By Charles Krauthammer
Thursday, February 26, 2015
A sunset clause?
The news from the nuclear talks with Iran was already
troubling. Iran was being granted the “right to enrich.” It would be allowed to
retain and spin thousands of centrifuges. It could continue construction of the
Arak plutonium reactor. Yet so thoroughly was Iran stonewalling International
Atomic Energy Agency inspectors that just last Thursday the IAEA reported its
concern “about the possible existence in Iran of undisclosed . . . development
of a nuclear payload for a missile.”
Bad enough. Then it got worse: News leaked Monday of the
“sunset clause.” President Obama had accepted the Iranian demand that any
restrictions on its program be time-limited. After which, the mullahs can crank
up their nuclear program at will and produce as much enriched uranium as they
want.
Sanctions lifted. Restrictions gone. Nuclear development
legitimized. Iran would re-enter the international community, as Obama
suggested in an interview last December, as “a very successful regional power.”
A few years — probably around ten — of good behavior and Iran would be home
free.
The agreement thus would provide a predictable path to an
Iranian bomb. Indeed, a flourishing path, with trade resumed, oil pumping, and
foreign investment pouring into a restored economy.
Meanwhile, Iran’s intercontinental-ballistic-missile
program is subject to no restrictions at all. It’s not even part of these
negotiations.
Why is Iran building them? You don’t build ICBMs in order
to deliver sticks of dynamite. Their only purpose is to carry nuclear warheads.
Nor does Iran need an ICBM to hit Riyadh or Tel Aviv. Intercontinental missiles
are for reaching, well, other continents. North America, for example.
Such an agreement also means the end of nonproliferation.
When a rogue state defies the world, continues illegal enrichment, and then
gets the world to bless an eventual unrestricted industrial-level enrichment
program, the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty is dead. And regional
hyperproliferation becomes inevitable as Egypt, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and
others seek shelter in going nuclear themselves.
Wasn’t Obama’s great international cause a nuclear-free
world? Within months of his swearing-in, he went to Prague to so declare. He
then led a 50-party Nuclear Security Summit, one of whose proclaimed
achievements was having Canada give up some enriched uranium.
Having disarmed the Canadian threat, Obama turned to
Iran. The deal now on offer to the ayatollah would confer legitimacy on the
nuclearization of the most rogue of rogue regimes: radically anti-American,
deeply jihadist, purveyor of terrorism from Argentina to Bulgaria, puppeteer of
a Syrian regime that specializes in dropping barrel bombs on civilians. In
fact, the Iranian regime just this week, at the apex of these nuclear talks,
staged a spectacular attack on a replica U.S. carrier near the Strait of
Hormuz.
Well, say the administration apologists, what’s your
alternative? Do you want war?
It’s Obama’s usual, subtle false-choice maneuver: It’s
either appeasement or war.
It’s not. True, there are no good choices, but Obama’s
prospective deal is the worst possible. Not only does Iran get a clear path to
the bomb but it gets sanctions lifted, all pressure removed, and international
legitimacy.
There is a third choice. If you are not stopping Iran’s
program, don’t give away the store. Keep the pressure, keep the sanctions.
Indeed, increase them. After all, previous sanctions brought Iran to its knees
and to the negotiating table in the first place. And that was before the collapse
of oil prices, which would now vastly magnify the economic effect of heightened
sanctions.
Congress is proposing precisely that. Combined with cheap
oil, it could so destabilize the Iranian economy as to threaten the clerical
regime. That’s the opening. Then offer to renew negotiations for sanctions
relief but from a very different starting point — no enrichment. Or, if you
like, with a few token centrifuges for face-saving purposes.
And no sunset.
That’s the carrot. As for the stick, make it quietly
known that the U.S. will not stand in the way of any threatened nation that
takes things into its own hands. We leave the regional threat to the regional
powers, say, Israeli bombers overflying Saudi Arabia.
Consider where we began: six U.N. Security Council
resolutions demanding an end to Iranian enrichment. Consider what we are now
offering: an interim arrangement ending with a sunset clause that allows the
mullahs a robust, industrial-strength, internationally sanctioned nuclear
program.
Such a deal makes the Cuba normalization look good and
the Ukrainian cease-fires positively brilliant. We are on the cusp of an epic
capitulation. History will not be kind.
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