't need music or science and cultural news from you; access to this sort of information is very easy these days and music can be heard through cassettes and CD's. Instead of broadcasting music 24 hours a day, broadcast political analysis and commentary! Let our activists speak. Let the messages of freedom fighters be broadcast via your technical facilities that are set up in the region. Please recognize that this is the best and easiest method to topple this regime and it is the least path of resistance...

Shaqayeq and Shayda - sisters:

We are not the ones who you see on TV. Do not consider those bearded terrorists you see, to be Iranian. We Iranians with our rich culture and history, perpetually wish to live in peace and serenity. Our rulers are not Iranian. They are in no way endowed with the Iranian disposition. It is due to this that they and their lackey agents have unleashed such a plague on the world and us. Mr. Bush, Ms. Rice...please come to our aid. A people are on the path of destruction and decline and furthermore the world is uneasy with an oppressive regime entitled the Mullacracy.

Soheil - Art Student provides insight for President Bush on aspects of the blueprint for a referendum:

We are seeking a referendum to choose our nation's fate. Our aim is to have a free election such as the ones held in Afghanistan and Iraq so that we can choose another form of government and it's own constitutional law. Please help us realize this aim.

Sarah - Accounting student has written 5 pages for the President of the U.S.! In sections of the letter, she states:

Iranian opposition outside Iran has not been able to create a united front against the Mullahs. The first measure that the government of the U.S. can take in supporting the freedom-loving people of Iran can be to gather the various forces and consolidate a caucus in exile; also helpful would be to assist in organizing a referendum for another form of rule...We, the people of Iran, have struggled for the last hundred years in order to obtain democracy, however in no period [in our history] had we suffered to the extent that we have under the rule of Mullahs nor had we galvanized our struggle to this extent. Now that you have become our supporter, we would like to ask you to help unite the world with our goals and hopes; it is in this way that we can be rid of a plague such as this Islamic regime. I realize that this regime however is the "pet" of certain Western countries and that these very same countries also benefit from the perpetuation of such a plague! Sitting on one's hands in the face of the expansion of such a regime is tantamount to imminent defeat! These [Mullahs] are busy building nuclear weapons. This is a fact that the whole world is aware of and I cannot understand why, is reluctant to confront.

Finally, Farhad, Shima, Mahmoud, Pantehah, Payam, Shahnaz, Behnam, Goudarz in similar messages, explicitly ask President Bush to consider military action against the Islamic republic. Payam also adds:

I am exhausted by these existing conditions. Mr. Bush, please come and fight fanaticism, inhumanity and persecution with your most sophisticated military equipment and confront them with much worse than what Mullah Omar, Bin Laden and Saddam experienced! Iran and Iranians are desperate, drained and downcast by all this pain, executions, massacres, profanity, poverty, corruption and suffocation...we hope for your arrival.

We are thus waiting for the receipt of more messages for the President, which we will print.

European Parliament censures Iran rights violations, calls for special representative to monitor situation

Iran Focus:
The European Parliament yesterday passed a resolution condemning Iran's human rights violations and called on the European Union to sponsor a separate resolution, censuring Iran in the United Nations and demanding that a special representative be re-appointed to monitor the human rights situation in Iran.

The EP condemned "the serious increase in human rights violations, notably the growing number of reports about executions, including executions of juvenile offenders, amputations, flogging in public, a generalised crackdown on the press and media, widespread arrests – especially of women and young people – on unclear or minor charges". ...

The parliamentarians who included two vice-Presidents of the European Parliament announced their collective opinion in Wednesday's edition of the International Herald Tribune.

"We have been encouraged by the words of President Bush to the Iranian people in his State of the Union address, when he said: 'As you stand for your own liberty, America stands with you'," parts of their declaration read.

"We agree with Mrs Maryam Rajavi, leader of the opposition National Council of Resistance of Iran, who said at the European Parliament: 'There is a third option beside appeasement of the mullahs or foreign military intervention: change brought about by the Iranian people and resistance'," it added.

The parliamentarians went on to voice their opposition to the EU's appeasement of the Iranian regime and called for the removal of the main Iranian opposition group, the People's Mojahedin, from the Europe's terror list, citing President Bush's recent remarks concerning the role of the Iranian opposition in revealing Iran's clandestine nuclear program to the international community.

Those making the call included Alejo Vidal-Quadras, First vice-President of the European Parliament, Edward McMillan-Scott, vice-President of the EP, Paulo Casaca, President of the EP delegation to Nato, and Struan Stevenson, co-Chair of the Friends of a Free Iran parliamentary group.

In Reagan's Footsteps

The Wall Street Journal, Review & Outlook:
Visits by U.S. Presidents to Europe tend to have a template-making quality: Wilson, the peace maker, in Paris, 1919; Truman, the victor, at Potsdam, 1945; Kennedy, the stalwart, in Berlin, 1963; Reagan, the visionary, in Berlin, 1987. If President Bush's trip this week has some kind of new theme, the word for it is probably conciliation. But our sense is that Mr. Bush is really following in Reagan's footsteps.

Admittedly, this thought is not original: Der Spiegel beat us to it. Still, it says something that the leftish German newsweekly, which two years ago devoted an entire cover story to advancing the "Blood-for-Oil" thesis about U.S. ambitions in the Middle East, has gingerly raised the question, "Could Bush Be Right?"

"The Germany Reagan was traveling in, much like today's Germany, was very skeptical of the American president and his foreign policy," Der Spiegel writes. "When Reagan stood before the Brandenburg Gate -- and the Berlin Wall -- and demanded that Gorbachev 'tear down this Wall,' he was lampooned the next day on the editorial pages. He is a dreamer, wrote commentators. ... But history has shown that it wasn't Reagan who was the dreamer as he voiced his demand. Rather, it was German politicians who were lacking in imagination -- a group who in 1987 couldn't imagine that there might be an alternative to a divided Germany."

It is doubtful that Der Spiegel would have made these observations had Mr. Bush's visit taken place just before Iraq's election rather than just after. And we suspect most of the magazine's editors would dearly have preferred to see a President Kerry.

But events have a way of imposing both discipline and clarity. For much of Europe, the idea that President Bush is the real and legitimate face of America came a few years late. But it has come, as has the realization that a hopeful era is dawning in the Middle East thanks to U.S. "unilateralism" and force of arms. In this sense, the purpose of Mr. Bush's trip isn't to present himself anew to Europe. It is to allow European leaders -- France's Jacques Chirac, Germany's Gerhard Schröder and Russia's Vladimir Putin -- to present themselves anew to Mr. Bush.

Partly this reflects political facts: Contrary to expectation a year ago (and with the qualified exception of Spain), the leaders who supported the war in Iraq have all been returned to office, while Messrs. Chirac, Putin and Schröder languish in polls. ..

Probably the most important component is that President Bush's vision of spreading democracy -- of getting to the "tipping point" where tyrannies start to crumble -- seems not only to be working but also winning some unexpected converts. Just ask the Lebanese who are suddenly restive under Syrian occupation. As a result, European politicians are in a poorer position to lecture this President about the true ways of the world.

This isn't to say that Mr. Bush can or should be indifferent to the attitudes of his European counterparts. They have agreed to put differences about Iraq behind them, which is good. The U.S., France and Germany also seem to be reasonably united in their concern about Russia's imperial pretensions and attenuated civil liberties. But potentially larger differences loom before them, above all over the nuclearization of Iran and the lifting of the post-Tiananmen arms embargo to China. ...

Still, there are reasons to be sanguine about the future of trans-Atlantic relations. We are in no doubt that most European hearts thrilled to the sight of Iraqi voters going to the polls last month, suggesting that, whatever Europe and America's political or ideological differences, we remain alike in our innermost values and aspirations. Nor do we believe our world views are so divided that persuasion and compromise are impossible. Pundits may differ as to whether Mr. Bush and his European counterparts planted the seeds for a better relationship. What's sure is that they were planting on fertile soil.

Dissident Watch: Ahmad Batebi

Suzanne Gershowitz, Middle East Quarterly:
On July 7, 1999, the Iranian government banned the popular reformist daily Salam. The next evening, students at Tehran University staged a peaceful demonstration against regime censorship. In the early morning hours of July 9, hard-line vigilantes, backed by Iranian police, attacked the students’ dormitory, beating many and killing at least one. In the days that followed, students across the country poured into the streets, demonstrating for freedom and rule-of-law.

The international press descended on Tehran. “Student Protests Shake Iran’s Government,” the New York Times headlined.[1] “Iranians Oppose Hard-Liners; Thousands of Students Demand Resignation of Ayatollah,” the Washington Post declared.[2] The most famous image of the protests came from the Economist.[3] Its cover featured a photo of 21-year-old Ahmad Batebi, waving the bloody shirt of a brutalized peer.

In the ensuing crackdown, Iranian authorities targeted Batebi, whom The Economist had transformed into a potent symbol of the Iranian freedom movement. Thrown in Tehran’s notorious Evin prison, Batebi was condemned to death for soiling the Islamic Republic’s image.[4] His sentence was later reduced to fifteen years in prison.

Batebi is an unlikely hero, thrust into the spotlight by chance rather than design. “Whether I want it or not, I am in prison as a representative of the student movement, and I will have to carry this burden as honorably as I can,” he told a reporter during a brief furlough. “There is not a second that I don’t wish I was a free man.”[5] Batebi’s furlough did not last long. Iranian security returned him to prison after he spoke with a United Nations human rights envoy.[6]

Batebi has suffered in prison. His lungs have deteriorated, and he has lost some eyesight and hearing as a result of prison beatings. In an open 1999 letter, he complained that, “They beat my head and abdominal area with soldiers’ shoes … [They] held me under [a drain full of excrement] for so long I was unable to breathe and the excrement was inhaled through my nose and seeped into my mouth.”[7] After suffering abuse and torture at the hands of the Islamic Republic, the once-religious Batebi has begun to question his faith. “I learned that I have to depend on myself and no other power to survive.”[8]

President George W. Bush has given rhetorical support to Iranian reformers. ...

A gap exists between rhetoric and policy, though. Tim Guldimann, the Swiss ambassador who between 1999 and 2004 represented U.S. interests in Tehran, has said he did not meet a single dissident during his tenure. Nor have State Department officials publicly called for Batebi’s release. ...

U.S. May Give EU Till June to Coax Iran on Nukes

Louis Charbonneau, Reuters:
In its drive to stop Iran gaining any ability to make nuclear weapons, the United States is ready to give European allies only until June to cajole Tehran before Washington seeks U.N. sanctions, U.S. diplomatic documents show.

U.S. officials in Vienna circulated a position paper for discussion to members of the U.N. nuclear watchdog's governing board on Thursday, as President Bush concluded a tour of Europe in which he repeatedly praised European Union efforts to persuade Tehran to give up on enriching uranium.

Washington will not push the International Atomic Energy Agency board to refer Iran's case to the Security Council when it meets next week and no resolutions condemning the Islamic republic are expected to be adopted then, diplomats on the 35-nation board told Reuters.

But the next quarterly meeting in June will be different.

The draft position paper, seen in full by Reuters, shows Washington is ready to give EU-Iran negotiations until that meeting to achieve their aim. If they fail, it will renew its campaign to have the IAEA refer Iran to the Security Council.

Before the June meeting, the United States wants IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei to report again on Iran's nuclear program:

"We believe it is essential that the director-general provide to the board in advance of the June board meeting another comprehensive written report describing in full the IAEA's inspection activities in Iran," the document said.

"The board in June must then be prepared to take further action as needed," it added, a phrase diplomats said meant referral to the Security Council in New York. ...

However, a senior British official told reporters in London on condition of anonymity the Europeans need an "objective guarantee" that Iran will not pursue atomic weapons.

"The only objective guarantee worthy of its name is a permanent cessation of fuel cycle activities," he said.

Tehran's chief negotiator, Hassan Rohani, predicted a fourth round of talks with the EU trio in March would yield positive results: "We are confident that with effective measures from all four sides, we can see a positive result in March," he said after talks with German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer.

But in comments published in the French newspaper Le Monde after a meeting in Paris on Thursday, he said talks were going slowly: "In a general, I note that the Europeans are incapable of coming good on their promises," he was quoted as saying. ...

Iran Confident of Nuclear Talks Result

Reuters:
Talks between Iran and Europe on Iran's nuclear programme should yield positive results in March and U.S. help in those negotiations would be welcome, Iran's chief nuclear negotiator Hassan Rohani has said.

"We are confident that with effective measures from all four sides, we can see a positive result in March," Rohani said, referring to the talks with Britain, France and Germany.

"Our negotiating partners are the three European countries. We would welcome it, see it as positive, if the Americans offered help here," he added, following talks with German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer. ...

Rohani said both sides in the talks were convinced that more dynamism was needed.

"The results of these talks don't just affect the Iranian nuclear programme, but also the strengthening of relations between Iran and Europe and the removal of many problems in the region," he said, according to comments translated into German.

Fischer was less upbeat, stressing the need for "goal-oriented" talks.

"It's not easy. It's a tough challenge," he said. ...

Russian Official Heads To Iran For Nuke Fuel Deal

Radio Free Europe, ITAR-TASS:
Aleksandr Rumyantsev, the head of Russia's federal nuclear energy agency, is expected to leave for Tehran today to sign an agreement with Iran on the return to Russia of spent nuclear fuel from the Bushehr atomic power plant, which Russia is building in Iran.

Reports say the signing of the protocol is set for tomorrow.

The agreement is expected to clear the way for the completion of the $800 million Bushehr plant and the start of its operation by early 2006.

The return of the spent nuclear fuel to Russia is seen as a safeguard to prevent Iran from potentially reprocessing the material to extract plutonium, which could be used in a nuclear weapon. ...

Member's of the Academy: There is Blood in Your Iranian Caviar!

Pooya Dayanim, writing for Iran va Jahan vents his frustration at Michael Moore and the Hollywood elite.

While you will be sipping your fine French champagne with your "Iranian" Caviar just remember there is Blood in your Iranian Caviar. You beloved President Clinton, in his infinite wisdom to buddy-up to the terrorist-mullahs who rule Iran lifted the restriction on the importation of Iranian caviar, pistachios and carpets so that they can better fund such terrorist groups as Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad and fund their other little hobby of building a nuclear bomb. At that time, a true friend of the Iranian people, A Democrat of all people, Rep. Brad Sherman of California (who has a huge Iranian constituency in his district) was brave enough to go to the floor of the House of Representatives and criticize the move by reminding President Clinton and his administration that the true cost of the Iranian Caviar is paid by the blood of innocent Iranians who live under the nightmare called the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Every time you dip your silver special spoons into that slimy Iranian Caviar just remember: women are being stoned to death in Iran, Virgin Iranian female students are raped by prison guards so they don't go to heaven after their execution in Iran, Jews, Evangelical Christians and Bahais mysteriously disappear never to be heard of again in Iran , students are tortured for expressing their views in Iran, bloggers are sentenced to jail terms for writing out their thoughts in Iran and opposition figures have been assassinated in the most vicious ways possible. ...

Pooya Dayanim is the President of the Iranian Jewish Public Affairs Committee (IJPAC). He may be reached at: Info@Iranianjew.org.

Friday’s Daily Briefing on Iran

DoctorZin reports, 2.25.2005:
Iran Guards tell leader forces unable to control Tehran uprising lasting more than 6 hours.

Iran Focus reports:

In a recent secret report to the Iranian regime's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps pointed out that were a demonstration or rebellion to last more than six hours in Tehran, the security apparatus would no longer be able to control the situation.

"Society is in an unstable state. Were certain sensitive locations in Tehran to 'explode' under these circumstances, and the capital sink into chaos, if uprisings continue unabated and grow larger for more than six hours in Tehran, the situation would become uncontrollable", the report said.

If this report is accurate, the IRGC is likely pleading for help in containing the demonstrations the regime is anticipating in the coming months. The wave of democracy spreading across the Middle East is gaining speed. We need to encourage the Iranian people that their time to stand is coming soon.

Here are a few of items you may have missed.

North Korea praises partner Iran as U.S. frets

Reuters:
North Korea and Iran are basking in praise of each other's battle against imperialism, the North's official news agency reported on Friday, in an apparent jab at Washington, which is fretting about the two states' nuclear programmes.

"The people of the DPRK (North Korea) and Iran have established friendly and cooperative ties, and supported, and closely cooperate with each other on the road of the struggle for independence against imperialism," KCNA reported a top North Korean official saying at a reception with Iran's ambassador to the reclusive state.

The statement follows in a series of comments on the warm ties between the two countries that have been reported in North Korean media since Feb. 10, when Pyongyang officially announced for the first time it had nuclear weapons.

Analysts have said North Korea made its nuclear boast in order to raise the stakes in diplomatic efforts to end its atomic ambitions, saying Pyongyang was also trying to press for an advantage while Washington's attention was focused on Iran's nuclear programmes.

The administration of U.S. President George W. Bush now faces two nations he once named as part of an "axis of evil" being openly defiant about their nuclear programmes -- North Korea and Iran.

He went to war with Iraq, the third of his "axis" nations.

President faces hard sell over Iran policy

Financial Times:
Senior Europeans involved in negotiating Iran's nuclear future have lobbied the US for months to give its full backing to the diplomatic process and put some incentives on the table.

But in vain - Washington repeatedly closed the door amid fraught discussions.

However, in a significant shift, President George W. Bush agreed after his summit meetings in Brussels and Mainz this week to reconsider. Aides suggested the US might offer some incentives and, in exchange, Europe would consider what joint "consequences" would follow any collapse in the talks with Iran.

Yesterday Mr Bush went one step further. In Bratislava, Slovakia, he said it was important that the "EU3" - Britain, France and Germany - also represented Nato and the US in their negotiations with Iran. ...

One unanswered question is how far Europe would go in imposing sanctions against Iran if it rejected the offer of outside supplies of nuclear fuel in exchange for a permanent end to its programme of developing the full fuel cycle.

Condoleezza Rice, secretary of state, is expected to follow up the issue in London next week. One diplomat said there needed to be agreement on the "definition of failure" in the talks with Iran, and a deadline. The US believes Iran is buying time while covertly continuing its weapons programme.

Iran's position on US involvement in the negotiating process has been deliberately ambiguous. Although Tehran does not want the US to block a deal with Europe, it does not necessarily want direct US engagement.

Neo-conservatives in Washington, pushing for a clear policy of "regime change" against Iran, have been dismayed at the sense of drift in the administration. Mr Bush may be about to change that, but not in the direction they want. ...

Bush, Putin Agree More on Iran, North Korea Than on Democracy

Bloomberg:
U.S. President George W. Bush and Russian President Vladimir Putin found more common ground discussing Iran and North Korea than when talk turned to Putin's own country. ...

On Iran, Chirac and German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder won Bush's promise to consider dropping his opposition to using economic incentives to encourage the Muslim nation to abandon its nuclear ambitions.

``I was listening very carefully to the different ideas on negotiating strategies,'' Bush said yesterday, the day after his talks with Schroeder in Mainz. ``And I'm going to go back and think about the suggestions I've heard and the ways forward.''

Iran's Nuclear Program

Putin privately assured Bush in Bratislava that Russia will provide Iran no further assistance on its nuclear power plant until Iran agrees to return all spent fuel rods -- which could be used to develop weapons-grade plutonium -- to Russia, a U.S. government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told reporters. ...

Search for Iran quake survivors ends

ABC.net.au:
Rescuers in south-eastern Iran have given up their search for survivors and victims of a devastating earthquake that left nearly 550 people dead.

The quake, the worst since the disaster in the ancient city of Bam in December 2003, left thousands of people homeless in sub-zero temperatures and heavy rain and snow.

"Operations to recover bodies and evacuate the wounded has ended," the Governor of Kerman province, Mohammad Ali Karimi, said.

A spokesman for the Governor, Ali Komsari, says that 549 people are known to have died but that figure could rise.

He did not give an updated figure on those injured, but Mr Karimi had earlier put it at 900.

The 6.4 magnitude quake struck before dawn on Tuesday, levelling mud-brick houses in dozens of villages and affecting an estimated 30,000 people in the Zarand region north of the provincial capital of Kerman. ...

Iranian Mole Caught?

DEBKAfile’s intelligence sources reveal:
A high-placed Iranian mole has been caught in Iranian president Mohammed Khatami’s office in Tehran.

Hossein Marashai, head of Iran’s cultural heritage council, was caught using a sophisticated US-manufactured listening-long-distance-transmitting device at top-level Iranian leadership meetings. DEBKAfile’s sources calls this the deepest foreign intelligence penetration in all 26 years of Iran's Islamic regime.

Iran nukes would trigger regional proliferation

World Tribune:
A new report warns that the United States must halt Iran's nuclear weapons programs or face the prospect of a nuclear arms race in the Middle East.

The Presidential Study Group, sponsored by the Washington Institute, said in a report that Iran's nuclear weapons program marked the most difficult proliferation challenge in the Middle East and must be stopped.

"Iranian nuclear proliferation could constitute a 'tipping point' in the Middle East, with states from Saudi Arabia to Egypt and possibly Syria and Algeria likely to respond with efforts to acquire nuclear capability and threatening the nuclear nonproliferation regime," the report said. ...

The 53-member panel organized by the Washington Institute included two former secretaries of state (Alexander Haig and Madeleine Albright), a former CIA director (James Woolsey) and a former national security adviser (Sandy Berger). The report was entitled "Security, Reform, and Peace: The Three Pillars of U.S. Strategy in the Middle East."

"Stopping Iran short of achieving a nuclear weapons capability -- by diplomacy if possible; by other means, if necessary -- is a vital U.S. interest," the report said.

The panel said an Iranian atomic bomb would spark nuclear weapons programs throughout the Middle East. The report cited Algeria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria.

The report recommended that the United States work with the European Union to halt Iran's nuclear weapons program. But the panel said U.S.-EU cooperation must not rule out the use of the military option against Teheran.

"Achieving international consensus on Iran should not, however, come at the cost of curtailing support to Iran's freedom-seeking opposition, nor should it require forswearing military options to address the problem," the panel said. ...

"The United States is facing an extraordinary moment of challenge in the Middle East, one that demands an integrated U.S. strategy built on a set of three pillars: security, reform, and peace," the report said. ...

Thursday, February 24, 2005

U.S. wants super-bunker busters that could destroy Iran nuke sites

Geostrategy - Direct.com:
The United States wants to develop the capability to destroy Iranian nuclear facilities in air strikes. Officials said the need for U.S. capability to destroy underground nuclear facilities has spurred the renewal of the effort to create so-called super-bunker busters. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld issued the request for the weapon, termed Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator, in a letter sent to then-Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham in January.

Iran girl gets 100 lashes

BBC News:
A teenage girl and two young men in Iran have been sentenced to lashes for having sex.

The court dismissed the girl's claim that we was raped. It said she had sex of her own free will, the official Iran Daily newspaper reported.

The girl was sentenced to 100 lashes because her accusations of rape and kidnap could have landed her partners a death penalty, the Tehran judge said.

Sex outside marriage is illegal in Iran and capital punishment can be imposed.

The young men in the case were sentenced to 30 and 40 lashes each. ...

Under Iranian law, girls over the age of nine and boys over 16 face the death penalty for crimes such as rape and murder, while capital punishment can be imposed in certain cases of illegal sexual relationships.

Iranian Terrorist Group Seeks Legitimacy in U.S.

The New York Times:
One-time members of a terrorist organization are hiding in the United States -- in plain sight. The organization's former U.S. representative freely walks the streets and has a contract with Fox News as a foreign affairs analyst. Lawmakers write letters on the group's behalf. And former intelligence officials say the group maintains contacts in defense circles, although the Pentagon denies it.

A cult to some and freedom fighters to others, the National Council of Resistance of Iran and its affiliate groups typify the gray areas in the war on terror. While they've been designated foreign terrorist organizations by the State Department, the groups' one-time members still maneuver between the restrictions aimed at disabling them.

The former U.S. representative for the council, Alireza Jafarzadeh, says the U.S. government listed his organization as terrorists to appease moderate elements within the Iranian government. He's hoping the Bush administration will lift the terrorist designation.

``I see increasingly more voices being raised against this designation in different parts within the administration and outside the administration,'' said Jafarzadeh, who notes that his group no longer exists in the United States but his free-speech rights allow him to discuss policies it once advocated.

``The more serious people get about Iran, the more they are against the designation,'' he said.

The mission of the National Council and its military wing -- the Mujahedin-e-Khalq or MEK -- is to overthrow the Iranian regime, an aim increasingly in line with the Bush administration. Yet the administration has stopped short of calling for regime change. ...
Yet the MEK is far from a U.S. ally.

As soon as the State Department created a list of terror organizations in 1997, it named the MEK, putting it in a club that includes al-Qaida and barring anyone in the United States from providing material support. By 1999, the department designated the MEK's political arm, the National Council of Resistance, and related affiliates.

The State Department says the MEK groups were funded by Saddam Hussein, supported the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in 1979 and are responsible for the deaths of Americans in the 1970s.

Despite the listing, the council and a related offshoot continued to file foreign agent registration documents with the Justice Department, cataloging meetings with dozens of members of Congress, media interviews, rallies and speeches.

It saw successes. In 2002, 150 members of Congress wrote a letter to the State Department advocating the organization be removed from the terror list.

But 2003 was a rocky year. After Saddam was toppled, the administration struggled with how to handle MEK fighters detained at training camps in eastern Iraq. They were eventually disarmed, but remain in limbo today at the camps.

In August of that year, the State and Treasury departments also froze the council's assets and shut down their Washington offices, blocks from the White House.

A State Department official said U.S. policy toward the MEK and its affiliates has not changed. The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said the group is still considered a threat because of its history of launching terrorist attacks.

Some, including Kenneth Katzman, a Middle East specialist at the Congressional Research Service, say they don't consider the group to be the most dangerous to U.S. interests. ``I don't see evidence that they purposely target civilians,'' said Katzman, who provides analysis to lawmakers.

But others find the sometimes soft approach to the MEK alarming. Further complicating the issue, the report from the top U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq said the group received oil as part of the scandal-tainted oil-for-food program, earning it millions of dollars in profits.

The MEK calls the appearance of its name in seized documents a smear campaign.

As U.S. focus on Iran increases, some wonder whether the MEK will play a role. A former senior intelligence official said some in the Pentagon see the MEK as a potential ally in their efforts against the Iranian regime.

``One man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter,'' said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

But a defense official denied contacts with the MEK are occurring. Michael Rubin, who used to handle Iran issues at the Pentagon, said those he knew there hated the group.

``Even if they are not terrorists, although I believe they are, any group that tells its members who to marry and when to divorce, the United States should not be doing business with. They are very cult-like,'' Rubin said.

Rubin notes that, while council officials revealed the existence of two secret Iranian nuclear sites in 2002, they nevertheless have an inconsistent intelligence record, often getting information ``dead wrong.''

Yet the council's former U.S. representative, Jafarzadeh, highlights the intelligence successes as evidence that the United States should support the Iranian opposition and advocate a policy of regime change in Iran.

``There is a lot of serious searching, to find the best options in dealing with Iran,'' he said. ``I can sense it in different government agencies. I can sense it among the think tanks. I sense it among the U.S. Congress.''

The Israeli Air Force Takes the Lead [with Halutz Appointment Focus On Iran]

Gerald Steinberg, The Jerusalem Post:
The quick appointment of Maj.-Gen. Dan Halutz as IDF chief of General Staff signals important and fundamental changes in emphasis in Israeli security priorities.

Halutz is the first chief of staff to come from the Air Force, and his appointment reflects the centrality of air power in Israeli strategy in the recent past and in the immediate future. From this position, he is often credited with much of the success in defeating the Palestinian terror campaign and restoring Israeli deterrence.

Overhead platforms – manned and unmanned – located terror leaders, detected preparations for the assembly of car bombs, found and mapped the suicide bombing networks, and launched the weapons against these targets. ...

Halutz is an innovator, and, as a senior officer in the Air Force, emphasized long-range planning designed to provide the technologies and tactics for responding to a wide range of threats. ...

From this perspective, Halutz's appointment is also a clear signal to Iran. If necessary, Israel will be prepared to defend its vital interests in response to the expanding existential threat from Teheran.

Iran Guards tell leader forces unable to control Tehran uprising lasting more than 6 hours

Iran Focus:
In a recent secret report to the Iranian regime's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Iran's Revolutionary Guards Corps pointed out that were a demonstration or rebellion to last more than six hours in Tehran, the security apparatus would no longer be able to control the situation.

"Society is in an unstable state. Were certain sensitive locations in Tehran to 'explode' under these circumstances, and the capital sink into chaos, if uprisings continue unabated and grow larger for more than six hours in Tehran, the situation would become uncontrollable", the report said.

The Iranian capital has been the scene of numerous clashes between people and State Security Forces over the past few months.

The Iranian regime has stepped up repression throughout the capital over the past year to combat any outbursts against the state.

Clashes have also erupted elsewhere in Iran in recent weeks. Iranian Kurds and security agents clashed heavily on Friday in three towns in western Iran, leaving dozens injured and hundreds arrested.

The disruption occurred after SSF agents used force to disperse demonstrations taking place simultaneously in the towns of Sardasht, Saqqez, and Baneh in protest against severe fuel shortages in the area, eye-witnesses reported.

The demonstrations quickly turned violent as protestors fought back and shouted slogans against Iran's ruling clerics.

Similarly, thousands of people flooded the streets of Mahabad (Kurdistan province) in mid-February, clashing with the SSF after days of gas, water, and electricity interruptions.

The demonstration quickly turned into a mass rally and youths set fire to banners and posters celebrating the 26th anniversary of the revolution that toppled the monarchy.

Eye-witnesses reported that at least two plainclothes policemen were injured during the ensuing clashes.

Thursday’s Daily Briefing on Iran

DoctorZin reports, 2.24.2005:

Dr. Jerry Corsi of “Unfit for Command” fame has been threatened with a lawsuit from a Kerry fund-raiser angered by Corsi’s new book Atomic Iran.

"Why so little?" is his response, Corsi said, pointing out one of his sources already has been sued by Nemazee for $10 million, Aryo Pirouznia, leader of the Student Movement Coordination Committee for Democracy in Iran.

"I'll say the same thing as I said to John Kerry – I'll send him the Federal Express package and save him the trouble," Corsi said.

Congratulations, Jerry!

Here are a few of items you may have missed.

  • LittleGreenFootballs discovers an Iranian lurker.
  • Yesterday, Charles Rangel said it was bigotry to use the term “Islamic terrorism” to refer to groups like Hezbollah. Will someone please wake him, he must be talking in his sleep.
  • Iranians are having problems in their negotiations with the EU3. They want the EU to guarantee their security. How can Iran expect the EU to do this? Will the EU have the US do this for them?
  • Want to know what Bush thinks? Read Natan Sharansky’s book, The Case for Democracy, or at least read this primer.
  • Congress is moving towards a regime change Iran policy, supporting the desire of Iranians for a straight up or down vote on the Iranian regime.
  • Pejamesque takes a look at the political consequences of Tuesday’s earthquake in Iran.
  • Across the Bay, takes a look at Hezbollah in Lebanon. Here are a couple of inspirational photos of the public unrest in Lebanon.
  • Tear down those walls! Walid Jumblatt, head of Lebanon's Druze Muslim community — and hardly a friend of the U.S. said yesterday:
    "It's strange for me to say it, but this process of change has started because of the American invasion of Iraq. I was cynical about Iraq. But when I saw the Iraqi people voting three weeks ago, 8 million of them, it was the start of a new Arab world."

    He goes on: "The Syrian people, the Egyptian people, all say that something is changing. The Berlin Wall has fallen. We can see it."
  • Taking on Tehran. Kevin Pollack shares his analysis for Foreign Affairs on how the US can derail Iran’s nuclear program.
  • The US offers help with Iran’s latest earthquake. Iran says no thanks.
  • And finally, Bush agrees to take a look again at the European stand on Iran.

Bush to Look Again at European Stand on Iran

James Harding and Hugh Williamson in Mainz, The Financial Times:
President George W. Bush on Wednesday showed a new willingness to consider a European-led diplomatic approach to ending Iran's nuclear threat, underlining one of the chief messages of his trip to Europe that he has no appetite for another war.

In spite of remaining differences between Mr Bush and Gerhard Schröder, the German chancellor, Stephen Hadley, the president's national security adviser, said that “there has been a convergence as a result of their discussions in Mainz on Wednesday. Mr Bush was now going to “go back [home] and think about” the European strategy, Mr Hadley said.

Wednesday's meeting should not be taken as a shift in policy but it represents a new openness to one. France, Germany and Britain have led negotiations with Iran, which the Bush administration has supported in principle but refused to join. The European troika has pleaded with Washington, arguing that without the offer of US economic incentives and security guarantees it will be unable to persuade Iran to abandon its nuclear ambitions.

German officials emerged from Wednesday's meeting with an invigorated sense of US willingness to co-operate, but uncertainty about what form that co-operation might take. It was clear that the “US wants to be more active in finding a solution”, one senior German official said. Mr Bush was eager to receive assurances from Mr Schröder, Mr Hadley said, that both the US and the Europeans sought the end of Iran's development of nuclear weapons and that there would be “consequences” for Tehran if it built a nuclear bomb.

Nevertheless, in one significant difference the German chancellor called for flexibility on both sides, while Mr Bush believed Iran, not the US or its allies, needed to give ground. ...

U.S. Offers Iran Quake Aid But is Rebuffed

Reuters, Yahoo! News:
In a rare, direct contact, a senior State Department official telephoned the Iranian government to offer aid after an earthquake killed more than 500 people in southeast Iran but was politely rebuffed, U.S. officials say. The offer was conveyed by Assistant Secretary of State William Burns to Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, Javad Zarif, who declined it, saying Iran was not accepting additional international aid for now, the officials said.

Zarif, speaking through an aide, largely confirmed this account but denied that the Iranian response was a refusal. "Iran did not refuse the help but said we can handle it domestically," he said.

After originally saying it would not accept help from abroad, Iran has requested and received about $180,000 (94,000 pounds) worth of tents and blankets from Japan.

Washington's offer appeared to be part of a U.S. effort to show it is willing to deal with the Iranian government despite its accusations that Tehran is seeking nuclear weapons and its refusal to join a European effort to negotiate a solution. ...

Taking on Tehran

Kenneth Pollack and Ray Takeyh, Foreign Affairs:
Summary: If Washington wants to derail Iran's nuclear program, it must take advantage of a split in Tehran between hard-liners, who care mostly about security, and pragmatists, who want to fix Iran's ailing economy. By promising strong rewards for compliance and severe penalties for defiance, Washington can strengthen the pragmatists' case that Tehran should choose butter over bombs.

Read the entire article here.

Tear Down Those Walls

Investors.com:
Something pretty wonderful and profound is happening, and in a place where it's not supposed to happen: the Mideast. That something is democracy.

Reading the newspapers or watching network TV these days can be depressing, even dispiriting. Headlines and news stories about Iraq are filled with the perils of democracy — how fragile it is, and how disappointing. Little else of note gets said.

A headline in Wednesday's Los Angeles Times summed it up: "U.S.' Prewar Visions Get Further Out of Focus."

But, as is often the case, the reality is quite different. In fact, we're in the middle of what looks like a democratic revolution in an area where such a development once seemed unthinkable.

Consider recent events, scattered across the Islamic Mideast:

In October 2003, Afghanistan held the first elections in its history.

Three weeks ago, Iraq held an election of its own. And now even Saddam Hussein's terrorist-supporting Sunni followers, who first rejected any form of democracy, are talking about joining in.

In Lebanon, thousands have demonstrated in support of greater democracy and the removal of Syria's 15,000 troops.

Pro-democracy demonstrations have also hit Egypt — home of some of the most radically undemocratic Muslim fundamentalists in the region.

Saudi Arabia recently held local elections another first. And in a radical step for the fundamentalist kingdom, it may let women vote in the next round.

Finally, in the West Bank and Gaza, Palestinians elected a government and local mayors, after the death of Yasser Arafat.

Why is this happening? And why now?

Here's a quote, culled from Washington Post columnist David Ignatius on Wednesday. The speaker is Walid Jumblatt, head of Lebanon's Druze Muslim community — and hardly a friend of the U.S.:

"It's strange for me to say it, but this process of change has started because of the American invasion of Iraq. I was cynical about Iraq. But when I saw the Iraqi people voting three weeks ago, 8 million of them, it was the start of a new Arab world."

He goes on: "The Syrian people, the Egyptian people, all say that something is changing. The Berlin Wall has fallen. We can see it."

Yes, the Mideast has been bitten by the democracy bug. And whom do we have to thank for this extraordinary turn of events? That unsubtle, unnuanced American cowboy, George W. Bush.

From 2001 through 2004, Bush was bashed relentlessly by the European elite, global big media and American left for his naive, neoconservative focus on pushing democracy on the Mideast. Didn't he know those people weren't capable of democracy?

Despite his lack of European polish and intellectual credentials, Bush understood that the hunger for freedom is universal. No one wants to be the slave of another. Fortunately, Bush didn't listen to the critics. He moved boldly to seize history.

No, democracy isn't always perfect. As is often noted, Hitler came to power in a legitimate election. And countries that have lived for centuries under cruel, despotic regimes don't become Swedish-style toy box democracies overnight, perfectly attuned to human rights and the rule of law.

Yes, there will be setbacks, and terrorism won't end instantly. But democratic change must start somewhere. And doesn't Jumblatt's phrase — "a new Arab world" — have a nice sound to it?

Lebanese protesters ask's who's next?

DoctorZin:
The photo below is from the Lebanese protests demanding that Syria leave their country. But the protester has a great sign in his hands.



I can think of a few nations that would benefit from similar popular demonstrations.

Earlier in the day, in Lebanon....



I predict will see a sea of green, when the wave of demonstrations come to Iran.

Bad Omen in Lebanon

Across the Bay, reports on Hizbullah in Lebanon:

A reader asked for my view on Hizbullah and the current scene in Lebanon. I have been (and still am) doing research and contacts to give you my reading and my sources' reading. It should be up very soon. In the mean time, take a look at this story from Naharnet:

Walid Jumblat has asserted that "Syria's mission in Lebanon is over," warning that Hizbullah "is a Syrian pressure levy with a frightening militia that may be used against us." He also revealed that he had sent his elder son and political heir to Paris to stay alive.

"The mere participation of Hizbullah's leader, Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, in the recent meeting of Syria's loyalists is a bad omen," Jumblat said in an interview with the Parisian newspaper Liberation, which was highlighted by the Beirut media Wednesday.

Jumblat was asked whether he was afraid of being assassinated. "Everything is possible. The Syrians have crossed the red line and they tell us 'you have to negotiate on our terms or we will kill you.'"

Liberation noted that Jumblat was so afraid of assassination that he has sent his elder son and political heir Taymour to France to "make certain that at least one of the Jumblat family is safe."

Jumblat recited in the interview what President Assad told Hariri in their last meeting in Damascus in august last year shortly before Syria dictated the 3-year extension of President Lahoud in power.

"Lahoud is me," Hariri quoted Assad as telling him in the meeting that was held when Hariri was still the prime minister of Lebanon, Jumblat said. "That was the intro of Syria's dictation of Lahoud's extension in September, which led Hariri to resign and which touched of the current crisis," Jumblat explained.

He further quoted Hariri as having told him that Bashar said: "If Chirac wants to get me out of Lebanon I will destroy Lebanon. Jumblat has Druze in Mount Lebanon, but I also have Druze and I shall hit and destroy Mt. Lebanon."

Jumblat said the opposition in Lebanon "does not want to fight the Syrians. They are our neighbors. But we don't want to be annexed in a new Anschluss as Hitler did to Austria in 1938."
Jumblat, as you'll see in my upcoming post, is extremely worried that Hizbullah will turn on the interior. The story also confirms two things about Bashar that I've written on this blog: 1) Bashar is in charge of the Lebanon file, and what we're seeing (and have been seeing) is his policy ("Lahoud is me.") 2) Bashar will burn his way out of Lebanon, as he knows that his regime's/family's survival rests in great part on his holding on to Lebanon. But he does not have Druze in Lebanon that would do his bidding. He has managed to turn most if not all the Sunnis against him (see this piece by Nick Blanford, which also has more on the Shiites). Whatever cronies he has in the Sunni (and Christian) community won't be able to do much in terms of a military threat, and will be quickly exposed as doing Syria's bidding. So in fact, Bashar's hand in Lebanon is really tied with Hizbullah and the Shiites (hence the Iranian alliance?).

That's why everyone's crossing their fingers hoping that Hizbullah decides to join an emerging free Lebanon, and not be Syria's proxy. More to come.