Barack Obama needed a win. He needed something that
resembled an accomplishment. His sinking presidency could not withstand very
many more news reports about how he lied to the American people. The Democratic
Party could not have survived too many
more stories about hospitals and physicians refusing to treat citizens who had
signed up for their health insurance via the Obamacare exchange.
So, President Obama proudly stepped forth late last night to
tout another signature accomplishment: a negotiated deal with Iran. Many people believe that our president has replaced Obamacare with Obamappeasement.
Was the event so momentous that it required a Saturday night
presidential address? Surely, it was not.
The man who refused to commemorate the Gettysburg address
with his presence decided that a half-baked deal with Iran’s mullahs had made
so much history that he needed to step forth to claim credit.
In the world of Obama it doesn’t have to be a real
accomplishment. It must merely look like one.
Obviously, those who are terrified at the possibility of
confronting Iran are thrilled. Those whose anti-war faith will accept anything
that resembles diplomacy feel vindicated. Everyone else has denounced the deal
as a sell-out, another Munich, a public acceptance of a nuclear Iran. So much
for the axis of evil.
One suspects that, from Obama’s perspective, what matters is
that Iran not develop a nuclear weapon while Barack Obama is in office. If it
happens in 2017 he will blame it on the Bush administration or another
convenient scapegoat.
John Bolton explains the deal, while underscoring its
deficiencies:
This
interim agreement is badly skewed from America’s perspective. Iran
retains its full capacity to enrich uranium, thus abandoning a decade of
Western insistence and Security Council resolutions that Iran stop all
uranium-enrichment activities. Allowing Iran to continue enriching, and despite
modest (indeed, utterly inadequate) measures to prevent it from increasing its
enriched-uranium stockpiles and its overall nuclear infrastructure, lays the
predicate for Iran fully enjoying its “right” to enrichment in any “final”
agreement. Indeed, the interim agreement itself acknowledges that a
“comprehensive solution” will “involve a mutually defined enrichment
program.”
Bolton is not a friend of the Obama administration. He is
also an expert in this field.
Among the flaw in the agreement, he sees these:
First,
it [Iran] bought time to continue all aspects of its nuclear-weapons program
the agreement does not cover (centrifuge manufacturing and testing;
weaponization research and fabrication; and its entire ballistic missile
program). Indeed, given that the interim agreement contemplates periodic
renewals, Iran may have gained all of the time it needs to achieve
weaponization not of simply a handful of nuclear weapons, but of dozens or more….
Second,
Iran has gained legitimacy. This central banker of international terrorism and
flagrant nuclear proliferator is once again part of the international
club. Much as the Syria chemical-weapons agreement buttressed Bashar
al-Assad, the mullahs have escaped the political deep freezer….
In return for freezing, not dismantling their program, the
mullahs will receive billions of dollars in sanction relief. As might be
expected, the administration will release the money by executive order. It will
not seek Congressional approval.
American Congressional leaders, from both parties, are
deeply skeptical. Bridget Johnson reported:
Analysts
and lawmakers quickly jumped on the deal, noting that any pact that does not
halt the construction of centrifuges is basically worthless.
“Unless
the agreement requires dismantling of the Iranian centrifuges, we really
haven’t gained anything,” tweeted Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.).
Sen.
Mark Kirk, who has led tough sanctions legislation in the upper chamber along
with Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), said “this
deal appears to provide the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism with
billions of dollars in exchange for cosmetic concessions that neither fully
freeze nor significantly roll back its nuclear infrastructure.”
“Furthermore,
the deal ignores Iran’s continued sponsorship of terrorism, its testing of
long-range ballistic missiles and its abuse of human rights,” Kirk added.
Sen.
Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) said there is no “freeze” on Iran’s nuclear program and
noted it doesn’t even require the Islamic Republic to abide by UN Security
Council resolutions.
“This
agreement shows other rogue states that wish to go nuclear that you can
obfuscate, cheat, and lie for a decade, and eventually the United States will
tire and drop key demands,” Rubio said. “Iran will likely use this agreement –
and any that follows that does not require any real concessions – to obtain a
nuclear weapons capability.”
Skilled diplomat that he is, John Kerry has also managed to
alienate our Israeli allies. And not just the Israelis.
Tom Friedman reported that the Obama administration had damaged
relationships with countries throughout the Middle East:
Now,
just the thought of big brother, Iran, being reintegrated and having its own
direct relationship with the United States has set all of America’s Sunni Arab
allies — Saudi Arabia, the Gulf states, Egypt and Jordan — on edge, especially
at a time when Iran is malignly meddling in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and Bahrain.
Under normal circumstances diplomacy is about managing
relationships. For the Obama administration, it seems to be about theatrics.
As Friedman and bolton point out, Iran is a malignant influence on the region. Nothing about its sponsorship of terrorism was addressed in the agreement. Apparently, it was not sufficiently consequential.
The Times reported the sharp Israeli reaction:
Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel called the agreement “a historic
mistake,” saying in remarks that were broadcast from the start of his weekly
cabinet meeting, “Today the world has become a much more dangerous place
because the most dangerous regime in the world has taken a significant step
toward attaining the most dangerous weapon in the world.”
Mr.
Netanyahu excoriated the world’s leading powers for agreeing to Iranian uranium
enrichment for the first time and for relenting on sanctions “in exchange for
cosmetic Iranian concessions that can be canceled in weeks.”
“Israel
is not bound by this agreement,” he said, “As prime minister of Israel, I would
like to make it clear: Israel will not allow Iran to develop a military nuclear
capability.”
If you alienate your allies by doing the bidding of their
(and your) enemies, your diplomacy has been a failure.
Friedman generally likes the deal, but he believes that the
real endgame is regime change in Iran.
If so, how can lifting sanctions and welcoming the Islamic
Republic of Iran back into the world of international diplomacy advance that
goal? Keep in mind, the same Obama administration had an opportunity to stand
up for democracy in Iran during the Green Revolution of 2009. It was not even moved
to offer a gesture of verbal support for the young democracy protesters.
Apparently, it did not want to offend the mullahs.
3 comments:
Yes, it's a capitulation -- but it's not a new capitulation.
This deal is merely an extension of systematic appeasement established by the Bush administration. Bush did absolutely nothing about Iran, including looking the other way while Iran killed hundreds, perhaps thousands of our troops in Iraq via proxies. Bush wanted to get out, not get in deeper, and he wanted to preserve Iran as a negotiating partner in a Grand Bargain the provided him with a political exit from the theater. This appeasement extended to matters great and small. For instance, bamboozled conservatives couldn't figure out why the Bushies went to such lengths to avoid supporting pro-democracy forces inside Iran. And why was the Administration working so hard, through multiple channels, to get rid of the phrase "War on Terror"?
Let's never forget why Bush/Rice booted John Bolton out of the Administration. Bolton wanted meaningful action to contain rogue regimes, an unacceptable stance in an administration that had discovered it could fool its support base with empty gestures. Free of Bolton, Rice could run around the world arming and training the Palestinians, telling the press that "all options are on the table" when it comes to dealing with the NoKo's, and chattering about working together with the Europeans to take action against Iran.
So, is the Community-Organizer-In-Chief an empty suit? You bet. So was the imposter who came before him.
A very partial pow. Yes, the objective of stopping all nuclear activities in Iran has failed, but was it even possible? It seems obvious to me that, keeping it up with the previous course, the end result would have been a nuclear-armed hostile iran, just like it happened with n.korea. Only, noone really cares about n.korea while iran is easily 10x more strategically important. Of course, much depend on iranians keeping their agreement but should they fail in doing so there would be no problem in restarting, even deepening the sanctions. International politic is not backjard's child relations, its based on compromises. Iran bowed down to the international-US led pressure and wont get the n.bomb, but keeps the infrastructure to get one should the tensions escalates; the western world prevents iran to get the bomb and ease (not cancel completely) the sanctions, but has to accept the nuclear reactors. Both side are unhappy, but a reasonable agreement is reached. Only spoiled child...... er, nation like israel are unhappy, but screw them. If the USA cant get all it wants, why should they?
p.alessio has been drinking the Kood-Aid if he believes, as it appears, that the Iranian genie can be but back into the lamp with ease.
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