Title: Iran
1Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Assoc. Prof. MUSTAFA KIBAROGLU
- International Relations Department
- Bilkent University
- Ankara - Turkey
- 02 November 2006
- NATO School
- Oberammergau Germany
2Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Background
- The Puzzle
- Actors in the Puzzle
- Iran
- United States
- European Union
- Russia
- Israel
- IAEA
- An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis
- Problems
3Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Background
- Iran is acquainted with nuclear technology in the
mid 1950s after the atoms for peace initiative - European countries like Germany and France, in
the first place, as well as the United States
have encouraged Iran in the 1960s and 70s to
embark upon a large scale nuclear technology
transfer - With the influx of huge revenues due to oil
exports Iran set an ambitious goal of 20,000 MWe
nuclear energy capacity to be operational by mid
1990s - Islamic revolution in 1979 and the war with Iraq
in the 1980s halted the construction of facilities
4Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Background (contd)
- Iran and Russia signed an Agreement in 1995 for
cooperation in the nuclear field including the
construction of two 1,000 MWe LWR in Bushehr - 30 Doctoral and Masters students are sent to
Russian institutes every year. To date, some 250
Iranians received their Ph.D. degrees in Nuclear
Engineering and Nuclear Physics from Russia - Iran developed (both through technology transfer
and indigenously) a complete nuclear fuel cycle
including uranium milling, conversion, enrichment
and reactor fuel production facilities as well as
plutonium reprocessing at laboratory scale
5Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- The Puzzle
- Iran is a State Party to the NPT and it has the
right to develop these capabilities, indigenously
or by way of transfers, provided that they are
not intended to be diverted from peaceful to
military purposes - Irans intentions are not clear due to the nature
of the policies followed by the clerics who
administer the country since the Islamic
revolution - Yet, some Iranians claim to have the capability
to detonate a nuclear device, but not the
political decision at the moment and add by
saying that they want to be admitted to the
Nuclear Club
6Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle
- The US sees Irans capability as a threat and
wants Iran to permanently halt uranium enrichment - The EU agreed with the US on that, but disagreed
on the ways and means of dealing with Iran - Russia disagreed with the requests of both the US
and the EU, and supported Irans rights under the
NPT - Israel does not rule out military attack on
facilities - The IAEA cannot verify allegations of Irans
clandestine work on nuclear weapons design
7Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle Iran
- Iranian leaders say that they will never agree
to a permanent cessation of enrichment on the
grounds of their Article IV rights under the NPT - They also say they will end cooperation with
the IAEA if sanctions are imposed on Iran.
Implicit in their statements is that Iran may
withdraw from the NPT - Iran tries to mount pressure on the US by getting
the support of Muslim countries, Arab
populations, the Non-Aligned Movement countries,
and also the moderate Europeans who emphasize
legitimacy
8Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle Iran (contd)
- Anti-Americanism and Anti-Israel feelings play
into the hands of Iran to get worldwide support - NAM countries and Islamic states dont want Iran
to give in to the US pressures so as not to set a
bad precedent for selective (mis)treatement. - They also see Iran as a potential nuclear
supplier state who can sell them technologies
that are denied to them by the US and the
Europeans - Iran signed the Additional Protocol and suspended
uranium enrichment to show its good intentions
9Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle USA
- Iran constitutes a potential threat to US
interests in the Gulf region and a direct threat
to Israel - The US pursues stick only policy toward Iran
and and does not discount possibility of military
action - The US has limited economic and diplomatic
leverages and faces difficulties dealing with
Iran - Iran is different than Iraq by all accounts, with
its four times bigger territory, powerful armed
forces and 70 million population who support the
nuclear (weapons) program, including those in
opposition
10Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle EU
- Europeans encouraged Iran to invest in nuclear
energy and provided education and training to
Iranian students and scientists in 1960s and 70s - They ceased cooperation with Iran in the 1980s
under the influence of the US, but resumed in the
second half of 1990s by signing trade contracts - There are deep divergences of views between the
US and the EU on the ways and means of dealing
with international security problems - EU countries prefer economic and diplomatic
incentives over coercive policies or use of force
11Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle Russia
- Russia cut a deal with Iran when it needed hard
currency to keep up its nuclear industry even
though the Nunn-Lugar initiative poured
billions of US dollars to Russia, but also raised
sensitivities - Russias cooperation in the context of
cooperative threat reduction initiatives is
essential for the US, and thus Russia cannot be
pressurized beyond a certain limit to stop its
cooperation with Iran - With the nuclear deal, Russia gained leverage in
its relations with Iran to control its ambitions
to export revolution to Muslim Central Asia
republics
12Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle Israel
- Iran is seen by Israel as a credible threat to
its survival as a sovereign state in the
territories where it is now - It is essential for Israel that Iran does not
acquire nuclear weapons and their delivery
capability - Carrying out a limited military strike to
selected Iranian facilities is among the options
for Israel - Apparently, Israel has less concerns with the
consequences of a military strike than the US,
and the Israeli population is less divided on
this issue
13Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle IAEA
- Established in 1957 to promote peaceful uses of
nuclear energy among less developed countries - Its Statute did not perfectly envisage the task
of timely detection of conversion of significant
quantities of fissile material from peaceful to
military purposes as required by NPT later on - IAEA has no enforcement capability and must be
impartial and objective in its dealings with
states - The composition of the Board of Governors
sometimes makes it difficult to reach consensus
decisions
14Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors in the Puzzle IAEA (contd)
- IAEA is in a much better shape since the
initiation of Program 932 which resulted in
strengthened safeguards document, namely
Additional Portocol - IAEA Director Generals initiative in early 2003
to set a deadline (Oct. 31, 2003) for Iran to
sign the Additional Protocol was an important
step forward - The Agency does neither want to become leverage
in US policy to pressurize Iran, nor to serve
Irans purpose to come clean while much is still
unknown - Both the US and Iran complain Good sign, indeed
15Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- An Emerging Crisis?
- Iran proposed objective guarantees including
permament placement of IAEA inspectors and
tamper-proof surveillance machines in the nuclear
facilities in return for which it requests firm
guarantees from the EU - Iran wants to avoid military strike to its
facilities so as not to lose prestige, and also
not to miss commercial opportunities as a
potential supplier - Iran threatens with using everything in its
capability to damage US interest from Afghanistan
to Lebanon, and from Gulf to the Mediterranean
if attacked militarily by the US and/or Israel
16Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis USA
- There are 125,000 US troops in Iraq who may be
targeted by Iran in retaliation to US military
strike - Intelligence failures in Iraq increased
scepticism and decreased support among the
Americans - US intelligence services may not have accurate
information about all of Irans nuclear
facilities some of which are built around
population centers - Military strike to selected facilities may result
in insignificant damage to Irans nuclear program
but may cause significant collateral damage
17Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis EU
- The EU lacks a full-fledged foreign and security
policy, and a viable security and defense
identity - The European Constitutional Treaty has no clause
on use of force - The EU does not see Iran as a clear threat, as it
doesnt believe Iran to have neither the
capability nor the intention to cause damage to
its interests - The young and vibrant population of Iran and its
export of oil and gas to Europe, indeed, makes
the EU dependent on Iran, rather than vice versa
18Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis Russia
- After the US military presence in Uzbekistan and
Georgia, Russia is concerned with further US
penetration into the Caucasus and Central Asia,
and thus builds partnership with Iran in the
region - Russia may veto any resolution that may be
brought to the UNSC, which may suggest tough
sanctions to Iran due to its work on enrichment - Supporting Article IV rights of the members of
the NPT is deemed important for Russia, who wants
the Bushehr nuclear power plant to serve as a
showcase for its future nuclear exports
19Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis Israel
- Israel may not be convinced to believe that if
Iran becomes a nuclearweapons-capable state,
there will be parity between Israel and Iran that
may help defuse the tension in the region - Irans nuclearization may trigger other countries
in the region, most of them being hostile to
Israel - There can be no guarantee that Iran will never
use its nuclear weapons against Israel in the
future - For Israel, the cost of doing nothing may turn
out to be far greater than carrying out a limited
military strike against Irans selected facilities
20Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Actors perspectives in the crisis IAEA
- It is essential and vital for the IAEA that Iran
accepts inspections in all nuclear facilities as
well as other sensitive sites and facilities that
may be potentially related to nuclear weapons
production - If Iran creates frictions in its cooperation with
the Agency or withdraws from the NPT, there may
be no way to know about the status of the work
done in the facilities related to its nuclear
program - The IAEA wouldnt like Iran to become a pariah
state by closing its doors to the world
21Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Problems
- Unsucessful military strike may consolidate
Irans determination to develop nuclear weapons,
may mobilize support from around the world - Even a succesful strike may only retard for
several years. With its existing indigenous
technological and scientific capabilities, Iran
may recover soon and elevate itself to a
nuclear-weapons-capable state or a de facto
nuclear-weapons state by withdrawing from NPT - The divide between the US and the EU may be
deepened, and anti-Americanism that fuels, among
others, terrorist attacks against the US may rise
22Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Prospects
- Irans proposal to provide objective guarantees
may serve as a basis that can be expanded with
inclusion of unfettered access and inspections at
any location as if Additional Protocol was in
force - In return for economic incentives, such as
normalization of trade relations, as well as
improved diplomatic relations within the context
of a regional security arrangement, Iran may be
allowed to enrich uranium in a MNC only for
producing the amount of fuel necessary for its
nuclear reactors
23Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- The Way Out
- All in all, the ultimate goal should be to
establish a nuclear-weapons-free zone, and
eventually, a zone free of all weapons of mass
destruction in the Middle East, no matter how
unrealistic it may seem under the present
circumstances ?
24Irans Nuclear Ambitions An Emerging Crisis?
- Assoc. Prof. MUSTAFA KIBAROGLU
- International Relations Department
- Bilkent University
- Ankara - Turkey
- 02 November 2006
- NATO School
- Oberammergau Germany