11/12/05 "AntiWar"
-- -- On September 24 of this year, the United States finally
achieved a goal it had persistently pursued
over several
years. Iran was declared by the IAEA (International Atomic Energy
Agency) to be in "non compliance" with its obligations under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).
The resolution passed by the IAEA is remarkably weak. It does not
set a date for Iran to be referred to the UN Security Council, and it
does not even mention the possibility of sanctions. It even notes that
Iran has made "good progress" in correcting its "breaches," all of
which date back to before October 2003. The LA Times
characterized it as a "gentle
slap." It is instead an enormous thud.
We pointed out
before
that the probable reason for the U.S. to insist on the passage of
such a weak resolution (on the face of opposition by Russia and China
to stronger resolutions) was to reach a stalemate in the Security
Council that would provide an excuse for U.S. military action, which
would necessarily include the use of nuclear weapons against Iran
[1],
[2],
[3].
There is, however, an even stronger reason for the U.S. to have pushed
for this resolution so adamantly, a reason which is valid even if Iran
is not referred to the Security Council at the forthcoming November 24
meeting or thereafter, and that supports the
predicted
scenario.
The
IAEA resolution of September 24 2005 allows the United States to
carry out a nuclear attack against Iran "legally."
Non-nuclear states have sought for many years that nuclear states
issue clear "negative security assurances," meaning a committment from
nuclear states not to use nuclear weapons against non-nuclear states.
No matter how logical such a desire appears to you and me, nuclear
states have been notoriously reluctant to make such pledges,
especially the United States.
The latest such assurances from the five nuclear states date back
to 1995, and are the subject of
UN Security Council Resolution 984, which was passed with
unanimity. The legal status of these assurances is not totally clear,
and non-nuclear states have continued to request "legally binding"
assurances, implying that the existing assurances are not. In fact, in
2002 John Bolton, then Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and
International Security, in an interview with "Arms Control Today"
explicitly
disavowed any U.S. committment to the 1995 resolution.
Nevertheless,
a case can be made that these assurances are at the very least
"politically binding" and may even be "legally binding." The reason is
that they were made for the explicit purpose of having the non-nuclear
states extend the NPT in 1995. The fact that the non-nuclear states
indeed did extend the NPT based on these assurances confers them
legally binding character even if it was not so intended originally,
according to
G. Bunn (1997).
The text of the 1995 U.S. negative security assurance
(S/1995/263) reads:
"The United States reaffirms that it will not use nuclear
weapons against non-nuclear-weapon States Parties to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons except in the case of an invasion
or any other attack on the United States, its territories, its armed
forces or other troops, its allies, or on a State towards which it has
a security commitment, carried out or sustained by such a
non-nuclear-weapon State in association or alliance with a
nuclear-weapon State."
Good news, the U.S. cannot nuke Iran, a party to the NPT? Think
again. The paragraph immediately before in the U.S. declaration reads:
"It is important that all parties to the Treaty on the Non-
Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons fulfil their obligations under the
Treaty. In that regard, consistent with generally recognised
principles of international law, parties to the Treaty on the
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons must be in compliance with these
undertakings in order to be eligible for any benefits of adherence to
the Treaty."
Iran was "in compliance" until September 24th, 2005. Thereafter,
the "benefit" of not being subject to nuking no longer applies. An
analysis of this qualification of the U.S. negative security assurance
declaration and its implications for non-nuclear states has been made
by
Jean du Preez in 2003 and is consistent with our conclusion.
Bolton's
statements were made at a time when the US had already been
denouncing for several years that Iran was pursuing a secret
nuclear weapons program in violation of the NPT. The
detailed
analysis of Gordon Prather, however, shows that Iran's
'violations' did not then nor do now amount to "non-compliance."
Nevertheless it will be politically very important for the US that the
1995 security assurance is no longer applicable to Iran, and Bolton
(now US Ambassador to the UN) will surely emphasize it at the United
Nations when the time comes to justify the US action.
Iran's protective shield against US nukes, however feeble it was,
is no longer. Any
"negotiating proposal" of the EU and the US towards Iran will be
carefully tailored so that Iran cannot possibly accept it.
Irrespective of what happens at the November 24th IAEA meeting, the
US
plan to nuke Iran will continue moving forward, focused and
unrelenting.
Jorge Hirsch is a
professor of physics at the University of California San Diego