After several recent hits the Obama team is hungry for a win. The Iran nuclear negotiations that have finely ended in an agreement will be spun to constitute such a victory. With Kerry saying things like "no deal is better then a bad deal" six world powers reached an interim agreement with Iran on its disputed nuclear program after days of talks in Geneva. American officials said it was the first time in nearly a decade that
an international agreement had been reached to halt much of Iran’s
nuclear program and ratchet back some elements of it. The goal of the accord, which is to last six months, is to give
international negotiators time to pursue a more comprehensive pact and ensure that Iran’s nuclear program could be used only for peaceful purposes.
Shortly after the agreement was signed in the Palace of
Nations in Geneva, President Obama, speaking from the State Dining Room
in the White House, hailed it as the most “significant and tangible”
progress of a diplomatic campaign that began when he took office. In
the six-month interim deal, Iran agreed to limit nuclear activities in
return for relief from economic sanctions. The United States agreed to provide
up to $7 billion in relief with roughly $4.2
billion coming from oil revenue that has been frozen in foreign banks. President Obama called the agreement
"an important first step" but said sanctions can be reapplied if the
Iranians violate it. Financially this is a "big deal" for Iran that is desperate for hard currency.
The sanction relief can be accomplished by executive order,
allowing the Obama administration to make the deal without Congress where there is strong criticism of any agreement
that does not fully dismantle Iran’s nuclear program. Critics point out the fact that the accord would only pause the Iranian program and say it will reward Iran for institutionalizing the
status quo. Several U.S. senators, both Democrat and Republican have voiced
displeasure with the parameters of the agreement, arguing that
the U.S. and its partners are offering too much for something short of a
full freeze on uranium enrichment. Those who are skeptical and view this as a weak agreement say Obama has again backed down again.
Mr. Obama attempted to address those concerns insisting that the
easing of sanctions could be reversed if Iran failed to reach a final
agreement or reneged on the terms of this one. “Nothing will be agreed to unless everything is agreed to,” he said noting the qualms of Israel, Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf
allies of the United States by saying they “had good reason to be
skeptical of Iran’s intentions.” Obama insisted he had a “profound
responsibility” to test the possibilities of a diplomatic solution. Administration officials
said the deal addresses several of Israel's most serious concerns about
Iran's nuclear program including Iran's growing supply of 20%
uranium and the Arak reactor coming online. Israeli Intelligence Minister Yuval Steinitz said there is no
reason for celebration insisting the deal is based on
"Iranian deception and self-delusion."
Some experts, including a former official who has worked on the
Iranian issue for the White House, said it was unlikely that Iran’s
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would ever close the door on the
option to develop nuclear weapons. Only last Wednesday in a speech Iran's supreme leader underlined the position of the old guard and muddied the water with saber rattling rhetoric saying that Iran would never compromise on "red lines." Since then Tehran has
publicly reverted to its original stance that the six powers must
recognize uranium enrichment as Iran's right, despite strong opposition
by Israel and within the U.S. Congress.
This initial six-month agreement is likely to
be followed by a series of partial agreements that constrain Iran’s
nuclear activities but do not definitively solve the nuclear issues.We must understand that a freeze may not really be a freeze. On the contentious issue of the heavy water reactor Iran is building
near Arak, which could produce plutonium and therefore another path to a
bomb, Iran agreed not to produce fuel for the plant, install additional
reactor components there or put the plant into operation. However Iran is not required to dismantle the facility. To guard against cheating, international monitors would be allowed to
visit the Natanz enrichment facility and the underground nuclear
enrichment plant at Fordo daily to check film from
cameras installed on site.
Iran has insisted on certain sovereign rights to pursue programs within their borders throughout almost a decade of fruitless negotiations. Last weekend Iran indicated that it was ready to sign a deal that does not expressly rule out that right. Iranian hard-liners are suspicious of talk of nuclear compromise
since moderate President Hassan Rouhani took office in September,
fearing his team will give not get enough in terms of sanctions relief
over the six-months of any first-stage agreement. For the world the bottom-line remains that if Iran does not halt and reverse its course any agreement means nothing. Iran can ramp up its plans to develop a nuclear bomb at off site locations. In the long-run Iran wins. If current trends continues in the future Iran looks to face a defanged and economically weakened America with less power in the region.
Footnote; As always your comments are welcome and encouraged. In a
separate post I chronicle the 10 most pressing and important problems
facing our world, these are increasingly more menacing in that we live
in a rapidly changing world that gives us little time and less room to
react and set straight the mistakes of our past. As you might expect weapons of mass destruction rates fairly high on the list that can be found
below,
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/11/the-worlds-10-worst-problems.html
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