
IRAN BECOMES REGIONAL SUPERPOWER
Iran may turn the region into
a Nuclear powder keg.
Iran may become one of the top 10 features of
the outgoing year for a number of reasons, including its nuclear
dossier and the Holocaust conference, as well as the anti-Israeli
rhetoric of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. In short, Iran
has made others view it as a regional superpower and the key
player in the Middle East.
Its nuclear program remains the top issue, with
good reason, because it threatens the Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT).
If Iran implements its nuclear program in the
proclaimed format, namely on the basis of its own uranium
enrichment technologies, this will deal a death blow to the
NPT. Iran's program will trigger the domino effect, encouraging
Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan to follow suit.
The bomb is not the issue, as Iran will most
likely decide against creating it. But it will hover merely
one step away from it, forcing Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Jordan
to cover the same distance. Tehran promises to share its nuclear
technology with Kuwait and Syria, which, taken together with
Israel's 200 nuclear charges, will turn the region into a
nuclear powder keg.
There are reasons to suspect that Iran's nuclear
program is neither peaceful nor civilian. Its Natanz facility
will have 54,000 uranium enrichment centrifuges, and it has
already put into operation two cascades with 164 centrifuges
each. Iran intends to turn on all of the 54,000 centrifuges.
What for?
Russian nuclear experts say this number will
allow Iran to produce its own nuclear fuel for 20 nuclear
power units. So far, Iran plans to turn on only one unit,
at the Bushehr nuclear power plant, which is being built with
Russia's technical assistance. The unit is expected to be
put into operation in September 2007 and start generating
electricity in November. The construction of the other 19
units is not planned so far.
On the other hand, the same experts say, given
the political will, the 54,000 centrifuges can be used to
create five to seven nuclear charges within two weeks at the
most.
Therefore, the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) cannot issue guarantees of the peaceful nature of Iran's
nuclear program, although it cannot prove its military goals
either. The IAEA has questions to Tehran which it has refused
to answer so far, keeping the world on nuclear tenterhooks.
The talks on Iran's nuclear program, as well
as endless debates by experts, political analysts and other
specialists, have turned into a cliffhanger compounded by
Iran's intricate diplomatic embroidery. More than three months
have passed since the UN's August 31 deadline, by which Tehran
should have stopped work on its first cascade of 164 uranium
enrichment centrifuges. Since then, Iran has put into operation
a second cascade and announced the intention to increase the
number of working centrifuges to 3,000 by March 2007.
It is certainly bluffing, as it does not have
the necessary capacity for this. Yet it has played a joke
on the UN Security Council no other country has dared to play
before.
Ahmadinejad's statements to the effect that
"Iran has made a crucial decision and is moving honorably
along its chosen path," and that Tehran would consider
any Security Council resolution on sanctions as a hostile
move are most likely just verbal bravado, which the world
has learned to regard calmly.
Tehran fears sanctions, or else why did Ali
Larijani, head of Iran's Supreme National Security Council,
rush to Moscow shortly before the planned stopover in Moscow
by U.S. President George W. Bush? Tehran thought President
Bush and Vladimir Putin would discuss the Iranian nuclear
dossier, and feared that Bush would convince Putin to vote
for harsh sanctions against Iran. Tehran needed Russia's support,
and Larijani received it. But nothing lasts forever.
Putin later said that Russia's support to Tehran
was aimed at encouraging it to maintain relations with the
IAEA so as to clarify the nuclear watchdog's questions and
restore the world's trust in the peaceful nature of Iran's
nuclear programs. But it appears that Tehran is not willing
to resume talks, at least not now.
On December 23, the UN Security Council voted
on the Iranian resolution. The permanent members of the council,
who form, together with Germany, a six-country group on Iran,
have coordinated sanctions against Iran. The resolution proposed
by the European Trio, which is negotiating with Iran on behalf
of the European Union, differed radically from Russia's stand.
Moscow argued that the sanctions should cover
only the areas that worry the IAEA - enrichment-related and
reprocessing activities and work on all heavy water-related
projects, and the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems.
The Security Council heeded the Kremlin's arguments,
but future developments are almost impossible to predict,
especially considering the "Persian motifs" in Tehran's
foreign policy. One way or another, Russia's neighbor, Iran,
will continue to play a key role in the region, and this is
the main result of the story with its nuclear dossier.
Source: - Persian Journal Home Page
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