The abandonment
By CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER
09/19/2012 21:54
With zero prospect of his policy succeeding, Obama insists on Israeli inaction, even as Iran races to close the window of opportunity for any successful attack. Not since its birth six decades ago has Israel been so cast adrift by its closest ally.
Iran's Sajil 2 missile Photo: REUTERS
WASHINGTON – There are two positions one can take regarding the Iranian nuclear
program: (a) it doesn’t matter, we can deter them, or (b) it does matter, we
must stop them.
In my view, the first position - that we can contain Iran
as we did the Soviet Union - is totally wrong, a product of wishful thinking and
misread history. But at least it’s internally coherent.
What is
incoherent is President Obama’s position. He declares the Iranian program
intolerable - “I do not have a policy of containment; I have a policy to prevent
Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon” - yet stands by as Iran rapidly approaches
nuclearization.
A policy so incoherent, so knowingly and obviously
contradictory, is a declaration of weakness and passivity. And this, as
Anthony Cordesman, James Phillips and others have argued, can increase the
chance of war. It creates, writes Cordesman, “the same conditions that
helped trigger World War II - years of negotiations and threats, where the
threats failed to be taken seriously until war became all too real.”
This
has precipitated the current US-Israeli crisis, sharpened by the president’s
rebuff of the Israeli prime minister’s request for a meeting during his upcoming
US visit. Ominous new developments; no Obama response. Alarm bells going off
everywhere; Obama plays deaf.
The old arguments, old excuses, old
pretensions have become ridiculous:
(1) Sanctions.
The director of
national intelligence testified to Congress at the beginning of the year that
they had zero effect in slowing the nuclear program. Now the International
Atomic Energy Agency reports (August 30) that the Iranian nuclear program, far
from slowing, is actually accelerating. Iran has doubled the number of
high-speed centrifuges at Fordow, the facility outside Qom built into a mountain
to make it impregnable to air attack.
This week, the IAEA reported
Iranian advances in calculating the explosive power of an atomic
warhead. It noted once again Iran’s refusal to allow inspection of its
weapons testing facility at Parchin, and cited satellite evidence of Iranian
attempts to clean up and hide what’s gone on there.
The administration’s
ritual response is that it has imposed the toughest sanctions ever. So what?
They’re a means, not an end. And they’ve had no effect on the nuclear
program.
(2) Negotiations.
The latest, supposedly last-ditch round
of talks in Istanbul, Baghdad, then Moscow has completely collapsed. The
West even conceded to Iran the right to enrich - shattering a decade-long
consensus and six Security Council resolutions demanding its
cessation.
Iran’s response? Contemptuous rejection.
Why not? The
mullahs have strung Obama along for more than three years and still see no
credible threat emanating from the one country that could disarm
them.
(3) Diplomatic isolation.
The administration boasts that
Iran is becoming increasingly isolated. Really? Just two weeks ago, 120 nations
showed up in Tehran for a meeting of the Non-Aligned Movement - against US
entreaties not to attend. Even the UN secretary-general attended - after the
administration implored him not to.
Which shows you what American
entreaties are worth today. And the farcical nature of Iran’s alleged
isolation.
The Obama policy is in shambles. Which is why Cordesman argues
that the only way to prevent a nuclear Iran without war is to establish a
credible military threat to make Iran recalculate and reconsider. That
means US red lines: deadlines beyond which Washington will not allow itself to
be strung, as well as benchmark actions that would trigger a response, such as
the further hardening of Iran’s nuclear facilities to the point of
invulnerability and, therefore, irreversibility.
Which made all the more
shocking Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s dismissal last Sunday of the very
notion of any US red lines. No deadlines. No brightline action beyond which Iran
must not go. The sleeping giant continues to slumber. And to wait. As the
administration likes to put it, “for Iran to live up to its international
obligations.”
This is beyond feckless. The Obama policy is a double game:
a rhetorical commitment to stopping Iran, yet real-life actions that everyone
understands will allow Iran to go nuclear.
Yet at the same time that it
does nothing, the administration warns Israel sternly, repeatedly, publicly,
even threateningly not to strike the Iranian nuclear program. With zero
prospect of his policy succeeding, Obama insists on Israeli inaction, even as
Iran races to close the window of opportunity for any successful
attack.
Not since its birth six decades ago has Israel been so cast
adrift by its closest ally.
Charles Krauthammer’s email address is
letters@charleskrauthammer.com.
(c) 2012, The Washington Post Writers Group.