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Bolton warns Iran of ‘painful
consequences’
By:
msnbc.msn on: 07.03.2006
WASHINGTON
- Iran faces “tangible and painful consequences” if it continues
its nuclear activities and the United States will use “all tools
at our disposal” to stop this threat, a senior U.S. official said
Sunday, ahead of a crucial international meeting on Iran.
U.S.
Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton, speaking at a
convention of Jewish-Americans, said it is too soon for the U.N.
Security Council to impose sanctions on Iran but other countries are
talking about doing so and Washington is “beefing up defensive
measures to cope with the Iranian nuclear threat.”
Monday’s
meeting of the 35-nation International Atomic Energy Agency
governing board is expected to take stock of Iran’s continued
defiance of U.S. and European demands to end sensitive
weapons-related uranium enrichment activity and then hand the case
over to the security council.
Security
council concerns Iran Sunday again threatened to begin large-scale
nuclear enrichment if the case is taken up by the security council.
“The
longer we wait to confront the threat Iran poses, the harder and
more intractable it will become to solve,” Bolton warned.
“The
Iran regime must be made aware that if it continues down the path of
international isolation, there will be tangible and painful
consequences,” he told 4,500 delegates to the annual convention of
the American-Israel Public Affairs Committee, the leading pro-Israel
U.S. lobbying group.
He
said Iran poses a “comprehensive threat” as a state sponsor of
terrorism as well as a nuclear aspirant and so “we must be
prepared to rely on comprehensive solutions and use all the tools at
our disposal to stop the threat that the Iranian regime poses.”
The
United States has had sweeping sanctions on Iran since after the
1979 Iranian revolution but is looking at ways to further use its
Proliferation Security Initiative to deny Iran materials it needs
for its nuclear program, he said.
Bolton
reaffirmed that the United States does not see the security council
moving quickly to impose sanctions on Iran, but he pointedly noted
that “many other governments have begun to include the word
sanctions in their discourse on Iran,” implying they may take
action outside the security council.
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/11684031/
Comment:
What, pray tell does the bombastic and abrasive Bolton think the
U.S. can do about Iran (other than to threaten to invade it?) The
current state of the U.S. forces is such that they couldn’t invade
Tijuana with any hope of success. BH
US
ambassador to UN warns of “painful consequences” for Iran
by Peter Symonds
8 March 2006
In
a provocative speech to an influential pro-Israeli lobby group on
Sunday, US ambassador to the United Nations, John Bolton, bluntly
threatened Iran with “painful consequences” if it failed to
accede completely to Washington’s demands to shut down its nuclear
programs.
Bolton
told the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference
that there was an urgent need to confront Iran’s “clear and
unrelenting drive” for nuclear weapons. “The longer we wait to
confront the threat Iran poses, the harder and more intractable it
will become to solve... we must be prepared to rely on comprehensive
solutions and use all the tools at our disposal to stop the threat
that the Iranian regime poses.”
Bolton’s
belligerent remarks were directed as much against the UN and
America’s own allies, as against Iran. With Tehran on the verge of
being formally referred to the UN Security Council for punitive
sanctions, the US ambassador warned that a failure by the body to
act against Iran would “do lasting damage to the credibility of
the council”. He emphasised that the US was not solely reliant on
the UN and could take other measures against Iran—a pointed
reminder of Washington’s unilateral invasion of Iraq.
Coming
on the eve of a key International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
meeting on Iran, Bolton’s speech was obviously aimed at pressuring
Russia, China and the European Union to accepting Washington’s
demands. The message was clear: if the major powers failed to
support referral to the UN and tough UN measures, the US would go it
alone and use “all tools at our disposal” to end the alleged
Iranian nuclear threat. US President Bush and other senior officials
have repeatedly declared that all options, that is, including
military action, are “on the table”.
At
its previous meeting in early February, the IAEA board voted to
“report” Iran to the UN but held off implementing the decision
for a month to allow for further negotiations. Since then there has
been a flurry of diplomatic activity, particularly over a Russian
proposal for a joint uranium enrichment program with Iran on Russian
soil. Unlike the US, Russia as well as China and the EU countries
all have major economic interests in Iran that would be threatened
by economic sanctions or war. None of them, however, is prepared to
challenge Washington.
Bolton’s
comments set the tone for the IAEA meeting that began on Monday.
American officials promptly scuttled a tentative Russian compromise
that would have permitted Iran to continue limited, small-scale
research into uranium enrichment in return for a lengthy moratorium
on industrial scale enrichment and the resumption of intrusive IAEA
inspections of Iranian nuclear sites. After meeting with US
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov did an abrupt about face and publicly denied that any such
Russian proposal existed. More pressure was applied when Lavrov flew
to Washington for further talks with Rice and, in a break with usual
protocol, Bush himself.
US
Vice-President Richard Cheney reinforced Bolton’s threats in his
own address to AIPAC conference on Monday. “The Iranian regime
needs to know that if it stays on its present course, the
international community is prepared to impose meaningful
consequences. For our part, the United States is keeping all options
on the table in addressing the irresponsible conduct of the regime.
And we join other nations in sending that regime a clear message: We
will not allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon,” he declared.
The
choice of venue was significant. Both Bolton and Cheney chose to
deliver speeches at the AIPAC conference despite the fact that two
of its lobbyists have been indicted for receiving highly classified
Pentagon information and passing it on to an Israeli diplomat. The
documents came from the Defence Department’s top Iran specialist
Lawrence Franklin and related to US strategy towards Iran. Like the
US, Israel has threatened military action to destroy Iran’s
nuclear facilities. Bolton and Cheney were among kindred spirits at
the AIPAC conference with its rabidly pro-Israeli and anti-Iranian
audience.
No
one in the Bush administration has offered any conclusive evidence
that Iran is building nuclear weapons. Tehran has declared that it
is interested solely in a nuclear power industry and insisted on its
right as a Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty signatory to develop all
aspects of the nuclear fuel cycle, including uranium enrichment. As
in the case of Iraq, the Bush administration is simply exploiting
allegations of weapons of mass destruction as a pretext for
furthering its ambition to dominate the oil-rich Middle East. If
Tehran were to turn around and agree to all of the IAEA conditions,
Washington would rapidly invent a new excuse to confront Iran.
Yesterday,
for instance, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld provocatively
accused Iran of sending its Revolutionary Guards into Iraq to foment
violence. “They have been putting people into Iraq to do things
that are harmful to the future of Iraq,” he said. He offered no
evidence for the claim nor did he explain why Iran would be involved
when Shiite fundamentalist parties sympathetic to Tehran dominate
the Iraqi government. When asked whether the Iranian regime was
responsible, Rumsfeld offhandedly declared: “Of course. The
Revolutionary Guard doesn’t go milling around willy-nilly.”
US
Director of National Intelligence John Negroponte piled on further
accusations, repeating claims by British and US officials that Iran
was supplying sophisticated bombs to anti-occupation insurgents.
“Tehran has been responsible for at least some of the increased
lethality,” Negroponte said, by providing improvised roadside
bombs with “explosively formed projectiles” capable of
penetrating the thickest US vehicle armour.
All
of these unsubstantiated claims serve to whip up a climate of fear
at home as well as to provide a pretext for action against Iran in
the international arena. It is in this poisonous atmosphere that
members of the IAEA board of governors will vote sometime this week
to refer Iran to the UN Security Council where the pressure is
already mounting for what Cheney called “meaningful
consequences”. If it fails to get what it wants in that forum,
then as Bolton declared, the US will take unilateral action of its
own.
There
is clearly an internal debate underway in the Bush administration
over the methods to be used. The most right-wing figures like Bolton
and Cheney have made little secret of their support for military
means.
In
private talks with a group of British MPs last week, Bolton openly
discussed possible strikes against Iran. As reported by Labour MP
Eric Illsley to the Guardian newspaper, Bolton told the group:
“They Iran
must know everything is on the table and they must understand what
that means. We can hit different points down the line. You only have
to take out one part of their nuclear operation to take the whole
thing down.”
Publicly
the White House maintains that military action is a last resort.
However, there is a continuing stream of leaks from military and
intelligence sources in the US, Israel and elsewhere, indicating
that detailed planning is underway for possible air strikes on
Iran’s nuclear facilities.
An
article in the Jerusalem Post on February 20 reported that
Washington had “put out feelers” to the governments in two of
Iran’s neighbours—Georgia and Azerbaijan—about the possible
use of military bases and airfields in the event of a US attack on
Iran. While the report was officially denied, the possibility cannot
be ruled out. Late last year CIA head Porter Goss visited Turkey to
seek political, intelligence and logistical support for a potential
attack on Iran.
The
British-based Times newspaper in an article on March 5 entitled
“NATO may help airstrikes on Iran” noted the comments of Major
General Axel Tüttlemann, head of NATO’s airborne Early Warning
and Control Force, during a visit a fortnight ago to Israel.
Speaking of possible NATO involvement in a strike on Iran, he
declared: “We would be the first to be called up if the NATO
council decided we should be.” At the very least, Tüttlemann’s
remarks reflect discussions taking place in NATO headquarters in
Europe.
Citing
unnamed Israeli officials, the same story reported that Israeli
special forces are operating inside Iran searching out the
country’s nuclear facilities. “We found several suspected sites
last year but there must be more,” an Israeli military
intelligence source said. The Israeli units were operating from a
base inside northern Iraq, with US approval. Similar details emerged
in an extensive article by US journalist Seymour Hersh entitled
“The Coming Wars” published in the New Yorker in January 2005.
Of
course these “leaks” serve a number of purposes. Like the
comments of Bolton and Cheney, they ratchet up the pressure not only
on Iran, but also on US rivals in Europe and Asia to fall into line
with Washington. In the final analysis, however, this military
planning demonstrates that the Bush administration is prepared to
plunge into another reckless adventure with no regard for its
consequences and despite the ongoing disaster in Iraq.
Comment: Another Bush favorite is heard from. Question: Who has to clean
the Monkey House floor when Bolton finishes his bombastic rants?
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