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Big Three Block Iran Attack

William O. Beeman | August 18, 2008

Editor: John Feffer

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Foreign Policy In Focus

The United States is in a huge foreign policy muddle in the Middle East. It wants to dominate and control Iran but requires the support of the world community to accomplish its aims. Diplomacy and sanctions require only a low level of support. On the other hand, to launch a military attack or green-light one by Israel, the United States needs far more backing.

This support does not appear to exist, and recent U.S. foreign policy actions are eroding that support even further. The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported on August 13 that the United States refused to give the go-ahead to Israeli attacks on Iran’s nuclear facilities in talks between Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak. Could it be that the Bush administration finally knows when it is licked?

Israeli officials acknowledge that it would be difficult to launch such an attack without approval from Russia, China, and India, something that the United States would have to lobby those nations to achieve. The chances at present are extremely slim that any of the three will acquiesce.

U.S. condemnation of Russia’s military action to defend the breakaway region of South Ossetia, combined with the determination of the Bush administration to install missile systems in Poland and the Czech Republic, virtually guarantee that Russia will not do anything to help the United States foment more violence in its neighborhood.

Beijing owns much of the U.S. debt, continues to be one of Tehran’s largest trade partners, and is not about to be dictated to by Washington. India has defied the United States by entering into a pipeline deal with Iran. Exhaustive three-year nuclear treaty negotiations between the United States and India are utterly stalled. If the treaty is not presented to Congress in September, it will be dead.

Russia and China have repeatedly said that they see no nuclear weapons danger in Iran. Besides the tension over the pending treaty with the United States, India has little to say, since it is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty, as Iran is. The skepticism of these nations is yet another reason why support for an Iranian attack is evaporating.

So the Bush administration is hoisted with its own petard. Whatever the more hawkish denizens of Washington want to do to Iran, they are not going to get the international support necessary for their desired action.

The most obvious alternative for the United States is to engage with Iran diplomatically. This is particularly difficult for the Bush administration because of its carefully burnished tough-guy approach. When Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William J. Burns merely appeared at the negotiating table with European Union members and Iran for the first time, the right-wing media reaction was swift and vitriolic. Critics on the right, , including two editorials in one week on the conservative Wall Street Journal editorial page, accused the Bush administration of “capitulation” to Iran.

Nevertheless international conditions with Russian, China and India may force expansion of this diplomatic approach, regardless of right-wing reaction.

The irony is that talking to Iran could be easy if the Bush administration would just relax. All the Iranians want for real talks to begin is to be treated as equals at the negotiating table, and to start the talks with no pre-conditions. This, too, is what Russia, India, and China want – not only for Iran, but for themselves as well.

The Bush crowd, however, is determined to patronize and insult everyone. During the current conflict in Georgia, Washington has implied that Russia is “not yet” part of the international community. The Bush administration coerced and threatened India over its nuclear program and the oil pipeline deal with Iran. China has been treated somewhat more gently, but the Chinese, too, chafe at criticisms of their environmental record, politics toward Tibet, and international dealings in the Sudan and elsewhere, which they see as hypocritical and intrusive.

When it comes to Iran, all three countries have signaled that they’ve had enough of Washington’s bullying. If however, the United States decides to treat Iran with mutual respect at the negotiating table, it might discover not only a way out of the impasse in the Middle East but improved relations with other key countries around the world.

Foreign Policy In Focus contributor William O. Beeman is professor and chair of the department of anthropology at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. He is president of the Middle East Section of the American Anthropological Association and the author, most recently, of The "Great Satan" vs. the "Mad Mullahs": How the United States and Iran Demonize Each Other.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
William O. Beeman, "Big Three Block Iran Attack," (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, August 18, 2008).

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Author(s): William O. Beeman
Editor(s): John Feffer
Production: John Feffer

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name BiBiJon Date: Aug 18, 2008
One cannot ignore the media's role in the way the public opinion is poisoned against other nations, faiths, etc. Before the US gets to unclench its fist, the media needs to clean up its act.

For a reality check on Iran, please see http://www.bibijon.org/iranimage/.

Name Mac Date: Aug 18, 2008
I am pleased that you have so much faith in the power that Russia, China and India have over Israel. Now if only Israel shared your faith. Irregardless of what the "Big Three" desire, Israel will take military action against Iran, whether or not it is sanctioned by the U.S. In fact, if Russia continues on its present course, it is not inconceivable that the U.S. will engage in direct military support for Georgia. Simply put, India has no teeth and no desire to back Iran. Russia is busy trying to thwart what it regards as U.S. attempts to stifle Russia's reformation of its empirical boundaries and China will do anything to keep the U.S. distracted in areas other than the Pacific Rim. Take a second look at the situation and try again.
Name Gurmit Singh Date: Aug 19, 2008
I haven't seen such clear, concise and solution-offering article elsewhere in media. Thanks for keeping journalism fair-and-square. The sad part is USA or Isreal Admin. still do not see the consequences of hawkish talk and daily threats issued towards Iran and Russia and China.
Name Bill Date: Aug 19, 2008
It amazes me that supposedly intellectual people can be so easily duped. All left leaning liberals complain about US bullying of poor Iran, When the only bullying and belicose banter comes from Iran. Every Irainian journalist in the country attended the 'Baghdad Bob' school of journalism. It is constantly 'We will Destroy you', 'We are so powerful' Who cares? Negotiating with Iran is like negotiating with a rock!
Name Hess Aletaha Date: Aug 19, 2008
Mac, are you are advocating Israeli attack on Iran? You might take into consideration that Iran is no Iraq or Afghanistan. Nor is Isreal US, Russia, China or even India. In fact without US help or its hidden nukes that US brokered, Israel is just a country that has less than 4 million people that most are not even born there. They came there to see a better life and not be attacked by Iranian missiles. But, at the same time I would not be totally surprised if this attach brain child is of a basic instinct in the Israeli Govenment. I would say stay put and don't cause trouble. No country the size of Iran will stay put if a small country like Israel attack it when it can respond - with thunders.
Name Haymann Cord Date: Aug 19, 2008
Mac, go to BiBijon's IranImage - look at the situation and try again.
Name Mac Date: Aug 23, 2008
In response to Hess Aletaha: I am not advocating anything. I am prophesying an action that i feel will occur. Israel, if the Iranian government continues to process weapons grade nuclear material, will attempt to stop them, militarily. You have correctly gauged the Israeli Governmental mindset. 70 years ago, Jews stood by as the Nazis murdered 5 million of their number. They will not allow the Iranian government to do the same. And neither Russia, China, India nor all three are going to dissuade them. You seem to discount much of the rest of the Middle Eastern players [the Gulf States, Egypt, Iraq and even Lebanon and Jordan}. Syria is a wholly owned subsidiary of Iran, of course. But the rest are extremely fearful of a new Persian Empire. And, of course, the U.S, Europe and the industrialized nations of the Pacific, except China, would not welcome Iranian expansion in the region. I doubt very much that Israel would stand alone in this instance.

As for Haymann Cord's remark: I think the following passage from IranImage sums up the problem nicely. "Middle East is dotted with anti-American populations led by unstable but friendly governments. The exception is Iran, with a pro-American population governed by a stable regime inimical to American policies in the region." No matter how pro-American the people of Iran are, if they cannot change or rein-in their government, they are of no consequence in the struggle. They are just along for the ride. Stay tuned.

Name Aaron Malcolm Date: Aug 27, 2008
Mac,
We don't understand your claim that Iran is looking to take over the entire Middle East region when the regime in Tehran doesn't have the military means or other capabilities to do, nor does it have any intentions for that very purpose, especially nowadays when that part of the world is already destabilized ever since the United States--the world's sole superpower--invaded Iraq with a war based on lies, and still occupies that country today. Do you seriously think that sooner or later the ruling Mullahs are going to force the Iranian population into the Revolutionary Guard so that Iran could invade and occupy other states of that region in order to impose a so-called "New Persian Empire"? Do you realize how ridiculous that sounds?
 
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