What do the current Pakistani political crisis,
Israel's September air strike against Syria, and Iran's continued pursuit of
nuclear enrichment all have in common? All three events reflect the aggressive
policies adopted by the George W. Bush administration to deal with the growing
threat of nuclear proliferation.
As US soft power in the region diminishes and its disdain grows for the transnational
bodies meant to monitor the nuclear threat, the stakes could not be higher.
The nuclear peril, a 70-year-old problem of mutual concern for most of the
world, has been couched as an integral target for the architects of the "war
on terror." The Bush administration carefully outlined the threat found
at the "the crossroads of radicalism and technology" in the 2002
National Security Strategy for the United States, a document that many Washington-Beltway
insiders referred to as the "Bush Doctrine."
As journalist Jonathan Schell convincingly wrote in a recent article in the
Nation, the nuclear threat has become a "mere sub-category, albeit
the most important one."
In the post Sep. 11, 2001 universe, the Bush White House divided the world
into two camps those who were "with us," and those "against
us." The first group led by the US consisted of moral "good
guys," democratic countries, many of whom possessed the bomb. The second
group consisted of malevolent dictators with designs on nuclear weapons, rogue
regimes that could not be trusted, because they would presumably sell their
technology to the highest-bidding transnational terrorist organization.
As nuclear proliferation specialist Joseph Circione writes in his book, Bomb
Scare: the History and Future of Nuclear Weapons, the White House "in
effect changed the focus from 'what' to 'who.'"
In addition to advocating for preemptive military strikes against the US adversaries
and terrorists possessing weapons of mass destruction, Washington's new approach
would disregard multilateral consensus as a prerequisite for foreign policy
and embrace unilateral action to establish security and spread democracy. It
is no secret that right-wing hawk John Bolton, the US's former representative
to the UN, held the organization in contempt. He once quipped: "If the
UN Secretariat building in New York lost 10 stories, it wouldn't make a bit
of difference."
And it appears that the Bush camp's antipathy for the UN, as well as its nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy (IAEA), continues to increase because
of what the US perceives as the agency's failures in addressing the Iranian
nuclear program.
"Mr. [Mohamed] ElBaradei has coasted on the IAEA's reputation as the authoritative
source of information on the world's nuclear secrets. Yet this is the same agency
that was taken by surprise by nuclear projects in Libya, North Korea and Iraq
in the 1980s," said a November editorial written in the Wall Street
Journal. The newspaper's editorial page often takes neoconservative views
of US foreign policy.
"All this is reason enough for the US, Israel and any other country serious
about stopping nuclear proliferation to refuse Mr. ElBaradei's not-so-good diplomatic
offices."
An IAEA report released last Thursday part of a deal brokered by ElBaradei
and Iran to avert a possible military confrontation between Washington and Tehran
said that while Iran had been truthful about key aspects of its past
nuclear activity, knowledge of Tehran's program was "diminishing."
In response, the White House lashed out by saying Iran's continued defiance
of the international community and its failure to halt uranium enrichment justified
Washington's push for a third round of sanctions.
This September, Israeli warplanes conducted a mysterious raid in northeast
Syria, and there is growing consensus among US government and independent analysts
that the suspicious target was a nuclear facility. Whether or not it was, the
episode and Israeli, Syrian, and US silence over the issue raises
even more questions as to the timing of the raid, and what the unilateral action
portends for nuclear ambitions of Israel's regional neighbors.
"The Bush administration's decision NOT to share its intelligence on the
Syrian site with the IAEA, and thereby encourage and support the international
agency's aggressive inspection and evaluation of this alleged threat to peace,
was another demonstration of the contempt in which the present US administration
holds the UN Organization.," wrote former Central Intelligence Agency analyst
Ray Close, in an e-mail to IPS.
"It suggests, in effect, that the United States intends to manage the
international nuclear proliferation issue all by itself, independent of the
rest of the international community except for deputizing Israel to be
the nuclear policeman of the Middle East," he said.
In a crowning irony, Bush's dualistic narrative, and the policy he has implemented
to conform to this narrative, has crumbled under the weight of realities on
the ground. US soft power is fading in the region for many different reasons
the Iraq quagmire, US support for Israel's 2006 aerial bombardment of Lebanese
infrastructure, and the isolation of Gaza following the 2005 election victory
of the Islamist group Hamas.
But the possible meltdown of Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf's government
has accelerated the more immediate fear that in the current environment of
instability brought by Musharraf's imposition of "emergency rule"
Islamabad's nuclear arsenal could fall into terrorists' hands.
A Times column co-authored by neoconservative Fred Kagan and liberal
interventionist Michael O'Hanlon, entitled "Pakistan's Collapse, Our Problem,"
is the latest example of the alarmist tone coming out of Washington, and it
suggests that in the absence of strong international mediators like the
IAEA the US will consider military options. The piece also reflects the
growing partnership between the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and the
Brookings Institution.
"We do not intend to be fear mongers," write O'Hanlon and Kagan,
before warning that Washington should "think now about our
feasible military options in Pakistan." The idea is to act fast and secure
Pakistan's nuclear stockpile before the political situation deteriorates further.
Washington spent nearly 100 million dollars in the past six years on a classified
program to help Pakistan secure its nuclear weapons, the New York Times
reported this weekend.
All conversations about US goals to deter nuclear weapons come back to the
issue of Iraq. The Bush administration learned that Iraq had ended all of its
weapons of mass destruction (WMD) programs between 1991 and 1995, according
to a 2004 report by the Iraq Survey Group, a CIA and Pentagon fact-finding mission
sent to postwar Iraq to uncover the evidence to support the White House's claims.
While administration officials tried to discredit UN inspections before the
2003 invasion, it appears that, in this case, sanctions did deter Saddam Hussein.
And while the US never found any WMD in Iraq, its presence has bolstered the
ability of transnational terrorist groups like al-Qaeda to propagandize Iraq
as an icon of jihad, thus drawing more potential recruits, and actually increasing
the threat of terrorism.
(Inter Press Service)