Western efforts to
negotiate an end to Iran's drive for nuclear weapons have produced
unsatisfactory results. Tehran has made tactical concessions under
international pressure to freeze its uranium enrichment
operations and submit to increased inspections of its nuclear
facilities by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), but it
remains determined to develop a full nuclear fuel cycle that would
eventually give it a nuclear weapons capability. The installation
of a new hard-line government led by President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, who has publicly criticized past Iranian concessions,
has further undermined the prospects for diplomatic success.
Washington should
back European efforts to pressure Iran diplomatically to give
up its nuclear weapons ambitions. However, if Iran resumes
uranium enrichment, the U.S. should mobilize an international
coalition to isolate the Ahmadinejad regime, weaken it through
targeted economic sanctions, contain Iran's military power,
and encourage democratic regime change.
The Faltering
Diplomatic Dialogue
Following exposure
of the secret uranium enrichment plant at Natanz in 2002 and
other suspicious activities, Iran agreed to suspend its nuclear
enrichment program in October 2003 to avoid referral to the
United Nations Security Council by the IAEA for violations of the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Tehran feared that referral
to the Security Council could result in diplomatic isolation,
economic sanctions, or military attack. Undoubtedly, it was
also motivated by the examples set by the rapid overthrow of both
the Taliban regime in Afghanistan in 2001 and Saddam Hussein's
regime in Iraq in early 2003 by U.S.-led coalitions.
Tehran made enough
tactical concessions to stave off international sanctions and
engage the European Union in diplomatic negotiations led by
Britain, France, and Germany (the EU-3), temporarily defusing
the crisis. Yet Tehran has increasingly chafed at the
continued suspension of its nuclear enrichment program, which can
produce fuel for civilian nuclear reactors or the fissile
material for a nuclear weapon. It now apparently believes that
it is in a much stronger negotiating position due to the continued
need for U.S. military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, greater
bargaining leverage with oil importers because of higher oil
prices, and its diplomatic cultivation of China and Russia, which
can dilute or veto resolutions brought before the Security
Council.
The EU-3
diplomatic approach is faltering and is unlikely to attain a
sustainable ironclad agreement by Iran to forgo a nuclear weapons
capacity. In August, Iran resumed operations at the Isfahan
uranium conversion facility, converting yellowcake into
uranium hexafluoride, a preliminary step to enrichment.
Despite this
violation of Iran's understanding with the EU-3, however, and
despite Tehran's failure to explain adequately other
activities that are inconsistent with its claim that it is merely
developing a civilian nuclear power industry, the IAEA has
dragged its feet on referring Iran to the Security Council for
possible sanctions. On September 24, the IAEA Board of Governors
voted 22-1 (with many abstentions, including Russia and China) to
declare Iran to be in noncompliance with its NPT safeguard
obligations. Yet the IAEA Board failed to refer Iran's
noncompliance to the U.N. Security Council as required by its own
governing statute.
The IAEA also
failed to refer Iran to the Security Council at the November 24
meeting of the IAEA Board of Governors, choosing instead to wait
for an Iranian response to a Russian proposal that would allow Iran
to enrich uranium at facilities in Russia. This proposal, which
would allow Iran to acquire all the elements of a nuclear fuel
cycle short of enrichment, would be a major step backward for the
U.S. and EU-3 positions on enrichment. Washington should
maintain its position that Iran must suspend and eventually
dismantle its nuclear fuel cycle capacities because of its long
history of cheating on its NPT obligations.
The IAEA's
sluggish response may encourage the assertive Ahmadinejad regime to
advance its nuclear program by resuming uranium enrichment
while going through the motions of allowing IAEA inspections to
deflect Western attempts to refer Iran's NPT violations to the
Security Council. Tehran has already used such tactics to escape
any concrete penalties for restarting its uranium conversion
activities. Iran's new president is firmly committed to Iran's
nuclear program and has criticized the previous government for
making too many concessions to the EU-3. Resuming uranium
enrichment would be consistent with the increasingly
confrontational tone of Iranian foreign policy.[1]
Ahmadinejad's
Defiant Foreign Policy
Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad rose through the ranks of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps, the praetorian guard dedicated to advancing and
exporting the revolution that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini inspired
in Iran in 1978. Ahmadinejad was appointed mayor of Tehran before
running for Iran's presidency in June on a platform calling for a
return to revolutionary values after years of stagnation,
corruption, and half-hearted reforms. Ahmadinejad is a true
believer in Khomeini's radical vision of Iran's role as the
vanguard of a global Islamic revolution. He has lambasted the U.S.
as "a failing power" and a threat to the Muslim world.[2]
In sharp contrast
to his predecessor, former President Mohammad Khatami, who
advocated a conciliatory "dialogue of civilizations" but was
blocked by the strong opposition of the ideological hard-liners,
Ahmadinejad has returned to the fiery rhetoric of the Khomeini
era. In September, he delivered a truculent speech at the
United Nations, warning foreign governments against meddling in
Iranian affairs. On October 26, he made a venomous speech
attacking Israel in which he quoted Khomeini: "As the Imam said,
Israel must be wiped off the map."[3]
Iranian Foreign
Minister Manouchehr Mottaki subsequently shrugged off foreign
criticism of the president's diatribe by insisting that it "was
nothing but the strategy and policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran
in the past 27 years." Under Ahmadinejad, Iran has stepped up its
lionization of Palestinian suicide bombers, whom it has long
financed through the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and Hamas terrorist
groups. Tehran has reportedly also recruited and registered 25,000
"martyrdom-seeking" Iranian volunteers for possible suicide
bombings against Iran's enemies.[4]
Ahmadinejad's
vehement return to Khomeini's radical line has been accompanied by
a purge of pragmatists and reformers in the regime. Forty senior
Iranian ambassadors have been recalled from overseas posts,
including diplomats who were involved in the EU-3 negotiations in
Britain, France, and Germany and at the United Nations in Geneva.
Ahmadinejad has appointed many of his Revolutionary Guard cronies
to key positions throughout the government, including the Supreme
National Security Council, which formulates foreign and
defense policy.
Iran has also been
increasingly aggressive in stirring up trouble inside Iraq. In
October, the British government charged that the Iranians had
supplied sophisticated bombs with shaped charges capable of
penetrating armor to clients in Iraq, who used them in a series of
attacks on British forces in southern Iraq. Iran has also given
discreet support to insurgents such as Moqtada al-Sadr, who has led
two Shi'a uprisings against coalition forces and the Iraqi
government.
Iranian
hard-liners undoubtedly fear that a stable democratic Iraq
would present a dangerous alternative model of government that
could undermine their own authority. They know that Grand Ayatollah
Ali al-Sistani-Iraq's pre-eminent Shi'a religious leader,
whose religious authority dwarfs that of any member of Iran's
ruling clerical regime-rejects Khomeini's radical ideology and
advocates traditional Shi'a religious doctrines. Although Iran
continues to enjoy considerable influence with many Iraqi
Shiites, particularly with Iraq's Supreme Council for the
Islamic Revolution in Iraq and the Dawa Party, Sistani's
moderate influence dilutes their own revolutionary influence.
Therefore, Tehran is playing a double game in Iraq, using the young
firebrand al-Sadr to undermine Sistani and keep pressure on
the U.S. military to withdraw while still maintaining good
relations with Shi'a political parties who revere Sistani and need
continued American support.
In addition to
trying to destabilize Iraq, Iran continues to be the world's
leading sponsor of terrorism. It has close ties to the
Lebanon-based Hezballah terrorist group, which it organized and
continues to finance, arm, and train. Tehran has supported a wide
variety of Palestinian terrorist groups and Afghan extremists, such
as Gulbuddin Hekmatyar. Iran was involved in the 1996 Khobar Towers
bombing, which killed 19 American military personnel deployed
in Saudi Arabia. Moreover, Iran continues to give sanctuary to
elements of al-Qaeda, including at least one son of Osama bin
Laden.[5]
This long and deep
involvement in terrorism, combined with repeated threats to destroy
Israel, provides a strong warning against the dangers of allowing
such a radical regime to develop nuclear weapons.
What If Iran
Continues Its Nuclear Weapons Efforts?
Diplomatic efforts
are unlikely to solve the Iran problem, partly because of the
institutional weaknesses of the IAEA and U.N. Security
Council, where a lack of consensus often leads to paralysis.
Nevertheless, the Bush Administration must resolutely press
the diplomatic case to set the stage and improve the U.S. position
in the push for possible economic sanctions or, as a last resort,
military action. Another goal should be to ensure that the end
result of the EU-3 dialogue with Iran clearly lays the
responsibility of any failure on Iran, not the U.S.
By earlier
pursuing a common policy with the EU-3 of mixing carrots and
sticks, the Bush Administration finds itself in a far stronger
diplomatic position if the Iranians-as is likely-spurn all efforts
to resolve the nuclear crisis that they have instigated.[6] Unlike
the lead-up to the Iraq war, this political approach has the
advantage of making Iranian action, not U.S. policies, the
centerpiece of future diplomatic action, allowing for transatlantic
agreement rather than discord. The EU-3 and the United States have
jointly committed, if Iran continues to pursuit a full nuclear
fuel cycle, to common measures designed to make the price of
Tehran's actions far harder to bear than would be the case with
only American opposition.
The requirements
of full Iranian compliance can be spelled out with a great deal of
specificity. Iran must agree to:
-
Terminate
permanently its pursuit of a full nuclear fuel cycle,
-
Terminate
permanently all programs to enrich uranium and produce uranium
hexaflouride and its precursors,
-
Terminate
permanently all programs to extract plutonium,
-
Terminate
permanently its pursuit of a heavy water nuclear reactor, and
-
Allow an
intrusive inspections regime (utilizing real-time monitoring
equipment) at the Bushehr reactor and associated spent-fuel
storage pond and any other site that the U.S. and the EU-3
deem suspicious.
If Iran agrees to
all of these steps, carrots in the form of diplomatic and trade
concessions (e.g., a nonaggression pledge similar to the one
posited for North Korea, diplomatic recognition, and the beginning
of a trade opening) will jointly follow from the transatlantic
partners. Ultimately, the onus remains firmly on the Iranians to
decide to end the crisis.
If the Iranians
continue to spurn international efforts to resolve the crisis and
instead opt to move forward with their nuclear program, at least
the transatlantic link need not be a casualty of Iranian
adventurism. In addition to agreeing which carrots to offer if the
Iranians forgo their nuclear program, the EU-3 and the United
States will need to work out a series of sticks designed to impose
a heavy price on Iran if it continues on its present course. These
sticks should include:
-
U.S. and EU-3
support for referring the Iranian nuclear issue to the U.N.
Security Council. Unlike during the Iraq crisis, the West will
speak with one voice.
-
Targeted
Economic Sanctions. If, as is likely, Russia and China thwart a
Security Council resolution against Iran and the process does
not come to an end, the EU-3 should immediately adopt a policy-at
the EU level if possible or as individual states if necessary-of
targeted sanctions against the Islamic Republic. Given the
relative economic weight of Germany, France, and Britain, and given
Iran's desperate need for further European foreign and direct
investment to deal with its population explosion, the potential
effect of this economic stick should not be underestimated.
-
A Common
Interdiction Policy. The EU-3 and the U.S. should agree to a
common interdiction policy to ensure that no prohibited
nuclear material moves into or out of Iran. If necessary, they
should also agree on a common blockade to enforce this
policy.
-
A Joint
Declaration on "Loose Nukes." The U.S. and the EU-3 should
jointly make it clear to the Iranian leadership that Iran, not just
the West, has a proliferation problem. That is, any proliferation
of nuclear technology in the region that is suspected to involve
Iran will trigger the harshest countermeasures against Iran.
Common diplomacy must again make it clear that the onus of "loose
nukes" falls squarely on Tehran.
-
A Military
Option. Barring an agreement, the U.S. reserves the right to
protect its vital national interests and protect Americans and
their allies, including through the use of military force if
necessary. If Tehran is caught red-handed sponsoring terrorism
against the U.S., any agreement on the nuclear front should not be
interpreted as giving it immunity from U.S. military reprisals
or counter-terrorist attacks.
Such a flexible
transatlantic diplomatic strategy suits the current crisis because
it allows the U.S. maximum room for diplomatic maneuver while
uniting the alliance and putting the onus for the crisis entirely
on the Iranians. Whatever decision the mullahs ultimately make,
such a carrot-and-stick approach marginally shifts the odds toward
a peaceful solution while remaining clear-eyed about the likelihood
that Iran will continue to pursue a full nuclear fuel cycle.
U.S. Policy and
Iran's Nuclear Challenge
The international
debate over Iran's nuclear weapons efforts is now coming to a head.
The United States and the EU-3 have closed ranks to confront Iran,
but time to defuse the crisis through negotiations is growing
short, assuming that it is even possible. Proceeding from the
policy framework outlined above, the Bush Administration
should:
Recommendation #1:
Push the IAEA to Refer Iran's Violations of Its Nuclear Safeguard
Agreements to the U.N. Security Council at the IAEA Board of
Governors' Next Meeting
Washington should
demand that the IAEA stop procrastinating and fulfill the terms of
its charter, which require it to report NPT violations to the
Security Council. By repeatedly delaying the referral of Iran to
the Security Council, the IAEA Board of Governors has given Tehran
more latitude to continue its cat-and-mouse game with the
international community. The U.S. and its allies should push for a
fixed deadline for concrete actions by Iran to account for its
suspicious nuclear activities and to halt uranium conversion before
the next meeting of the IAEA Board. Tehran should no longer be
allowed to avoid sanctions by making just enough promises to avoid
referral to the Security Council while failing to deliver on its
promises.
Recommendation #2:
Forge a Coalition to Impose Targeted Economic Sanctions on Iran
Although Iran has
benefited significantly from the recent spike in world oil and
natural gas prices, its economic future is not promising. The
mullahs have sabotaged economic growth by expanding state control
of the economy, economic mismanagement, and corruption. Annual
per capita income is only two-thirds of what it was at the time of
the 1979 revolution. The situation is likely to worsen if President
Ahmadinejad follows through on his populist campaign promises to
increase subsidies and give Iran's poor a greater share of
Iran's oil wealth.
Iranians have
already begun to send their capital out of the country because
they fear the potentially disastrous policies of the new
government. Shortly after Ahmadinejad gave his October 26 speech
threatening Israel, Iran's stock market plunged to its lowest level
in two years. Many Iranian businessmen understand, even if
Ahmadinejad does not, that Iran's economic future depends on
access to world markets, foreign investment, and trade.
The U.S. should
push for the strongest possible sanctions at the U.N. Security
Council, but experience has demonstrated that the U.S. cannot
rely on the U.N. to halt the Iranian nuclear program. Russia
and China may veto or dilute any resolution. The U.S. should
therefore make contingency plans to work with Britain, France,
Germany, the EU, and Japan to impose sanctions outside the U.N.
framework.
An international
ban on the import of Iranian oil is a non-starter. It is
unrealistic to expect oil importers to stop importing Iranian oil
in a tight, high-priced oil market. Instead, the focus should be on
denying Iran loans, foreign investment, and favorable trade deals.
Washington should cooperate with other countries to deny Iran
loans from international financial institutions such as the World
Bank and to deny Iran loans for a proposed natural gas pipeline to
India via Pakistan.
Although Iran is
one of the world's leading oil exporters, it is also an importer of
gasoline due to mismanagement and inadequate investment in its
refinery infrastructure. Representatives Mark Kirk (R-IL) and
Robert Andrews (D-NJ), the leaders of the House Iran Working Group,
have proposed a ban on gasoline exports to Iran. International
support for such sanctions, particularly if supported by the Arab
states of the Persian Gulf, would drive up the prices of Iranian
gasoline and underscore to the Iranian people the shortsightedness
of Iran's ruling regime.
Recommendation #3:
Rally International Support for Iran's Democratic Opposition
The Bush
Administration has correctly aligned the U.S. with the Iranian
people in their efforts to build a true democracy, but it has held
back from a policy of regime change, partly in deference to the
EU-3 negotiations with Iran. However, now that Iran has clearly
reneged on its promises to the EU-3, Washington should
discreetly aid all Iranian groups that support democracy and reject
terrorism, either through direct grants or indirectly through
nongovernmental organizations. The Iran Freedom and Support
Act of 2005 (H.R. 282 and S. 333), currently under
consideration in Congress, would authorize such aid and tighten
U.S. economic sanctions on Iran.
Iran has a
well-educated group of young reformers who are seeking to
replace the country's current mullahcracy with a genuine
democracy that is accountable to the Iranian people. They have been
demoralized by former President Khatami's failure to live up to his
promises of reform and by his lack of support for the student
uprisings of 1999, but a brewing popular disenchantment with the
policies of Ahmadinejad's hard-liners is likely to re-energize
them.
The U.S. and its
allies should discreetly support all Iranian opposition groups that
reject terrorism and advocate democracy by publicizing their
activities internationally and within Iran, giving them
organizational training indirectly through Western NGOs, and
inviting them to attend international conferences and workshops
outside Iran, preferably in Europe or other countries where
Iranians can travel relatively freely with minimal fear of being
penalized upon their return to Iran. Educational exchanges with
Western students would be an important avenue for bolstering and
opening up communication with Iran's restive students, who
historically have played a leading role in Iran's reform movements.
Women's groups could also play a key role in strengthening support
for young Iranian women, a key element opposing the
restoration of harsh social restrictions by Iran's resurgent
Islamic ideologues.
The United States
should also covertly subsidize opposition publications and
organizing efforts, as it did to aid the anti-communist opposition
during the Cold War in Europe and Asia. However, such programs
should be strictly segregated from public outreach efforts by the
U.S. and its allies in order to avoid putting Iranian participants
in international forums at risk of arrest or persecution when they
return home.
The United States
should not try to play favorites among the various Iranian
opposition groups, but should instead encourage them to cooperate
under the umbrella of the broadest possible coalition. However,
Washington should rule out support for the People's Mujahideen
Organization (PMO or Mujahideen Khalq) and its front group, the
National Council of Resistance.
The PMO is a
non-democratic Marxist terrorist group that was part of the broad
revolutionary coalition that overthrew the Shah but then was purged
in 1981, after which it aligned itself with Saddam Hussein's
dictatorship. While this cult-like group is one of the
best-organized exile organizations, it has little support
inside Iran because of its alliance with archenemy Iraq during the
Iran-Iraq War.
Moreover, the PMO
resorted to terrorism against the Shah's regime and was responsible
for the assassinations of at least four American military
officers in Iran during the 1970s. It demonstrated in support
of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 and against the
release of the American hostages in 1981. The U.S. cannot afford to
support an organization with such a long history of terrorism
if it expects Tehran to halt its own terrorism.
Recommendation #4:
Mount a Public Diplomacy Campaign to Explain to the Iranian People
How the Regime's Hard-line Policies Hurt Their Economic and
National Interests
Iran's clerical
regime has tightened its grip on the media in recent years, closing
more than 100 independent newspapers, jailing journalists,
shutting down Web sites, and arresting bloggers. The U.S. and its
allies should work to defeat the regime's suppression of
independent media by increasing Farsi broadcasts by
government-sponsored media, such as the Voice of America, Radio
Free Europe, and other information sources.
The free flow of
information is a prerequisite for the free flow of political ideas.
The Iranian people need access to information about the activities
of Iranian opposition groups, both within and outside Iran, and the
plight of dissidents such as imprisoned journalist Akbar
Ganji, an investigative journalist who has been jailed for
exposing the regime's crimes against its own people.
The Internet is a
growing source of unfiltered information for many Iranians,
particularly Iranian students. Farsi is reportedly the fourth most
popular language used on line, and there has been a
proliferation of political blogs devoted to Iranian issues.
The U.S. should consider ways to assist Iranians outside the
country to establish politically oriented Web sites that could be
accessed by activists and other interested people inside
Iran.
Recommendation #5:
Mobilize Allies
to Contain and Deter Iran
The resurgence of
Iran's hard-liners, Iran's continued support for terrorism,
and the prospective emergence of a nuclear Iran threaten many
countries. Ahmadinejad's belligerence gives Washington greater
opportunity to mobilize other states, particularly those in
the growing shadow of Iranian power. The United States should
maintain a strong naval and air presence in the Persian Gulf to
deter Iran and strengthen military cooperation with the Gulf
States, which are growing increasingly anxious about Iran's
hard-line government.
The U.S. and its
European allies should strengthen military, intelligence, and
security cooperation with threatened states, such as Iraq,
Turkey, Israel, and the members of the Gulf Cooperation Council
(Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
Emirates), which was founded in 1981 to provide collective security
for Arab states threatened by Iran. Such a coalition could help
both to contain the expansion of Iranian power and to facilitate
military action, if necessary, against Iran.
Washington could
also offer to deploy or transfer anti-ballistic missile defense
systems to threatened states, enhance joint military planning, and
step up joint military exercises.
Recommendation #6:
Prepare
for the Last Resort
The worst
situation imaginable would occur if Iran posed an imminent threat
to U.S. vital national interests and America lacked the capacity
and will to respond. A strong U.S. military is essential both to
dissuading and deterring Iran from fielding nuclear weapons and
supporting terrorism and to responding decisively and effectively
to Iranian threats.
Several military
capabilities are particularly important to dealing with a nuclear
or terrorist threat from Iran, including (1) expanding and
strengthening the Proliferation Security Initiative (PSI); (2)
theater missile defense; (3) robust special operations forces and
human intelligence (HUMINT) assets; (4) assured access to bases and
staging areas in theater for both special operations and
conventional ground, air, and sea forces; and (5) a viable and
effective U.S. nuclear deterrent.
Proliferation
Security Initiative. The PSI is a multinational effort to track
down and break up networks that proliferate chemical, biological,
and nuclear weapons technologies and materials. The Administration
should field more modern capabilities that can provide the
right intelligence, reconnaissance, surveillance, and
interdiction assets for the U.S. military. In particular,
modernization of Coast Guard and naval forces to help prevent
seaborne trafficking of weapons material is vital.
Theater Missile
Defense. Theater missile defense is also essential. Missile
defenses provide the means to intercept and destroy a ballistic
missile in flight before it can deliver a nuclear warhead to
its target. The United States should work with its friends and
allies to provide theater missile defense to countries in the
region. The United States should continue to pursue a mix of
air-based, land-based, and sea-based missile defense systems.
Special
Operations Forces and HUMINT. These military and intelligence
assets provide the capacity for focused operations against specific
targets. Today, these forces are overstretched,
performing many missions in the global war on terrorism. The
Pentagon should stop using special operations forces to train
foreign militaries and do other tasks that can be done by
conventional military units. In addition, the Administration needs
to bolster the ranks of the special forces and HUMINT assets that
might be required to operate in Iran, ensuring that they have the
right language skills, area knowledge, and detailed, actionable
intelligence.
Theater
Access. The United States needs to retain the means to deploy
and sustain forces in theater. The Pentagon should work to secure a
variety of basing options for staging military
operations. In addition, the military must have robust means
to ensure its ability to operate in the Gulf and defeat
"anti-access" weapons, such as cruise missiles, naval mines,
terrorist attacks, and biological and chemical weapons.
Nuclear
Deterrent.America's nuclear forces are in danger of atrophying.
The U.S. missile force and warhead inventory is aging. The United
States should be developing next-generation nuclear weapons. The
American nuclear deterrent has been an effective guarantor against
nuclear conflict for more than half a century, and U.S. nuclear
power has helped to dissuade other nations from acquiring
these weapons. Failing to retain an effective and dependable
nuclear deterrent will simply invite aggression, not only against
United States, but against other free nations as well.
Conclusion
Iran remains a
dangerous revolutionary power determined to acquire nuclear
weapons. No policy short of war is guaranteed to halt the Iranian
nuclear program. The U.S. can frustrate Iran's nuclear plans and
drive up the economic, diplomatic, and political costs of obtaining
nuclear weapons by working with other countries to impose targeted
sanctions on Iran, contain it, and deter it from using or
threatening to use nuclear weapons.
In the end, if
Iran threatens U.S. vital national interests, the hard-line
government in Tehran should have no doubt that the United States
has the capacity and the will to use all the instruments of
national power, including military force, to defeat that threat.
The United States should be prepared both to preempt and to
retaliate against any threats to its citizens and property or those
of its allies.
James
Phillips is Research Fellow in Middle Eastern Studies
in the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies,
and John C. Hulsman, Ph.D., is
Senior Research Fellow in European Affairs in the Margaret
Thatcher Center for Freedom, divisions of the Kathryn and Shelby
Cullom Davis Institute for International Studies, at The
Heritage Foundation. James Jay Carafano,
Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow for National Security and
Homeland Security in the Allison Center.
[2]Amir Taheri,
Arab News, July 9, 2005.
[4]Reuters, "Iran
Hard-liners Mark 1983 Attack on U.S. Marines," December 2,
2004.