U.S. “Dismantling” Rhetoric Ignores Iran’s Nuclear Proposals
by alethoBy Gareth Porter | IPS | January 25, 2014
Iran’s
pushback against statements by Secretary of State John Kerry and the
White House that Tehran must “dismantle” some of its nuclear programme,
and the resulting political uproar over it, indicates that tough U.S.
rhetoric may be adding new obstacles to the search for a comprehensive
nuclear agreement.
Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said in an interview with CNN’s Jim Sciutto Wednesday,
“We are not dismantling any centrifuges, we’re not dismantling any
equipment, we’re simply not producing, not enriching over five percent.”
When
CNN’s Fareed Zakaria asked President Hassan Rouhani, “So there would be
no destruction of centrifuges?” Rouhani responded, “Not under any
circumstances. Not under any circumstances.”
Those
statements have been interpreted by U.S. news media, unaware of the
basic technical issues in the negotiations, as indicating that Iran is
refusing to negotiate seriously. In fact, Zarif has put on the table
proposals for resolving the remaining enrichment issues that the Barack
Obama administration has recognised as serious and realistic.
The
Obama administration evidently views the rhetorical demand for
“dismantling” as a minimum necessary response to Israel’s position that
the Iranian nuclear programme should be shut down. But such rhetoric
represents a serious provocation to a Tehran government facing
accusations of surrender by its own domestic critics.
Zarif
complained that the White House had been portraying the agreement “as
basically a dismantling of Iran’s nuclear programme. That is the word
they use time and again.” Zarif observed that the actual agreement said
nothing about “dismantling” any equipment.
The White House issued a “Fact Sheet” November 23
with the title, “First Step Understandings Regarding the Islamic
Republic of Iran’s Nuclear Program” that asserted that Iran had agreed
to “dismantle the technical connections required to enrich above 5%.”
That
wording was not merely a slight overstatement of the text of the “Joint
Plan of Action”. At the Fordow facility, which had been used
exclusively for enrichment above five percent, Iran had operated four
centrifuge cascades to enrich at above five percent alongside 12
cascades that had never been operational because they had never been
connected after being installed, as the International Atomic Energy
Agency (IAEA) had reported.
The
text of the agreement was quite precise about what Iran would do: “At
Fordow, no further enrichment over 5% at 4 cascades now enriching
uranium, and not increase enrichment capacity. Not feed UF6 into the
other 12 cascades, which would remain in a non-operative state. No
interconnections between cascades.”
So
Iran was not required by the interim agreement to “dismantle” anything.
What Zarif and Rouhani were even more upset about, however, is the fact
that Kerry and Obama administration spokespersons have repeated that
Iran will be required to “dismantle” parts of its nuclear programme in
the comprehensive agreement to be negotiated beginning next month.
The
use of the word “dismantle” in those statements appears to be largely
rhetorical and aimed at fending off attacks by pro-Israel political
figures characterising the administration’s negotiating posture as soft.
But the consequence is almost certain to be a narrowing of diplomatic
flexibility in the coming negotiations.
Kerry appears to have concluded that the administration had to use the “dismantle” language after a November 24 encounter with George Stephanopoulos of NBC News.
Stephanopoulos
pushed Kerry hard on the Congressional Israeli loyalist criticisms of
the interim agreement. “Lindsey Graham says unless the deal requires
dismantling centrifuges, we haven’t gained anything,” he said.
When
Kerry boasted, “centrifuges will not be able to be installed in places
that could otherwise be installed,” Stephanopoulos interjected, “But not
dismantled.” Kerry responded, “That’s the next step.”
A
moment later, Kerry declared, “And while we go through these next six
months, we will be negotiating the dismantling, we will be negotiating
the limitations.”
After
that, Kerry made “dismantle” the objective in his prepared statement.
In testimony before the House Foreign Affairs Committee December 11,
Kerry said the U.S. had been imposing sanctions on Iran “because we
knew that [the sanctions] would hopefully help Iran dismantle its
nuclear programme.”
White
House spokesman Jay Carney dismissed Zarif’s comment as “spin” on
Iran’s commitments under the Joint Plan of Action “for their domestic
political purposes”.
He
refused to say whether that agreement involved any “dismantling” by
Iran, but confirmed that, “as part of that comprehensive agreement,
should it be reached, Iran will be required to agree to strict limits
and constraints on all aspects of its nuclear programme to include the
dismantlement of significant portions of its nuclear infrastructure in
order to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon in the future.”
But
the State Department spokesperson, Marie Harf, was much less
categorical in a press briefing January 13: “We’ve said that in a
comprehensive agreement, there will likely have to be some dismantling
of some things.”
That
remark suggests that the Kerry and Carney rhetoric of “dismantlement”
serves to neutralise the Israel loyalists and secondarily to maximise
U.S. leverage in the approaching negotiations.
Kerry
and other U.S. officials involved in the negotiations know that Iran
does not need to destroy any centrifuges in order to resolve the problem
of “breakout” to weapons grade enrichment once the stockpile of 20-
percent enriched uranium disappears under the terms of the interim
agreement.
Zarif
had proposed in his initial power point presentation in October a
scheme under which Iran would convert its entire stockpile of 20-percent
enriched uranium into an oxide form that could only be used for fuel
plates for the Tehran Research Reactor.
U.S.
officials who had previously been insistent that Iran would have to
ship the stockpile out of the country were apparently convinced that
there was another way to render it “unusable” for the higher-level
enrichment necessary for nuclear weapons. That Iranian proposal became
the central element in the interim agreement.
But
there was another part of Zarif’s power point that is relevant to the
remaining problem of Iran’s stockpile of low-enriched uranium: Iran’s
planned conversion of that stockpile into the same oxide form for fuel
rods for nuclear power plants as was used to solve the 20-percent
stockpile problem.
And
that plan was accepted by the United States as a way of dealing with
additional low-enriched uranium that would be produced during the
six-month period.
An element included in the Joint Plan of Action which has been ignored thus far states:
Beginning when the line for conversion of UF6 enriched up to 5% to UO2 is ready, Iran has decided to convert to oxide UF6 newly enriched up to 5% during the 6 month period, as provided in the operational schedule of the conversion plant declared to the IAEA.
The
same mechanism – the conversion of all enriched uranium to oxide on an
agreed time frame — could also be used to ensure that the entire
stockpile of low-enriched uranium could no longer be used for “breakout”
to weapons-grade enrichment without the need to destroy a single
centrifuge. In fact, it would allow Iran to enrich uranium at a low
level for a nuclear power programme.
The
Obama administration’s rhetoric of “dismantlement”, however, has
created a new political reality: the U.S. news media has accepted the
idea that Iran must “dismantle” at least some of its nuclear programme
to prove that it is not seeking nuclear weapons.
CNN
Anchor Chris Cuomo was shocked by the effrontery of Zarif and Rouhani.
“That’s supposed to be the whole underpinning of moving forward from the
United States perspective,” Cuomo declared, “is that they scale back,
they dismantle, all this stuff we’ve been hearing.”
Yet
another CNN anchor, Wolf Blitzer, who was an official of the
American-Israel Public Affairs Committee before becoming a network
journalist, called Zarif’s statements “stunning and truly provocative,”
adding that they would “give ammunition” to those in Congress pushing
for a new sanctions bill that is clearly aimed at sabotaging the
negotiations.
The
Obama administration may be planning to exercise more diplomatic
flexibility to agree to solutions other than demanding that Iran
“dismantle” large parts of its “nuclear infrastructure”.
But
using such rhetoric, rather than acknowledging the technical and
diplomatic realities surrounding the talks, threatens to create a
political dynamic that discourages reaching a reasonable agreement and
leaves them unresolved.
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