Iran on the Nuclear Edge
Official leaks suggest the U.S. is
making ever more concessions.
From the Wall Street Journal
Secretary of State John
Kerry told Congress this week that no one should pre-judge a nuclear
deal with Iran because only the negotiators know what’s in it. But the truth is
that the framework of an accord has been emerging thanks to Administration
leaks to friendly journalists. The leaks suggest the U.S. has already given
away so much that any deal on current terms will put Iran on the cusp of
nuclear-power status.
The latest startling detail is
Monday’s leak that the U.S. has conceded to Iran’s demand that an agreement
would last as little as a decade, perhaps with an additional five-year
phase-out. After that Iran would be allowed to build its uranium enrichment
capabilities to whatever size it wants. In theory it would be forbidden from
building nuclear weapons, but by then all sanctions would have long ago been
lifted and Iran would have the capability to enrich on an industrial scale.
On Wednesday Mr. Kerry denied that a
deal would include the 10-year sunset, though he offered no details. We would
have more sympathy for his desire for secrecy if the Administration were not
simultaneously leaking to its media Boswells while insisting that Congress
should have no say over whatever agreement emerges.
The sunset clause fits the larger
story of how far the U.S. and its allies have come to satisfy Iran’s demands.
The Administration originally insisted that Iran should not be able to enrich
uranium at all. Later it mooted a symbolic enrichment capacity of perhaps 500
centrifuges. Last July people close to the White House began talking about 3,000.
By October the Los Angeles Times reported that Mr. Kerry had raised the ceiling
to 4,000.
Now it’s 6,000, and the
Administration line is that the number doesn’t matter; only advanced
centrifuges count. While quality does matter, quantity can have a quality all
its own. The point is that Iran will be allowed to retain what amounts to a
nuclear-weapons industrial capacity rather than dismantle all of it as the U.S.
first demanded.
Mr. Kerry also says that any deal
will have intrusive inspections, yet he has a habit of ignoring Iran’s
noncompliance with agreements it has already signed. Last November he insisted
that “Iran has lived up” to its commitments under the 2013 interim nuclear
agreement.
Yet even then Iran was testing
advanced centrifuge models in violation of the agreement, according to a report
from the nonpartisan Institute for Science and International Security. In
December the U.N. Security Council noted that Iran continued to purchase
illicit materials for its reactor in Arak, a heavy-water facility that gives
Tehran a path to a plutonium-based bomb.
The International Atomic Energy
Agency reported last week that Iran was continuing to stonewall the U.N.
nuclear watchdog about the “possible military dimensions” of its nuclear
program. On Tuesday an exiled Iranian opposition group that first disclosed the
existence of Tehran’s illicit nuclear sites in 2002 claimed it had uncovered
another illicit enrichment site near Tehran called “Lavizan-3.” The charge
isn’t proven, but Iran’s record of building secret nuclear facilities is a
matter of public record.
As for the idea that the IAEA or
Western intelligence agencies could properly monitor Iran’s compliance, a
report last year from the Pentagon’s Defense Science Board is doubtful. “At low
levels associated with small or nascent [nuclear] programs, key observables are
easily masked,” the board noted.
This is significant since the
Administration insists that any deal will give the U.S. at least one year to
detect and stop an Iranian “breakout” effort to build a bomb. Iran’s ballistic
missile programs aren’t even part of the negotiations, though there is no
reason to build such missiles other than to deliver a bomb.
The Administration’s emerging
justification for these concessions, also coming in leaks, is that a nuclear
accord will become the basis for a broader rapprochement with Iran that will
stabilize the Middle East. As President Obama said in December, Iran can be “a
very successful regional power.”
That is some gamble on a regime that
continues to sponsor terrorist groups around the world, prop up the Assad
regime in Syria, use proxies to overthrow the Yemen government, jail U.S.
reporter Jason Rezaian on trumped-up espionage charges, and this week blew up a
mock U.S. aircraft carrier in naval exercises near the Strait of Hormuz.
***
Given how bad this deal is shaping
up to be, it’s not surprising that U.S. allies are speaking out against it. “We
prefer a collapse of the diplomatic process to a bad deal,” one Arab official
told the Journal last week. Saudi Arabia has also made clear that it might
acquire nuclear capabilities in response—precisely the kind of proliferation
Mr. Obama has vowed to prevent.
No wonder many in Congress want to
hear Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next week. They look at all of
this public evidence and understandably fear that the U.S. is walking into a
new era of nuclear proliferation with eyes wide shut.
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