Is a Nuclear Deal With Iran Possible?
In diplomacy, always leave your adversary an honorable avenue of retreat.
Fifty years ago this October, to resolve a Cuban missile crisis that had brought us to the brink of nuclear war, JFK did that.
He conveyed to Nikita Khrushchev, secretly, that if the Soviet Union pulled its nuclear missiles out of Cuba, the United States would soon after pull its Jupiter missiles out of Italy and Turkey.
Is the United States willing to allow Iran an honorable avenue of retreat, if it halts enrichment of uranium to 20% and permits intrusive inspections of all its nuclear facilities? Or are U.S. sanctions designed to bring about not a negotiated settlement of the nuclear issue, but regime change, the fall of the Islamic Republic, and its replacement by a more pliable regime?
If the latter is the case, we are likely headed for war with Iran, even as our refusal to negotiate with Tokyo, whose oil we cut off in the summer of 1941, led to Pearl Harbor.
What would cause anyone to believe Iran is willing to negotiate?
There are the fatwas by the ayatollahs against nuclear weapons and the consensus by 16 U.S. intelligence agencies in 2007, reaffirmed in 2011, that Iran has no nuclear weapons program.
Even the Israelis have lately concluded that the Americans are right.
Nor has the United States or Israel discovered any site devoted to the building of nuclear weapons. The deep-underground facility at Fordow is enriching uranium to 20%. There are no reports of any enrichment to 90%, which is weapons grade.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has lately mocked the idea of Iran building a bomb in the face of a U.S. commitment to go to war to prevent it: “Let’s even imagine that we have an atomic weapon, a nuclear weapon. What would we do with it? What intelligent person would fight 5,000 American bombs with one bomb?”
Ahmadinejad did not mention that Israel has 200 to 300 nuclear weapons. He did not need to. The same logic applies.
And Tehran seems to be signaling it is ready for a deal.
According to the United Nations’ watchdog agency, Iran recently converted more than one-third of its 20% enriched uranium into U308, or uranium oxide, a powder for its medical research reactor.
The New York Times also reported Thursday that Iran had proposed to European officials a plan to suspend the enrichment of uranium in return for the lifting of sanctions. By week’s end, Iran was denying it.
Yet common sense suggests that if Iran is not determined to build a nuclear weapon, it will eventually come to the table.
Why? Because, if Iran is not seeking a weapon, no purpose is served by continuing to enrich.
Iran already has enough 20% enriched uranium for medical isotopes and more than enough 5% enriched uranium for its power plant. Further enrichment gives Iran nothing in the way of added security, but it does ensure that the severe sanctions will be sustained and perhaps tightened. And those sanctions are creating tremendous hardships on the Iranian people.
In two weeks, Iran’s currency, the rial, has lost a third of its value. It is at an all-time low against the dollar. Iran’s oil exports are down to 800,000 barrels a day, a third of what they were a year ago. The cost of food and medicine is soaring. Inflation is running officially at 25%. Foreign travel is drying up. Workers are going unpaid.
“We’re close to seeing mass unemployment in cities and queues for social handouts,” an Iranian-born economic adviser to the European Union told Reuters. “There are few alternatives for those people, and many will end up on the bread line.” Last week, merchants marched on parliament and had to be driven back by police using tear gas.
An Iranian businessman in Dubai told Reuters: “Business is drying up. Industry is collapsing. There’s zero investment.… I see it with my own eyes.”
In short, the oil embargo and economic sanctions, what Woodrow Wilson called the “peaceful, silent, deadly remedy,” are working, and Ahmadinejad — who leaves office next year — is rapidly losing support.
So a new question is now on the table. If Iran advances ideas to demonstrate convincingly that it has no weapons program, but insists on what President Obama said he supports — Iran having a peaceful nuclear program under U.N. inspection — will America accept that?
Or will we, seeing the economic crisis deepening, make demands so humiliating no Iranian government can accept them, because our true goal is and has always been regime change?
No one would weep if the Islamic Republic fell. But this is a tough crowd that will not go quietly. If we give them no way out, only a choice between national humiliation or escalation, the hard-liners in the regime and Republican Guard will likely take the death-before-dishonor course.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM
Read more by Patrick J. Buchanan
- What Should Americans Die For? – May 16th, 2013
- Who Are the War Criminals in Syria? – May 6th, 2013
- Their War, Not Ours – April 29th, 2013
- Is War With North Korea Inevitable? – April 4th, 2013
- Goading Gullible America Into War – March 21st, 2013





Johnny in Wi.
October 8th, 2012 at 9:47 pm
More common sense from America's great statesman. He has been right on foreign entanglements since the early 1990's. That is when he called Congress Israeli occupied territory.
Duglarri
October 8th, 2012 at 10:30 pm
There's a simple answer to the way this plays out: Iran is going to cut its enrichment back to zero when it has enough 20% for the medical isotopes reactor, and enough 3% for a few new reactors in a few years. Then the rubber will hit the road, and we'll find that there are new demands, such as were included in the Congress' last set of sanctions. In order to end the sanctions, ending enrichment is only step 1. Iran would also have to ship all of its enriched uranium out of the country. And stop supporting "international terrorism" (which translates as, stop supporting anyone who opposes Israel). And most of all it'll have to come clean on it's ballistic missile program, which means: dismantle all of them.
And then we'll talk. Maybe.
The sanctions are on permanently. There's no power that can make the US Congress do anything AIPAC doesn't want them to do. Certainly no President likely to be elected in the next twenty years or so.
mark g.
October 8th, 2012 at 10:31 pm
Well said, Mr. Buchanan.
Indeed, the first US war on Iraq by Bush Sr. could have been averted had we allowed Saddam Hussein a graceful way to exit Kuwait. Instead, even though US diplomat, April Gillespie, gave Hussein a green light to invade Kuwait in 1991 (over disputes involving oil drilling and historic border disagreements) suddenly Hussein's local invasion became an international showdown with unilateral demands for an Iraqi retreat coming from Zionist-friendly Washington.
Foolishly, Hussein stood his ground and allied forces dumped inconceivable quantities of high tech explosives on Iraqi forces in Kuwait around the clock for some four weeks. America's high tech slaughter left tens of thousands of young Iraqi men dead or maimed. Even Gen. Colin Powell acknowledged personal disgust at the unnecessary and asymmetrical annihilation of this first Gulf War.
Nonetheless, this mass killing did please the chickenhawks in Washington and their Zionist handlers. Bush Sr.'s war has been consistently presented as a great US military victory. But was it? Yes, we killed many young Iraqis, but no vaunted American value (like democracy) was advanced in either Kuwait or Iraq during or following the engagement. Operation Desert Storm turned out to be an immense slaughter that protected a local monarchy and pleased militarists in Washington and Israel.
Now Americans have an opportunity to allow Iran to honorably yield to concerted Western demands for military subordination without bloodshed (even though Israel did introduce nuclear weapons to the Middle East and is allowed to keep them). Will an Iranian retreat with honor be acceptable to Washington/Israel?
Or will the democratic imperialists in Washington and Tel Aviv demand absolute Iranian humiliation or war?
james
October 9th, 2012 at 4:47 am
Sorry Mr. Buchanan, you might sound much more reasonable than the current crew at the helm. But who is the US to dictate what another country can and cannot do? Sanctions are hurting all Iranians, particularly the poor ones and they are a declaration of war, so there is nothing to be averted by submission. The Ayatollahs know it, the americans know it and the shitty little statians know it.
I am surprised an accomplished statesman like Buchanan is ignorant about the Farsi and generally Shia muslim state of mind, they will take it al the way.
What will Iran get in your Scenario? Absolutely nothing unless you think not attacking it militarily is something. Do not forget they believe they know how to defend themselves and put a hurt on whoever wants to attack them.
Maybe it the other way around Patrick, Iran will offer the US an honorable way out only if they grow brains and ditch the ME Bitch.
Bob D
October 9th, 2012 at 4:54 am
As usual Buchanan hits the nail on the head. There is no graceful exit for Iran. The Israel lackey neocons have Iran on their long hit list as the cross off the countries that will stand up to Israel one at a time. Iran is not even arab and was considered only a minor threat to Israel in the 60's. But all of the bigger threats are gone. And the US still has some treasure and military lives available at Israel's disposal. Time to sweep up.
WTE
October 9th, 2012 at 5:20 am
It is time for isreal to be dealt with. If nothing is done they will have WWIII
EFM
October 9th, 2012 at 7:58 am
Wrong, Saddam didn't stand his ground, Saddam's army was retreating when they were bombed.
Better Cause
October 9th, 2012 at 8:53 am
Let’s say reality does not exist….does that do away with reality? There must be something in the Christian mentality that prompts abandonment of universal logic and evidence. I understand now why we have the Jefferson Bible because he was a man of evidence logic and cause.
mark g.
October 9th, 2012 at 9:48 am
Saddam stood his ground until Iraqi deaths became unacceptable as they were completely routed on the battlefield.
mark g.
October 9th, 2012 at 9:51 am
Yes, Powell did pass along phony intelligence about Iraq at the UN. But he also acknowledged later that he was very disturbed at the slaughter of Iraqi soldiers on the battlefield towards the end of this war.
The Highway of Death became a zone where finally US forces ceased their destruction of surviving Iraqis, at Powell's command.
Jaime
October 9th, 2012 at 10:44 am
Buchanan seems to believe that if Iran "behaves", the US will kindly oblige. You know better Mr. Buchanan. First of all, Iran shouldn't give up its right to nuclear energy. That they may eventually want to build a bomb? Probably. So what? If you want to prevent Iran from doing this, then tell your masters in Tel Aviv to forego their huge arsenal. You can't? You don't dare to? Then, until you don't have the balls to order Israel to do that, don't hypocritically dictate such nonsense to a country that doesn't even have the intention to build nuclear weapons.
james
October 9th, 2012 at 11:35 am
Right on Jaime, the facts seem to elude Buchanan. I actually liked the guy a bit before, but now he is just another politician trying to grand stand and show American arrogance.
Sam
October 9th, 2012 at 2:02 pm
Both, Iran and the US would be wise to compromise.
Minaret of Freedom Weblog » News and Analysis (10/9/12)
October 9th, 2012 at 3:17 pm
[...] Is a Nuclear Deal With Iran Possible? (antiwar.com) All three islands are strategically located. A treaty signed by the late, deposed shah gives Iran rights over Abu Musa, but the “UAE insists [the other two islands] belonged to the emirate of Ras al-Khaimah until [the shah] captured them by force days before the UAE statehood in 1971″: [...]
Eileen Kuch
October 9th, 2012 at 5:47 pm
Don't forget, Bob, that Iran does have China's and Russia's backing, as well as some of their most advanced torpedoes and missiles. These two great powers won't allow/tolerate any aggression from either the US or Israel against Iran; so, it''s either a diplomatic solution, or WW III.
If WW III does occur, there will be NO winners. Israel will be totally destroyed by Iranian missiles in a retaliatory strike; Iran will suffer heavy fallout from its stricken nuclear facilities. This will only be the beginning; since, both China and Russia – as well as the US – will have been dragged into the conflict.. And, don't forget; nuclear weapons will already be in use; and, such a war will be unwinnable, with most of the planet destroyed by the blasts themselves or by the resultant radioactive fallout and nuclear winter.
Reza_from_Iran
October 9th, 2012 at 6:27 pm
There would be no Successful high-level negotiations, because US only needs a regime change in Iran and anything else is a gesture. they think sanctions are working so they will continue it by killing time. and I'm pretty sure they know that there is no nuke developing in Iran so they continue their long-termed regime change plan in Iran.
the existence of Islamic Republic of Iran is unacceptable for American administrators( Obama or Romney or…) .
with it's independent and non-aligned and Islamic spirit , Iran is a bad sample for other regional governments and people. especially countries with new reforms and Islamic awakening in the region.
on the other hand Iran's government has an independent spirit which is a must for any government after people's revolution,so it will not bow to any uncommon and unreasonable demand by west or east,and even if it wants, the people of Iran would not let that happen.
so it's an another game which will have no winner ,the only ones losing is the people of Iran which are in the pressure because of their faith, their independence , their Islamic democracy and their liberty, which they will bear, because the day when they decided to be non-aligned and free they knew what would happen.this is least for liberty.
GeriatrikSk8r
October 9th, 2012 at 9:04 pm
Buchanan certainly is no fan of Israel (he's referred to DC as "Israeli occupied territory"), but your point is well taken, regardless.
GeriatrikSk8r
October 9th, 2012 at 9:19 pm
So, it's simple. Iran just needs to advance "ideas to demonstrate convincingly that it has no weapons program" e.g., Iran just needs to prove a negative. Which is impossible.
So, what exactly is your point, Mr. Buchanan? "Bend completely to the Will of the West and we won't demonstrate the hypocrisy of the NPT by bringing freedom and democracy to your country like we did to Iraq"? Not just poorly thought through, this is completely incoherent.
Patriotic American
October 16th, 2012 at 6:46 pm
Why is everyone missing the forest from the TREES here? If Iran does NOT havea nuclear program for WEAPONS – which has been PROVEN by the above said agencies, then HOW or WHY the hell are their Sanctions against the peaceful People of IRAN?
When will it become evident that the ONLY reason for sanctions against IRAN is once again OIL, but this time it is also about a CENTRAL BANK System in Iran…How is it the the Bankers want to place the final stranglehold onto the last of a few nations, who do not have a Federal reserve bank (ing) system in their country??? This is the 800 lb gorilla in the room –more lie for war, under the guise of a nuclear program by Iran –this is senseless and those who are voting for sanctions against the Iranian people, should be held for treason, and be prosecuted and brought before a world court for their crimes against HuMANITY.