Triumph of hope over experience…writes Michael Danby

August 17, 2015 by Michael Danby
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Forty million Americans now have healthcare. If I was an American, the President’s domestic policy, in this area alone, would impress me. Further, if I was to put myself into the shoes of the average American taxpayer, after contributing so much blood and treasure to wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, I would be naturally reluctant to support action that might lead to further military involvement in the Middle East.

Yet I cannot support the current US Administration’s Vienna nuclear deal with Iran. Its proponents suggest it will prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons, and argue that it will allow Iran to become a responsible regional player. This seems to be the triumph of hope over experience. Comments by Iran’s leaders since the deal was signed only worsens pessimism about Iran’s future role in the region because there is no discernible shift from its past role. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei said just four days after the deal was signed, “Our policies toward the arrogant government of the US have not been changed at all.” And those who favour the deal have been trying to parse and downplay what Iranian chants of “death to America” really mean at rallies in Iran since the nuclear deal was initiated.

In this picture released by an official website of the office of the Iranian supreme leader on Saturday, July 18, 2015, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivers his sermon during the Eid al-Fitr prayer at the Imam Khomeini Grand Mosque in Tehran, Iran. Khamenei said a historic nuclear deal with world powers reached this week won't change Iran's policy towards the "arrogant" government of the United States

In this picture released by an official website of the office of the Iranian supreme leader on Saturday, July 18, 2015, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivers his sermon during the Eid al-Fitr prayer at the Imam Khomeini Grand Mosque in Tehran, Iran. Khamenei said a historic nuclear deal with world powers reached this week won’t change Iran’s policy towards the “arrogant” government of the United States

Leading US Democratic Senator Chuck Schumer has announced he will not support the deal, as have other Democrats. It will not wash with me or other US supporters world-wide to characterise those who think that this sharp tilt to Iran is wrong, as supporting war. Schumer said:

“After ten years, if Iran is the same nation as it is today, we will be worse off with this agreement than without it… If one thinks Iran will moderate … one should approve the agreement… But if one feels that Iranian leaders will not moderate and their unstated but very real goal is to get relief from the onerous sanctions, while still retaining their nuclear ambitions and their ability to increase belligerent activities in the Middle East and elsewhere, then one should conclude that it would be better not to approve this agreement.”

In 1979 Congress rejected the SALT II treaty with the former Soviet Union. This did not lead to war, but to a better outcome, including the signing of a much better treaty: the START arms control treaty, in 1991.

Falsely asserting that the only alternative to signing the deal is going to war is an obvious tactic to confront Congressional critics, including US Democrats. However, by weakening the sanctions regime, the US has removed its main bargaining chip. Progress to deep, real and fair disarmament occurred after the US Senate defeated the SALT II treaty. The START treaty showed the alternative is a better treaty under the pressure of existing sanctions.

This is a bad deal. Under it, Iran achieves its goals—to have sanctions lifted while retaining its breakout capability. Worse, it gained international legitimacy for its nuclear program. Even if one supported this unequal arms control arrangement, how could the P5+1 justify lifting the arms embargo on ballistic missiles after eight years and unlimited access to conventional weapons after five? All the while, the P5+1 refused to use the leverage that they had accumulated through the hard-biting sanctions in order to compel Iran to admit, let alone give up its ambitions for nuclear weapons. America compromised on the issue of Iran enriching uranium (and, in doing so, performed a 180-degree turn from its position before and during early negotiations). Since 2013, it even scaled back covert American attempts to hinder Iran’s nuclear project during negotiations.

Even if one was willing to turn a blind eye to the crossing of all our red lines in the Vienna deal, as Admiral James Stavridis (ret.), the former NATO Supreme Allied Commander said, the verification regime resembles Swiss cheese: “You can drive a truck through some of the holes”. Iran has been hiding nuclear infrastructure from the IAEA for years. And this deal allows up to 28 days’ notice for Iran to sanitise any area ahead of UN inspectors (though, in case that’s not enough, senior Iranians have been lining up to say that inspectors will not be allowed to inspect military sites). Obama’s assertion that any moves towards weaponisation will leave traces is false. Highly enriched uranium will leave traces, but not other give-aways of intended military use, such a neutron initiators, warhead designs and trial models of key components of a bomb.

Michael Danby

Michael Danby

However, the most astonishing thing I’ve seen in this whole debate is US Secretary of State John Kerry’s testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee. According to Kerry, pursuant to a secret side deal, the IAEA will agree to receive samples of nuclear triggers (explosives) tested at the Parchin military complex collected by the Iranians themselves! As Senator Tom Cotton said, this is like a football drug cheat being allowed to send their own urine sample back to the NFL.

The deal’s advocates say that if all the compromises fail, and Iran refuses to comply with its obligations, sanctions will ‘snap back’. But they won’t. It’s not just Russia or European countries that have vested commercial and military interests in not rocking the boat by “snapping back” sanctions at the Security Council level. With all those sanctions being unwound, many countries, including Britain, France, Germany, the US and even Australia, are salivating at the prospect of dramatically increased trade.

If the only problem of the Iran deal was that it, all but, guarantees Iran will become a nuclear weapons power whenever it so chooses in 10 to 15 years, that would be bad enough. But concern rightly remains about the benefits the nuclear deal will provide to Iran’s aggressive regional policy. It’s not just that lifting of sanctions will deliver Tehran a $150 billion cash infusion. The deal also sends the message that the international community is willing to live with Iranian regional aggression, including through its proxy groups like Hezbollah (classified as a terrorist organisation by parliaments all over the world, including Australia). As Walter Russell Mead said in his testimony to the US Senate Committee on Armed Services, “it is quite possible that the regional consequences of the agreement would be so severe that even a relatively effective nuclear agreement could be a net negative for American interests in the region.”

Saudi (and most other Arab) leaders snubbed even the prospective deal by not attending a summit with Obama before the deal was signed. Worse, from the point of view of proliferation, the Saudis have since hinted they need their own nukes.

President Obama has made it crystal clear that his priority is this deal, whatever the regional implications.  If pressure is put on Iran over its prolonging of the Syrian civil war, its undermining of democratically elected governments in Iraq and Afghanistan, or its prosecution of civil war in Yemen, Tehran will hint it is rethinking its adherence to the nuclear deal, and pressure will quickly dissipate.

Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop became the first of her peers to visit Iran in many years. Since her mission to curry favour with Tehran, an intelligence sharing deal has been announced, as has Australia’s willingness to establish Iranian consulates in Sydney or Melbourne, even though this would exacerbate existing tensions between Sunnis and Shia.

The great Churchill said, in an earlier era, that this strategy of accommodation was premised on feeding the “crocodile, hoping it will eat him last”. This Vienna arrangement is being voted on by responsible US Congressman and Senators. Hopefully with a vote on all sides, it will not be ratified. There are people of goodwill who have different views. President Obama genuinely believes that his pressure on his own legislature, as well as Germany, France and Britain was the right thing to edge Tehran towards less belligerence. It is infantile to support the deal because the current Israeli PM (who many people disagree with on other issues) opposes it.

Autonomous sanctions passed by countries like Australia and Canada should not be abandoned as they were prompted by illegal Iranian behaviour documented by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

The alternative is not war. The alternative is a good dose of patience, sticking with the sanctions that bought Iran to the table in the first place. Rejection and sanctions can bring us to a better nuclear control arrangement with Iran, as eventually happened with the START Treaty and the Russians.

Michael Danby is Federal Labor Member for Melbourne Ports

 

Comments

9 Responses to “Triumph of hope over experience…writes Michael Danby”
  1. Leon Poddebsky says:

    The targeting of Israel / Jewish national self-determination by the ALP at its recent conference is a tradition that was inaugurated by Messrs Whitlam, Evans, Hartley et al
    many years ago.

    That targeting is sheer malice since no Australian national interest is served by it.
    On the contrary; the ALP’s anti-Israel position conflicts with Australia’s national interest in that it undermines efforts at stabilisation in the Middle East.

    • Henry Herzog says:

      There you go again Mr Poddebsky; making up history as you go along in the effort to vilify the ALP as being Anti-Israel. I know that you are using the tactic of, if you repeat a lie enough times people will start to believe it. But seriously, you’ll have more success with getting people to believe that Jews wear hats to conceal their horns.

      • Paul Winter says:

        Henry, your ad hominem attack on Leon is offensive and your claim that Leon invents history is plain wrong. Wrong, but typical of totalitarian tactics to intimidate opponents, stifle debate and to portray themselves as morally superior.

        When Whitlam came to power, he shifted Australia’s policy from pro-Israeli to an “even-handed” one. It was immoral then and it is now; one cannot be even-handed between a criminal and a cop. You know the history and your accusation of Leon lying is built on a lie, another tactic typical of totalitarians.

        And don’t you dare turn around and accuse me of being a right-wing, conservative, fascist, whatever. I was still a member of the ALP when Whitlam was elected and I only let my membership lapse when Hawke’s policies became to right-wing for me. The difference between you and me is that I decide matters not according to right/left ideologies but on what I deem to be right or wrong according to my principles which are democratic, humanitarian and, yes,Jewish.

        • Henry Herzog says:

          I haven’t got time to reply to your comments, Mr Winter; suffice to say that it’s not unusual for those on the right, who hurl abuse at their opponents, to claim victimhood when subjected to criticism.

  2. Leon Poddebsky says:

    Did the ALP conference have time to yak about the Iran nuclear deal?

    • Henry Herzog says:

      The only yaking done on the deal with Iran has been between our foreign affairs mister, Julie Bishop, and the Iranians, on how to re-establish trade relationships so our money, as a consequence, will flow into Iran. And, I wonder, what Iran will do with the money. And, of course, the other deal; trading Iranian asylum seekers, who tried to escape from the tyrannous regime there, and probably will face the death penalty on their return, for bright young, I assume, hand picked tertiary students to study at our universities, where, I hazard to guess, will provide much needed assistance in demonizing Israel.

  3. Lynne Newington says:

    For me, I was pleased to see Danby making his position clear on the Iran issue with the Federal Government sending it’s usual mixed messages. Whether it has anything to do with the Vatican supporting it with all our connection there has any influence or not.
    If the Pope agree’s, then it’s eventually a goer, just like the climate change……

  4. Leon Poddebsky says:

    Closer to home, can any one tell me for how long Messrs Danby and Dreyfus spoke against the recent ALP conference resolution about recognition of a “Palestinian” state?

    I noted that Mr Albanese, an MP of the same party, spoke for his conscience and against the ALP’s resolution endorsing turnback of asylum seeker boats, despite a majority against him on this.

    Interesting contrast, isn’t it?

    • Henry Herzog says:

      It doesn’t matter how many times you repeat that the ALP voted to recognize a Palestinian state, it won’t make it true, even though that form of propaganda has proved very effective in the past. And this targetting of Jewish Labor MPs is disturbing, incinuating that they are traitors. Or is it because they make easy targets for you?
      Something else Mr Poddebsky got wrong: Anthony Albanese actually endorsed the turnback policy. Another fear mongering attempt that Labor would let all these “illegal” Muslims invade the country.

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