Bolton Already Has a Legacy

Even if Undersecretary of State John Bolton isn’t our next ambassador to the United Nations, he already has a legacy. At the recently concluded Review Conference for the Treaty on Nonproliferation of Nuclear Weapons, his underlings managed to seriously undermine both the NPT and the Safeguards regime of the International Atomic Energy Agency.

How?

By insisting that certain NPT signatories be denied – by force, if "necessary" – their "inalienable right" under the NPT to enjoy "without discrimination" all the peaceful benefits of nuclear energy.

But the NPT now requires all non-nuke signatories to subject their "nuclear materials and activities" to the IAEA regime, and assigns to it – not to the NPT signatories, individually or collectively – the responsibility for verifying nuclear energy is not used for a "military purpose."

Yes, the Bush-Boltonites argue, but the IAEA is, at least, incompetent. The Bush-Boltonites just know that Iran has had a covert nuclear weapons program for 20 years, and the IAEA – in spite of being able to go anywhere, interview anyone, and see anything – hasn’t been able to find it.

What to do?

Sign up to the Bush-Bolton Proliferation Security Initiative! Then when Bush-Bolton suspect some country like Iran has a nuke program the IAEA can’t find, Bush-Bolton will just "take it out."

Yeah, like two years ago, when Bush-Bolton defied the UN Security Council, overrode the IAEA, invaded Iraq, turned the country upside down, went everywhere, "interviewed" everyone, and saw everything there was to see? It turned out the reason the IAEA hadn’t been able to find the Iraqi nuke program was that there wasn’t one.

The Bush-Boltonites have been insisting the IAEA Safeguarded nuclear power plant the Russians are completing at Bushehr should be destroyed "before it’s too late."

Too late?

Nonsense.

Once the power plant goes "on-line" next year, the Iranians would have to operate it for a year, withdraw from the NPT, kick out the IAEA inspectors, shut down the power plant, remove the fuel from the reactor, and let it "cool off" in a "swimming pool" for a couple of years.

Meanwhile, construct – and get on-line – a plant for recovering the plutonium contained in that fuel once it cools off.

Also, establish a research and development program for producing a high-explosive spherical-implosion system like that employed in Fat Man, the nuke we dropped on Nagasaki.

(Fat Man weighed about 10,000 pounds. If Iran wants to deliver nukes by ballistic missile to Israel, Iran will have to get that weight down to about a thousand pounds. That took us 10 years.)

Maybe so, the Bush-Boltonites argue, but Iran has also been constructing a secret underground uranium-enrichment plant at Natanz.

As soon as they get it up and running, producing low-enriched uranium, allegedly for power plant fuel, they will withdraw from the NPT, kick out the IAEA inspectors, further enrich that low-enriched uranium to weapons-grade, and make gun-type nukes, like the Little Boy the U.S. dropped on Hiroshima. "We" have to take it out, before it’s too late.

More nonsense!

It will take the Iranians five to six years to produce – subject to IAEA Safeguards – the tens of thousands of gas centrifuges that now-empty, but IAEA-Safeguarded, underground plant was meant to house. Then, spend at least several more years producing – under IAEA Safeguards – tons of IAEA-Safeguarded low-enriched uranium. Finally, Iran will have to withdraw from the NPT, kick out the IAEA inspectors, and reconfigure the gas centrifuges in order to produce a thousand pounds or so of weapons-grade highly enriched uranium.

In any case, Little Boy also weighed about 10,000 pounds. Even the South African gun-type nukes weighed more than 2,000 pounds, still too heavy to be delivered from Iran to Israel by ballistic missile.

So what can NPT signatories do to protect those NPT signatories subject to the NPT-IAEA Safeguards regime from the preemptive Bush-Bolton Proliferation Security Initiative?

Well, all Bush-Bolton doomsday scenarios involve the NPT signatory kicking out the IAEA inspectors.

The original Iranian Safeguards Agreement had a clause that said the agreement would only remain in force so long as Iran remained a signatory to the NPT. (The North Korean agreement had a similar clause.)

So all the Iranians have to do to provide additional assurances that they won’t kick out the IAEA – even if the Bush-Boltonites succeed in destroying the NPT – is to have that clause removed.

The NPT doesn’t require them, so all such clauses should be removed. Then NPT withdrawal wouldn’t affect the authority of the IAEA to verify compliance with Safeguards Agreements and to report "noncompliance" to the UN Security Council for possible punitive action.

Author: Gordon Prather

Physicist James Gordon Prather has served as a policy implementing official for national security-related technical matters in the Federal Energy Agency, the Energy Research and Development Administration, the Department of Energy, the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Department of the Army. Dr. Prather also served as legislative assistant for national security affairs to U.S. Sen. Henry Bellmon, R-Okla. -- ranking member of the Senate Budget Committee and member of the Senate Energy Committee and Appropriations Committee. Dr. Prather had earlier worked as a nuclear weapons physicist at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and Sandia National Laboratory in New Mexico.