Bombed
if you do, Bombed if you Don't
The latest National
Intelligence Estimate has been greeted by a mixture of relief and alarm.
As I have been saying all along,
Iran
indeed poses no quantifiable imminent nuclear threat to us or her neighbors.
It is with much alarm, however, that we see the administration continue to
ratchet up the war rhetoric as if nothing has changed.
Indeed nothing has
changed from the administration's perspective, as they have had this latest
intelligence report for some time. Only this week has it been made known
to the public. They want it both ways with Iran. On the one hand, they discredit the report entirely, despite it being
one of the most comprehensive intelligence reports on the subject, with over
1,000 source notes in the document. On the other hand, when discrediting
it fails, they claim that the timing of the abandonment of the weapons
program, just as we were invading Iraq, means our pressure must have worked, so we must keep it up with a new round of
even tougher sanctions. Russia and China are not buying this, apparently, and again we are finding ourselves on a lonely
tenuous platform on the world stage.
The truth is
Iran
is being asked to do the logically impossible feat of proving a negative.
They are being presumed guilty until proven innocent because there is no
evidence with which to indict them. There is still no evidence that
Iran, a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, has ever violated the
treaty's terms – and the terms clearly state that
Iran
is allowed to pursue nuclear energy for peaceful, civilian energy needs.
The
United States
cannot unilaterally change the terms of the treaty, and it is unfair and unwise
diplomatically to impose sanctions for no legitimate reason.
Are we to think that
Iran
hasn't noticed the duplicitous treatment being received by so-called nuclear
threats around the globe? If they have been paying attention, and I think
they have, they would see that if countries do have a nuclear weapon, they tend
to be left alone, or possibly get a subsidy, but if they do not gain such a
weapon then we threaten them. Why wouldn't they want to pursue a
nuclear weapon if that is our current foreign policy? The fact remains,
there is no evidence they actually have one, or could have one any time soon,
even if they immediately resumed a weapons program.
Our badly misguided
foreign policy has already driven this country's economy to the brink of
bankruptcy with one war based on misinformation. It is unthinkable that
despite lack of any evidence of a threat, some are still charging headstrong
into yet another war in the Middle East when what we ought to be doing is coming
home from
Iraq,
coming home from
Korea,
coming home from
Germany
and defending our own soil. We do not need to be interfering in the
internal affairs of other countries and waging war when honest trade,
friendship, and diplomacy are the true paths to peace and prosperity.