Dore Gold, November 12, 2013
Vol.
13, No. 30 12 November 2013
- Eliminating Iran’s 20-percent-enriched uranium, but allowing the Iranians to continue to produce 3.5-percent-enriched uranium is an unacceptable option if the goal of the West is to prevent Iran from advancing a nuclear weapon. Allowing Iran to enrich to the 3.5-percent level will not address the threat emanating from Iran’s latest generation of faster centrifuges and the scenario of a fast dash by Iran to weapons-grade uranium, known as “nuclear break-out.”
- President Obama’s former aide on the National Security Council, Gary Samore, warned in October that ending the production of 20-percent-enriched uranium is not enough because Iran can also reach weapons-grade uranium using its stock of 3.5-percent-enriched uranium. Thus, any agreement must eliminate all of Iran’s enriched uranium.
- If the Geneva talks produce a bad agreement and allow Iran to continue its drive for nuclear weapons, there will be accelerated nuclear proliferation in the Middle East among Iran’s neighbors, like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey. A multi-polar nuclearized Middle East will in no way resemble the bi-polar superpower balance during the Cold War and is likely to be unstable.
- Iran’s global network of terrorism will obtain a protective nuclear umbrella, allowing its organizations to strike with complete impunity. Finally, given Iran’s increasing propensity in recent years to remove any constraints on the supply of state-of-the-art conventional weapons to its terrorist proxies, the flow of nuclear technologies to these groups cannot be dismissed.
- Iran has argued that it has an “inalienable right” to enrich uranium under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), while Western states have contested this. If the West now accepts Iranian enrichment of uranium to the 3.5-percent level, it will be acknowledging that Iran has a right to enrichment. Moreover, the UN Security Council adopted six resolutions under Chapter VII of the UN Charter that called on Iran to suspend all uranium enrichment. Chapter VII resolutions are binding international law. If the West now says that the suspension is no longer necessary, what does that mean for the binding nature of Chapter VII resolutions?
- Turning to the question of plutonium production, up until now, the West has been encouraging states not to erect heavy-water reactors, but instead to accept light-water nuclear reactors which have a reduced risk of being used for plutonium production. At present it appears that Western proposals to Iran do not include the dismantling of the Arak heavy-water facility.
The details of the agreement being
worked out with Iran may not be fully known, but several elements of the
Western position have already been disclosed. At the heart of virtually every
Western proposal under consideration at Geneva by the P5+1 (the five permanent
members of the Security Council plus Germany) is the idea that the
international community will acquiesce to Iran continuing to enrich uranium, at
least to the level of 3.5 percent. Israel has objected to this idea on security
grounds.
Even if the impending agreement will
only be an interim deal, assuming that it leads to a reduction of Western
economic sanctions, it is questionable how much leverage the West will have to
improve the agreement at a later stage after it is signed. Therefore, it is
important to scrutinize those details of the Geneva negotiation that have
already entered the public discourse.
The Declining Importance of the 20-Percent Threshold
Originally, Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, like other world leaders, focused on the dangers emanating from
Iran’s growing stockpile of 20-percent-enriched uranium, since uranium at this
level of enrichment can be enriched quickly to the level of weapons-grade
uranium with little effort in what is called “nuclear break-out.”
Enriched uranium has a greater
proportion of the fissile isotope U-235, as opposed to U-238, which cannot
be easily split in order to release atomic energy. Since natural uranium
ore has only 0.7 percent U-235, enormous energy must be expended to elevate the
amounts of U-235 during the process of enrichment. As Prime Minister
Netanyahu explained to the UN General Assembly in 2012, when uranium is
enriched to the 20-percent level, it is already 90 percent of the way to the
weapons-grade level. Thus, using 20-percent-enriched uranium as a starting
point is a short-cut to reaching weapons-grade material.
But in the last year, new technological
factors have been introduced. Iran has been installing advanced IR-2m
centrifuges, which operate three to five times faster than the older IR-1
centrifuges.1 Thus, Iran can also jump-start its advance
to weapons-grade uranium by using only its 3.5 percent inventory and,
therefore, establish a fait accompli as
a nuclear weapons threshold state.
In short, eliminating Iran’s
20-percent-enriched uranium, but allowing the Iranians to continue to produce
3.5-percent-enriched uranium is an unacceptable option if the goal of the West
is to prevent Iran from advancing a nuclear weapon. As Gary Samore, a
nonproliferation expert who served on the National Security Council during
President Obama’s first term, has warned: “Ending production of
20-percent-enriched uranium is not sufficient to prevent breakout because Iran
can produce nuclear weapons using low-enriched uranium and a large number of
centrifuge machines.”2 Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu told
his cabinet that with its new capacity, Iran can enrich uranium from the
3.5-percent level to the weapons-grade level in a matter of weeks.3
Yet allowing Iran to enrich to the
3.5-percent level appears to be part of the approach which the Obama
administration is taking.4 Any agreement must eliminate all of
Iran’s enriched uranium. According to various reports on the Geneva
negotiations, it does not seem that the impending agreement will address the
threat emanating from Iran’s latest generation of faster centrifuges and their
implications for nuclear break-out by Iran.
The Risks of an Iranian Nuclear Breakout
The risks emanating from an Iranian
nuclear breakout are well-known, if the Geneva talks produce a bad agreement.
There will be accelerated nuclear proliferation in the Middle East among Iran’s
neighbors, like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Turkey. Already, leaks have appeared
about Saudi-Pakistani cooperation in this regard. A multi-polar nuclearized
Middle East will in no way resemble the bi-polar superpower balance during the
Cold War and is likely to be unstable.5 Iran’s global network of
terrorism will obtain a nuclear umbrella, allowing organizations like Hizbullah
to strike with complete impunity. Finally, as experts point out, the threat of
nuclear technologies spreading to terrorist organizations cannot be dismissed,
given Iran’s propensity in recent years to supply state-of-the-art conventional
weapons to its terrorist proxies.
The Erosion of Previous Western Positions
But even before these scenarios become
possible, there are other vital issues that will be affected by a Western
decision in Geneva to accept parts of Iran’s current nuclear program as
legitimate. First, since negotiations began between the West and Iran over
the Iranian nuclear program in 2003, Iran has argued that it has a right to
manufacture enriched uranium under the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
(NPT). Up until now, Western states have contested this Iranian interpretation
of the NPT. However, if the West now accepts Iranian enrichment of uranium to
the 3.5-percent level, it will be acknowledging, even without saying this
explicitly, that Iran has a right to enrichment.
Second, the UN Security Council adopted
six resolutions under Chapter VII of the UN Charter that called on Iran to
suspend all uranium enrichment and its activities for the eventual production
of plutonium. Chapter VII resolutions are binding international law. But what
if the West now says that the suspension is no longer necessary? What does that
mean for the binding nature of Chapter VII resolutions?
Third, turning to the question of
plutonium production, Iran is building a heavy-water nuclear reactor whose
by-products may be re-processed for the production of plutonium, another
radioactive material used in the manufacture of atomic bombs. Up until now, the
West has been encouraging states not to erect heavy-water reactors, but instead
to accept light-water nuclear reactors which have no risk of being used for
plutonium production. At present it appears that Western proposals to Iran do
not include the dismantling of the Arak heavy-water facility.
Iran’s Alleged Right of Enrichment and the NPT
In a recent address to parliament,
Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, was quoted on November 10 as repeating
what has become a refrain for Iranian leaders, that Iran’s nuclear rights,
“including uranium enrichment, on its soil,” are not negotiable. The
Iranians have called enrichment an “inalienable right” under the NPT. But this
Iranian assertion is not true.6
In 2009, Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton appeared on “Meet the Press” and, directing her words to the
Iranian leadership, stated: “You do not have a right to obtain a nuclear
weapon. You do not have the right to have the full enrichment and
reprocessing cycle under your control.”7 Clinton was right to take
this position since the spread of enrichment facilities worldwide, under the
guise of civilian nuclear work, is one of the ways in which nuclear
proliferation is expected to spread. Perhaps with considerations of these
sorts, the initial position of the Obama administration was to say that Iran
did not have a right of enrichment as its spokesmen had asserted.
The NPT itself never explicitly
mentions enrichment. Article II of the treaty prohibits signatories, like Iran,
from manufacturing nuclear weapons. The Iranians always cite Article IV
which states: “[N]othing in this Treaty shall be interpreted as affecting the
inalienable right of all the Parties to the Treaty to develop research,
production and use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes without
discrimination and in conformity with articles I and II of this Treaty.”
Clearly, if a state is violating Article II by developing a nuclear weapons
program, it cannot claim a right of enrichment, which would not be used for
“peaceful purposes.”
The August 2013 report on Iran by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reminds Tehran that the international
community has had serious doubts over whether the Iranians are developing their
nuclear capabilities for peaceful purposes and do not actually have a nuclear
weapons program: “Since 2002, the Agency has become increasingly concerned
about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed nuclear-related activities
involving military-related organizations, including activities related to the
development of a nuclear payload for a missile.” As long as Iran has not taken
the necessary steps to prove these concerns to be unfounded, then it would be a
cardinal error to recognize that Iran has a right to enrichment.
If the new Western understanding with
Iran being worked out in Geneva allows Tehran to continue to enrich uranium to
any level, then the P5+1 are acquiescing to the Iranian demand to recognize its
right of enrichment, even if no explicit statement accompanies the agreement.
This implicit acknowledgement has also been called “de facto recognition of the
Islamic Republic’s ‘right’ to enrich uranium.”8
True, as noted by The New York Times, the Obama administration is not prepared to
acknowledge “at this point” that Iran has a “right” to enrich.9 An
unnamed senior administration official stated, “The United States does not
believe there is an inherent right to enrichment, and we have said that
repeatedly to Iran.”10 Yet it is likely that after an agreement is
reached allowing Iran to enrich to 3.5 percent, Iran itself will make explicit
what will be implicit through the agreement. It will be difficult to deny other
states the same right to enrichment that they will now assert, thereby further
undermining nuclear non-proliferation in the years ahead.
The Fate of the Chapter VII Resolutions on Iran in the UN Security
Council
Any decision taken in Geneva to allow
Iran to continue to enrich uranium to any level stands in contradiction to UN
Security Council Resolution 1696 as well as five other resolutions that
followed which prohibited Iran from enriching uranium. Resolution 1696, which
was adopted on July 31, 2006, stated that the Security Council: “Demands, in this context, that Iran
shall suspend all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities, including
research and development, to be verified by the IAEA.”
The resolution, as well as the five
that were adopted subsequently on Iran, was based on the support of all five
permanent members of the Security Council, including China and Russia. It was a
great accomplishment for U.S. diplomacy. Now, if the proposed Geneva Agreement
allows Iran to enrich uranium to the 3.5-percent level, it will undermine what
the U.S. achieved seven years ago and no longer lock in Russia and China to
their UN commitment. The agreement will let them off the hook.
In the UN system, Security Council
resolutions may be adopted under different chapters of the UN Charter.
Resolution 1696 and the five resolutions adopted on its basis were approved
under specific clauses of Chapter VII, which deals with cases of aggression and
threats to international peace. These are the most stringent of UN
resolutions. UN members regard them as binding under international law.
Chapter VII resolutions are also
self-enforcing and hence do not require a negotiation in order to be
implemented. In some cases, if they are not implemented, then the Security
Council can take punitive actions and resort to the use of force against a
state that violates such a resolution. Significantly, a Chapter VII resolution
supersedes the terms of a multilateral treaty like the NPT (in the case, for
example, that the Iranians argue that they have a right of enrichment according
to their interpretation of the NPT).11
In today’s international political
environment, many observers will not lose sleep over a further weakening of the
UN’s role in guaranteeing international peace and security. But if the specific
terms of a Chapter VII resolution are ignored by a new agreement between Iran
and the P5+1, then states will undoubtedly question the extent to which they
will be bound by such resolutions in the future.
Permitting a Heavy-Water Reactor
Since the revelation of Iran’s effort
to construct a heavy-water reactor at the Arak facility, the international
community has been concerned that Tehran will reprocess the reactor’s spent
fuel to produce weapons-grade plutonium, as an alternative fuel to enriched
uranium for manufacturing an atomic bomb. This was the pathway that North Korea
initially used to acquire nuclear weapons. During the negotiations between the
EU-3 and Iran that transpired between 2003 and 2005, the Europeans proposed to
Iran that it replace its heavy-water reactor with a light-water reactor which
would be less useful for the production of plutonium. Revealingly, Iran refused
to accept the proposal. UN Security Council Resolution 1696 and the other five
Chapter VII resolutions on the Iranian file call on Iran to suspend all
reprocessing activities.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius
described one of the key issues at Geneva as the Western call for all
construction work at Arak to stop.12 But if the diplomacy in Geneva
leaves the Arak facility intact and does not seek its replacement with a more
benign reactor, then the international effort to halt the spread of heavy-water
reactors and plutonium-based atomic bombs will undoubtedly be set back.
Conclusions
The agreement being worked on in Geneva
between the P5+1 and Iran has not yet been set in stone. What has been reported
about the substance of the understandings that it contains poses serious
challenges to international security. These understandings also challenge many
of the past understandings that have underpinned the international order in
countering proliferation. It would be tragic if one of the consequences of
an international agreement with Iran would be a serious erosion of the
global effort to halt the spread of nuclear weapons, especially in such an
unstable region as the Middle East.
*
* *
Notes
1. Patrick Migliorini,
David Albright, Houston Wood, and Christina Walround, “Iranian Breakout
Estimates, Updated September 2013,” Institute for Science and International
Security, ISIS Report, October 24, 2013, http://isis-online.org/isis-reports/detail/iranian-breakout-estimates-updated-september-2013.
2. Michael R. Gordon
and Thomas Erdbrink, “In New Nuclear Talks, Technological Gains by Iran Pose
Challenges to the West,” New York Times,
October 14, 2013, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/15/world/middleeast/us-iran-sanctions.html?_r=0
3. “PM: “Iran Can
Enrich Uranium from 3.5% to 90% in Weeks,” Israel
Hayom, October
27, 2013, http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_article.php?id=12873
4. Michael R. Gordon,
Mark Landler and Jodi Rudoren, “Iran Balked at Language of Draft Nuclear Deal,
Western Diplomats Say,” New York Times,
November 10, 2013, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/11/world/middleeast/kerry-no-deal-in-hand-defends-negotiating-strategy-on-iran.html.
5. Shmuel Bar, “Can
Cold War Deterrence Apply to a Nuclear Iran?” Strategic Perspectives No. 7, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs,
Institute for Contemporary Affairs, 2011, pp. 8-10, http://jcpa.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/cold_war_deterrence_nuclear_iran.pdf.
6. Nasser Karimi,
“Iran’s Rouhani Says Uranium Enrichment ‘Red Line,’” Associated Press, November
10, 2013, http://news.yahoo.com/irans-rouhani-says-uranium-enrichment-red-line-080300726.html.
7. David E. Sanger,
“Clinton Says Nuclear Aim of Iran is Fruitless,” New York Times, July 27, 2009, http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/27/us/politics/27clinton.html?_r=0.
8. Mark Dubowitz and
Reuel Marc Gerecht, “The Case for Stronger Sanctions on Iran,” Wall Street Journal, November 10, 2013, http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304644104579189714065263216?commentid=6611893.
9. See note 4.
10. Ibid.
11. Kenneth M.
Pollock, Unthinkable: Iran, the Bomb, and
American Strategy (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2013); and Emily B.
Landau, “Does Iran Have an ‘Inalienable Right’ to Enrich Uranium,” INSS Insight No. 376, October 22, 2012,
p. 38, http://www.inss.org.il/publications.php?cat=21&incat=&read=10356.
12. Julian Borger and
Saeed Kamali Dehghan, “Iran Nuclear Negotiations at Crucial Juncture over Arak
Reactor,” Guardian (UK), November 9,
3013, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/nov/09/iran-nuclear-negitiations-arak-reactor-crucial
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