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Calls for Dialogue in the Iran Crisis

Pax Christi and DIE LINKE | 20.02.2006 15:32 | Anti-militarism | World

Renunciation on force and non-aggression guarantees are crucial for de-activating the crisis along with convening a UN mediation commission. All military options must be excluded.

CALL TO POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS DIALOGUE IN THE IRAN CRISIS

Declaration of the Pax Christi Vice-President Johannes Schnettler

By Pax Christi

[This declaration of the international peace organization Pax Christi published February 8, 2006 is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de/.]



Given the escalating violence in countries of the Middle East, a necessary and sensible discussion of religious tolerance and freedom of opinion on one side and functionalization of wounded religious feelings for political goals on the other side must be clearly distinguished. Where people are killed and houses set on fire, the demonstrations have long gone beyond the real cause of the anger, the Mohammed-caricatures. An immediate connection exists to the Iran crisis in which a verbal political escalation is pursued on the Islamic side. For their part, the “western” governments may not fall into the error of provocation. De-activating the tone and contents and speaking about real differences of interest are crucial. Arrogant language is prohibited in view of the West’s human rights violations and involvement in war. Alongside condemnation of the unacceptable anti-Semitic policy of the Iranian president, the policy of encircling and isolating Iran with the goal of its humiliation should be criticized. Russia’s mediation role in the Iran crisis should be explicitly welcomed. A self-critical dialogue on all sides is necessary. Churches and religious communities have a special role here that they have long exercised and should strengthen again.


ALL MILITARY OPTIONS MUST BE EXCLUDED

Resolution of the European Parliament escalates Iran Conflict

By Tobias Pflueger

[This press release published 2/15/2006 is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de/. Tobias Pflueger is a member of the European Parliament.]


The European delegate of the left fraction, Tobias Pflueger, member of the Foreign Affairs committee and coordinator of the subcommittee on security and defense made this statement on the Iran resolution passed in the European Parliament on 2/15/2006:

The joint resolution of liberals, conservatives, rightwing nationalists and social democrats on the nuclear dispute with Iran adopted today with a large majority is very problematic. Points 4 and 7 of the resolution support the escalating position of the governments of the EU3 (Germany/France/Great Britain). The resolution welcomes the summons of Iran before the UN Security Council. This is the first step for the countdown to a military attack against Iran. The Iraq war is obviously the blueprint for the conflict with Iran. Unlike the Iraq war, Germany and France are considerably aggravating the situation this time. Jacques Chirac’s statement that he is ready to use nuclear weapons against so-called terror states is a scandal. The historical comparison of Hitler with the president of Iran (BILD-newspaper) and the instrumentalization of anti-fascism by Angela Merkel are completely unacceptable.

The Iranian nuclear program should be rejected. The nuclear weapons in the EU (France and Great Britain) and the US should be disarmed in accordance with the Nuclear Weapons Ban treaty. The so-called “civilian” use of atomic energy is also problematic.

All military options must be excluded. The unspeakable remarks of the Iran president against Israel and human rights violations in Iran may not be instrumentalized for war policy.


FOR A COMPREHENSIVE MIDDLE EAST PEACE CONFERENCE –
AGAINST A FURTHER ESCALATION IN THE CONFLICT WITH IRAN

Four-point paper of the Bundestag party DIE LINKE on the Conflict around the Iranian Nuclear program

By Bundestag party DIE LINKE

[This four-point paper published February 17, 2006 is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de.]


A latent danger of war starts from the conflict around the Iranian nuclear program. Iran is threatened with military force by the governments of the United States and the European Union in a way that recalls the time before the attack on Iraq. The Iranian president foments the conflict with threats against Israel.

The Bundestag party DIE LINKE regards a comprehensive peace conference for the Middle East by the UN Security Council as urgently necessary. The DIE LINKE party calls on the German government to champion the immediate convening of such a conference vis-à-vis the permanent members of the UN Security Council and within the European Union.

No state of the region can refuse participating in the Middle East peace conference convened by the UN Security Council. Mutual state acknowledgment goes along with this participation. On the basis of a comprehensive renunciation of force and a non-aggression guarantee toward all states, the conference should grapple with the unsolved problems of the Middle East through involvement of the permanent members of the Security Council. The following four points are crucial:

1. Israel’s right of existence may not be put in question by the states of the region. Defining and acknowledging a lasting agreement on Israel’s legal borders should be a goal of the conference.
2. Defining and acknowledging the legal borders of a viable Palestinian state must also occur with recognition of Israel’s borders. Assuring Palestine’s permanent state sovereignty and economic survival should be a goal of the conference.
3. The massive troop presence in Iraq does no prevent violent confrontations but contributes to political radicalization in the whole Middle East. Agreeing on a timetable for withdrawing foreign troop[s from Iraq should be a responsibility of the conference.
4. One main motive for possessing or striving to possess nuclear weapons is cancelled with a mutual acknowledgment of all states, a renunciation on force and a non-aggression guarantee for all states of the region. Fixing a binding timetable on establishing a nuclear weapon free zone in the Near East and Middle East on the basis of renunciation of force and security guarantees of the permanent members of the UN Security Council should be a goal of the conference.

For the following reasons, the Bundestag party DIE LINKE is convinced that a Middle East peace conference represents a realistic and lasting way out of the explosive situation and can avert the latent danger of war:

1) A military intervention against Iran that is not excluded by the US government or the German government as an option would have unimaginable consequences for the region. US air attacks on Iran would probably have grave consequences for Germany’s security.
2) Israel must feel threatened by the possibility of nuclear weapons in the hands of Iran. The unacceptable threats of the Iranian president and his remarks denying the holocaust have intensified this feeling. Any use of force against Iran would escalate the situation and endanger Israel’s security even more. Israel’s nuclear weapon arsenal intended to deter conventionally armed neighboring states cannot permanently guarantee its security as the nuclear weapons of other states of the region cannot guarantee their security.
3) Nevertheless access to nuclear weapons is seen by more and more states as the only effective protection from a military attack of the US and other states. The interventions in Yugoslavia, Afghanistan and Iraq contributed greatly to the attractiveness of nuclear weapons. The threats of a military intervention of the US that is also conventionally overpowering give Iran a strong incentive to at least develop the capacity for building nuclear bombs.
4) The US troop presence in Iraq contributes considerably to the feeling of humiliation in countries of the region and to making Iraq into the center of the violent conflicts in the region. From neighboring states like Iran, the US military presence in Iraq can be viewed as a starting point for military interventions. This is aggravated by the massive military presence of the US, Germany and other states in Afghanistan – a military action that also has not led to a permanent stabilization of the land and region.
5) The danger of more wars in the region of the Near and Middle East will grow even more through conflicts around the increasingly scarce resources oil, natural gas and drinking water. Given the failures in converting to renewable forms of energy, the struggles around oil will aggravate the inner conflicts of the region.
6) The violent protests after the publication of the Mohammed-caricatures are a sign of how sensitively the population in several Islamic countries reacts to happenings in Europe and the US. They show how quickly the political situation in the countries of the Near and Middle East could fall out of control in the case of an attack on Iran.
7) The United Nations Security Council runs the risk of losing its role preserving the peace assigned by the UN Charter. In the conflict around the Iranian nuclear program, the demand for involvement of the UN Security Council has become a synonym for preparing a military attack. There is no inner logic of the sanction catalogue of Chapter VII of the UN Charter that allows coercive military measures whose dimensions and effects can hardly be controlled.
8) Experience with the conference for security and cooperation in Europe demonstrates that renunciation on force and mutual state recognition combined with discussions on disarmament, trade, human rights and culture could open up perspectives for peaceful, nonviolent and democratic change.


AN ETHICAL PERSPECTIVE

From the Clash of Cultures to Human Competition in a Global-Ethical Competition of People

By Klaus Roggendorf

[This address is translated from the German on the World Wide Web.]


Dear ladies and gentlemen, seekers of meaning, friends of true life in the false, hard-core philosophers and everyone searching for a more fruitful ethic!

The clash of cultures belongs to historical humanity. What happened and what will happen if we do not come to a global ethical consensus, to an ecumene of all religions? Homo sapiens must accomplish the existentially necessary change of values to authenticate humanity in solidarity.

Let us wage the “clash of cultures” for a fruitful life as a battle for the best arguments. Without a true and global ethic, everything is only growing suffering and misery.

The homemade distresses of nature are growing more visible and menacing among people and animals because/when simple, clear, ethically unequivocal, everyday (global) standards of binding human conduct are lacking to us.

We have the innate common desire that human life may be optimally fruitful. Therefore the philosophical question is raised, how should we humans live.

Existentially we need an ethical, life-affirming change in values. Globalization can also be understood and used as a chance here.

On account of the increasingly pressing existential questions of meaning and orientation, the theme ethics has the highest priority globally and for every individual person. A natural evolutionary ethic will be offered here to stimulate a broad discussion:

What is central is the dynamic process of true human life in theory and practice, not the establishment of a new ethical dogma. A natural and historically necessary hierarchy of rational values that can sift through a global ethical-social discourse and finely adjust to a nature-friendly ethical consensus exists in all religions, sects, cultures and social forms.

In the practical execution of a humane change in values, we will first do justice to human claims of dignity proper to the Homo sapiens. The fundamental question how we could/can solve our homemade global problems should drive our desires and lead to a praxis-oriented fundamental ethic effective for all people.

Help start such a permanent global-ethical discourse for more democracy and justice and keep it going as competition for better arguments out of humane solidarity. This need grows daily and with every new generation. Perhaps stimulation for personal life and for our common efforts at an optimally just life will be found in these mediations encouraging ethical discussion.

The clash of cultures can be minimized and prevented through human cooperation in a global ethical competition, through consensus and change in values of the people.

Everything depends fundamentally on a true ethic that can be lived fruitfully.

With friendly greetings,

Dr. Klaus Roggendorf


APPEAL TO KOFI ANNAN

Threatening War against Iran

For a Moratorium and UN Mediation Commission in the Iran Nuclear Conflict to Prevent Escalation

[This appeal to Kofi Annan, Secretary general of the UN, is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de.]


Since the middle of January 2006, the conflict between Iran and the West has intensified alarmingly. Threats and counter-threats get worse. The confrontation can soon go off course and lead to sanctions and violence with grave consequences for world peace. To prevent further escalation, a moratorium must be inserted in the conflict to give the antagonistic parties time for careful reflection on their goals and behavior patterns and develop new proposals and procedures. To achieve this, we propose the UN Secretary use his right to call a UN commission at any time.

We ask the UN Secretary General to convene an international UN mediation commission of personalities with lofty reputations as soon as possible. Under his chairmanship, the commission should work out proposals for a peaceful solution of the conflict and spread this to the world public within a half year.

The commission should be filled with experienced statesmen without official functions and personalities with great moral authority. We name several personalities who in our view could be appointed to this commission:

· Martti Ahtisaari (former president of Finland)
· Gro Harlem Brundtland (former Norwegian prime minister)
· Bill Clinton (former president of the United States)
· Michael Gorbatschow (former president of the Soviet Union)
· Mohammad Khatami (former president of the Islamic Republic of Iran)
· Nelson Mandela (former president of South Africa)
· Avi Primor (former Israeli ambassador to Germany)
· Mary Robinson (former president of Ireland)
· Gerhard Schroeder (former chancellor of Germany)
· Ayatollah Sistani (Shiite leader in Iraq)

During the consultations, the commission will ask the Iranian government to suspend the enrichment of uranium for more research studies on nuclear technology. All parties to the conflict are called to end all threats against each other.

The proposal of a moratorium and a high-ranking mediation commission should be acceptable to all sides. No additional threats should arise in this time.

Our proposal is impelled by the hope that more than a peaceful solution for the Iran nuclear conflict should be worked out through this process. Multinational consultations going beyond the present nuclear conflict should be opened up for the whole region of the Middle East and the Near East.

In this sense, the signatories ask UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to take the initiative for a moratorium and a mediation commission.

[Andreas Buro and Mohssen Massarrat formulated this text on the basis of discussions at the strategy conference of cooperation for peace in Hanover. International organizations are urged to support this appeal that will be delivered to Kofi Annan in New York in the middle of February 2006]



LETTER TO THE KOLN STADTANZEIGER

By Bernd Hahnfeld

[This letter on the problem of one-sided reporting on the nuclear conflict with Iran was published in the Kolner Stadtanzeiger ( http://www.ksta.de) and is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de. Bernd Hahnfeld is an attorney in Koln, Germany.]


Dear Ladies and Gentlemen,

Your reporting on the nuclear conflict with Iran misses important aspects of the problem. Any new nuclear weapon state is a danger for peace and international security. This is especially true for Iran whose government appears verbally very aggressive. However nuclear weapons in the hands of other states are not less dangerous.

For these reasons, the nuclear weapon states and many other states signed a treaty on the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons (“Non-Proliferation Treaty” – NPT) on 7/1/ 1968. In this treaty, non-nuclear weapon states agreed to neither produce nor acquire nuclear weapons and other nuclear warheads (Art. II). This treaty is the foundation for the worldwide criticism of Iran’s conduct.

The NPT guarantees that all parties to the agreement research, produce and use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes (Art. IV). This guarantee for peaceful use was a fundamental precondition for the non-proliferation regime created by the NPT. Iran now appeals to this right. The international dilemma is that the nuclear weapon states and their allies demand something from Iran that they are not ready to observe themselves, namely the NPT. In 1968, the nuclear weapon states committed themselves in Art. VI of the NPT to honestly conduct negotiations on nuclear disarmament and sign a treaty on universal and complete nuclear disarmament under effective international control. The International Tribunal in the Haag unanimously emphasized this obligation in its legal opinion of 7/8/1996 adopted by the UN General Assembly.

An international law obligation enjoins honestly conducting and concluding negotiations that lead to nuclear disarmament in all its aspects under strict and effective international control. Since 1968, the nuclear weapon states and their allies have refused to conduct negotiations on total nuclear disarmament. Rather they repeatedly declared that nuclear weapons are indispensable. Even the first use of these weapons prohibited by the International tribunal is not excluded.

Jurists know that the offense of one cannot justify the offense of another. One’s own legal violation actually makes the demand for observing the NPT completely incredible. From the view of the non-nuclear weapon states, gaining the power position of a nuclear weapon. His power position would secure a state better than any non-aggression pact.

Reporting should not one-sidedly emphasize only the obligation of Iran but also the corresponding obligation of the nuclear weapon states. This is the backside of the coin and a necessary part of the problem solution.

Otherwise the danger exists that war may be stressed and possibilities of non-military conflict settlement disregarded.


A DECISIVE STEP ON THE WAY TO ESCALATION

By Michael Lueders

[This article published in: Frankfurt Rundschau 1/5/2006 is translated from the German on the World Wide Web,  http://www.friedenskooperative.de. Michael Lueders is a Middle East expert.]


The disputing parties, Teheran and Washington, do not give anything in the conflict around Iran’s nuclear program. Europe tried in vain to de-activate the situation. Who will resort to weapons first?

There is no magic formula in dealing with Teheran’s nuclear ambitions. However the decision to discuss the Iranian nuclear program in the Security Council of the United Nations is a decisive step toward escalation. The next step may be the threat or imposition of sanctions against Iran joined with the warning Teheran is only “a few months” away from building nuclear bombs according to the German news service. Most likely the call for a military option will become ever louder.

The Iranian leadership with its imprudent policy has an important share in this development. The anti-Semitic invectives of president Mahmoud Ahmadinedschad and his threats against Israel have strengthened the West’s impression of incalculability, hostility and malevolence – notwithstanding the fact that both Washington and Jerusalem were presumably very thankful for this folly. Ahmadinedschad could not have provided a better argument against the Islamic republic.

The fact is that for a long time there has been no evidence of the building of an Iranian nuclear bomb. That no one believes the Iranian leadership is only interested in the peaceful use of atomic energy is also a fact. This is true for Arab governments allied in this question in a rare unity with the US and Europe. Saudi Arabia, Iran’s perennial rival in the struggle for supremacy in the Islamic world, fears Teheran’s increase of power. The Arabs do not want to be drawn into a conflict between Israel and Iran.

The government in Washington is also jointly responsible for the escalation of the crisis. They have learned nothing from the mistakes in Iraq. Pragmatism is lacking to them. (This is also true for the hardly diplomatic words to Teheran from German chancellor Merkel in the beginning of February 2006). Teheran supported US policy after September 11, 2001 both in Afghanistan and in Iraq and presented itself as an alliance partner. With the help of Swiss negotiators, the Iranian foreign ministry sent the US government a detailed plan for normalizing political relations in the spring of 2003. Willingness to stop supporting Hamas and Hisbollah was part of this plan. Washington bluntly rejected the proposal. The influence of the anti-Iranian lobby was obviously too strong.

In October 2003, the EU (European Union) successfully moved Teheran to suspend uranium enrichment. The goal was to negotiate strategic and nuclear questions in a total package seeking normalizing relations to Washington. The government under US president George W. Bush refused and let the negotiations break down.

In 2002, Bush included the Islamic republic in the “axis of evil.” Washington openly strives for a regime change in Teheran. US troops are in nearly all Iran’s neighboring countries. Iran formulates its security interests on this background. To keep Teheran from building nuclear bombs, a clear security guarantee is needed – Washington’s commitment not to attack Iran. The Bush government will definitely not give this guarantee. This means the points are set in the direction of “preventive military strike.”

But Iran is not Iraq. The populist Ahmadinedschad knows very well how he can exploit the anti-western mood from Morocco to Indonesia. He sees himself as the Islamic Robin Hood who resolutely opposes western arrogance. In fact, the relations between the West and the Islamic world were never so strained as the violent escalation in the caricature dispute demonstrates again. Seen this way, time is in no way working against the Iranian president.



Pax Christi and DIE LINKE
- e-mail: mbatko@lycos.com
- Homepage: http://www.mbtranslations.com

Comments

Hide the following comment

US nuclear bomb attack planned against Iran

22.02.2006 00:51


The US is not just planning a military attack: it's planning nuclear war!!!!!!!!!!

See original for URLs (links) - this article is very well referenced:
 http://www.campaigniran.org/casmii/page/p/America_and_Iran_At_the_Brink_of_the_Abyss

America and Iran: At the Brink of the Abyss

By Jorge Hirsch, 20 February 2006 (source: antiwar.com)

Whether the U.S. will use nuclear weapons against Iran if a military confrontation erupts is in the hands of a single person, President Bush, as stated in NSC 30 from 1948: " the decision as to the employment of atomic weapons in the event of war is to be made by the Chief Executive when he considers such decision to be required." Bush will certainly not ask Congress nor the public permission once hostilities start. Whether or not tactical nuclear weapons should be deployed and used against Iran is a matter that needs to be faced by America right now !

So are U.S. tactical nuclear weapons deployed in the Persian Gulf, on hair-trigger alert, and ready to be launched against Iran at a moment's notice?

I posed the question in December , arguing that every other element needed for a nuclear strike on Iran was "deployed" and ready. On Feb. 3, 2006, an answer was kindly provided by the Chief of Naval Operations in the form of OPNAVINST 5721.1F [.pdf], which states:

"Military members and civilian employees of the Department of the Navy shall not reveal, purport to reveal, or cause to be revealed any information, rumor, or speculation with respect to the presence or absence of nuclear weapons or components on board any specific ship, station or aircraft, either on their own initiative or in response, direct or indirect, to any inquiry."

Oh well then, we don't know for sure, and there is no way to know. Really?

We do know. Because it would be inconsistent with every fiber of the current administration, and with all the circumstances surrounding the Iran scenario , if tactical nuclear weapons were not deployed in the Persian Gulf, following NSPD 35 , on high alert and ready to be used in a confrontation with Iran. So we may safely assume they are deployed and they will be used, and make our choices accordingly. Once it happens, it cannot be undone .

The Impending Nuclear Attack

All the elements have been put in place carefully and methodically for the U.S. to use tactical nuclear weapons against Iran in a way that will seem "acceptable" at first sight, as discussed in previous columns : the new nuclear doctrine , the nuclear hitmen , the weapons , the justification , the legal framework , and the public mindset . The IAEA resolution of Feb. 4 [.pdf] has paved a smooth road to confrontation, paralleling the events after the passage of UN Security Council Resolution 1441 of November 2002. The use of low-yield earth-penetrating nuclear weapons will appear to be a military necessity , one that will save thousands of American and Israeli lives, deter an Iranian response, and achieve " rapid and favorable war termination on U.S. terms. "

The public mindset has been thoroughly prepared for war by a barrage of untrue propaganda against Iran, extending over many years and gradually escalating in volume and tone . Iran has been demonized as the pure incarnation of evil: the foremost sponsor of terrorism , pursuing nuclear weapons , intent on harming America , harboring al-Qaeda , hiding arsenals of chemical and biological weapons and their means of delivery , oppressing its own people , intent on destroying Israel and the West . Max Boot just wrote in the Los Angeles Times , "In sum, a terrorist-sponsoring state led by an apocalyptic lunatic will soon have the ability to incinerate Tel Aviv or New York," which "leaves only one serious option ? air strikes by Israel or the U.S." Niall Ferguson wrote a few days earlier in the same newspaper that a U.S. preemptive strike against Iran today would prevent an Iranian nuclear strike on Israel in 2007, ignoring among other things the reality that it is physically impossible for Iran to produce a nuclear weapon in a year. Nicholas Goldberg, who edits the Times ' opinion page, studiously avoids publishing any alternative viewpoints. A similar approach is taken by the rest of the mainstream media in the U.S. and Western Europe. Is it surprising that a few days after these two opinion pieces were published the Los Angeles Times found that 57 percent of the U.S. public backs a military strike on Iran?

Whether Iran has nuclear weapons today, 10 years from today , or never is not the issue anymore. The U.S. has declared that Iran will not be allowed to have a " nuclear weapons capability. " How? Perhaps the CIA will supply Iran with misleading documents indicating that E=m 2 c rather than E=mc 2 ? Unlikely. The nuclear weapons "capability" will be defined as broadly as needed, no matter what Iran agrees to, to justify the military option, which has already been endorsed by senators on both sides of the aisle .

However, neither the media nor Congress are bringing up the inconvenient little fact that the military option will necessarily lead to the use of nuclear weapons against Iran. And they are unwilling to weigh the fact that using nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear country like Iran will likely have disastrous consequences for the U.S. and the rest of the world.

The Fallacy of Nuclear "Deterrence"

We are told over and over that the sole purpose of U.S. nuclear weapons is to "deter" adversaries , which surely provides some comfort to otherwise moral people who devote their efforts to building up the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal . The argument made some sense before: an adversary like the Soviet Union could arguably be deterred by the U.S. nuclear arsenal from launching a nuclear attack against the U.S. or its allies, or even a massive conventional attack against Western Europe.

However, the "deterrent" role of U.S. nuclear weapons has recently been extended to deter WMD (e.g., chemical weapons) attacks, and the administration argues that "low-yield" nuclear weapons make deterrence more "credible" [.pdf], and low-yield earth penetrating weapons (B61-11) are already in the U.S. nuclear stockpile [.pdf]. Where does this lead?

As Keith Payne, a proponent of the current U.S. Nuclear Posture well puts it, " deterrence is inherently unreliable: prepare for its failure. " This means that if an adversary undertakes an action that the U.S. nuclear threat was meant to deter, the U.S. will respond by making good on its threat and use its nuclear weapons. Couple this with the recently adopted preemptive National Security Strategy , and the fact that the U.S. accuses Iran of having chemical weapons and that it can " deploy chemical warheads on its long-range missiles ," and you are led to the following scenario: If in response to an aerial attack on Iran's facilities, Iran fires or threatens to fire a single missile against Israel or against U.S. forces in Iraq, the U.S. will attack Iran with tactical nuclear weapons .

Why is this a realistic expectation ? Because no matter what the political cost, it would support the much broader role desired for the U.S. nuclear arsenal in the " second nuclear age ," which currently has no credibility . According to the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review , the U.S. nuclear arsenal is now also supposed to "dissuade adversaries from undertaking military programs or operations that could threaten U.S. interests or those of allies and friends." Well, it has already failed in this regard. Iran is pursuing its nuclear program, undeterred by all overt and less overt U.S. threats. Once the U.S. makes good on its nuclear deterrence threat once and uses its nuclear weapons, the validity of the nuclear deterrence policy against any action opposed by the U.S. will be established for future contingencies. There is a good reason why U.S. documents emphasize that " there is no customary or conventional international law to prohibit nations from employing nuclear weapons in armed conflict ."

Tactical Nuclear Weapons Deployment

The Navy instruction OPNAVINST 5721.1F [.pdf] just released concerning "the release of information about nuclear weapons and nuclear capabilities of U.S. forces" is an update of the earlier 1993 version [.pdf] with some changes. One is this added paragraph:

"The current NCND [neither confirming nor denying] policy mirrors the original policy taking into account employment and program policy changes. In general, it is U.S. policy not to deploy nuclear weapons aboard surface ships, naval aircraft, attack submarines, or guided missile submarines."

Note the "in general" wording, which clearly allows for exceptions. That phrasing was conspicuously absent in the 1993 version, which instead stated "It is general US policy not to deploy nuclear weapons?." Note also that the new statement explicitly mentions that it is issued in view of "employment and program policy changes," which presumably refers to the 2001 Nuclear Posture Review and the associated " Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations ," which envision the U.S. use of tactical nuclear weapons in vastly expanded circumstances .

The policy's purported rationale is that

" Uncertainty as to the location of nuclear weapons complicates an adversary's military planning and reduces his chances of successful attack thereby increasing the deterrent value of our forces and the security of the weapons ."

Perhaps. But it also serves the clear function of allowing preparations for a tactical nuclear strike against Iran without raising public alarm. The same considerations that were being made back in 1948 ? "The novel nature of atomic war nevertheless made it advisable to refrain from openly declaring an American atomic strategy, because that would alarm the American public, triggering a moral debate?" ? apply today. Americans would vehemently oppose the deployment of tactical nuclear weapons to be used against Iran if such action was publicly disclosed.

Blaming the Military

The principal responsibility for what is about to happen will be assigned to the military. Linton Brooks, the National Nuclear Security Administration director, stated that "recently funded research into earth-penetrating bombs came at the request of military leaders who have seen potential uses for them against rogue states that hide sensitive sites deep underground." The weapons that will be used are B61-11 nuclear earth penetrators , in the U.S. nuclear stockpile since 2001 [.pdf].

The Pentagon draft document " Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations " provides "guidance for the employment of U.S. nuclear forces" and states, "Geographic combatant commanders may request presidential approval for use of nuclear weapons for a variety of conditions," then proceeds to list several conditions that will undoubtedly apply in a military confrontation with Iran:

* "An adversary using or intending to use WMD against U.S., multinational, or alliance forces or civilian populations"
* "Attacks on adversary installations including WMD, deep, hardened bunkers containing chemical or biological weapons"
* "To counter potentially overwhelming adversary conventional forces"
* "For rapid and favorable war termination on U.S. terms"
* "To ensure success of U.S. and multinational operations"
* "To demonstrate U.S. intent and capability to use nuclear weapons to deter adversary use of WMD."

Bush and Rumsfeld often emphasize that their decisions on military operations in Iraq rely on recommendations of military commanders on the ground. As Bush recently put it ,

"The people don't want me making decisions based upon politics; they want me to make decisions based upon the recommendation from our generals on the ground. And that's exactly who I'll be listening to."

When Rumsfeld was accused of overruling advice from Gen. Tommy Franks on preparations for the war on Iraq, the BBC reported that he "flatly denied overriding military commanders," instead stating,

"You will find, if you ask anyone who has been involved in the process in the central command, that every single thing that they [military commanders] have requested has, in fact, happened."

This shameful approach of shifting responsibility from the policymakers to the commanders on the ground will be an essential element in the nuking of Iran. The motivation is transparent: the administration's hope that the strong American inclination to " support the troops " will blunt criticism of the political decision to nuke Iran.

The mere possibility that Iranian missiles targeting U.S. troops could carry chemical warheads, suggested by faulty or even true intelligence and already assumed by U.S. officials , could prompt a geographic commander to request authorization from the president to use low-yield nuclear weapons against Iran, particularly if such weapons are already deployed in the theater. Or such a request could be prompted by "intelligence" that chemical weapons hidden in underground facilities in Iran will be supplied to terrorists to be used against Americans , and can only be destroyed by nuclear bunker-busters. It is obviously unconscionable to demand that a military commander, whose prime concern is the safety of the troops under command, take into account the long-term consequences for America of crossing the nuclear threshold.

How will President Bush respond to such a request? Will he not authorize the use of tactical nuclear weapons after the military commander has stated that thousands of soldiers under his/her command could be at risk? We're talking about the president whose " top priority is the safety and security of the American people " and who has proclaimed that " [t]he greater the threat, the greater is the risk of inaction ? and the more compelling the case for taking anticipatory action to defend ourselves, even if uncertainty remains as to the time and place of the enemy's attack ." This is the same man who year after year has requested that Congress lift the ban on research and development of low-yield nuclear weapons ( he finally succeeded ), who year after year asks Congress to fund new, more "usable" nuclear bunker-busters [.pdf], who has said that " [i]f America shows uncertainty and weakness in the decade, the world will drift toward tragedy. This will not happen on my watch ."

A decision that will determine the future of humanity and its possible annihilation lies in the hands, mind and soul of a geographic combatant commander.

Make No Mistake About It: Nuking Iran Is Wrong

Attacking Iran with nuclear weapons, no matter how small , is evil for the following reasons:

* It will not be the result of military necessity, but a premeditated act , the circumstances to make it possible having been methodically put in place by the United States over the course of many years.
* Iran does not have ready-to-use chemical nor biological weapons , just like Iraq didn't in 2003, despite identical U.S. accusations, no matter what " intelligence " tells you. Iran is party to international treaties proscribing chemical and biological weapons and terrorism .
* Iran is not pursuing nuclear weapons ; it is pursuing a civilian nuclear program . Even if it wanted to, it is many years away from the ability to make nuclear weapons.
* Iran advocates a political solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict; it does not threaten the use of force against Israel. The U.S. may not agree with Iran's advocated political solution (elimination of the state of Israel), but that does not give the U.S. the right to attack Iran, just as the Spanish claim over Gibraltar does not entitle Britain to attack Spain.
* Iran has never attacked nor threatened to attack another state in modern times.
* Iran has no more connection to al-Qaeda than do the U.S., Spain , or Germany , and a lot less than the state of Florida .
* Iran is a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty as a non-nuclear-weapon state, does not have nuclear weapons, and does not threaten to use them, unlike the U.S.
* Iran's missiles serve the purpose of deterring an Israeli attack (like the Israeli attack on Osirak ), not an offensive purpose.
* Iran's government was democratically elected and has popular support. Attacking Iran will not result in Iranians rebelling against their government, despite the LA Times' (here we go again, Nick ) claim to the contrary.

The U.S. has just declared that it will defend Israel militarily against Iran if needed. Presumably this includes a scenario where Israel would initiate hostilities by unprovoked bombing of Iranian facilities, as it did with Iraq's Osirak, and Iran would respond with missiles targeting Israel. The U.S. intervention is likely to be further bombing of Iran's facilities, including underground installations that can only be destroyed with low-yield nuclear bunker-busters. Such nuclear weapons may cause low casualties, perhaps only in the hundreds [.pdf], but the nuclear threshold will have been crossed.

Iran's reaction to a U.S. attack with nuclear weapons, no matter how small, cannot be predicted with certainty. U.S. planners may hope that it will deter Iran from responding, thus saving lives. However, just as the U.S. forces in Iraq were not greeted with flowers, it is likely that such an attack would provoke a violent reaction from Iran and lead to the severe escalation of hostilities, which in turn would lead to the use of larger nuclear weapons by the U.S. and potential casualties in the hundreds of thousands. Witness the current uproar over cartoons and try to imagine the resulting upheaval in the Muslim world after the U.S. nukes Iran.

The Military's Moral Dilemma

Men and women in the military forces, including civilian employees, may be facing a difficult moral choice at this very moment and in the coming weeks, akin to the moral choices faced by Colin Powell and Dan Ellsberg. The paths these two men followed were radically different.

Colin Powell was an American hero, widely respected and admired at the time he was appointed secretary of state in 2001. In February 2003, he chose to follow orders despite his own serious misgivings , and delivered the pivotal UN address that paved the way for the U.S. invasion of Iraq the following month. Today, most Americans believe the Iraq invasion was wrong, and Colin Powell is disgraced , his future destroyed, and his great past achievements forgotten.

Daniel Ellsberg , a military analyst, played a significant role in ending the Vietnam War by leaking the Pentagon Papers. He knew that he would face prosecution for breaking the law, but was convinced it was the correct moral choice. His courageous and principled action earned him respect and gratitude .

The Navy has just reminded [.pdf] its members and civilian employees what the consequences are of violating provisions concerning the release of information about the nuclear capabilities of U.S. forces. Why right now, for the first time in 12 years ? Because it is well aware of moral choices that its members may face, and it hopes to deter certain actions. But courageous men and women are not easily deterred.

To disobey orders and laws and to leak information are difficult actions that entail risks. Still, many principled individuals have done it in the past and will continue to do it in the future ( see [1] , [2] , [3] , [4] , [5] , [6] , [7] , [8] , [9] .) Conscientious objection to the threat and use of nuclear weapons is a moral choice .

Once the American public becomes fully aware that military action against Iran will include the planned use of nuclear weapons, public support for military action will quickly disappear. Anything could get the ball rolling. A great catastrophe will have been averted.

Even U.S. military law recognizes that there is no requirement to obey orders that are unlawful . The use of nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear country can be argued to be in violation of international law , the principle of just war , the principle of proportionality , common standards of morality ( [1] , [2] , [3] , [4] , [5] ), and customs that make up the law of armed conflict . Even if the nuclear weapons used are small, because they are likely to cause escalation of the conflict they violate the principle of proportionality and will cause unnecessary suffering .

The Nuremberg Tribunal , which the United States helped to create, established that "The fact that a person acted pursuant to order of his government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him."

To follow orders or to disobey orders, to keep information secret or to leak it, are choices for each individual to make ? extremely difficult choices that have consequences. But not choosing is not an option.

America's Collective Responsibility

Blaming the administration or the military for crossing the nuclear threshold is easy, but responsibility will be shared by all Americans.

All Americans knew , or should have known , that using nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear country like Iran was a possibility given the Bush administration's new policies . All Americans could have voiced their opposition to these policies and demand that they be reversed.

The media will carry a heavy burden of responsibility. The mainstream media could have effectively raised public awareness of the possibility that the U.S. would use nuclear weapons against Iran. So far, they have chosen to almost completely hide the issue, which is being increasingly addressed in non-mainstream media .

Members of Congress could have raised the question forcefully, calling for public hearings, demanding public discussion of the administration's plans, and passing new laws or resolutions . So far they have failed to do so and are derelict in their responsibility to their constituents. Letters to the president from some in Congress [1] , [2] are a start, but are not likely to elicit a meaningful response or a change in plans and are a far cry from forceful action.

Scientific organizations and organizations dealing with arms control and nuclear weapons could have warned of the dangers associated with the Iran situation. So far, they have not done so ( [1] , [2] , [3] , [4] , [5] , [6] , [7] , [8] ).

Scientists and engineers responsible for the development of nuclear weapons could have voiced concern [.pdf] when the new U.S. nuclear weapons policies became known, policies that directly involve the fruits of their labor. Their voices have not been heard.

Those who contribute their labor to the scientific and technical infrastructure that makes nuclear weapons and their means of delivery possible bear a particularly heavy burden of moral responsibility . Their voices have barely been heard.

The Nuclear Abyss

T he United States is preparing to enter a new era: an era in which it will enforce nuclear nonproliferation by the threat and use of nuclear weapons. The use of tactical nuclear weapons against Iran will usher in a new world order. The ultimate goal is that no nation other than the U.S. should have a nuclear weapons arsenal.

A telltale sign that this is the plan is the recent change in the stated mission of Los Alamos National Laboratory, where nuclear weapons are developed. The mission of LANL used to be described officially as " Los Alamos National Laboratory's central mission is to reduce the global nuclear danger " [1] [.pdf], [2] [.pdf], [3] [.pdf]. That will sound ridiculous once the U.S. starts throwing mini-nukes around. In anticipation of it, the Los Alamos mission statement has been recently changed to " prevent the spread of weapons of mass destruction and to protect our homeland from terrorist attack. " That is the present and future role of the U.S. nuclear arsenal, to be achieved through threat (deterrence) and use of nuclear weapons. References to the old mission are nowhere to be found in the current Los Alamos documents, indicating that the change was deliberate and thorough.

It is not impossible that the U.S. will succeed in its goal. But it is utterly improbable. This is a big world. Once the U.S. crosses the nuclear threshold against a non-nuclear country, many more countries will strive to acquire nuclear weapons, and many will succeed.

The nuclear abyss may turn out to be a steep precipice or a gentle slope. Either way, it will be a one-way downhill slide toward a bottomless pit. We will have entered a path of no return, leading in a few months or a few decades to global nuclear war and unimaginable destruction.

But there are still choices to be made. Up to the moment the first U.S. nuclear bomb explodes, the fall into the abyss can be averted by choices made by each and every one of us. We may never know which choices prevented it if it doesn't happen. But if we make the wrong choices, we will know what they were. And so will future generations, even in a world where wars are fought with sticks and stones .

End.

don't let nuclear war start!
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