By Richard Goldberg
Thursday, May 03, 2018
Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu dropped an
intelligence bombshell on the world Monday and, with it, may have signed the
death warrant for the 2015 Iran nuclear accord: Thousands of files seized from
inside Iran definitively prove that the Islamic Republic has been deceiving the
international community all along. The regime lied to the International Atomic
Energy Agency about the existence of a nuclear-weapons program, and, in direct
violation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), hid its massive
archive of nuclear knowhow.
The response from President Donald Trump should be no
different than his response to North Korea: maximum pressure until the
complete, verifiable, and irreversible dismantlement of Iran’s nuclear
infrastructure.
In 2015, when the Obama administration negotiated the
JCPOA, critics warned that Iran would ultimately follow in the footsteps of
North Korea, which reached its own nuclear agreement with America in 1994. In
that accord, known as the Agreed Framework, North Korea promised to freeze its
production of plutonium in exchange for heavy fuel oil and light-water
reactors. As it turned out, the North covertly developed a uranium-enrichment
program, which, when combined with its unabated development of ballistic missiles,
turned it from a national-security problem to a national-security nightmare.
Just two and a half years into the JCPOA, it appears
Iran’s intentions are equally nefarious: It is using the JCPOA to buy time to
regain economic strength while continuing work on ballistic missiles and
advanced centrifuges until it decides to build nuclear weapons. The regime’s
own archive, as revealed by Netanyahu, confirms that Tehran is on a slow but
clear path toward nuclear capability.
Netanyahu’s revelation comes days before President
Trump’s deadline for Europe to help him fix certain flaws in the nuclear deal
or else face an American exit. For months, State Department negotiators have
worked with their counterparts in London, Paris, and Berlin to find ways to force
inspections at Iranian military sites, extend the deal’s restrictions beyond
2025, and curb the Iranian ballistic-missile program.
At the center of this negotiation, however, the nuclear deal
remained intact: legitimized uranium enrichment, nuclear equipment and
facilities at the ready, and no disclosure of past work on nuclear weapons. The
Israeli intelligence bonanza shows the world that, given the extraordinary
depth of the regime’s lies and deceptions, the only true way to stop Iran’s
slow-walk to a bomb is to dismantle its nuclear infrastructure. Secretary of
State Mike Pompeo suggested as much in a statement issued late Monday. “Now
that the world knows Iran has lied and is still lying,” he said, “it is time to
revisit the question of whether Iran can be trusted to enrich or control any
nuclear material.”
Over the weekend, Pompeo said that the United States will
continue to exert maximum pressure on North Korea until that regime completely,
verifiably, and irreversibly dismantles its nuclear program. The standard for
Iran should be no different. The fatal flaw of the JCPOA, after all, was that
it gave up the leverage of economic sanctions without any guarantee that Iran
would dismantle its nuclear and missile programs. Working to rectify that flaw
should be Trump’s top priority.
Since Iran violated the nuclear deal’s preliminary
condition for sanctions relief — the full disclosure of its past and present
work on nuclear weapons — and violated its ongoing commitment to never pursue
nuclear weapons, the Trump administration should trigger the agreement’s
procedures to restore international sanctions imposed by the United Nations
Security Council. As this “snapback” process unfolds, America should re-impose
its own sanctions, bringing back pressure on Iran’s central bank, its key
economic sectors, and nearly all Iranian financial institutions. Trump should
also insist that Europe follow suit, ordering the SWIFT financial-messaging
service to stop serving Iranian banks that are once again subject to sanctions.
Maximum pressure must not be economic alone. It will
require intense political efforts to ensure that the Iranian public knows the
mullahs not only squandered the sanctions relief provided in 2015, but are
directly responsible for the JCPOA’s collapse. It will require raising the cost
for Iran in Syria and Yemen, by supplying Israel, Saudi Arabia, and the U.A.E
with the real-time intelligence needed to strike Iranian targets. And it will
require reminding the regime in Tehran that there will be consequences if it
tries to race to a nuclear weapon — that its only viable option is a peaceful
negotiation ending in the full disclosure and irreversible destruction of all
illicit programs.
Iran and North Korea have a long history of nuclear
cooperation — and of nuclear deception. Now is the time for President Trump to
hold both rogue regimes to the same denuclearization standard.
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