The election of the hard-line Teheran mayor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, over
former President Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani as the new head of Iran is
undeniably a setback for those hoping to advance greater social and political
freedom in that country. It should not necessarily be seen as a turn to the
right by the Iranian electorate, however. The 70-year old Rafsanjani—a cleric
and penultimate wheeler-dealer from the political establishment—was portrayed
as the more moderate conservative. The fact that he had become a millionaire
while in government was apparently seen as less important than his modest reform
agenda. By contrast, the young Teheran mayor focused on the plight of the poor
and cleaning up corruption.
In Iran, real political power rests with unelected military, economic, and
right-wing ideologues, and in the June 25 runoff election, Iranian voters were
forced to choose between two flawed candidates. The relatively liberal contender
came across as an out-of-touch elitist, and his ultraconservative opponent
was able to assemble a coalition of rural, less-educated, and fundamentalist
voters to conduct a pseudopopulist campaign based on promoting morality and
value-centered leadership. Such a political climate should not be unfamiliar
to American voters.
Of course, Washington did not provide the Iranians with much incentive to
elect another relative progressive to lead their country. Since the 1997 election
of the outgoing reformist President Mohammed Khatami, the United States has
strengthened its economic sanctions against Iran and has even threatened military
attack. Although most Iranians would like improved relations with the United
States, they apparently got the message that U.S. hostility toward their country
would continue whomever they chose as president.
Washington’s primary criticisms of Teheran focus on the Iranian government’s
suppression of political freedom, its support for terrorism and subversion,
and its nuclear program. Though all three of these are legitimate areas of
concern for the international community, the double standards exhibited by
both the Bush administration and the bipartisan congressional leadership in
pressing these issues have done little to promote individual liberty, counterterrorism,
and nonproliferation in Iran or the region as a whole.
U.S. Criticism of the Electoral Process
The Bush administration has attempted to use the flawed election process in
the Islamic Republic of Iran to further isolate that country and discredit
its government. Yet, despite a call by some U.S.-based exiles for a boycott,
more than two-thirds of Iran’s eligible voters went to the polls during
the first round, a higher percentage than in recent U.S. presidential elections.
Many, though not all, reform-minded candidates were prevented from running,
and since President Khatami was unable to significantly liberalize the political
system, unelected ultraconservative clerics are still capable of dominating
Iran. Despite these very real limitations, however, the election campaign was
utilized by the growing pro-democracy movement to encourage greater political
discourse and to deepen popular involvement in the civic process.
For the first time since Iran became a republic a quarter century ago, a presidential
election was forced into a second round. The disappointment with the choices
offered led to a much lower voter turnout during the runoff, but the majority
of Iranians apparently considered the outcome significant enough to warrant
their involvement in the electoral process. Most Iranians felt they had at
least some stake in the system.
Still, President Bush insisted that the Iranian vote failed to meet “the
basic requirements of democracy” and that the “oppressive record” of
the country's rulers made the election illegitimate.1 Such
comments appear to have actually catalyzed Iranian voters from across the political
spectrum, many of whom recall how the United States engineered the overthrow
of their country’s last genuinely democratic government in 1953 and backed
the repressive regime of the unelected shah until his ouster in a popular revolution
in 1979.
Efforts by the Bush administration to portray the political situation in neighboring
Iraq and Afghanistan as superior to Iran’s similarly failed to convince
Iranian voters. Although those countries recently experienced relatively fair
electoral processes, both are suffering from bloody insurgency campaigns led
by Islamic extremists and even bloodier counterinsurgency campaigns orchestrated
by the United States. Moreover, Baghdad and Kabul exercise little direct control
over much of their respective countries, and neither of these elected governments
has thus far been able to demonstrate any real independence from U.S. military
and economic domination.
A look at most other U.S. allies in the region does not offer much inspiration
for those desiring greater freedom and democracy, either. There are no competitive
elections for president, for prime minister, or for any kind of legislature
that can initiate and pass meaningful laws and make real policy in Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Egypt, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, United Arab Emirates, Pakistan,
Uzbekistan, or Azerbaijan, even though these autocratic governments are bolstered
by U.S. military and economic aid. Indeed, the majority of U.S.-allied governments
in the region are even less democratic than Iran.
At least the ruling Iranian government does not massacre demonstrators by
the hundreds or boil dissidents to death, as does the U.S-backed Karimov regime
in Uzbekistan. Nor do current Iranian leaders usurp most of the nation’s
riches and restrict political power to a single extended family, like the U.S.-backed
family dictatorships in Saudi Arabia and the other sheikdoms of the Arabian
Peninsula. And Iranian voters were spared election day brutalities like those
in Egypt under the U.S.-backed Mubarak dictatorship, where police recently
escorted pro-government thugs to attack a group of women who dared to hold
a nonviolent protest in support of greater political freedom.
Yet only Iran, not these U.S.-backed dictatorships, endures President Bush’s
complaints that power is in the hands of “an unelected few.”2 Echoing
his selective criticism, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice challenges the
legitimacy of the Iranian elections, because female candidates were barred
from the presidential race, but she praises the far more restrictive local
council elections in Saudi Arabia, where women, unlike in Iran, were not even
allowed to vote.3
Such double standards in no way justify the repression, the lack of real choices
in the election process, and the many other failures by Iranian leaders to
conform to international standards of human rights and representative government.
They do, however, indicate that Washington’s bipartisan emphasis on the
lack of democracy and human rights in Iran stems not out of a desire to enhance
these ideals but rather from an urge to punish, isolate, and militarily threaten
an oil-rich country that refuses to sufficiently cooperate with U.S. economic
and strategic designs in the Middle East.
Subversion and Terrorism
U.S. hostility toward Iran often follows accusations of subversion
and terrorism beyond its borders. For example, Washington tried to blame Teheran
for the popular anti-government resistance movement in the Arab island state
of Bahrain in the Persian Gulf, where the Shiite Muslim majority began to resist
the autocratic rule of a Sunni Muslim monarchy during the 1980s. The United
States also sought to link Iran with acts of terrorism—both through its
own agents and through local groups—and accused Teheran of military threats
and acts of subversion against Arab monarchies in the region. Even Arab states
suspicious of Iran’s
intentions, however, have expressed concerned about the U.S. tendency to define “Iranian-backed
terrorist groups” so broadly as to include, for example, Lebanese guerrillas
fighting Israeli occupation forces prior to Israel’s withdrawal in May
2000.
Although Iranian agents have trained, financed, and funneled arms to a number
of extremist Islamic groups, U.S. charges of direct Iranian responsibility
for specific terrorist acts against Israeli or American targets remain dubious.
For example, Washington exerted enormous pressure on the Saudi government to
implicate Iran in the 1996 terrorist bombing of the Khobar Towers in Dharan,
which killed 19 U.S. soldiers, even though Saudi investigators found no such
link. Iran has challenged the United States to present evidence in an international
judicial forum to prove its allegations, but Washington has refused.4 Many
now believe this terrorist attack may have been one of the first strikes by
Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaida network.
U.S. State Department investigations reveal that Iranian support for terrorism
emanates almost exclusively from the Revolutionary Guards and the Intelligence
services, both of which are beyond the control of Iran’s president and
legislature. Furthermore, most acts of international terrorism clearly linked
to Teheran have been directed at exiled Iranian dissidents, not against the
United States.5 Iran’s immediate
post-revolutionary zeal to export its ideology was short-lived, as internal
problems and outside threats deflected the attention of its leadership. In
addition, Iranians are culturally and religiously distinct from the Sunni Arabs
who dominate most of the Middle East. The hierarchical structure of the Shiite
Islam practiced in Iran limits the revolution’s appeal as a model for
other Middle Eastern states.
There is little evidence to support Washington’s warnings of aggressive
Iranian designs in the Persian Gulf, either. Iran has not threatened—nor
does it have any reason for provoking—a confrontation over sea lanes,
as several U.S. analysts have feared. Iran is at least as reliant as its Arab
neighbors on unrestricted navigation, so if it closed the Straits of Hormuz,
Iran would be primarily hurting itself. With few pipelines servicing its southern
oil fields, Iran is far more dependent on tanker shipping than any other country
on the Persian Gulf coast.
Iran has dramatically reduced its military spending due to chronic economic
problems. Indeed, in constant dollars, Iranian military spending is barely
one-third what it was during the 1980s, when Washington was clandestinely sending
arms to the Islamic Republic.6 Mirroring
increased Iranian procurement of sophisticated missiles, the Arab sheikdoms
along the Persian Gulf have similar missile capabilities, serving (along with
the U.S. Navy) as an effective deterrent force.
The United States has also cited Iran’s occupation of three small islands
claimed by the United Arab Emirates as evidence of aggressive Iranian designs
in the Persian Gulf.7 However, Iran originally
seized the islands—Abu Musa, Greater Tunbs, and Lesser Tunbs—in
1971 under the shah and with U.S. and British encouragement.8
One litmus test of a country’s aggressive designs on its neighbors is
military procurement. As a country amasses arms, bolsters troops, and acquires
training, the chance that it may initiate war escalates, because the probability
of success rises. On this front, Iran also seems less of a threat. Iran’s
military procurement relative to the Gulf States is far less than it was during
the 1970s under the shah, when the United States was actually promoting arms
sales to Iran. In addition, much of Iran’s naval capability was destroyed
by the United States in the 1987-88 tanker war, and Iran lost much of its ground
weaponry during Iraq’s 1988 offensive. As much as half of Iran’s
inventory of major land-force weapons were destroyed in the course of the war
with Iraq.9 Although Iran’s defensive
capabilities have improved somewhat, there is little to suggest that Teheran
poses any kind of realistic offensive threat to the region. Indeed, Iranian
tanks and planes actually number less than in 1980.10
Regarding potential conflicts on the country’s eastern border, Iran
came close to declaring war against Afghanistan’s Taliban government
in 1998 in response to repression against the country’s Shiite minority
and the killings of nine Iranian diplomats in the Northern city of Mazar-e-Sharif.
Iran accepted nearly two million Afghan refugees during more than 20 years
of war in Afghanistan, a country with which the Iranians have close ethnic
ties. Iran also provided military support for the Northern Alliance in its
fight against the Taliban. Despite all this, the Bush administration has warned
Iran not to interfere in Afghanistan’s internal affairs, an ironic admonition
coming as it did after months of U.S. interference in Afghanistan that included
heavy bombing, ground combat, the ouster of one government, and the installation
of another.
The Bush administration has also claimed that Teheran allowed al-Qaida members
to seek sanctuary in Iran, though it has been unable to present much in the
way of evidence to that effect. In reality, Iran has strongly opposed al-Qaida
and welcomed their ouster from Afghanistan. Likewise, al-Qaida has been antagonistic
toward Iran, in part due to its Shia Islam, which Osama bin Laden and his Sunni
followers view as heretical.
U.S. claims of Iranian support for the Iraqi insurgency are particularly ludicrous,
given the close ties with the Iraqi president, prime minister, and leaders
of the majority Shiite coalition in the national assembly. Iran has absolutely
no interest in supporting the Sunni-led insurgency, though—like most
Iraqis—it would like the United States to withdraw its forces as soon
as possible and allow the elected Iraqi government greater sovereignty.
Nor, despite claims by the Bush administration and congressional leaders of
both parties, is Iran a serious threat to Israel. Israel is separated from
Iran by over 600 miles, and the Israeli air force is more than capable of shooting
down any Iranian aircraft long before it could reach Israel’s borders.
Israel also possesses a strong defense system against medium-range missiles.
It is highly unlikely that Israel would have clandestinely armed the Ayatollah
Khomeini’s government throughout the 1980s if the Islamic Republic was
considered a threat, particularly since hard-line anti-Israel elements were
more prominent in the Iranian government during that period than they are now.
Iran’s Nuclear Program
Having already successfully fooled most of Congress and the American public
into believing that Saddam Hussein’s Iraq had an active nuclear weapons
program, the Bush administration and congressional leaders of both parties
are now claiming that it is Iran that has an active nuclear weapons program.
As with Iraq, the administration does not look too kindly on those who question
its assumptions. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is the United
Nations body legally responsible for monitoring compliance with the Nuclear
Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT), to which Iran, the United States, and all but
a handful of countries are members. When the IAEA published a detailed report
in November 2004 concluding that its extensive inspections had revealed no
evidence of Iran pursuing a nuclear weapons program, the Bush administration
responded by attempting to oust the IAEA director.
For the time being, the Iranians have been able to avert a crisis through
negotiations with representatives of the European Union (EU). Iran agreed to
suspend its uranium enrichment and processing programs until a permanent deal
is reached, which the Iranians hope will also include political and economic
concessions from the Europeans.
The Bush administration has not been supportive of the European negotiating
efforts, however. John Bolton, the former undersecretary of state for arms
control and international security and currently the UN ambassador-designate,
declared that the EU’s strategy of negotiating with Iran was “doomed
to fail.”11 Washington has instead
advocated a more confrontational approach of UN sanctions in response to Iran’s
apparent earlier violations of IAEA agreements. Bolton has argued for “robust” military
action by the United States, if the UN Security Council fails to impose the
sanctions that Washington demands.12
The Bush administration’s efforts have not received much support, however,
in part because of U.S. double standards. The United States has blocked enforcement
of a previous UN Security Council resolution calling on Israel to place its
nuclear facilities under IAEA trusteeship. Washington has also quashed resolutions
calling on Pakistan and India to eliminate their nuclear weapons and long-range
missiles.13
Despite accusations from U.S. officials that “there is no doubt that
Iran has a secret nuclear weapons production program,”14 no
one has been able to cite any evidence supporting such a charge. As with the
lead-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, however, Democratic congressional leaders
have contributed to the Bush administration’s alarmist rhetoric about
a supposed nuclear threat from Iran and have defended White House double standards
that focus on the alleged nuclear weapons program of an adversary while ignoring
the obvious and proven nuclear weapons arsenals of U.S. allies like Israel,
Pakistan, and India. Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, widely seen as the front-runner
for the 2008 Democratic presidential nomination, declared that the prospect
of Iran also developing nuclear weapons “must be unacceptable to the
entire world,” since it would “shake the foundation of global security
to its very core.”15 Similarly,
House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi called for the establishment of “an
international coalition against proliferation” modeled on the multilateral
effort to combat terrorism. She suggested that instead of organizing against
nuclear proliferation in general, such a coalition should focus on Iran, despite
the Islamic Republic’s apparent current cooperation with its NPT obligations.16 As
with the run-up to the U.S. invasion of Iraq, congressional Democratic leaders
appear willing to blindly support the Bush administration in its exaggerated
and highly selective accusations of an imminent threat from a distant country
that just happens to sit on a lot of oil.
It is important to recognize that even if Iran’s nuclear program is
entirely peaceful, the enormous expense and environmental risks from nuclear
power production make it a poor choice for developing countries, especially
those with generous energy resources. And the risk of it being used as a cover
for a secret nuclear weapons program is certainly real.
However, the United States is still obligated under the Nuclear Non-proliferation
Treaty to allow signatory states in good standing to have access to peaceful
nuclear technology. Ironically, this provision promoting the use of nuclear
energy was originally included in the NPT in large part because of Washington’s
desire to promote the nuclear power industry. In any case, whatever the extent
of Iran’s nuclear ambitions and whatever the outcome of the ongoing EU
talks, the United States is in a poor position to assume much leadership in
the cause of nonproliferation.
Lost in Bush’s current obsession with Iran’s nuclear intentions
is the fact that the United States—from the Eisenhower administration
through the Carter years—played a major role in the development of Iran’s
nuclear program. In 1957, Washington and Teheran signed their first civil nuclear
cooperation agreement. Over the next two decades, the United States provided
Iran not only with technical assistance but with its first experimental nuclear
reactor, complete with enriched uranium and plutonium with fissile isotopes.
Despite the refusal of the shah to rule out the possibility of Iran developing
nuclear weapons, the Ford administration approved the sale to Iran of up to
eight nuclear reactors (with fuel) and later cleared the sale of lasers believed
to be capable of enriching uranium. Surpassing any danger from the mullahs
now in power, the shah's megalomania led arms control advocates to fear a diversion
of the technology for military purposes.
The Washington Post reported that an initially hesitant President Ford
was assured by his advisers that Iran was only interested in the peaceful uses
of nuclear energy despite the country’s enormous reserves of oil and
natural gas.17 Ironically, Ford’s
secretary of defense was Donald Rumsfeld, his chief of staff was Dick Cheney,
and his head of nonproliferation efforts at the Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency was Paul Wolfowitz, all of whom—as officials in the current administration—have
insisted that Iran’s nuclear program must be assumed to have military
applications.
Iranian Perceptions of Defense Needs
Concerned about the proliferation of nuclear weapons in a volatile region,
Teheran has called for the establishment of a nuclear weapons-free zone for
the entire Middle East. All nations in the region would be required to give
up their nuclear weapons and open up their programs to strict international
inspections. Iran has been joined in its proposal by Syria, by U.S. allies
Jordan and Egypt, and by other Middle Eastern states. Such nuclear weapons-free
zones have already been established for Latin America, the South Pacific, Africa,
and Southeast Asia.
The Bush administration has rejected the proposition, however. A draft UN
Security Council resolution in December 2003 calling for a nuclear-free zone
in the Middle East was withdrawn when the United States threatened to veto
it. The Bush administration, with bipartisan support on Capitol Hill, insists
that the United States has the right to decide which countries get to have
nuclear weapons and which ones do not, effectively demanding a kind of nuclear
apartheid. Not only are such double standards unethical, they are simply unworkable:
any effort to impose a regime of haves and have nots from the outside will
simply make the have nots try even harder.
Since Iranian efforts to establish a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East
have been unsuccessful, it is certainly possible that Iran may someday develop
nuclear weapons. However, Washington errs in assuming that the Islamic Republic
would use them for aggressive designs. Indeed, the Iranians may have good reasons
to desire a nuclear deterrent.
In early 2002, Iran was listed with Iraq and North Korea by President Bush
as part of “the axis of evil.” Iraq, which had given up its nuclear
program over a decade earlier and allowed IAEA inspectors to verify this, was
invaded and occupied by the United States. By contrast, North Korea—which
reneged on its agreement and has apparently resumed production of nuclear weapons—has
not been invaded. The Iranians may see a lesson in that.
In addition, soon after coming to office, President Bush decided to unfreeze
America’s nuclear weapons production and launch a program to develop
smaller tactical nuclear weapons for battlefield use. It is important to remember
that the only country to actually use nuclear weapons in combat is the United
States, in the 1945 bombings of two Japanese cities, a decision that most American
political leaders still defend to this day.
Furthermore, the United States is allied with Pakistan, which borders Iran
on the east and possesses nuclear weapons and sophisticated delivery systems.
The United States is also a strong ally of Israel, located 600 miles to the
west and capable of launching a nuclear strike against Iran with its long-range
missiles in a matter of minutes. Unlike Iran, neither of these countries has
signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and both are in violation of UN
Security Council resolutions regarding their nuclear weapons programs. However,
the Bush administration’s view is that rather than focusing on countries
that actually do have an acknowledged nuclear weapons program, actually do
possess nuclear weapons, and are in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions,
the focus should instead be on a country that does not have a confirmed nuclear
weapons program, does not yet have nuclear weapons, and is not in defiance
of UN Security Council resolutions.
The only realistic means of curbing the threat of nuclear proliferation in
the Middle East is to establish a law-based, regionwide program for disarmament
encompassing all countries regardless of their relations with the United States.
Ultimately, the only way to make the world safe from the threat of nuclear
weapons is by establishing a nuclear-free planet. And the United States—as
the largest nuclear power—must take the lead. Polls show that a sizable
majority of Americans do not believe any country, including the United States,
should possess nuclear weapons.18 Neither
the Bush administration nor the leaders of the Democratic Party, however, appear
willing to even broach the subject.
The Issue Is U.S. Hegemony
Iranians are convinced that U.S. hostility toward Iran is not really about
nuclear weapons, terrorism, or anything other than opposition to the very existence
of an Islamic republic in a country once ruled by a compliant, U.S.-installed,
absolute monarch. This is why both “conservative” and “reformist” elements
in Iranian politics support their country’s right to develop a nuclear
energy and research program under IAEA supervision.19
Besides Iraq, Iran is the only Middle Eastern country with a sizable educated
population, enormous oil resources, and an adequate water supply. Among Middle
Eastern nations, only Iraq and Iran have shown the potential for pursuing domestic
and foreign policies independent of the dictates of powerful Western governments
or the international financial institutions dominated by these governments.
In order to control Iraq, the Bush administration decided it had to take over
the country by military force.
There is little question that there were similar plans in store for Iran,
until U.S. difficulties in stabilizing and managing Iran’s once-powerful
Arab neighbor made it apparent that an additional occupation would be unwise.
Pentagon troop strength is already severely stretched, and the financial and
political costs of the ongoing war in Iraq are becoming difficult for the Bush
administration to manage.
Iran would also be far more difficult to invade and occupy than Iraq. Iran
has more than three times Iraq’s population and land mass, and the country
has far more mountains and other geographical hindrances to invasion and occupation.
Unlike Iraq in the dozen years prior to the U.S. invasion, Iran has not been
under a strictly enforced international arms embargo and has been able to build
up its military defenses.
And as problematic as Iran’s political system may be, Iranians enjoy
far more political pluralism than did Iraqis under the totalitarian regime
of Saddam Hussein. As a result, Iranians harbor more hope that change is possible
from within. Although Iran’s population consists of several different
ethno-linguistic groups, there is a very strong sense of nationalism that would
likely result in far more Iranians rushing to defend their country from foreign
conquest and occupation than was the case with the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of
Iraq.
The legal case for military action against Iran is even weaker than it was
in regard to Iraq. Great Britain, Poland, and other allies that supported the
United States in invading Iraq have made it clear they would not take part
in a conquest of Iran.
An outright invasion of Iran is therefore unlikely, but this does not mean
that military action is not forthcoming, either directly or through Washington’s
client state Israel. The most likely scenario might resemble the half decade
prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq complete with periodic bombing raids and
missile attacks against suspected military, industrial, and government targets.
Though not as calamitous as a full-scale invasion, such military action would
nevertheless constitute a tragic blunder.
Iranians would probably find ways to retaliate against such attacks, including
a refusal to cooperate with the IAEA and an increase in support for terrorist
groups. Reaction to such attacks would almost certainly fan anti-American and
anti-Israeli extremism in the region, even within the pro-Western and anti-Iranian
Arab sheikdoms of the Persian Gulf.
Furthermore, as Iranian human rights lawyer and Islamic feminist Shirin Ebadi
observed, “Respect for human rights … can never be imposed by
foreign military might and coercion—an approach that abounds in contradictions.” The
2003 Nobel Peace Prize winner, jailed by the Iranian government for her dissident
activities, went on to observe that not only would an attack on Iran “vitiate
popular support for human rights activism, but by destroying civilian lives,
institutions, and infrastructure, war would also usher in chaos and instability.
Respect for human rights is likely to be among the first casualties.”20
Up to this point, U.S. pressure on Iran has primarily been through strict
unilateral economic sanction. Unlike international sanctions against the former
apartheid government of South Africa or the current military junta in Burma,
Washington’s sanctions against Iran are not predicated on significant
legal or moral imperatives. As with similar extraterritorial efforts regarding
Cuba, U.S. attempts to pressure other nations to get tough with Iran have alienated
even America's strongest allies, who consider such measures to be in violation
of World Trade Organization principles.
Similarly, U.S. efforts to subvert the Iranian government are contrary to
international legal conventions that recognize sovereign rights and principles
of nonintervention. They also directly counter the Algiers Declaration of 1981,
under which the United States unequivocally pledged not to intervene politically
or militarily in the internal affairs of Iran. Still, even while acknowledging
that Iran is a sovereign government, the Bush administration insists that it
has the right to attack governments that do not “exercise their sovereignty
responsibly.”21
What neither the Bush administration nor Congress seems to appreciate is that
even if Iranians were free from clerical domination and the electoral process
in Iran were completely fair and open, the result would almost certainly be
a government that—though presumably not as fanatically anti-American
as the current hard-line clerics in power—would never consent to the
role of a compliant ally. In Washington’s eyes, Iran’s most serious
offense lies not in the area of human rights, terrorism, nuclear ambitions,
subversion, or conquest but rather in daring to challenge U.S. hegemony in
the Middle East. Iran is the most important country in the Middle East actively
opposing U.S. ambitions for strategic, economic, and political domination over
the region. By arranging for the Iranian government to be overthrown or crippled,
American policymakers hope to acquire unprecedented leverage in shaping the
future direction of the Middle East.
And this brings us to the final irony. Serving as an impediment to Washington’s
ambitions gives Teheran a degree of credibility and legitimacy that it would
not otherwise receive from large numbers of Middle Eastern peoples resentful
of such foreign domination. This strengthens the current Iranian government’s
grip at home as well as its influence throughout the Middle East and beyond.
End Notes
- Cited in Robin Wright and Michael Fletcher, “Bush
Denounces Iran’s Election,” Washington Post, p. A18, June
17, 2005.
- Ibid.
- Interview on Fox News Sunday, June 19,
2005.
- Houman A. Sadri, “Trends in the
Foreign Policy of Revolutionary Iran,” Journal of Third World Studies, vol.
15, no. 1, April 1998.
- Office of the Coordinator for Counterterrorism,
U.S. Department of State, Patterns ofGlobal Terrorism—2000, Section
I: Overview of State-Sponsored Terrorism, April 30, 2001.
- Anthony H. Cordesman, Trends in Iran:
A Graphic and Statistical Overview, Washington: Center for Strategic
and International Studies, 1999, p. 17.
- Jamie McIntyre, “Iran Builds Up
Military Strength at Mouth of Gulf,” CNN World News, August 6,
1996, available at <www.cnn.com/WORLD/9608/06/iran.threat/>.
- Hooshang Amirahmadi and Nader Entessar,
eds., Iran and the Arab World (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1993),
p.127.
- Anthony Cordesman, “The Changing
Military Balance in the Gulf,” Middle East Policy, vol.
VI, no. 1, June 1998, p. 82.
- Cordesman, Trends in Iran,
op. cit., p. 31.
- Cited in Scott Ritter, “Sleepwalking
to Disaster in Iran,” Al Jazeera, March 30, 2005.
- Ibid.
- See UN Security Council Resolutions
487 (1981) and 1172 (1998).
- Ritter, op. cit.
- Remarks by Senator Hillary Rodham
Clinton to the 2005 American Israeli Public Affairs Committee Conference, May
24, 2005, available at <http://clinton.senate.gov/%7Eclinton/speeches/2005524910.html>.
- Remarks by Representative Nancy Pelosi
to the 2005 American Israeli Public Affairs Committee Conference, May 24, 2005.
- Dafna Linzer, “Past Arguments
Don’t Square with Current Iran Policy,” Washington Post, March
26, 2005.
- WM Lester, “Most Americans Say
No Nations Should Have Nuclear Weapons,” Associated Press, March 31,
2005.
- See Michael Ryan Kraig, “Realistic
Solutions for Resolving the Iranian Nuclear Crisis,” Stanley Foundation
Policy Analysis Brief, January 2005, p. 2.
- Shirin Ebadi, “Attacking Iran
Would Bring Disaster, Not Freedom,” I ndependent (UK), February
19, 2005.
- National Defense Strategy of the United
States of America, 2005.
Stephen Zunes is Middle East editor for the Foreign Policy in Focus Project (www.fpif.org) and a Professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco.