John Bolton and Michael
Ledeen presented a disturbing picture of Obama Administration national
security policy adrift amidst a continually crisis-laden Middle East on August
28, 2013. In particular, these two leading foreign policy experts foresaw
no truly effective international policy to stop Iranian nuclear weapons
proliferation, leaving Israel to confront this existential danger unilaterally.
Bolton and Ledeen appeared at the briefing "Who is
the Real Rouhani?" at the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center.
The Endowment for Middle East Truth (EMET),
described by its founder and president Sarah Stern as
"unabashedly pro-American and pro-Israeli," sponsored the
event. Stern introduced Bolton and Ledeen by discussing how Hassan
Rouhani had appeared to American media as a "great moderate"
following his June 14, 2003, election to the presidency of the Islamic Republic
of Iran.
Yet Ledeen described the "big difference" between
Rouhani and his predecessor, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad as being "exactly the same as the difference between
Pepsi Cola and Coca Cola." In contrast to Ahmadinejad, Rouhani
"is more charming," his "face is prettier," and "he
knows the West" due to his Western education. Such attributes,
though, simply reminded Ledeen of how some Western observers had expectantly
noted Yuri
Andropov as a "jazz fan" after this KGB chief succeeded
Leonid Brezhnev as the Soviet Union's leader in 1982. Rouhani's exposure
to the West, rather than moderating his views, seems to have instilled
anti-Western vitriol in Rouhani, just as other Islamist leaders like the Muslim
Brotherhood's (MB) ideologue Sayyid
Qutb "learned to hate America in America."
Ledeen also rejected speculation of Rouhani being part of a
"cunning scheme" to present an "apparent moderate." Ledeen
believed that Rouhani's election was a "surprise" in an "honest
vote" within the Iranian theocracy. Here again the difference between
Rouhani's "moderation" and Ahmadinejad was minimal, for the latter
could also "buy endless time" in negotiations over Iran's nuclear
program.
In such dictatorships "you are dealing with a
regime" that has "core policies," Ledeen argued. "It
doesn't matter who the person is." Rouhani, moreover, has personally been
"fully committed...fully engaged" during his career in Iran's
terrorism and nuclear programs, central concerns for the international
community. Citing the former Soviet dissident Natan
Sharansky, Ledeen considered a dictatorship's domestic behavior indicative
of foreign policy. "The way they treat their own people is the way they
want to treat us."
Bolton as well saw no moderation in Rouhani, Iran's chief
nuclear negotiator during 2003-2005. This background meant that
"Rouhani could not be a better public face" for Iran now.
Reflecting upon his negotiating experience, Rouhani had subsequently often
"boasted" of his success in shielding Iran's nuclear program from
interference.
Bolton attributed the origins of these negotiations to a
European desire in 2003 for "showing up the United States"
after its Iraq invasion. With the controversial Iraqi regime change as a
backdrop, "we suave and sophisticated Europeans" sought to tame
the Iranian nuclear program. The European concept then was a
"macro-solution" following an Iranian enrichment freeze and
today "they are still pursuing the same elusive goal."
Iranian stalling tactics in the following negotiations
recognized, Bolton observed that weapons proliferators "need time and they
need legitimacy." Iran, moreover, was "scared to
death" after American invasions not only in Iraq but Afghanistan as
well brought American troops to Iranian borders on opposing sides. Thus
Iran has had no hesitation in suspending enrichment in the past, especially
when temporary technical difficulties made the issue moot. Looking to the
future, Bolton considered it "clear beyond dispute that the Europeans are
getting ready to be suckered again."
Bolton predicted that the
Iranians would make diplomatic overtures to the American diplomats as
well. Iranian officials would claim that their nuclear program was
peaceful and transparent, while sanctions hurt the Iranian people. In
response, American officials might well offer phased plans of reciprocal
Iranian-international actions. "When you hear sequencing" from
diplomats, Bolton warned, "you know they are talking about
surrender." With sanctions "once dialed back," it
will be "almost impossible to torque them back up again."
"What we don't know cannot be good news," Bolton meanwhile speculated
about the progress of the Iranian nuclear program in light of past intelligence
failures in Iraq.
In contrast to the Iranian
regime, Ledeen believed that the Iranian people sought to emulate the Egyptian
overthrow of the MB. Ledeen attributed to Iranian opposition leaders
under house arrest a "huge following" such that the regime dared not
execute them. Additionally, the "Iranian opposition is fundamentally
pro-Western and anti-Islamist." Speaking of senior Iranian ayatollahs in
opposition to the Iranian regime as well as Muslim opposition to the MB in
Egypt, Ledeen also warned "don't write off all Muslims" as allies
against Islamism. Ledeen lamented, however, that the United States had
done nothing to foment this internal Iranian opposition, something not
requiring American military force. Yet "Iran is the key to
international terror," while Iraq in 2003 was only a secondary terrorism
supporter.
"We would have to have
an Iran policy," Ledeen argued, for regime change in Syria, a country
under "virtual Iranian control" in the guise of the Lebanese Hezbollah ("that's
Teheran") and Iran's Al-Quds
Force. The "road to Damascus starts in Teheran," Ledeen
said. The "problem in Syria is Iran," Bolton agreed; focusing
on Syria was "defining the problem much too narrowly."
In particular, if the Assad
regime perpetrated the latest chemical attack in Syria, then Ledeen saw
"no way that that happened at a minimum without Iranian
approval." The Iranians might have even provided
"know-how." Syria regime change would be a terrible Iranian
loss, thus in their view "Assad must be preserved."
Contemplating a pending
strike in Syria under the Obama Administration, Bolton foresaw this involving
"some number of cruise missiles used against some number of empty
buildings." The response of the Assad regime and its Iranian
supporters will be "that's it" with no effect upon chemical
weapon use.
For deterrence, by
contrast, a response must be "absolutely punishing." Opposed to
a Syrian intervention, Bolton nonetheless criticized British Prime
Minister David
Cameron's suggestion of a "proportionate
response" to the Syrian gas attack. "Why respond
proportionately?" Bolton asked. "You have to act
decisively," Ledeen concurred, proportionate response is "for little
countries. Otherwise, why be a superpower."
The "worst outcome is
that we do something and it has no effect," Ledeen worried, merely
making a "moral demonstration." Bolton as well warned that an
ineffective "tank-plinking kind of raid" will have an
"immeasurable effect" on American credibility. President
Barack Obama's personal "credibility has already been shredded" by earlier
chemical attacks in Syria following his ill-conceived "ad
lib" of a chemical attacks "redline." Ledeen assessed the Obama
Administration as now "leading with the behind."
With respect to the
critical question of Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons, Bolton thought
that the "prospects are grim." The Iranians "are going to
get nuclear weapons," Bolton predicted, setting off Middle East regional
proliferation as a result. This is the most possible outcome "by a
long shot." Current sanctions against Iran merely "give the illusion
of doing something" and thereby cover the reluctance of congressional
leaders and the Obama Administration to intervene in Iran. "The
Iranians are convinced that they are dealing with an American administration
that does not have the will to fight," Ledeen likewise assessed.
In the end, the crisis of
Iranian nuclear proliferation, "for well or ill...is going to be Israel's
to solve," according to Bolton. Bolton criticized the past Israeli
"mistake" of having allowed the first operational nuclear reactor in
a "hostile state" in Bushehr, Iran. Now,
though, he considered an Israeli military strike against Iranian nuclear
facilities the last viable nonproliferation option in the face of American
inaction.
The "Israelis won't
talk to us about" an Iranian strike, Ledeen predicted. "We'll
know about it when the attack begins," Bolton seconded. As with past
Middle East nuclear dangers inIraq
in 1981 and Syria
in 2007, the pair foresaw Israel decisively acting alone for its own
freedom and survival. Yet the interests of a wider but more timid free world,
however ungrateful, would also hang in the balance.
Andrew E. Harrod is a freelance researcher and writer who holds a
PhD from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and a JD from George
Washington University Law School. He is admitted to the Virginia State
Bar. He has published various pieces concerning an Islamic supremacist
agenda at the Middle East Forum's Legal Project, American Thinker, and Faith
Freedom International.
Read more: Family Security Matters http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/adrift-the-united-states-and-the-middle-east?f=must_reads#ixzz2dzFoxTtt
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution
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