The Iranian Threat That Never Was
by alethoBy Sheldon Richman | Future of Freedom Foundation | March 26, 2014
If
you take politicians and the mainstream media seriously, you believe
that Iran wants a nuclear weapon and has relentlessly engaged in covert
efforts to build one. Even if you are aware that Iran signed the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and is subject to International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections, you may believe that those who run the
Islamic Republic have cleverly found ways to construct a
nuclear-weapons industry almost undetected. Therefore, you may conclude,
Democratic and Republican administrations have been justified in
pressuring Iran to come clean and give up its “nuclear program.”
But you would be wrong.
Anyone
naturally skeptical about such foreign-policy alarms has by now found
solid alternative reporting that debunks the official narrative about
the alleged Iranian threat. Much of that reporting has come from Gareth
Porter, the journalist and historian associated with Inter Press Service.
Porter has done us the favor of collecting the fruits of his dogged
investigative journalism into a single comprehensive and accessible
volume, Manufactured Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.
A
grain of truth can be found at the core of the official story. Iranian
officials did indeed engage in secret activities to achieve a nuclear
capability. But it was a capability aimed at generating electricity and
medical treatments, not hydrogen bombs.
Porter
opens his book by explaining why Iran used secretive rather than open
methods. Recall that before the 1979 Islamic revolution, Iran was ruled
by an autocratic monarch, the shah. The shah’s power had been eclipsed
in the early 1950s by a democratically elected parliament. Then, in
1953, America’s Eisenhower administration sent the CIA in to foment
civil discord in order to drive the elected prime minister, Mohammad
Mossadegh, from office and restore the shah’s power.
During
his reign, the shah, a close ally of the United States and Israel,
started building a nuclear-power industry — with America’s blessing.
Iran’s Bushehr reactor was 80 percent complete when the shah was
overthrown.
When
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini became Iran’s supreme leader in 1979, he
cancelled completion of the reactor and stopped related projects. But
“two years later, the government reversed the decision to strip the
[Atomic Energy Organization of Iran] of its budget and staff, largely
because the severe electricity shortages that marked the first two years
of the revolutionary era persuaded policymakers that there might be a
role for nuclear power reactors after all,” Porter writes.
The
new regime’s goals were “extremely modest compared with those of the
shah,” Porter adds, consisting of one power plant and fuel purchased
from France. Take note: the Iranian government did not aspire to enrich
uranium, which is the big scare issue these days.
Iran
brought the IAEA into its planning process, Porter writes, and an
agency official, after conducting a survey of facilities, “recommended
that the IAEA provide ‘expert services’ in eight different fields.”
Porter notes that the IAEA official said nothing about an Iranian
request for help in enriching uranium, “reflecting the fact that Iran
was still hoping to get enriched uranium from the French company,
Eurodif.”
Had
things continued along this path, Iran today would have had a
transparent civilian nuclear industry, under the NPT safeguard, fueled
by enriched uranium purchased from France or elsewhere. No one would be
talking about Iranian centrifuges and nuclear weapons. What happened?
The Reagan administration happened.
Continuing
the U.S. hostility toward the Islamic Republic begun by the Carter
administration, and siding with Iraq when Saddam Hussein’s military
attacked Iran, the Reagan administration imposed “a series of
interventions … to prevent international assistance of any kind to the
Iranian nuclear program.” Not only did President Reagan block American
firms from helping the Iranians; he also pressured American allies to
participate in the embargo. This was in clear violation of the NPT,
which recognizes the “right” of participating states to acquire nuclear
technology for civilian purposes.
No
wonder Iran turned to covert channels, most particularly A.Q. Khan, the
Pakistani who “was selling nuclear secrets surreptitiously.” This would
have been the time for Iran to buy weapons-related technology —
however, Porter writes, “there is no indication that [Khan’s Iranian
contact] exhibited any interest in the technology for making a bomb.”
This is indeed a manufactured crisis.
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