This important article, by Youaf Butt,
was published by the Christian Science Monitor (9/5/12). Butt, a
nuclear physicist, is professor and scientist-in-residence at the
Monterey Institute of International Studies.
"An Israeli strike won’t delay
Iran’s nuclear weapons program. It will start it."
In spite of the hype, there is no
definitive evidence Iran is working to develop a nuclear weapon. A
new study suggests that the one thing that could launch an Iranian
drive to weaponize, however, would be an Israeli strike.
Monterey, Calif.
Last week, Joint Chiefs of Staff
Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey told reporters that an Israeli attack on
Iran would “clearly delay but probably not destroy Iran’s nuclear
program.” This is true enough, but it is important to note that the
general did not say Iran’s nuclear weapons program.
While
Iran’s ongoing nuclear enrichment program could be used to gather
the material needed for a bomb, there is no definitive evidence that
Iran has kicked off such a weaponization effort. The one thing that
would almost surely launch an Iranian drive to weaponize, however,
would be an Israeli strike.
While there is no clear indication Iran
is currently working on a nuclear weapon, there is considerable
evidence to the contrary. In fact, following the release of the 2011
National Intelligence Estimate on Iran, US Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper confirmed in the spring of 2011 that he
had a “high confidence” that Iran had not restarted their nuclear
weapons program.
And International Atomic Energy Agency
inspectors continue to meticulously monitor Iran’s stockpile of
enriched uranium to make sure none is being diverted to any military
related activities. Mohamed El-Baradei, the Nobel Peace Prize
laureate who spent more than a decade as the director of the IAEA,
said that he had not “seen a shred of evidence” that Iran was
pursuing the bomb during his time at the agency (1997 – 2009),
adding “All I see is the hype about the threat posed by Iran.”
Even Defense Secretary Leon Panetta
acknowledged this fact: “Are [the Iranians] trying to develop a
nuclear weapon? No. But we know that they’re trying to develop a
nuclear [weapons] capability. And that’s what concerns us.”
Of course, a nuclear weapons capability
comes with the territory: Any nation with a fully developed nuclear
fuel cycle has such a weapons capability. In fact, this could be
considered a major flaw in the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty. For
instance, Japan, Argentina, and Brazil also have a latent nuclear
weapons capability. Just like you can't get a speeding ticket for a
car that is capable of going 110 miles per hour, it is not illicit to
have a latent nuclear weapons capability.
An Israeli strike on Iran could change
this latent capability into an active weaponization program. Iran’s
response would likely include the expulsion of IAEA inspectors and a
break-neck race to the bomb – not to mention the possibility of a
region-wide conflagration and sky-high gas prices.
An Israeli strike would also have a
“rally-around-the-flag” effect on the Iranian populace, allowing
the regime to crack down further on political opponents and silence
critics, cementing the regime’s authority.
Recent analysis shows that a previous
Israeli strike – in 1981, on Iraq’s civilian Osirak nuclear
reactor complex – led Saddam Hussein to demand a nuclear deterrent
and was actually the trigger for Iraq launching a full-scale effort
to weaponize. A decade later, by the time of the 1991 Gulf War, Iraq
was on the verge of a nuclear weapons capability.
As researcher Malfrid Braut-Hegghammer
explains in a recent International Security article, such ostensibly
“preventive attacks can increase the long-term proliferation risk
posed by the targeted state.”
Her research suggests that the
conventional wisdom that Israel’s 1981 attack on Osirak denied Iraq
a nuclear weapons capability no longer holds up: The strike actually
created unprecedented pressure inside the Iraqi national security
apparatus to pursue the bomb more vigorously than ever.
t is clear that senior echelons of the
Israeli national security establishment understand this dynamic
perfectly and are firmly against any strike on Iran.
For
instance, former Mossad chief Efraim Halevy recently told Haaretz:
“[W]hat I recommend is trying to calm the Iranian-Israeli conflict
and not escalate it.”
He continues: “It is possible that,
in the end, we will have no choice and will be forced to
attack.....But before venturing on such an extreme and dangerous
action, I suggest making a supreme effort to avoid it. We must not
hem the Iranians in and we must not push them into a corner. We have
to try to give them an honorable way out. It’s always worth
remembering that the greatest victory in war is the victory that is
achieved without firing a shot.”
It seems to be only some of Israel’s
top political leaders who are calling for a strike. Commentators
Nahum Barnea and Simon Shiffer wrote in Israel’s biggest-selling
daily, Yedioth Ahronoth: “Insofar as it depends on Binyamin
Netanyahu and Ehud Barak, an Israeli military strike on the nuclear
facilities in Iran will take place in these coming autumn months,
before the US elections in November.”
They later explain: “There is not a
single senior official in the establishment – neither among the
[Israeli Defense Forces] top brass nor in the security branches, or
even the president – who supports an Israeli strike at the moment.”
So if an Israeli strike on Iran is such
a transparently bad idea, why does Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu keep threatening one? Many – including Israeli
politicians – speculate that this posturing is simply a cynical
ploy to try to influence the outcome of the US elections by trying to
paint Obama as weak on defense.
Former Israeli defense minister and
current Kadima party leader Shaul Mofaz put it bluntly to Mr.
Netanyahu, saying recently, “Mr. Prime Minister, you want a crude,
rude, unprecedented, reckless, and risky intervention in the US
elections. Tell us who you serve and for what? Why are you putting
your hand deep into the ballot boxes of the American electorate?”
Quite apart from the fact that an
Israeli attack on Iran would be against international law, it would
likely convince Iran to kick out IAEA inspectors and kick off
full-fledged nuclear weaponization.
As Ms. Braut-Hegghammer’s new
analysis of the consequences of the 1981 Israeli strike on Iraq
explains: “Such attacks may not only speed the targeted state’s
efforts to produce nuclear weapons, but also create a false sense of
security in the outside world.”
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