The Geneva talks rehabilitate Iran's beleaguered regime.
From Geneva yesterday come all kinds of good diplomatic vibrations. Iran may allow U.N. inspectors into a recently unveiled uranium-enrichment plant "within two weeks." Another meeting will be held before month's end. A "freeze" on sanctions was bruited about. In an appearance at the White House, President Obama sounded sober but hopeful, calling the direct American talks with the Islamic Republic "a constructive beginning" toward "serious and meaningful engagement."
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was presumably in even better spirits at his remarkable change of fortune. A month ago, Iran's president was struggling to cement his grip on power after stealing an election and repressing nationwide protests. A week ago, the disclosure of the secret facility near Qom highlighted Iran's chronic prevarication and raised calls for more sanctions.
By yesterday, all that had changed. At the 18th-century Villa Le Saugy, Iran's representative sat among the world's powers as a respected equal. Responding to an overture from the Obama Administration, the Iranians even talked about the future of the U.N. and other nonnuclear issues. Meanwhile, Washington was "buzzing" (as one newspaper put it) that a one-day visit by Iran's foreign minister might signal more detente to come. Back in Tehran, Mr. Ahmadinejad floated a tete-a-tete with the U.S. President. In short, this engagement conferred a respectability on his regime that Mr. Ahmadinejad could only have imagined amid his vicious post-election crackdown.
The price of entry is surprisingly modest, too. Though cautious, the P5+1 (the veto-wielding Security Council members, plus Germany) welcomed signs of Iranian concessions: Inspectors at Qom, an openness to send low-enriched uranium outside Iran for enrichment, possibly suspending its own enrichment program. Mr. Ahmadinejad said the Geneva talks were "a unique opportunity" for the West.
Consider the Iranian offers in turn. Inspectors from the International Atomic Energy Agency won't find anything incriminating at the Qom facility. Having lied about it for years, the Iranians now have plenty of time to clean the place out. Iran's experience with the IAEA goes back to the first inspections starting in 1992, which somehow prevented the world from learning about Iran's bomb program for a decade and then only from an Iranian dissident group. A freeze on enrichment used to be the U.S. precondition for talks with Iran. Now the U.S. and Europeans say that in exchange merely for this enrichment promise, they'll freeze any additional sanctions.
Iran has timed its olive branch well. The Europeans are more frustrated with past Iranian stalling than is Washington and have started to hanker for tougher measures. Those demands will now be muted. For years, Iran has talked with the Europeans, using the time and diplomatic cover to make nuclear progress. The Obama ascendency offers the mullahs another chance, with an even more eager partner, to repeat the exercise with a far bigger potential payoff. Expect Iran to follow the North Korean model, stringing the West along, lying and wheedling, striking deals only to reneg and start over. In the end, North Korea tested a nuclear device.
On long evidence, the regime has no intention of stopping a nuclear program that would give it new power in the region, and new leverage against America. The Qom news reveals a more extensive, sophisticated and covert nuclear complex than many people, including the CIA, were willing to recognize. The facility is located on a Revolutionary Guard base, partly hidden underground and protected by air-defense missiles. Its capacity of 3,000 centrifuges is too small for civilian use but not for a weapons program. It's a good bet an archipelago of such small covert facilities is scattered around Iran.
Meanwhile, news reports this week say German and British intelligence believe Iran never stopped clandestine efforts to design a nuclear warhead. Their assumptions contradict the U.S. National Intelligence Estimate in 2007 that Iran had stopped its nuclear weapons program in 2003 and kept it frozen.
The evidence is overwhelming that the window to stop the world's leading sponsor of terrorism from acquiring a bomb is closing fast. If we are serious about doing so, the proper model isn't North Korea, but Libya. The Gadhafi regime agreed to disarm after the fall of Saddam Hussein convinced its leaders that their survival was better assured without nuclear weapons. Mr. Ahmadinejad and Iran's mullahs will only concede if they see their future the same way.
This supposed fresh start in Geneva only gives them new legitimacy, and new hope that they can have their bomb and enhanced global standing too.
Click to view image: 'f4ac7692b2e2-obeo908_iran_g_20091001184607.jpg'
By: pisscookie
In: Iran, Middle East
Tags: Mullahs, Springtime, Iran, Obama, Ahmadinejad, Geneva, Qom, IAEA, Gadhafi
Location: Geneva, Geneve, Switzerland (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 8671 | Comments: 14 | Votes: 0 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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It's important to give Iran a way out-without Iran losing face. This could be a win-win for everyone. Let's hope so.
Posted Oct-2-2009 Bycirvine11 (443.02) 
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Win-Win thats a new word.. now try to convince the Zio's.. I agree with you.
Posted Oct-2-2009 Byxyxyxy (145.20) xyxyxy View Channel Send Message
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let us hope you are right but i fear the wheels are already in motion
Posted Oct-2-2009 ByMoniker (148.36) Moniker View Channel Send Message
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That's a great idea for a Mel Brooks movie.
Posted Oct-2-2009 ByFlibbleDeeFlobble (967.94) 
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(2)
"serious and meaningful engagement." so is wacking off. I don't think Iran will be convenced to stop its nuclear ambitions. Nobody wants to go to war and Iran knows it. They will develope a nuclear war head and eventually join the club and life will go on...until a bomb is detonated in a large city in the USA or other non-islamic country. Right now there is nothing but postureing.
Posted Oct-2-2009 ByFukmup (576.50) Fukmup View Channel Send Message
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saynora fagot country of iran. it was nice knowing you....well not really, but bye anyway!
Posted Oct-2-2009 ByAnonymousUser1000 (12.42) 
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I've noticed that the mods have been very busy today cleaning house. Maybe they'll put you out on the curb too with the rest of the rubbish.
Posted Oct-2-2009 Bypisscookie (213.26) 
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You can help the mods by blocking quickly.
Posted Oct-2-2009 ByFlibbleDeeFlobble (967.94) 
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I suppose I could, but I'd rather leave these apes on display in their cages covered with their own filth. That way anyone can see them for what they are and pelt them with whatever they have handy. I've only ever blocked one of these e-hadis, and that was for blocking me because I put a Churchill quote on his homepage.
Posted Oct-2-2009 Bypisscookie (213.26) 
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what are these guys talking about? Iran already gave the green light to the UN to visit the new site.
Posted Oct-2-2009 Bymissguidedcumshot (2.70) missguidedcumshot Send Message
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Stupid Islamist regime abandoned even by Russia in the end.
Posted Oct-3-2009 ByMonsterZero_Jr (237.96) 
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