Archive for December 2013

Former CIA, AMAN chiefs: Iran is a nuclear threshold state and can no longer be stopped

December 2, 2013

Former CIA, AMAN chiefs: Iran is a nuclear threshold state and can no longer be stopped.

DEBKAfile Special Report December 2, 2013, 10:05 AM (IDT)
Binyamin Netanyahu's nuclear depiction caricatured

Binyamin Netanyahu’s nuclear depiction caricatured

The former heads of two of the most powerful intelligence agencies in the world, speaking Sunday, Dec. 1, in different parts of the world, were of the same opinion: Iran has reached the point of a nuclear threshold state and can build several nuclear bombs in a matter of weeks. By this diagnosis, Gen. Michael Hayden, former director of the CIA and NSA, and ex-general Amos Yadlin, ex-chief of AMAN, Israeli military intelligence indicted their respective governments of the US and Israeli for their failure to stop this happening.
Asked in a FoxNews interview in New York about the interim accord the six powers reached with Iran in Geneva, Gen. Hayden was terse: “Iran is a nuclear threshold nation and we can’t stop this,” he said. America has moved its red lines and “all but conceded Iran has the right to enrich uranium.” He went on to voice the hope that “We have hit the pause button. Now we’ve got to negotiate hitting the delete button.”

Yadlin, who heads a national security think tank, had this to say: “Iran is approaching breakout point to a nuclear bomb.” On the Geneva accord, he commented: “… this is only a first step, not a final agreement, although it contains elements which predetermine the final accord.”

Speaking in Tel Aviv, Yadlin said: “The fact that Iran is a nuclear threshold state is not the fault of this agreement. Iran spent many years developing this capability and no one managed to stop it. Iran is a step before breakout to a bomb.  This is unfortunate but true.”

It was the first time that a former high-ranking Israeli intelligence officer had admitted the responsibility of successive Israeli governments, defense ministers and heads of its various intelligence agencies for the failure to pre-empt Iran’s drive for a nuclear weapon.
MK Tzahi Hanegbi , a senior lawmaker who has the ear of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, expressed concern that the interim deal with Iran would be left standing as the final accord, and so leave the Islamic Republic in place as a nuclear threshold state with the capability to assemble a bomb within six to seven weeks.
In Rome, Netanyahu was heard to say for the umpteenth time that Israel would not allow Iran to attain a nuclear bomb. He seemed to have forgotten the diagram he exhibited to the UN General Assembly in September 2012 accompanied by a resounding pledge not to let Iran accumulate enough enriched uranium for a weapon.

Hanegbi, in his comments Sunday, put the record straight: Iran has built a uranium stockpile of 7.2 tons, enough for several bombs.”

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, after criticizing his successor for daring to argue with US President Obama, was of the opinion that Israel would not attack Iran’s nuclear facilities. He was saying that Israel has decided to accept a nuclear-armed Iran.

Senators work on new Iran sanctions bill as White House lobbies against

December 2, 2013

Senators work on new Iran sanctions bill as White House lobbies against | The Times of Israel.

Lawmakers from both parties spend Thanksgiving recess planning new penalties they hope to pass before Christmas

December 2, 2013, 6:55 am

The reactor building of the nuclear power plant just outside the southern city of Bushehr, Iran (photo credit: AP/Mehr News Agency, Majid Asgaripour, File)

The reactor building of the nuclear power plant just outside the southern city of Bushehr, Iran (photo credit: AP/Mehr News Agency, Majid Asgaripour, File)

US Senators from both the Democratic and Republican parties are spending their Thanksgiving recess forging a new agreement aimed at passing a new sanctions bill against Iran before Christmas.

According to a report in the Washington Post Monday, “a bipartisan juggernaut of senior senators” is currently working on the agreement, while the White House is trying to lobby against the move, afraid that it could thwart talks to reach a final deal with Tehran on curbing its nuclear program, set to begin in January.

“If you want to hold our feet to the fire on the final deal, fine, do that,” a senior Obama administration official was quoted by the paper as saying. “If people have concerns about elements of a final agreement, come in and tell us. But that is a separate discussion from passing a sanctions bill in the middle of negotiations .”

Administrations officials argue that additional sanctions now would violate the interim agreement signed between world powers and Iran in Geneva last weekend. That deal promised to ease sanctions on the Islamic Republic in exchange for Tehran halting its controversial nuclear program, which it insists is for peaceful purposes.

“Our view is that passing these sanctions during the life of the negotiations would complicate the negotiations in a number of ways,” said the official quoted in the report.

The Senate is back in session December 9, and between now and then, according to the report, “the White House has organized a full-court press to persuade lawmakers not to act. In addition to briefings for anyone who wants one, [President Barack] Obama, Secretary of State John F. Kerry, national security adviser Susan E. Rice and other top officials are making personal calls. Kerry sent a video to his former Capitol Hill colleagues explaining the deal, ‘because some people are putting out some misinformation on it.’”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been a firm advocate of increased sanctions on Iran, arguing that the measures are what brought the regime to the negotiating table in the first place, and that the lifting of sanctions would pave the way for Tehran to produce nuclear weapons.

On Sunday, Netanyahu vowed to “not be silent” when he sees that “interests vital to the security of Israel’s citizens are in danger.”

“I would like to dispel any illusions. Iran aspires to attain an atomic bomb,” he said while on a state visit to Italy.

Netanyahu has publicly savaged the Geneva interim accord with Iran, signed early last week, as a “historic mistake.” Officials in Jerusalem have repeatedly castigated President Barack Obama for overseeing a failed negotiating process with Iran under which, they claim, Iran’s nuclear weapons drive is not being thwarted while the sanctions pressure against Iran is collapsing.

That sentiment is shared by some in Washington. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), a proponet of the bill said that new sanctions would “strengthen the administration’s hand” and positions the United States “for the possibility that [a permanent] agreement cannot ultimately be struck,”

“It would make clear to the Iranians if they don’t strike a deal, this is what’s coming,” he was quoted by the paper as saying.

On Friday, in a widely circulated editorial, the Washington Post charged that the United States and its partners had already agreed to allow Iran to enrich uranium “with mutually agreed parameters,” and gave their initial consent to a “sunset clause” on international restrictions in the nuclear deal negotiated in Geneva last weekend.

The interim nuclear agreement signed with Iran last week leaves the United States and world powers at a disadvantage in negotiating a future long-term agreement, the editorial read, adding that “the fact sheet distributed by the Obama administration about the nuclear agreement with Iran is notable for its omissions.”

The deal sought to curb Iran’s nuclear program in exchange for eased sanctions — by capping Tehran’s uranium enrichment capabilities, stopping plans to build a plutonium-producing reactor in Arak and having Iran agree to surprise international inspections at nuclear sites. But, the paper notes, major concessions were made to the Islamic Republic on the terms for a final deal.

It urges that a balance be set ahead of expected talks for that permanent agreement.

Olmert slams PM: We have declared war on US

December 1, 2013

Olmert slams PM: We have declared war on US – Israel News, Ynetnews.

( Olmert, corrupt disgrace though he may be, asks a critical question, “Who will be our savior.”  Answer via Ben Gurion:  Only ourselves. – JW )

In special conference on Geneva agreement, former-PM Olmert slams Netanyahu over his public reaction to the nuclear deal with Iran, asking rhetorically ‘Who will be our savior Obama or Putin?’ Former-MI chief says deal bad, but stress fact it is preliminary

Attila Somfalvi

Published: 12.01.13, 19:34 / Israel News

Former Prime Minister Ehud Olmert addressed the Geneva agreement between world powers and Iran, and slammed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who according to him has declared war on the American administration

“We have declared war on the US… Will the savior in the Iranian matter be Putin, or Obama?” the former prime minister rhetorically asked, adding “We need to go against the American president? To ask questions, to argue, in closed door decisions, of course,” hinting critisim at Netanyahu’s public statements in regards to the Iranian deal.

Speaking at a special conference on the Geneva agreement held at the Institute for National Security Studies together with Former Military Intelligence Chief (res.) Major General Amos Yadlin and MK Tzachi Hanegbi (Likud ), Olmeret added that “Until 2009 we managed in silence, after that our policy changed to screams and threats and financial outlays of more than NIS 10 billion ($2.83 billion).

Ehud Olmert at the INSS (Photo: Hagai Dekel)
Ehud Olmert at the INSS (Photo: Hagai Dekel)

According to Olmert, Israel should not lead talks with Iran. “Israel needs to be a partner in this process, but it cannot and should not lead this international struggle.

“During the last ten years the government has been dealing with this more and more. Two government, the one headed by Ariel Sharon and the one headed by myself, clearly stated Israel’s position: Israel will not and cannot accept a nuclear Iran, this is an existential threat on our country.”

“If we had used those warnings in the proper way, through the confidential backchannels which we had built for decades with the American administration, we would have made it easier for that administration to make the decisions we wanted.”

MK Tzachi Hanegbi addressed the INSS (Photo: Hagai Dekel)
MK Tzachi Hanegbi addressed the INSS (Photo: Hagai Dekel)

 However, “In no way did we want the diplomatic discussions and contacts to become a matter of public disagreements between us and our allies. I never raised the idea, neither did my processor, of picking a fight with Israel’s number one ally and to incite the American congress against the president – a thing which is without precedent, and its dangers and damages are larger than we can estimate.”

Head of the INSS and the former Military Intelligence Chief (res.) Major General Amos Yadlin also commented on the temporary agreement reached with Iran, and said that “Iran is one breakthrough away from the bomb. It’s sad, but it’s the fact.”

However, he noted that “we must remember that this is only an initial agreement, not a final one. The fact that Iran is on the threshold of nuclear capabilities is not the result of this agreement, but because the Iranians were hard at work on these capabilities for many years and no one has been able to stop them.”

‘Moral surrender’

Regarding the public debate over the agreement and a nuclear Iran, Yadlin said “during the last three years has moved to the forefront of the public debate. This is the result of the initiative of Israel’s leaders. But the majority of the public is still awkward and without the proper tools to formulate an educated opinion.”

MK Tzachi Hanegbi (Likud) addressed the nuclear deal at saying “The West agreed that the final agreement will allow Iran to enrich uranium in her facilities. If this is not a moral defeat, what is a moral defeat? If this isn’t surrender, what is surrender? The time frame that Iran needs to get a nuclear weapon is no longer than a few months.”

According to Hanegbi, “The Israeli position needs to be sharper. We must demand the removal of all of the enriched uranium. If Israel stutters or flatters, all the other voices will weaken as well. Netanyahu clarified that Israel is not party to the deal that was reached. We are the first who want a diplomatic agreement.”

Pakistan’s new army chief: Nuclear ties with Saudis, US exit from Afghanistan, Riyadh’s anti-Iran drive

December 1, 2013

Pakistan’s new army chief: Nuclear ties with Saudis, US exit from Afghanistan, Riyadh’s anti-Iran drive.

DEBKAfile Exclusive Analysis December 1, 2013, 7:22 PM (IDT)
Changing of Pakistani chiefs of staff

Changing of Pakistani chiefs of staff

Gen. Raheel Sharif, 57, who comes from a distinguished Punjabi military family, started work as new chief of Pakistan’s armed forces chief this weekend with three formidable tasks on his plate, spin-offs from fast-moving events involving the United States, Iran and Israel.
He will have to adapt his military policy to next year’s US military evacuation from neighboring Afghanistan leaving a dangerous void.
Pakistan has been inextricably bound up in the 12-year US-led war in Afghanistan against al Qaeda and its ally Taliban, both of which used Pakistan’s lawless tribal territories as rear bases for their war on coalition forces.

The Obama administration is trying at all costs to prevent the Taliban from seizing the government in Kabul after President Hamid Karzai’s retirement. Its strategy, so far without much luck, is to enlist Iran to help in this objective which, however, is diametrically opposed to that of Pakistan Prime minister Nawaz Sharif.
Sharif is anxious to be rid of Taliban, whose expanding terrorist operations are threatening his government’s stability, and wants to push them over into Afghanistan. In particular, he would like to clear them out of the northern and western border districts, where Al Qaeda leader Ayman Zawahiri has set up his central command.
To achieve this goal, the Pakistani government must reach terms with Taliban leaders for their cooperation.

The new armed forces’ chief’s second mission is to complete the transfer to Saudi Arabia of the nuclear weapons plus ballistic missiles Riyadh purchased and which Pakistan held in reserve under a secret defense pact the two governments signed in 2004.

This transfer may have already started. It makes Islamabad a major contributor to the evolving Middle East nuclear arms race boosted by the six-power nuclear deal which recognizes Iran’s “nuclear rights.”  It also means that Pakistan has ranged itself on the side of the Sunni Arab camp against Shiite Iran, by lending a Sunni power a nuclear capability versus a nuclear-armed Shiite Iran recognized by the six world powers.

Gen. Sharif will be fully backed in this task by his prime minister, an old ally of the Saudi royal house.

These critical moves have not been lost on Iran or India.

Friday, Nov. 29, New Delhi announced a team of planners and engineers would soon be leaving for Tehran to accelerate the construction of the southern Iranian port of Chabahar near the Pakistani and Afghan borders, India’s most important naval base in the Arabian Ocean, which will also offer landlocked Afghanistan its first outlet to the sea.

This outlet is important enough to grant India and Iran a strong foothold in the Afghan capital after the American exit, even if Taliban seizes power.

New Delhi sees Chabahar port as a counterweight for the big naval base China is building at Gwadar on the Arabian Ocean to share with Pakistan.

Taking shape therefore is the first tectonic strategic-political-military movement set off in a key world region by the six-power first-step nuclear deal with Iran.
It finds Beijing pulling away from its alliance with Tehran and aligning more firmly with Pakistan and Saudi Arabia to counteract rising US-Iranian influence in Kabul.

India is stepping into Chinese shoes in Tehran, cheered on by Washington, and distancing itself from Israel, its foremost supplier of advanced weapons. Indian-Israeli military and intelligence ties have been receding in the last two years.

The change of military chiefs in Islamabad is also relevant to the covert war waged by Saudi intelligence against the Iranian regime in recent weeks. The Saudis are using Pakistani Baluchistan as their base for subversive operations against the central regime in Tehran.

According to Iran and some Western clandestine agencies, Israeli intelligence is assisting this Saudi-Baluchi campaign.
Gen. Sharif will have to decide whether to allow it to go on and how much leeway he is willing to grant Saudi undercover agencies.
The outgoing chief of staff, the charismatic Gen. Pervez Kayani, managed during his six-year term to keep Pakistan’s armed forces for the first time clear of Pakistan’s endemic political wars, the bane of this nation of 180 million.

But he also worked under a cloud as a suspected sympathizer of Pakistani terrorist organizations, which operated against India. The military Inter-Service Intelligence agency (ISI) has long been suspected of secretly supporting one of Al Qaeda’s foremost operational arms, Lashkar-e-Taiba, which conducted terrorist operations against American and Israeli targets, the most horrendous of which was the coordinated assault on 12 targets in the India city of Mumbai in Nov. 2008, which left 166 dead and hundreds maimed.

Intelligence experts in the West maintain that the Mumbai outrage, one of Al Qaeda’s first serial attacks, could not have gone forward without Gen. Kayani noticing its preparations. Washington chose to take Kayani at his word when he said the ISI was an independent entity and not under his military command, because his cooperation was needed for the counter-terror operation against Al Qaeda concentrations in the Pakistan tribal areas along the Afghan border.
Many eyes are watching to see whether or not the new chief of staff will continue his predecessor’s policy of tacitly approving the clandestine relations between military intelligence and Islamist terrorist movements.

Iran, powers to meet next week on carrying out nuclear deal

December 1, 2013

Iran, powers to meet next week on carrying out nuclear deal – Israel News, Ynetnews

( Iran feels it can act like the party with power in these negotiations.  Understandable, given Obama.  What they don’t understand  is that the US is not controlled by one thug at the top.  This may be their undoing in the end. – JW )

After signing nuclear deal, Iran, six world powers to hold meeting on implementation strategies. Iran envoy says if Islamic republic delegation feels ‘opposite side is not meeting its obligations or its actions fall short, we will revert to our previous position, cease process’

Reuters

Published: 12.01.13, 15:08 / Israel News

Envoys of Iran and six world powers will meet next week to start working out steps to implement a deal under which Tehran is to curb its nuclear program in return for some respite from sanctions, a top Iranian negotiator said.

The landmark Nov. 24 interim accord between the Islamic Republic and the United States, France, Germany, China, Russia and Britain is seen as a first step towards resolving a decade-old dispute that has stirred fears of a new Middle East war.

Iranian Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi was quoted by the state-run news agency Fars as saying in a television interview that Tehran was expecting to hear from senior European Union diplomat Helga Schmid soon.

“Schmid is supposed to call us this week and it’s likely our experts will negotiate in the coming week in Geneva or Vienna to find a mechanism for implementation,” he said.

But, underlining years of mutual distrust, Araqchi said the deal was not legally binding and Iran had the right to undo it if the powers failed to hold up their end of the bargain.

“The moment we feel that the opposite side is not meeting its obligations or its actions fall short, we will revert to our previous position and cease the process,” Fars quoted Araqchi, a senior member of Iran’s negotiating team, as saying. “We are in no way optimistic about the other side – we are pessimistic – and we have told them that we cannot trust you.”

A senior Western diplomat described the implementation phase of the deal as “extremely complex and difficult”.

Iran’s envoy to the UN nuclear watchdog agency had said on Friday that the implementation phase was expected to start by early January, with Western diplomats saying a start to sanctions relief would hinge on verification by UN inspectors that Iran was fulfilling its side of the deal.

A diplomatic opening was created after the election in June of a relative moderate, Hassan Rohani, as Iranian president, on a pledge to end Tehran’s isolation and win relief from sanctions that have battered the oil producer’s economy.

The deal is designed to halt any further advances in Iran’s nuclear campaign and to buy time for negotiations on a final settlement aimed at ensuring Tehran’s nuclear activity is wholly peaceful in nature.

Iran rejects suspicions that it has sought covertly to develop the capacity to produce nuclear weapons, saying it is enriching uranium solely for civilian energy purposes.

Obama has accepted a nuclear Iran

December 1, 2013

Israel Hayom | Obama has accepted a nuclear Iran.

Dan Margalit

The interim deal on Iran’s nuclear program has upgraded the level of discussions of its significance in the defense establishment, in academia and in joint seminars for both communities. First because the agreement is important, and second because Iran experts are unable to reach a consensus on the deal’s meaning for the future of dialogue with Tehran.

The more facts that come to light from the negotiations in Geneva, the more the agreement appears to resemble Swiss cheese. There are many holes in the agreement as well as some serious vagueness. Barack Obama and John Kerry are not persuading the average American that this was any kind of achievement. They simply assume that most of the American public are willing to have their leaders deceive them. This is what the fight is about on Capitol Hill. In the present round, Israel is not holding back its criticism of the agreement, but neither is it taking steps against the While House.

Analyzing the administration’s conduct leads to the conclusion — for which there is yet no proof — that Obama has made a decision to reconcile himself to Iran’s nuclearization. Perhaps full nuclearization, perhaps stopping at a point where Iran is a threshold country that can assemble four nuclear bombs in a very short period of time. There is no “smoking gun” to prove this circumstantial belief, but the evidence is getting stronger by the day.

The weakness of this decision from the White House’s point of view is that Obama is not able to and does not want to admit it. It represents a collapse of all America’s obligations, and a serious violation of its alliance not just with Israel, but with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, the Gulf states and to a certain extent even Turkey.

Because the administration refuses to admit that it has decided to live with the Iranian nuclear program, it is exposed to criticism in the Senate and House of Representatives, which may yet thwart the White House’s intentions.

The danger persists even if Iran does not complete the construction of a nuclear bomb and remains a threshold nation. Because if Iran is that close to a nuclear bomb, any diplomatic crisis, real or manufactured, any refusal to accept an ultimatum from Tehran, could serve as a pretext for the ayatollahs to announce that their country is completing construction of a weapon.

Who under such circumstances would use military force against Iran? Not Obama’s America. He is a president that many countries disdain. The conflict erupting at present on a different front, on the open seas near China, is an interesting example of American foreign policy’s quality control. Except that, in reality, Obama doesn’t really care.

He is turning his back on allies that arose following an imperialist agreement with Britain and France (with the involvement of czarist Russia) orchestrated by the diplomats Mark Sykes and François Georges-Picot.

These men laid the foundation for the current division of the Middle East, establishing ruling dynasties under the auspices of the great powers in Saudi Arabia, Syria, Jordan and Iraq. Obama is responding to America’s longtime allies in the region with a shrug or even worse.

His America is capitulating. The alliance with Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States, Egypt and Jordan does not speak to him. It’s not just the world that will pay the price. His own country will too, on his successors’ watch.

Rouhani says Iran will intensify nuclear work

December 1, 2013

Israel Hayom | Rouhani says Iran will intensify nuclear work.

Not only is Iran not going to dismantle any of its nuclear facilities as part of an effort to reach a long-term agreement to limit its nuclear development, it will also construct a second nuclear reactor at Bushehr, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani says.

News Agencies and Israel Hayom Staff
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani

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Photo credit: AP

Sorry we were right

December 1, 2013

Israel Hayom | Sorry we were right.

Boaz Bismuth

Israel began the ordeal of confronting Iran’s nuclear program alone, and it appears that is how it will end it.

The very imperfect “interim deal” signed in Geneva; the international conglomerates already seeing the dollar signs and reserving hotel rooms in Tehran; smiley-faced Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s interviews to the press, now being broadcast after the deal was signed; and primarily the feelers sent out between Iran and the Gulf States, including the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia — which all point to one thing: Iran will be nuclear, and that this is first and foremost our problem.

It would be so tempting to blame the Israeli government for the latest series of events, but it is impossible to complain about the efforts exerted by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which began as far back as his first stint as prime minister in 1996 to sound the alarm over the threat of a nuclear Iran. There are even those who argued he was doing too much.

And he was not the only one. Former Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin rushed to China to warn Beijing before helping to build the reactor at Isfahan. That was in 1993.

The interim agreement signed with Iran has many limitations, but the most problematic of them all stipulates that the interim deal will be valid over a period of time to be decided by the sides, and when this period is over, the Iranian nuclear program will be received similarly to any other country that has nuclear weapons and which is a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

In other words, Iran, even as it is led by this dark regime, will be able to install an unlimited amount of centrifuges and of course produce enriched uranium without violating the agreement. That is to say, the world has no more qualms with the ayatollah regime. It is free, down the road, to receive its certificate of validation.

The amazing part of the Geneva agreement — regardless of whether it is interim or final — is how quickly the world is moving today to bring Iran into the family of nations. This is what it looks like when the world in general and the White House in particular act according to their heart’s desires instead of the realities on the ground.

It is tempting to say “sorry that we were right,” but because of the gravity of the situation it is more appropriate to say “what a shame we weren’t wrong.”

Iran is happy. Next up: The Palestinians

December 1, 2013

Israel Hayom | Iran is happy. Next up: The Palestinians.

Richard Baehr

In the inverted worldview of President Barack Obama, the problem with Iran’s nuclear program was most of all that Israel threatened to attack it. Such an event would have been a catastrophe for Obama, who has been “outreaching” to Iran for the entirety of his term, and negotiating with the Iranian regime behind the backs of all of America’s presumed allies for more than a year. With a complete drawdown of U.S. forces from Iraq accomplished, and one in Afghanistan near complete, a new broader conflict in the region that an Israeli attack might precipitate, drawing Americans back into the fighting, had to be prevented.

The deal announced last week in Geneva backtracks on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty agreement that Iran has signed, and a multitude of U.N. Security Council resolutions that prohibited Iran from enriching uranium. The agreement will not prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, and at most will extend the so-called “breakout period” by a few weeks. In the term of the agreement, nothing prevents Iran from continuing to enrich uranium, no enriched uranium will leave the country, none of the near 20,000 centrifuges will be disabled or destroyed, and nothing will prevent Iran from further steps at weaponizing their nuclear program at locations in Iran the P5+1 nations do not know about and hence, will not inspect. Coupled with sanctions relief, and a new rush by foreign companies lining up to be first to invest in the “new no longer toxic Iran,” it is a very good deal for Iran. Al Arabiya is reporting that a joint Iranian-United States chamber of commerce is in the works, as well as the possible resumption of airline service between the two countries. What is next? Will President Hassan Rouhani be invited to sit with the first lady for the State of the Union address, and asked to take a bow?

One might think that a deal that is so overwhelmingly favorable for Iran — ending their international isolation, granting billions of dollars in sanctions relief, protecting their rights and their nuclear program — would be seen as a bad deal in the United States. But for Obama, it is a good deal as well, because it makes it a near certainty that Israel will not strike at Iran during the six-month period of the initial agreement.

That six-month period, we learned this week, has not even begun, since there are “details” still to be worked out between the parties, or in reality more concessions Iran demands before signing a real agreement . A State Department spokesperson estimated this week that maybe the six-month clock would start running in January, meaning that Iran bought itself two more months with no restrictions whatever on its nuclear activities (and no new sanctions), and at least eight months in total without fear of Israeli action, and almost certainly no new American sanctions as well.

Other parts of the supposed historic agreement were also unraveling, as U.S. officials agreed that the shutdown of activity at the Arak heavy water facility was not so complete. And of course, since lying has become so endemic with this White House, the denials by John Kerry that the P5+1 had granted any enrichment rights to Iran, completely collapsed, as the language of the agreement revealed that those rights were enshrined in the agreement, details to follow.

Just in case Israel had not gotten the message, or if any Israelis were foolish to even entertain the notion that they retained any free will in the matter, Britain’s Foreign Secretary William Hague made it quite clear this week that such independence would be frowned upon.

“We would discourage anybody in the world, including Israel, from taking any steps that would undermine this agreement and we will make that very clear to all concerned,” Hague told parliament, as he noted that Britain would be “on guard.” Britain, along with the United States, have now become the protectors of Iran’s nuclear program. This is not an agreement designed to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, nor the beginning of a policy of containment once they do, but a welcome wagon to the nuclear club though a Western security blanket.

All presidents are concerned with their legacy, and how they will be judged by historians. No president, however, seems to have been as fiercely committed to his legacy as Obama, since he was trying to define it at a time before he was even nominated in 2008! That legacy, as laid out to an audience of several hundred thousand breathless and politically intoxicated Berliners in June 2008 included such glorious achievements as the planet (Gaia?) starting to heal, and the oceans no longer rising. It was promises such as these that enabled the solons in Oslo to decide to award the Nobel Peace Prize to Obama even before he took office, which also seemed to “jump the gun,” so to speak.

On a policy level closer to that of mere mortals, Obama has focused most on two policy objectives — one domestic, one foreign. The domestic objective was to bring America closer to providing universal health insurance. The Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) passed in early 2010 on a strict party-line vote was the magic elixir designed to achieve the president’s domestic goal. Unfortunately, the extraordinary executive branch incompetence on display since the enrollment process began in October and the repeated lies about the impact of the legislation (revealed once millions of Americans started receiving cancellation notices from their insurance companies), have been a severe embarrassment to the White House, such that the president’s approval ratings have dropped to 40%, their lowest level since he took office.

It is becoming increasingly clear, that Iran has been an obsessive focus of the administration from the beginning and that the administration’s goal was not to prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons, but rather to end its international isolation and create a new American-Iranian rapprochement . Lee Smith summarizes what has occurred this way:

“The interim deal makes official what Obama has long been pursuing — a strategic realignment integrating Iran into a multipolar Middle East, where once-traditional American allies will no longer enjoy a privileged relationship with Washington. The signs pointing to Obama’s new configuration, downgrading Saudi Arabia and Israel and upgrading Iran, have long been apparent, if incredible.”

That Iran might obtain nuclear weapons was a secondary issue, if a concern at all. After all, in a fairer world, if Israel had nuclear weapons, why shouldn’t Iran, a far larger and more important nation on the world stage (one of the seven world powers, John Kerry supposedly assured his Iranian interlocutors last weekend)?

Obama called Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu after the deal was reached with Iran last Saturday night, but rather than trying to reassure the Israelis, the president’s message seems to have been that Netanyahu should stop whining about it, since Israeli unhappiness with the deal makes life more difficult for Obama with Congress.

American relations with Israel during the Obama years have been on two tracks — stopping Iran from going nuclear (Israel’s desire), and forcing an agreement between Israel and the Palestinians (Obama’s desire). With Israel visibly unhappy with the American deal with Iran, what does it signal for the Israeli-Palestinian track? Jonathan Freeland, the resident Israel-basher at The Guardian, thinks now is the time for Obama to ratchet up the pressure on Israel to finally get a deal done with the Palestinians. Freeland, his paper, The New York Times, Obama himself, and the other “great minds” with whom the president discusses grand strategy — Valerie Jarrett, Tom Friedman, and David Ignatius among them — are all convinced that nothing has prevented a deal in the past except for Israeli intransigence (which some of them can even spell), and Israeli settlement policy. The time has come for one more attempt to break Israel’s back (all for Israel’s own good, of course, as the encouragers of backbreaking will argue).

I think the expectation that Obama will give Israel time to salve its wounds is misguided. This is a president who came to office determined to weaken the influence of the pro-Israel community, and “rebalance” Israel’s relationship with its neighbors, Iran and the Palestinians. Rebalancing of course, can be defined here as weakening Israel’s strategic position, since Israel’s relative strength is perceived to be unfair and some of its power (and wealth) needs to be redistributed.

The president, a narcissist to the end, may think he is on a roll in the Middle East. His press clippings are certainly better these days on this front than for his health care reform. So with a bit of momentum, he may well think now is the time for him to slam down the hammer on the so-called “peace process,” or rather, slam it down once again on Israel. And if he needs a workman to do the job, he can count on John Kerry, who, once again, will be “reporting for duty.”

US foreign policy in ‘whirlfall’

December 1, 2013

US foreign policy in ‘whirlfall’ – Israel Opinion, Ynetnews.

Op-ed: Whom will Washington be able to turn to when it has to fight to reestablish its security perimeter, reassert its interests – from position of self-imposed weakness?

Jérôme Vitenberg

Published: 12.01.13, 11:18 / Israel Opinion

A quarter of a century has elapsed since the Iron Curtain fell, heralding the collapse of the Soviet empire that had perverted human rights, trampled economic freedoms and subjugated its citizens utterly. The implosion of USSR brought an end to the decades-old Cold War that had been the dominant framework of international relations since the end of World War II.

The disintegration of the communist world meant victory for the liberal democracies. It yielded an “American Moment,” the brief window in which the United States was unchallenged in its global hegemony.

But victory also left the West disoriented within a new landscape no longer defined by the bipolar battle between the free world and the Warsaw Pact. Without clearly identifiable villains, the West lost its compass.

Quickly, global militant fundamentalist organizations, fueled by an ideological hatred of the West, attacked it at large and in its heart. America took up arms in response, but the legitimacy of its wars would soon be challenged by the growing number of casualties and concerns over its invasions of foreign territory, while domestic resistance to the spiraling cost of these campaigns, along with tactical and strategic mistakes, stymied their rapid and decisive conclusion.

Appalling flaws in communicating the rationale for and the justice of the Western military enterprises significantly weakened the effectiveness of the operations as a loose coalition of anti-Western forces and opponents to American foreign interventions used every channel at their disposal to delegitimize Washington. The conflicts’ narratives were turned on their head: The theme of “War for Freedom” against aggressive Fundamentalists became the object of ridicule and was eclipsed by images of innocent civilians resisting the oppressive Western armies invading their lands.

Elected on a wave of popular discontent with both the economy and America’s overseas adventures, President Obama initiated a strategy of reconciliation with the country’s enemies, focusing on Arab states and the Muslim world. Pledged to reduce the US footprint in foreign conflicts, the president of the United States adopted a policy of appeasement based on the precept that “it is better to be loved than to be feared.”

‘Perfect storm’

This policy, which is hastening the voluntary disintegration of the Western sphere of influence, is creating a vacuum into which old and new powers moved with incredulous alacrity, led by Realpolitik statesmen with scant regard to Western sensibilities, undeterred from using force to attain their goals. In the Middle East, in Africa, and in Asia, state actors such as Russia and China, as well as fundamentalist and terrorist groups such as the Taliban or Al-Shabaab, have moved in. Even in parts of South America – America’s “back yard” – the United States is being left behind.

Yet, as gentle and as troubling as the president’s approach towards the West’s adversaries would become, it would be increasingly tougher with America’s allies, striking a blow to their interests. All over the world, dismayed friends of the United States have been required to bow to their opponents and to relinquish national security principles they consider fundamental to their survival. Decreeing that his approach would transform anti-American wolves into lambs, the leader of the free world is treating loyal allies as vassals, not only abandoning them to the maelstrom unleashed by his retreat, but handcuffing them by his policy of appeasement. Kept in containment, they remain as wounded soldiers abandoned on the battlefield.

Current US policy may be summarized by a new term, “whirlfall” – a kind of “perfect storm” formed by the whirlpool generated by the United States’ declining global presence that is reinforced by the windfall that America’s global rivals are reaping from US-imposed policy restrictions on its allies.

Sooner or later, confrontations will start between those rival new great powers, in their quest for strategic interests and natural resources.

Unhampered by scruples, they will be free to wreak war, death and misery in the arenas vacated by America – until, inevitably, they become strong enough and confident enough to raise a frontal challenge to the democratic West itself.

Then, with freedom, liberalism, democracy and its pursuit of happiness under threat, America will have no option but to respond. It will have to fight to reestablish its security perimeter and reassert its interests – but from a position of self-imposed weakness with its associated additional cost in lives and resources.

But to whom will Washington be able to turn for help? Sucked into the raging whirlpool, America’s allies will be hamstrung in their attempts to sustain themselves as their rivals nibble at every piece of the cake left to them. Not only will they have little strength to join in a reassertion of Western interests – they will be wary of placing their trust again in their unreliable former ally.

By the time Washington wakes up, the “whirlfall” will be at America’s door. But how many of its allies will answer the call when the West needs them most?

Jérôme Vitenberg is an international political analyst. He has taught political science for the London School of Economics and political science via the University of London’s International Programs at DEI College, Greece