How to Manage a Nuclear Iran

Obama's diplomacy is the first step. Here are steps 2 through 5.

BY GREGORY L. SCHULTE | OCTOBER 8, 2009

On Sept. 25, flanked by his French and British counterparts, Barack Obama announced that Iran was building a second underground facility for uranium enrichment. The U.S. president warned that Iran's decision to build yet another nuclear facility without notifying the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) represented a direct challenge to the nonproliferation regime. The revelation gave a sense of urgency to the Oct. 1 negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany), the first in which the United States would actively participate.

Many thought that the announcement would scuttle the Oct. 1 talks. Yet, at their conclusion, Obama announced that Tehran had agreed to open the newly exposed facility near Qom to IAEA inspectors. He also announced Iran's agreement to transfer low-enriched uranium from its first enrichment facility at Natanz to another country for fabrication into fuel rods for peaceful purposes. Iran reportedly agreed to transfer 1,200 kilograms of the 1,500 kilograms it had stockpiled, meaning that the amount remaining would no longer suffice, if further enriched, to build a nuclear bomb.

The administration deserves congratulations for its adroit diplomacy. Most analysts, including myself, were not expecting substantial results from the Oct. 1 talks. We expected Iranian negotiators to deploy their well-developed tactics of delay and diversion. Securing agreement to convert most of Iran's low-enriched uranium to reactor fuel was unexpected -- and might represent an important diplomatic breakthrough.

Still, as Obama said, "This is a constructive beginning, but hard work lies ahead." The president was right in his sober assessment. To convert a potential diplomatic breakthrough to real diplomatic success, the United States and its P5+1 partners must engage the Security Council, demand complete transparency, deny Iran a rapid breakout capability, and guard against Iran's well-developed tactics of deception and delay.

One day before exposing Iran's second enrichment facility, Obama presided over a Security Council meeting that, at the outset, unanimously adopted Resolution 1887 on nonproliferation and disarmament. The resolution's very first operative paragraph emphasized that noncompliance should be brought to the attention of the Security Council.

The Security Council has already determined that Iran's nuclear activities and past violations pose a threat to international peace and security, thus providing the basis for the council's Chapter VII resolutions imposing sanctions. Certainly the threat is only increased by the revelation of the Qom facility, which Iran has been building in secret, in violation of multiple Security Council resolutions, and -- as the president said on Sept. 25 -- in a size and configuration inconsistent with a peaceful program.

Iran's leaders argue that they were not obliged to inform the IAEA of the facility's construction because they had suspended the associated reporting requirement. However, the IAEA's outgoing director general, Mohamed ElBaradei, repeatedly made clear that Iran had no right to suspend this requirement. With the facility revealed, ElBaradei has now said plainly that Iran is on "the wrong side of the law." When the IAEA board meets to receive the director general's report on the facility, it should find Iran in noncompliance with its safeguards agreement and report this to the Security Council. As Obama said last April in Prague, "Rules must be binding. Violations must be punished."

The IAEA's report will give the Security Council good reason to act, as will Iran's violation of Security Council direction to suspend all enrichment-related activities. Although the Security Council may wish to give the P5+1 a limited time frame to negotiate with Iran, the council should start to draft two possible resolutions: one welcoming and endorsing an agreement that brings Iran into compliance with its international obligations, and the other foreshadowing the "crippling sanctions" promised by the administration if Iran refuses.

Another requirement is total transparency. In his Oct. 1 statement, Obama insisted that Iran demonstrate its commitment to transparency. In particular, he called on Tehran to grant the IAEA unfettered access to the enrichment site near Qom. Iran's leaders have agreed, and the IAEA is preparing to send inspectors to the site later this month.

But the transparency shouldn't end there. First, Iran must commit to notifying the IAEA of the construction of any other nuclear sites, and Iran's leaders cannot be allowed to hide behind the argument that they "suspended" this requirement. Worryingly, Syria also violated this requirement by secretly constructing a nuclear reactor with North Korea's help. Clandestine construction of nuclear facilities cannot become a new norm in the Middle East, or anywhere else.

Second, Iran should give the IAEA permanent access to the workshops where it manufactures and assembles centrifuges for uranium enrichment. IAEA inspectors monitored these workshops during the enrichment suspension negotiated by the EU3 -- Britain, France, and Germany -- but were expelled when Iran broke that suspension four years ago. Renewed access would give the IAEA greater insight into the scale and nature of Iran's enrichment activities, better positioning the inspectors to uncover any other hidden sites and verify any agreement that comes from the talks between the P5+1 and Iran.

Third, Iran's leaders must disclose the full extent of past work on weaponization. IAEA reports have repeatedly expressed concern about the "possible military dimensions" of Iran's nuclear program. IAEA information points toward a covert program that, according to reports, apparently included detailed design and initial engineering work on a nuclear explosive device and its integration into a re-entry vehicle for Iran's Shahab-3 missile. Iran should meet the IAEA's long-standing requests to provide full access to the information, individuals, and sites involved.

In 2007, the Security Council decided in its Resolution 1737 that Tehran "shall provide such access and cooperation as the IAEA requests ... to resolve all outstanding issues, as identified in IAEA reports." The IAEA director general has never exercised this authority, choosing instead to make "transparency requests" on a voluntary basis. Following the latest revelation about Iran's nuclear program, the director general should now make clear that his requests are fully backed by the Security Council. If Iran still refuses to cooperate, the IAEA board must be ready to report this to the Security Council. This will give added reason for sanctions should Iran continue to defy its international obligations.

 

DOMINIC FAVRE/AFP/Getty Images

 

Ambassador Gregory L. Schulte, the U.S. permanent representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency from July 2005 to June 2009, is a senior visiting fellow at the Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction at the National Defense University (NDU). This contribution reflects his personal views and not those of NDU or the U.S. government.

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HASS

3:56 PM ET

October 8, 2009

The US has violated the NPT

Iran has already offered to open its nuclear program to joint US operation to address even the hypothetical fear that it may use the program to secretly make nukes, in addition to making several other compromise offers to place greater restrictions on its nuclear program that it is legally required under the NPT.

The US however continues to ILLEGALLY demand that Iran cease enrichment. And UNSC resolutions making that demand are themselves illegal and ultra vires.

And the IAEA has never accused Iran of conducting weapons work. ElBaradi himself has repeatedly said the IAEA has no independent information to verify US claims from the so-called "Laptop of Death" -- especially since the US refuses to providet the full contents to the IAEA or IRan for verification.

 

THEBIGSHEISTER

7:07 PM ET

October 8, 2009

Were they really caught with their pants down?

All the articles I've read in regards to the recently outed Qum facility state that the Iranians revealed it (albeit in a "cryptic" fashion) a few days prior to the US announcement in order to preempt them and lessen the impact. However, I have not seen any evidence (even flimsy evidence) reinforcing this. Does anybody know of a source for this or is it just an assumption? And if it is an assumption, what factors lead us to assume this?

 

HASS

1:59 PM ET

October 9, 2009

If the NY TImes says so, it must be true

After all, if you can't trust "anonymous Government sources" repeatedly quoted by the Times, who can you trust?

 

ESTHER HAMAN

7:07 PM ET

October 8, 2009

How to Manage a Nuclear Iran

This article by Mr. GREGORY L. SCHULTE is more attempts by the Zionists and the Neo-Cons to beat the war drums. It is a total disregard to what we want to achieve with Iranians and to strengthen the NPT, which Iran is a signatory of. Under NTP, any nation is allowed to develop a peaceful nuclear technology.

However, after almost 10 years of inspections by IAEA according to you Iran still should not be allowed to have this capability. Well, many other nations who are not signatory to the NPT, also have nuclear bombs, such as Pakistan, India and the Zionists. Other states such as Argentina and Brazil have advance nuclear fuel production, but no mention of them in the IAEA inspection. So, why the double standard and why Iran?

You refer to the present UN Security Council sanctions on Iran and what was illegally passed against Iran. These sanctions have already been exposed as what they are and and expired. No one can argue that Iran is breaking any UN laws, because they are not and Dr. El Baradie has not found anything to prove otherwise. These sanctions are proven baseless which is why there are talks between Iran and West already and no one is enforcing them. You said it yourself "The IAEA director general has never exercised this authority, choosing instead to make "transparency requests" on a voluntary basis.".

Iran in the past was forced to relinquish its rights (1953), however that was then. Your argument that Iran needs to be kept under our thumbs will blow up in your face. If we are ready for another Middle Eastern war and you are beating the drum for it, then lets stop this engagement or why should there be an engagement in the first place.

It is not Iran that is buying time here. Iran does not need or wants a nuclear weapon. But this is a front for the West to appease the world and to by time to fortify the oil reserve it needs so bad. An invasion or a bombing will not subjugate Iranian population and any military posturing will be more costly than just letting Iran have the nuclear weapon. The Iranian will to fight this time is determined by their goal and what was once done to them in the past and what they want to prove to the West now.

 

GOEDEL

9:37 PM ET

October 8, 2009

When is it a bomb? Does it have to be perfect?

How efficient does a nuclear explosion have to be? Must 90% or more of the fissionable material undergo fission in order for such a bomb to be a threat to population centers? It seems to me that even a poorly engineered bomb, one whose material does not reach critical mass long enough before it is dispersed, is still a very bad threat. The concerns repeatedly raised, when will Iran have the bomb; does it have the bomb now; these seem rather beside the point. The point is does Iran (or any other country) have a nuclear weapon that can spread deadly radiation and contaminate wide areas for a long time? That to me would be threatening enough. The perfection of a bomb that is as perfect (pardon the word!) as we used on Hiroshima or Nagasaki hardly seems necessary.

Anyone who has long-lived radioactive material and the means of dispersing it over a wide area has the bomb, in my view.

 

PALDEN

12:13 AM ET

October 9, 2009

Lets Face It.

If a vegetarian who has vowed to kill you time and time again has now been found to be secretly sharpening butcher knives, what would you think and what precautionary measure would you take.

Yes we should be concerned about what Iran's intent towards Israel is. Iran has repeatedly threatened to destroy Israel and Israel has the right and the responsibility to ensure its own existence.
If Iran refuses to come clean on this, Israel may pre-emptively take out the Iranian sites and when they do they will have more justification than the U,S had for its pre-emptive invasion of Iraq based on false intelligence.

 

HASS

1:55 PM ET

October 9, 2009

Israel has nukes pointed at Tehran

The REAL nukes are in the hands of the Israelis, and they're pointed at Tehran. Israeli agents are pressing for the US to attack Iran. Who is the real danger to whom? Even the Israeli officials themselves quitely conceed that they are not threatened by Iran:

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak was quoted on Thursday as saying he does not view Iran as a threat to the existence of the Jewish state, a view that would seem to depart from Israeli statements of the recent past
http://www.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUSTRE58G0ZF20090917

 

DAVE1995

9:48 AM ET

October 9, 2009

WATCH OUT IRAN...

.... here comes the latest Hebrew Alexander, GREGORY L. SCHULTE.

 

GERONIMO

11:35 AM ET

October 9, 2009

Dirty bomb

Goedel writers:"Anyone who has long-lived radioactive material and the means of dispersing it over a wide area has the bomb, in my view.."

Yessir. An ideal weapon for anyone having it in for compact and therefore vulnerable little Israel. Relatively very straaightforward to engineer, handy enough to deliver, and easy as pie to cobble together.Adventitiously just possibly a way out of the center of the Iran Nuclear Crisis for the US. A dirty bomb in the possession of Iran leaves it to Israel, which would be immediately threatened, to react..
It could either resort to violence or some very serious negotiation. Iran must know that on questions of security Israel is not inclined to play Hamlet.
Hmmmm.

 

HASS

1:56 PM ET

October 9, 2009

Israel is always the victm

Why does Israel always try to monopolize victim status?

 
January/February 2010