Handheld users: view this page better on http://m.socialistparty.org.uk

Link to this page: http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/issue/478/2169

From The Socialist newspaper, 15 March 2007

US continues threats over Iran's nuclear ambitions

TENSIONS BETWEEN the US and Iran became feverish as the United Nations (UN) security council resolution (insisted upon by the US) instructing Iran to suspend its nuclear programme, passed its 21 February deadline. UN council members are now discussing imposing further sanctions on Iran.

Chris Moore

The UN's International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported that since the resolution, Iran has expanded its nuclear industry. Tehran claims it is for domestic use and is entitled to do so as a member of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. But with neighbouring hostile nuclear powers, including the US in Iraq that has talked openly of Iranian 'regime change', and having aspirations as a regional power, Iran may well intend to develop nuclear weapons.

Recently, some commentators have predicted an imminent airforce strike on Iran's nuclear installations by the US or its proxy force Israel. They have cited US president George Bush's military build up in the region and his ratcheting up of anti-Iran rhetoric, playing up the idea of Iran being a nuclear threat and recently accusing it of orchestrating attacks on the US military in Iraq.

Last year US vice president Dick Cheney said: "We will not allow Iran to have a nuclear weapon" and Bush said "the possibility that Israel would carry out a strike against Iran's nuclear installations could not be ruled out." Israel was reported as carrying out preparations for an attack.

But the Iranian nuclear programme is embryonic, frequently breaks down and is at least 5-10 years away from producing functioning weapons, especially after the break up of the nuclear smuggling network of Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. Russia halted its supply of materials two days before the UN resolution deadline, claiming late payments from Iran.

Bush rejected the recent US Iraq Study Group's advice to enter into talks with Iran and Syria, instead sending a 21,500 troop 'surge' to Iraq aimed against the Iraqi Shi'ite Mahdi army and other militias. But much of the US ruling class and military opposes Bush's reckless policy. General Pace, chair of the US joint chiefs, publicly questioned Iran's involvement in supplying weapons to Iraqi militias.

Dire consequences

As a result of this growing pressure on Bush and his fellow neo-cons to alter their stance, the US reluctantly entered into a deal with North Korea over its nuclear weapons and toned down their provocative language in relation to Iran. US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice even welcomed the invitation of Iran and Syria to a conference to discuss the situation in Iraq.

However the US is still pressing for further sanctions aimed at isolating Iran, insisting it suspends its uranium enrichment programme. Iran has indicated it is open for talks as long as the enrichment condition is dropped.

Bush is now the most isolated US president since Richard Nixon at the end of the Vietnam War. His neo-conservative agenda lies in tatters. The overstretched US military is trapped in a quagmire in Iraq and 80% of Americans opposed the troop surge. Defeated in the mid-term elections, Bush's foreign policy strategy of 'democratisation' of the Middle East is over.

A US attack on Iran would have catastrophic consequences. The US and NATO military in Iraq and Afghanistan would face fierce retaliation from forces sympathetic to Iran. Iran is the fourth biggest oil producer in the world and so could easily disrupt supplies.

It could move to block oil tankers from the Arab Gulf states passing through the Strait of Hormuz or launch missile attacks on US oil suppliers in the Gulf area, so pushing up oil prices and possibly triggering a global economic downturn.

Iran has developed close ties with Russia, China and Venezuela, so the US would face a reaction from these countries. It is also the case that massive popular reaction would explode across the Arab and Muslim world, threatening pro-western regimes like Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

Iran has long held aspirations to be the dominant regional power, sponsoring parties such as Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories. Before 11 September 2001 it was virtually surrounded by Sunni controlled states, but the removal of Saddam in Iraq and the initial rout of the Taliban in Afghanistan, its most powerful adversaries, enormously strengthened its position.

Regional struggle

The key to Iran's ambitions lies in Iraq. An editor of the Iranian newspaper Shargh puts it this way: "Iran and Iraq's national interests are intertwined". Not only are Shias now in power in Iraq, but their main leader, Ayatollah Sistani, is close to the Iranian regime.

There is a vying for power between the US and Iran in the region. Tehran is not only engaged in nuclear development but has also increased defence spending by almost $2 billion in two years.

Iranian president Ahmadinejad swept to power in 2005 on a populist programme of redistributing oil revenues to the poor. Despite increasing social spending by 25% his popularity has fallen since then. Unemployment is 11% and inflation between 12% and 24%.

Tomatoes for instance cost an enormous 30,000 rial (£1.65) per kilo while the average wage is just £225 a month. A Tehran grocer explained his situation: "The most I make a day is $13, imagine how much I have to make in order to eat and not die." (Al Jazeera 26/2/07)

Parliament is now in open revolt and Ahmadinejad's allies were routed in municipal elections late last year.

In response to his domestic woes the Iranian president took a belligerent attitude towards foreign policy, goading the US over Iran's nuclear ambitions and making inflammatory anti-Semitic gestures, in particular by organising a conference questioning the Holocaust. He hopes to rally nationalist and religious sentiment in the face of American threats.

But some of the mullahs have moved in a more pragmatic direction and made attempts to rein in Ahmadinejad. Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei rebuked the president for refusing to take sanctions seriously, worried about the effect they are having on the economy.

The authorities have initiated a repressive clampdown after student protests in November last year, with arrests of opposition journalists. Recently, Vahed bus workers protested outside the Revolutionary Court at the trial of their trade union leader accused of undisclosed activities against the state.

With the economy a mess and 80% of exports oil-based, the mullahs worry about more unrest being sparked. So chief foreign advisor Ali Akbar Velayati was ordered to say that suspending uranium enrichment is not a red line for the regime and former president Rafsanjani has echoed his words.

Any military action against Iran by the US hawks is likely to only help Ahmadinejad and the repressive Iranian regime. It would serve as a rallying point for the Iranian masses, and the mullahs may feel a change of leader at such a time would be interpreted as a sign of division and weakness.

But a dangerous game of bluff and counter-bluff is being played and given the stupidity of the Bush government, air strikes or an accidentally sparked confrontation are still possible. The masses of Iran and the Middle East would suffer severe consequences.

Why not click here to join the Socialist Party, or click here to donate to the Socialist Party.


In The Socialist 15 March 2007:

£billions for rich... Pennies for us!

Minimum wage insult


Socialist Party NHS campaign

UNISON Health group votes for summer demo

Hewitt's 'day of exchange'


Socialist Party news and analysis

Fighting the cuts in Camden

Lambeth council attacks services for vulnerable people

Barking BNP don't oppose council cuts

Lewisham council's outrageous attack

Kurdish asylum seekers living in fear


Northern Ireland and Scotland

Northern Ireland Assembly elections: Another sectarian headcount...

We Won't Pay Campaign conference success

Solidarity builds party profile ahead of elections


Marxist analysis: history

February revolution 1917 - what lessons for today?


International socialist news and analysis

US continues threats over Iran's nuclear ambitions

Iraq war: Convicted Bush official is 'fall guy' over WMD scandal


International Women's Day

Celebrating International Women's Day


Housing

Tenants vote no to council housing sell-off

Market-driven 'social housing' threatens tenants


Environment and socialism

Will government plans stop climate change?


Socialist Students

Build the campaign to defeat fees

International Socialist Resistance (ISR) and Socialist Students conference


Campaign for a New Workers Party

Trade Unions and the Labour Party: CWU branch asks some awkward questions

Campaign for a New Workers' Party conference


Workplace news and analysis

Reinstate Dave Condliffe now

UNISON leaders lead members into dead end

SOUTHAMPTON council strike

PCS prepares for more struggles

Right wins lecturers' union leadership - on a 14% turnout


 

Home   |   The Socialist 15 March 2007   |   Join the Socialist Party

Subscribe   |   Donate   |   Bookshop






Join the Socialist Party Join us today!

Printable version Printable version

email to friend email to friend

Facebook   Twitter

Related links:

US:

triangleThem & Us

triangleFight the Tories' Welfare Reform Bill

triangleLondon Socialist Party: Occupy USA

triangleUnilever strike: 'It's us that make them their money!'

triangleUSA: Occupy movement links with working class

triangleInside Job: Capitalism is a failed system: support the socialist fightback

Iran:

triangleSalford Socialist Party: Will there be war over Iran?

triangleBrighton Socialist Party: Will there be a war with Iran?

triangleRevolution in Iran: 1979 and Now

triangleWhere now for the Iranian revolution?

Iraq:

triangleIraq war: Labour's lie machine

triangleBlair Must Go

triangleKelly Death Deepens Blair's Crisis

Oil:

triangleStriking oil tanker drivers demand meaningful talks

triangleStrike action by Jet tanker drivers

triangleKazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!

Ahmadinejad:

triangleRegion-wide revolution of the Arab people

Sanctions:

trianglePeace activists murdered by reactionary Israeli army

trianglePalestine: "No excuse can justify this atrocity"

Israel:

triangleIsrael: General strike over job security

triangleSocialist MEP among Gaza peace activists kidnapped by IDF

triangleYouth protest movement grows in Israel

Nuclear weapons:

triangleBlockading Britain's warhead factory

triangleBlair (and Tories) get their Trident vote

triangleLewisham leads the way

Afghanistan:

trianglePoppy mania for bosses...

trianglePicture slide show: Marking ten years since the invasion of Afghanistan

triangleAfghan war

Middle East:

triangleSyria: Eight months of mass protests met with bloody brutality

triangleMiddle East and North Africa

triangleJordan: 'Reforms' fail to halt growing opposition

International

International

8/2/12

Egypt

Mubarak's state machine blamed for football massacre

1/2/12

Tunisia

Interview: the Tunisian revolution one year on

1/2/12

Eurozone

EU summit - no capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis

25/1/12

Egypt

Egypt - A year of revolution and counter-revolution

18/1/12

Ireland

Irish 'poll tax' battle has begun

18/1/12

Poll tax

Greece: Non-payment movement against new housing tax

18/1/12

Nigeria

Nigeria: Fuel strike suspended

11/1/12

Nigeria

Nigeria shut down at start of indefinite general strike

4/1/12

Nigeria

Nigeria: Boko Haram's Christmas Day bombings

4/1/12

USA

USA: Occupy movement links with working class

16/12/11

Kazakhstan

70 Dead & 500 wounded by riot police in Kazakhstan

14/12/11

Elections

"Putin is a thief", "Putin is a thief"

14/12/11

Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan - 20 years of authoritarianism!

7/12/11

Portugal

Portugal: Build on the general strike action

7/12/11

Ireland

Ireland: Resist latest austerity attacks

triangleMore International articles...

 Latest Posts

triangle10 Feb The battle of Saltley Gates

N30 - Millions strike back at Con-Dem government on 30 November 2011, photo Paul Mattsson

triangle9 Feb NUT and PCS launch consultative surveys to build for ongoing pensions...

triangle9 Feb Jet tanker drivers force employers to negotiate

Hardest Hit Protest: Disabled people and their families protest in central London against government spending cuts, photo Paul Mattsson

triangle8 Feb London - a tale of two cities

triangle8 Feb Salford campaign saves day care centres

NHS demo London, May 2011 , photo Paul Mattsson

triangle8 Feb Save the NHS!

Picket line at Stagecoach,  Rotherham depot 8.2.12 , photo by Alistair Tice

triangle8 Feb Stagecoach South Yorkshire - management getting desperate

More ...

 What's On

triangle11 Feb Socialist Party national youth meeting

triangle13 Feb Manchester Socialist Party: Lenin's State and Revolution

triangle13 Feb Leeds City & Bradford Socialist Party: The crisis of capitalism in the eurozone and Britain

triangle13 Feb Aylesbury Socialist Party: What is Marxism?

triangle13 Feb Birmingham Socialist Party: Socialism and religion

triangle14 Feb Derby Socialist Party: China - Will the economic boom continue?

triangle14 Feb Hatfield Socialist Party: Trade unionists and socialists standing against the cuts

triangle14 Feb Bristol Central Socialist Party: The 1917 February revolution in Russia

triangle14 Feb Hyde Park & Headingley Socialist Party: Perspectives for Britain

triangle15 Feb Wakefield & Pontefract Socialist Party: Fighting the cuts - What's socialism got to do with it?

More ...

Categories

1-9 

1-9 


Select articles from month:

February 2012

January 2012

December 2011

November 2011

October 2011

September 2011

August 2011

July 2011

June 2011

May 2011

April 2011

March 2011

February 2011

January 2011

December 2010

November 2010

October 2010

September 2010

August 2010

July 2010

June 2010

May 2010

April 2010

March 2010

February 2010

January 2010

December 2009

November 2009

October 2009

September 2009

August 2009

July 2009

June 2009

May 2009

April 2009

March 2009

February 2009

January 2009

December 2008

November 2008

October 2008

September 2008

August 2008

July 2008

June 2008

May 2008

April 2008

March 2008

February 2008

January 2008

December 2007

November 2007

October 2007

September 2007

August 2007

July 2007

June 2007

May 2007

April 2007

March 2007

February 2007

January 2007

December 2006

November 2006

October 2006

September 2006

August 2006

July 2006

June 2006

May 2006

April 2006

March 2006

February 2006

January 2006

December 2005

November 2005

October 2005

September 2005

August 2005

July 2005

June 2005

May 2005

April 2005

March 2005

February 2005

January 2005

December 2004

November 2004

October 2004

September 2004

August 2004

July 2004

June 2004

May 2004

April 2004

March 2004

February 2004

January 2004

December 2003

November 2003

October 2003

September 2003

August 2003

July 2003

December 2001

November 2001

October 2001

September 2001

August 2001

July 2001

June 2001

May 2001

April 2001

March 2001

February 2001

January 2001

December 2000

November 2000

October 2000

September 2000

August 2000

July 2000

June 2000

May 2000

April 2000

March 2000

February 2000

January 2000

December 1999