An
op-ed piece by former UK foreign affairs secretary Jack Straw reveals
on how high-level Western statesmen think about international affairs
and the Middle East.
Before
beginning I want to make clear that my problem with Straw’s analysis is
not his opposition to a military attack on Iran. Actually, I agree with
him on this point. The problem is his reasoning on the framework around
that point.
I don’t know if he is responsible for the title of the article in the Daily Telegraph but it does reflect the dangerous worldview of Western leaders. It is, “Even if Iran gets the Bomb, it won’t be worth going to war.” This
is rather open-ended. The title might better have been: Going to War is
Not the Best Response to Iran’s Nuclear Weapons’ Drive.
The trouble with the actual title is it basically implies that no matter what Iran does once it gets the bomb it won’t be worth the West going to war. And that is really what Straw is saying.
Straw’s
first point is that he objects to the statement that “all options
remain on the table” regarding Iran’s campaign. In other words, the West
should drop this, making clear that no matter what Iran does the West
won’t resort to force. He is thus advocating throwing out a prime aspect
of Western leverage.
How
does he justify this? Basically by saying that Iranians are proud and
patriotic and thus resent such threats. Straw says they would be more
flexible if they are assured that the West won’t attack.
While
I oppose an attack, it is absurd to remove a prime incentive for an
Iranian regime to make concessions or—as is far more likely since Tehran
wants the bomb—to be more cautious. By removing this threat, the West
would undercut those members of the Islamic Republic’s elite who—no
matter how radical they are—warn that seeking nuclear weapons is too
risky. Certainly, Obama has rejected taking any such step, verbally
asserting the continuing possibility of a military response at some
point.
Yet
this is a common theme of contemporary Western diplomacy--including
Obama's behavior toward radical Islamism generally--assure your actual
or potential foe that you won’t do anything nasty to them and then
expect them to moderate. This isn’t how Middle East thinking or politics
works.
Second,
while he seems unaware of the implications of his argument, Straw takes
a shocking stance on the threat to Israel and Arabs from an Iranian
nuclear weapon:
“If
Iran were to attack Israel, or, say, one of its Arab neighbours,
international law is clear: the victim has the right to retaliate. But
such an attack is highly improbable. Under Article 42 of the UN Charter,
the Security Council can authorise military action where there’s a
`threat to international peace and security.’ Such resolutions were the
legal basis for the actions against Iraq in 1991 and 2003, and Libya in
2011. But there are no such Article 42 resolutions against Iran; and
there won’t be – China and Russia would veto them.”
It is paragraphs like that which make me think Western foreign policy elites are dunderheads nowadays. Let’s break it down:
--“If Iran were to attack Israel” or an Arab state, the victim has the right to retaliate. But, ahem, the whole purpose of policy toward Iran is to make such an attack impossible, to ensure they don’t become victim to mushroom clouds that kill hundreds of thousands of people. Straw is actually saying: No worries! If Iran drops nuclear warheads on Israel or Saudi Arabia they have the right under international law to retaliate!
--“If Iran were to attack Israel” or an Arab state, the victim has the right to retaliate. But, ahem, the whole purpose of policy toward Iran is to make such an attack impossible, to ensure they don’t become victim to mushroom clouds that kill hundreds of thousands of people. Straw is actually saying: No worries! If Iran drops nuclear warheads on Israel or Saudi Arabia they have the right under international law to retaliate!
--“But
such an attack is highly improbable.” It isn’t clear to me whether he
is saying that Iran won’t attack them—how about some serious
argumentation to try to prove that—or whether they wouldn’t be able to
retaliate. I think that an Iranian nuclear attack is unlikely but it
could happen and one cannot just assume that it won’t. After all, a
Soviet nuclear attack on America during the Cold War was far more
unlikely but the United States and its allies spent huge amounts to
create hundreds of warheads along with geopolitical efforts to prevent
the USSR from ever thinking it could get away with an attack. And while
the United States and NATO had plenty of resources to do so, how much of
a margin does Israel or Arab states have for retaliation or defense?
--And
if Iran does attack, well there isn’t much the UN could do about it. By
the same token, the UN wouldn’t support a Western assault on Iran. Is
it now official that the United States or Great Britain can only do
things if the UN approves in advance? Should Israel conclude that its
defense by allies is dependent on the UN agreeing that it should not be
wiped off the map? Even Straw admits that Russia or China would probably
veto any strong action against Iran.
--The West, and especially the UK, has treated Iran badly so now is the time to make it up:
“Transcending
their political divisions, Iranians have a strong and shared sense of
national identity, and a yearning to be treated with respect, after
decades in which they feel (with justification) that they have been
systematically humiliated, not least by the UK.”
If I had more space, I’d dispute the details of Straw’s history of UK-Iran relations but briefly let me note that the historical mistreatment of Germany and Russia were once leading arguments for appeasing those countries at a time when their regimes were Nazi and Communist. Straw could, if he wished, equally make the precise opposite argument that the majority of Iranians would love to have the West help overthrow the Islamist regime.
If I had more space, I’d dispute the details of Straw’s history of UK-Iran relations but briefly let me note that the historical mistreatment of Germany and Russia were once leading arguments for appeasing those countries at a time when their regimes were Nazi and Communist. Straw could, if he wished, equally make the precise opposite argument that the majority of Iranians would love to have the West help overthrow the Islamist regime.
But
there is another theme here as well and one that is especially relevant
to Iran’s history. The idea is deeply entrenched in Western thinking
that if foreigners are seen as very powerful that this creates profound
resentment. In fact, it has often been true—and especially so in
Iran—that the belief in powerful foreigners makes people want to be on
the winning side.
Straw
blames the emergence of hardliners in Iran on U.S. policy under
President George W. Bush. Again, space forbids a detailed discussion of
this assertion but it is quite wrong. Straw argued that Iranian
president Muhammad Khatami wanted to follow a moderate policy but
Washington was not cooperative. It is well-known in Iran that Khatami
never had much power to do anything, especially change Iran’s foreign
policy into one of working with the United States.
At
any rate, this plays to another dominant theme in current Western
policy: nobody in the Third World is truly radical , ideologically
hard-line, or violent unless due to mistreatment by the West.
What does Iran want? According to Straw it wants what the Iranian regime claims to desire:
“…`full
rights’ under the NPT [Non-Proliferation Treaty] for civil nuclear
power [and]…an end to its international isolation and a recognition
(especially by the US) of its regional status.”
In other words, Iran is only seeking nuclear weapons because it wants to have nuclear power, an idea most experts ridicule. What about all that petroleum the country produces and which can be accessed for almost no cost as compared to a dangerous and politically costly route for power generation?
In other words, Iran is only seeking nuclear weapons because it wants to have nuclear power, an idea most experts ridicule. What about all that petroleum the country produces and which can be accessed for almost no cost as compared to a dangerous and politically costly route for power generation?
And
he also adds that Iran wants the sanctions off. So in that case a deal
is easy: Iran gets civilian nuclear power and the West drops the
sanctions. Iran would also be doing the West of a favor since,
“Normalisation of relations with Iran is also an important prize for the
international community.”
Straw
thinks that Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei just “wants to
create the intellectual capacity for a nuclear weapons system, but will
stop short of making that system a reality.” Then why is Iran paying
such a high price for something it doesn’t intend to do? Is it just “a
yearning to be treated with respect”? If so, it isn’t working.
Then
Straw once again shows how bizarre the logic of Western leaders has
become: “If I am wrong, further isolation of Iran would follow….” In
other words, well if I’m wrong then we could go back to isolating Iran.
But isn’t isolating Iran with nuclear weapons a bit different from doing
so for an Iran that doesn’t have them?
Straw
also ends with more silliness: an extended discussion of how Israel’s
election proves that Israelis don’t support an attack on Iran. The
election had nothing to do with that at all. Indeed, the party that
really focused on the idea of a threat did not do well at all. Here’s an article about how Iran was not a campaign issue.
Again,
I agree with Straw that actually attacking Iran is not a good idea but
the article is riddled with remarkably bad assumptions. These include:
abandon your own leverage; put a priority on not offending your enemies;
believe that the stronger you are the worse the situation is; blame
yourselves for the enmity of extremists and fanatics; risk Israel’s
existence on your wishful thinking; make your foreign policy dependent
on UN decisions; view foreign policy as a means of paying reparations;
and totally misunderstand the politics of other countries.
Here's the Los Angeles Times making all the same arguments in a September 2009 editorial. Straw, like other leaders, simply ignore experience in favor of the ideas bouncing around in their heads.
Here's the Los Angeles Times making all the same arguments in a September 2009 editorial. Straw, like other leaders, simply ignore experience in favor of the ideas bouncing around in their heads.
But a far better article on the same subject is written by Matthew Gould,
the former British ambassador to Iran. He stresses that the main goal
of the regime in Tehran is to stay in power. Thus, he believes sanctions
can work by making the rulers fear that they might have to choose
between nuclear weapons and having the country (and hence the regime)
come close to collapse. I don't know if Gould is right on sanctions but
he's making the correct kind of argument.
What Gould understands and Straw doesn't understand is that having power and leverage is a good thing. The whole guilt-ridden, apology-oriented approach to international relations taken by the Obama Administration and many in Europe (and also generally taught in Western universities) doesn't work. It only convinces your foes that you are weak and your friends that you are unreliable.
What Gould understands and Straw doesn't understand is that having power and leverage is a good thing. The whole guilt-ridden, apology-oriented approach to international relations taken by the Obama Administration and many in Europe (and also generally taught in Western universities) doesn't work. It only convinces your foes that you are weak and your friends that you are unreliable.
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Barry
Rubin is director of the Global Research in International Affairs
(GLORIA) Center and editor of the Middle East Review of International
Affairs (MERIA) Journal. His latest book, Israel: An Introduction, has just been published by Yale University Press. Thirteen of his books can be read and downloaded for free at the website of the GLORIA Center including The Arab States and the Palestine Conflict, The Long War for Freedom: The Arab Struggle for Democracy in the Middle East and The Truth About Syria. His blog is Rubin Reports. His original articles are published at PJMedia.
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