Tags for This Article:

Media (3126)  Iran (2454)  Israel (1433)  Oil (1373)  Energy (633)  Weapons (579)  Threats (132) 

Populum Tag Cloud
       Control Panel
Fine tune your search to access content
Articles
Diaries Products
Events All
All time
Last 6 mos
Last month
Last week
Last 24 hrs
From:
Month  Day   Year

To:
Month  Day   Year
Alphabet
Popularity
Count ON
Count OFF
This Level
Sub-levels

 

 

 

Tag(s): ; ; ; ; ; ;
Add to My Group
November 30, 2007 at 15:43:46

The Iran Threat

by Soraya     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

www.opednews.com

 

Tell A Friend

View Ratings | Rate It  

In 2001, 83% of the Pakistanis supported the Taliban[i].  Six years later, in a 2007 World Public Opinion poll[ii], 84% of the Pakistanis thought attacks on civilians for the purpose of reaching a political goal was justified.   Given that there are radicals who support terrorism with the possibility of gaining access to nuclear bombs in a country that is currently under emergency rule, common sense demands that world leaders turn their attention to Pakistan.   Yet, inexplicably, the United States continues to hand out aid to its ‘ally’ Pakistan while quietly upgrading special stealth bomber hangars on the British island of Diego Garcia in preparation for a military assault against Iran[iii].  What motivates the United States to take such paradoxical action?  

 

America and Israel have accused Iran of intending to diversify its program – they allege that Iran is using its civilian program as a cover to build nuclear bombs.  This supposition begs the question why Iran would place itself in the spotlight instead of renouncing the energy program for history has shown that having an operating nuclear power reactor is no longer a prerequisite or even a necessary condition of obtaining fissile material which can be used for the development of nuclear materials.  South Africa was able to develop five nuclear bombs without having a nuclear energy program. North Korea was able to acquire enriched uranium with mundane centrifuges and other technologies to constitute the critical mass needed for a low-yield “dirty” bomb (Meshkati[iv]).

Iran has also been accused of pursuing its nuclear program in ‘secret’, further ‘proof’ of its alleged intentions to divert its nuclear program into a bomb making one. Contrary to these allegations, the new Iranian government decided to continue its nuclear energy projects to meet the surging needs of the growing population and to compensate for the immense damage caused to the infrastructure of the country during the war with Iraq.  In 1982 Iranian officials announced that they planned to build a reactor powered by their own uranium at the Isfahan nuclear technology centre.  In 1983, the IAEA reported that they were ready to “contribute to the formation of local expertise and manpower needed to sustain an ambitious program in the field of nuclear power reactor technology and fuel cycle technology”.  Under pressure from the United States, their cooperation was terminated[v]. 

 

Tehran openly negotiated with several nations (unsuccessfully under pressure from Washington) until finally it struck a deal with Moscow.  This met with former President Clinton’s ‘duel-containment’ policy.  Executive Order 12957 given by Clinton specifically banned any "contract for the financing of the development of petroleum resources located in Iran." 

 

In addition, President Yeltsin had assured Washington that Iran would not be able to make weapons-grade plutonium and that he had canceled the "military components" of two nuclear reactors bound for Iran. Under U.S. pressure, both Ukraine and China had made some adjustments. Ukraine, announced that it would not supply turbines for a Russian reactor project at Bushehr. China suspended the sale of a plant for the conversion of uranium hexafluoride, which is required for making fuel rods[vi].  In 1997,  Russian officials expelled Iranians studying nuclear physics and missile science from Russian schools in late 1997[vii].  They have also halted all vocational training of Iranian students in fields that may have applications for nuclear weapons and missiles.   

 

America had long said –and it continues to say today, that its single biggest concern is for Iran to have the knowledge which could lead to making the bomb.  So why did it not stop its confrontational path?

 Ideology - Regrettably, the history of the Middle East shows that secular resistance to foreign exploitation has been crushed by imperial powers.  Mossadeq, a fierce nationalist, who was democratically elected to be prime minister of Iran, was removed by a CIA-backed coup when he nationalized Iran’s oil.  Likewise, Egypt’s leader, Nasser, a secular and fiercely nationalist leader, was called ‘Hitler on the Nile’ for wishing to control the Suez canal.   Six months before the French and the British invaded Egypt in 1956, Britain had drawn up secret plans to cut off the flow of the River Nile to try to force Nasser to give up the Suez Canal[viii].    

Islam, it would seem, has proven itself capable of challenging the world’s superpower.   And it was not with its effects on the region.  Saudi Arabia felt unsettled with events in Iran and the lack of support the Shah seemed to have received from the U.S.  “The Saudis undoubtedly felt considerable annoyance at the United States for doing too little to prevent the Shah’s fall and too much to promote Sadat’s peace initiative”.  For this reason, at the onset of the Iranian revolution, the Saudis dropped their production by 1 million barrels per day, playing havoc on oil markets at a most crucial time (Deese and Nye 68)[ix].   Although Saudi Arabia later picked up Iran’s slack, Washington was not prepared to have Saudi Arabia follow Iran’s suite. Nor was Washington accustomed to having an Arab nation ‘threaten’ its oil supply.  

 

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan was the pretext Washington needed to make its move.   The ‘Carter Doctrine’ was nothing short of putting American soldiers in harms way to protect the free flow of oil. In subsequent years this doctrine took on other forms such as the Gulf War, and War on Terror and democratization.  But putting the life of American soldiers in harms way for the sake of oil required a noble cause – the public have always been led to believe that wars have been necessary to defeat ‘evil’.

 

Money: The root of all Evil - In 1960s, an agreement was struck with OPEC to price oil in U.S. dollars exclusively for all worldwide transactions.  In essence, the dollar was now backed with oil instead of gold.  In return, the U.S. promised to protect the various oil-rich kingdoms in the Persian Gulf against threat of invasion or domestic coup. The arrangement gave the dollar artificial strength.  Deviation from this by any OPEC member would impact the dollar.    Iran announced its intentions to convert to Euros in 1999.

 

Other economic factors include a renewable 15-year Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between the U.S. and Israel signed in September 1975,  in which the United States Government has undertaken to promptly make oil available for purchase by Israel. If Israel is unable to secure the necessary means to transport such oil to Israel, the United States Government will make every effort to help Israel secure the necessary means of transport[x].   

 

The 1979 overthrow of the Shah created added expense and inconvenience for Israel and America.  The Shah supplied all Israel's oil needs via a pipeline from Eilat. After the revolution, the clergy put a stop to this and Israel was forced to buy more expensive oil – footed by the U.S.   In the 1980’s, Israel’s National Infrastructure Minister Joseph Paritzky was considering the possibility of reopening the long-defunct oil pipeline from Mosul to the Mediterranean port of Haifa in northern Israel.  Syria,  acceded to a request from Iran to block the flow of Iraqi oil to the Mediterranean (The flow of oil from Mosul was redirected from Haifa to Syria after the British Mandate for Palestine expired in 1948).[xi]  The plan was postponed.

 The ‘war on terror’ presented yet another opportunity, but Washington's game plan seems to have been stymied by Iraq's Shiite majority which is a close ally of Iran’s.   This explains why Iran is cast as a threat and the endless efforts of the mainstream media delivering news to every living room of deaths caused by ‘Iranian-backed Shiite militias’.   This is the evil that must be overcome in order for democracy to prevail, and this is why American soldiers are dying.   

Where there is oil, there is Plan ‘B’ - Upon taking office, George W. Bush. commissioned the Bakers Institute (Rice University) and the Council on Foreign Relations to study the energy trends and requirements of the 21st century.  The comprehensive 99-page report favored the Iranian route for the Caspian oil exports which would serve several purposes.  In itself, it would translate into a policy shift towards Tehran, and throw Iran as a counter weight to Iraq.  The transport of oil through Iran versus the prohibitively expensive longer and costly Baku-Ceyhan pipeline would be of great benefit to the West, and the world, and help build up the drastically low global spare capacity, according to the report.   Another strong contention of the report was that the U.S. ought to move the Caspian region into a zone of cooperation with Russia instead of a zone of competition and confrontation, enabling future cooperation such as jointly countering Islamic militants in the region (Strategic Energy Policy Challenges for the 21st Century, 2001, pp. 38-40,45,)[ii].   Of note, the Kazakh officials had been in favor of the Iran route, as well as the U.S. oil companies such as Chevron, Exxon-Mobil and Conoco[iii]

         

In September 2001, A.Nesdat Pamir of the Jerusalem based think-tank IASPS,  challenged the commission report with a strategy paper called  “Turkey: The Key to Caspian Oil and Gas”.   He argued that  “ given that the price of oil have allowed states to invest heavily in Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD), the primary external of this development, both economically and diplomatically, has been Russia”[iv].   Russia, therefore, is arming the Middle East with WMD and the 80% oil potential should be rescued.   According to him, the lifeline of America would be for it to use the prohibitively expensive Ceyhan –Baku Pipeline [through Turkey and Israel] in order to avoid the anti-American Middle East . 

 

Given that the mainstream media does not serve the public, it comes at no surprise that a day after the Israeli assault on Lebanon last summer the inauguration of the Ceyhan-Tblisi-Baku (BTC) oil pipeline took place[xii].  Noted among the guests at the inauguration reception in Istanbul, hosted which was by Turkey's President Ahmet Necdet Sezer at Çýraðan Palace was Israel's Minister of Energy and Infrastructure Binyamin Ben-Eliezer together with a delegation of top Israeli oil officials.

 

America and Israel insist on reject the report card from the IAEA the UN watchdog chief has been told that he must be ‘sacked’ for not understanding Iran’s ‘intentions’.  One must have a clear understanding that Iran’s nuclear ambitions do not pose a threat, however, due to isolation, Iran has become a self-reliant nation and has escaped self-colonization.  Iran is politically aware, and technologically advanced.  She is keen to pursue her civilian nuclear technology, not as a violation or as a threat to world order, but as her inalienable right under international law and in response to the current and future needs of the Iranian people. 

 

No doubt the perceived threat from Iran will diminish should Tehran yield to Washington, generously delivers its oil to Israel to better enable it to continue its expansionist policies, and participate in human rights abuses in the name of freedom and democracy vs. state sovereignty.   But even if the regime in Tehran succumbs,  will the people who have accomplished so much under such extraordinary circumstances, surrender? 

 1  |  2

 

Soraya has lived and studied in Iran, UK, France, and has obtained her degree in International Relations from USC, Los Angeles.  She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist. 

Contact Author
Contact Editor
View Other Articles by Author

 

Bookmark this page: (what's this?)

NETSCAPE      DIGG THIS      Add This Page to Mr Wong!           NEWSVINE      DEl.ICIO.US      Looksmart Furl      My Web      Tag!RawSugar      Blink List     (More...)
Comments: Expand   Shrink   Hide  
7 comments

Soraya has lived and studied in Iran, UK, France, and has obtained her degree in International Relations from USC, Los Angeles.  She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist. 
SorayaSoraya has lived and studied in Iran, UK, France, and has obtained her degree in International Relations from USC, Los Angeles.  She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist. 

A Magnificant Op-Ed

I am grateful that you read this rather long essay and flattered by your comments.  The Islamic ideology that is standing up to the imperial powers is a major stumbling block; as such, it does not surprise me that in 2004, an adjunct scholar from the Jerusalem based think tank IASPS D.Y. Anaximander said: "The depths to which we've come . now marked by the convergence of terrorist Islam and Western elites (represented at this moment by the Democrat candidate for president of this country) are such that we must be grateful-it is horrifying to say-that we were attacked by Muslims."

It also makes one understand why Islam is under attack everywhere - the creation of the Islamo-facism vocabulary, etc.  However, the mistake that is being made is that while the U.S. may be the only superpower, it is fast declining and there are several contenders/threats, and Iran may well end up being needed as an ally and not a foe.   

by Soraya (21 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 17 comments) on Friday, November 30, 2007 at 9:55:41 PM
 


'The people are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty.' Thomas Jefferson 1787
Munich'The people are the only sure reliance for the preservation of our liberty.' Thomas Jefferson 1787

Re: The Iran Threat

Thank you Soraya for that very informative and sobering
article.

If I could just note with regard to a link you provided: Secret move to upgrade air base for Iran attack plans. The US is secretly upgrading special stealth bomber hangars on the British island protectorate of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean in preparation for strikes on Iran.

About a year ago I was listening to a retired General who's name escapes me, speaking on CNN about any impeding attack on Iran. I vividly remember him saying that "we'll know they are planning an attack  when we begin to see movement of the stealth bombers on Diego Garcia." Very frightening!

Sadly, there's been no real outcry by the American people denouncing any such preemptive and illegal attack on Iran. The vast majority of Americans have become too complacent in their lifestyles, due impart to the constant propaganda they've been fed by a reticent and complicit corporate mainstream media. The citizens of this country are totally oblivious to the horrendous long term ramifications of any such attack.

If you recall, after 911 our bellicose usurper "n" chief told Americans to "go shopping." I can only imagine what he'll blather if he decides "God forbid" to attack Iran.

And Impeachment is off the table?

by Munich (0 articles, 67 quicklinks, 12 diaries, 838 comments) on Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 12:50:45 AM
 


Soraya has lived and studied in Iran, UK, France, and has obtained her degree in International Relations from USC, Los Angeles.  She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist. 
SorayaSoraya has lived and studied in Iran, UK, France, and has obtained her degree in International Relations from USC, Los Angeles.  She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist. 

The Iran Threat

Sadly, almost half of Americans now feel that if we need to, we should attack Iran.  The msm has managed to brainwash Americans into thinking that Iran is a threat.  Here is something  interesting:

A undertaken by the Westminster Committee on Iran, looked at 19 national newspapers in the UK for a week long period. It found that whilst most articles were unbiased and factually-based, 74% contained a sentence or two that rendered the article "overly negative" or "misleading". The most common of these misleading sentences were:

  • stating that Iran had threatened "to wipe Israel off the face of the map". In fact the Farsi phrase used by President Amadinejad was "Imam ghoft een rezhim-e ishghalgar-e qods bayad az safheh-ye ruzgar mahv shavad." This translates directly as "The Imam said this regime occupying Jerusalem must vanish from the page of time. This statement is very wise". Whatever the interpretation of this translation, "a regime vanishing from the page of time" is very different from a threat to wipe a nation off the map.

  • stating that Iran is responsible for supplying weapons and intelligence to terrorists in Iran. Despite many accusations, no evidence has been produced to link the Iranian government to Iraqi insurgents. General Peter Pace, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, admitted at a Pentagon news this year that he had no evidence of the Iranian government sending any military equipment or personnel into Iraq.

The report, Iran in the British Print Media, finds that a general impression has been created in the UK media that Iran is acting against the will of the "international community" in continuing to develop a covert nuclear weapons programme. This impression is deemed to be misleading to the extent that there is absolutely no proof that Iran has a nuclear weapons programme. Inspections over the past three years have found no evidence of a nuclear weaponization programme. The idea that Iran is defying the will of the world community ignores the fact that 118 nations of the Non-Aligned have recognise Iran's right for a civilian nuclear technology and 56 nations signed the Baku Declaration which stated "the only way to resolve Iran's nuclear issue is to resume negotiations without any preconditions and to enhance cooperation with the involvement of all relevant parties."

I imagine the U.S. is a great deal worse.

 

by Soraya (21 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 17 comments) on Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 12:40:25 PM
 


I live in the heart of America, and am haunted by the saying:
"Evil succeeds because good men do nothing." by Edmund Burke.

Albert Einstein had another way of saying it:
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."

So I do what I can.

Edward Ulysses CateI live in the heart of America, and am haunted by the saying:
"Evil succeeds because good men do nothing." by Edmund Burke.

Albert Einstein had another way of saying it:
"The world is a dangerous place, not because of those who do evil, but because of those who look on and do nothing."

So I do what I can.

Well said, Soraya.

I agree with the previous commenters, a job well done. Your comment about one sentence among all the others being factual is very important. It is said that dis-information must be 90% correct in order to be believed. This is how our government gets MSM to lie to us. It's almost the whole truth, but it's difficult to find the one line of falsehood that destroys the other 9 lines of truth.

For a simple example, there's a commentary at GreatRedDragon.com [no ads] entitled 070220 Identifying Psychopaths. The link is too long. Sorry. But the point is how we get taken in by the media. Almost everything is 100%, then they slide in one falsehood to mis-direct our thinking and our efforts. This applies to religion, to education and to our government.

by Edward Ulysses Cate (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 217 comments) on Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 1:01:30 PM
 


I am nobody important - except to me. And even then... sometimes I wonder... about that much too.
bejeezusI am nobody important - except to me. And even then... sometimes I wonder... about that much too.

The Real Threat to America Lies from Within

Very well said, Saroya. The real threat to America, of course, lies from within.

It could also be said that most all threats to individual freedom and personal well-being start with externalities not properly assimilated... or otherwise... fully digested.

If our sense of self-worth can be boiled down to how much is our ability to simply consume something - whether it be outsourced information from state-sanctioned or corporate-controlled media... or supposed necessities of life purchased with monopoly money... to enhance our daily survival or everyday pleasures - then I dare say, most Americans today have truly been had.

As it relates and ties back to what's in it for me (WIIFM) I can't imagine Iran - or the Iranian people, for that matter - posing any serious threat to me.

The threat might be perceived as real by someone... inside some collusive commercial groups... acting for outside vested interests... with a secretive predilection towards piracy - but I can't for the life of me... consider that ordinary people should actually die... for somebody else's idea... of a threat.

Assumptions are often the result of ig-nore-ance; thus, false beliefs... are just as often... borne from fear.

Hopefully, for Americans too lazy or acculturated to honestly think for themselves anymore, your words will shed some new light on their own very real predicaments - that is, their own individual perceptions of reality... consumed without too much thinking... then internalized as actual truth... unthinkingly... from within.

This is the only real threat to America and its citizenry I can conceive to be true - the lies we willfully stomach as truth... and trust in the liars... that pretend to know... how best we should think.

Thank you again for your insights! I appreciate the good research you put into this piece.

by bejeezus (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 14 comments) on Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 5:30:47 PM
 


I am nobody important - except to me. And even then... sometimes I wonder... about that much too.
bejeezusI am nobody important - except to me. And even then... sometimes I wonder... about that much too.

Oops, sorry I misspelled your name, Soraya!

It seems I'm constantly threatened by my own incompetence. ;)

by bejeezus (0 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 14 comments) on Saturday, December 1, 2007 at 5:34:46 PM
 

 

7 comments

 

Tell A Friend

 


Copyright © OpEdNews, 2002-2008

Blog Ads

 

 

 

 

Most Popular Articles
in the Last 2 Days
(by Recommend Emails)

Obama Must Appoint a Consumer Protectionist as FDA Commissioner by Stephen Fox

Documentation on Sarah Palin's IQ, Academic Record, and Job Performance Posted by Stephen Fox

Bailout Fraud: Does the bailout pass the smell test? by Paul Craig Roberts

Resignation letter from the McCain Palin Campaign by Robyn Crane

Aries Full Moon October 14, 2008 by C.L. Pagano

This is Your Nation on White Privilege Posted by Siv O'Neall

Johnstown, PA McCain-Palin rally, view it and weep for America by Ed Tubbs

What you should know about Barack Obama by miles mathis

Marx, Globalization, and the Death of Neo-Liberalism by David Schultz

Race in the 2008 Election by Sally Liuzzo-Prado

Go To Top 50 Most Popular