Barack Obama still wants to talk to Iran – but may lack the political strength to keep the path to dialogue open much longer
- Simon Tisdall
- guardian.co.uk, Monday 3 August 2009 16.36 BST
Barack Obama's policy of engagement with Iran – the "unclenched fist" of his January inaugural address – has about 60 days left to run. If Tehran does not respond positively and credibly to his offer of dialogue on nuclear and regional issues by the end of September, all bets are off. At that point, US and European officials say, a new international coalition will set to work on possibly the toughest sanctions imposed on a single country since Iraq invaded Kuwait in 1990.
When Binyamin Netanyahu, Israel's prime minister, met Obama in Washington in May, a rough year's-end deadline for progress was agreed. But the reported steady advance in Iran's nuclear capabilities (Israeli officials claim it could test-detonate a nuclear device within 12 months), coupled with its snubbing of Obama's initiatives have brought forward that deadline for action.
A sign of things to come is a bill, authored by US senator Joe Lieberman and now well-advanced in the US Senate, that would punish European and Asian companies that export petrol to Iran. Hawkish voices on the American right are cheering on this effort. "The one thing we can do, and should do immediately, is cut off their gasoline," said Kathleen Troia McFarland, a former official in the Nixon and Reagan administrations. "It will encourage Iranian citizens … to take to the streets again to protest an incompetent government. Then they can change their regime themselves."
While Iran continues to insist that it does not seek nuclear weapons capability, and no concrete proof exists to refute its contention, the US, its western allies and neighbouring Arab countries all believe it is lying and will continue to obfuscate and delay substantive talks. Writing in the Israeli newspaper Ha'aretz, Amos Harel noted with evident satisfaction the way opinion had turned around since Obama's moment of hope in January.
Underscoring the slide towards confrontation, neither the Pentagon nor the Israeli Defence Force made any effort to conceal a recent joint exercise at Nellis air force base in Nevada, named Red Flag, that featured the in-flight refuelling of Israeli jets by US military planes. Such refuelling skills will be required in any long-range Israeli air attack on Iran. This event, plus vice-president Joe Biden's comment that the US will not "dictate" to Israel on Iran, have weakened the idea of a blanket Obama veto on Israeli military action.
"If the engagement process is not successful, the US is prepared to press for significant additional sanctions," US defence secretary Robert Gates said in Israel. "We would try to get international support for a much tougher position … Our hope remains that Iran will respond to the president's outstretched hand in a positive and constructive way. But we'll see."
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