U.S. Policy and Iran's Nuclear Challenge
Testimony of James Phillips before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
May 18, 2006
The efforts of the United
States and its allies to dissuade Iran from pursuing its
long-sought goal of attaining a nuclear weapons capability
have so far failed to yield satisfactory results. Iran made
temporary tactical concessions in October 2003 under strong
international pressure to temporarily freeze its uranium
enrichment operations and submit to increased inspections of
its nuclear facilities by the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA). Tehran feared that referral to the United Nations
Security Council could result in diplomatic isolation, economic
sanctions, or possible military attack. It undoubtedly also was
motivated by the rapid overthrow of 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) to temporarily
defuse the crisis. But Tehran later dropped the charade of
negotiations after it apparently concluded that the international
situation had shifted in its favor. It now seems to believe
that it is in a much stronger position due to the continued
need for U.S. military forces in Iraq and Afghanistan; the
rise in oil prices, which has given it greater bargaining leverage
with oil importers; and its diplomatic cultivation of China
and Russia, which can dilute or veto resolutions brought before the
Security Council.
The installation of a new hard-line government led by President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in August 2005 also was a major factor that led
Tehran to renege on its agreement with the EU-3. Iran's new
president is firmly committed to Iran's nuclear program and
vehemently criticized Iran's previous government for making too
many concessions in past negotiations with the EU-3. Shortly
thereafter, Iran resumed operations at the Isfahan uranium
conversion facility, converting yellowcake into uranium
hexafluoride, a preliminary step before enrichment. In January
2006, Iran announced its intention to resume uranium
enrichment activities and removed IAEA seals at its Natanz
facility. Iran remains determined to develop a complete nuclear
fuel cycle, which would eventually give it the fissile material for
nuclear weapons. Thus far, Iran has escaped paying any significant
price for its apparent violations of its commitments under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and failure to fully
cooperate with the IAEA.
The U.S. should mobilize an international coalition to raise
the diplomatic, economic, domestic political, and potential
military costs to Tehran of continuing to flout its obligations
under its nuclear safeguards agreements. This "coalition of the
willing" should seek to isolate the Ahmadinejad regime, weaken
it through targeted economic sanctions, explain to the Iranian
people why their government's nuclear policies will impose
economic costs and military risks on them, contain Iran's
military power, and encourage democratic change. If Tehran
persists in its drive for nuclear weapons despite these escalating
pressures, then the United States should consider military options
to set back the Iranian nuclear weapons program.
The Growing Threat of Ahmadinejad's Iran
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 1978-1979. 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.
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 hardliners, 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."
Ahmadinejad's vehement return to Khomeini's radical line has been
accompanied by a purge of pragmatists and reformers within the
regime. Forty of Iran's senior ambassadors have been recalled from
overseas posts, including diplomats who were involved in the EU-3
negotiations in Britain, France, Germany, and at the United Nations
in Geneva. Ahmadinejad has appointed many of his Revolutionary
Guard cronies to key positions throughout the government.
Iran also has 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 also has given discreet support to insurgents such as Moqtada
al-Sadr, who twice has led Shiite uprisings against coalition
forces and the Iraqi government.
Iranian hardliners undoubtedly fear that a stable democratic Iraq
would present a dangerous alternative model of government that
could undermine their own authority. They know that Iraq's
pre-eminent Shiite religious leader, Grand Ayatollah Ali
al-Sistani, whose religious authority is greater than that of any
member of Iran's ruling clerical regime, rejects Khomeini's radical
ideology and advocates traditional Shiite 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, the moderate
influence of Sistani dilutes their own revolutionary influence.
Therefore, Tehran plays 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 Shiite political parties who revere Sistani and need
continued American support.
In addition to its destabilizing role in Iraq, Iran continues to be
the word's leading sponsor of terrorism. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice recently called Iran "the central banker" of
international terrorism. It has close ties to the Lebanon-based
Hezballah terrorist group, which it organized and continues to
finance, arm, and train. Tehran also has supported a wide variety
of Palestinian terrorist groups, including Fatah, Hamas, and
Palestinian Islamic Jihad, as well as 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 reportedly continues to give sanctuary
to elements of al-Qaeda, including at least one of Osama bin
Laden's sons, Saad bin Laden, and Saif al-Adil, a top
operations coordinator.
This long and deep involvement in terrorism, continued hostility to
the United States, and repeated threats to destroy Israel, provide
a strong warning against the dangers of allowing such a
radical regime to develop nuclear weapons.
Leading an International Response to Iran's Nuclear
Challenge
Diplomatic efforts centered on the United Nations to pressure Iran
to abandon its clandestine nuclear efforts are unlikely to solve
the problem, in part due to the institutional weaknesses of the
U.N. Security Council, where a lack of consensus often leads to
paralysis or lowest common denominator policies that are not
effective. Nevertheless, the Bush Administration must resolutely
press the diplomatic case at the Security Council to set the
stage and improve the U.S. position in the push for possible
diplomatic and economic sanctions targeted at Iran's recalcitrant
regime, or, as a last resort, possible future military
action.
Another goal should be to make sure that the end result of the
Security Council's interactions with Iran clearly lays the
responsibility of any failure on Tehran, not Washington. Washington
should seek to focus the Security Council debate on the critical
issue-the threat posed by Iran's nuclear program -not the broader
question of whether to seek a multilateral "grand bargain" with an
untrustworthy revolutionary power that exploited and sabotaged past
American efforts to stage a rapprochement under the Carter and
Reagan Administrations and failed to respond to the tentative
détente offered by the Clinton Administration. Getting drawn
into a multilateral dialogue with Iran through the auspices of the
United Nations would allow Iran to divert attention from its
safeguard violations and history of terrorism, while subjecting the
United States to growing international pressure to bribe Iran with
diplomatic carrots to comply with international legal commitments
that it already has violated and could renege on again in the
future.
Iran already has provided ample evidence that it has no intention
to fully cooperate with the IAEA or end the uranium enrichment
activities that eventually will give it a nuclear weapons
capability. If it merely seeks a nuclear power capability for
economic reasons, as it insists, then it would not have
rejected the Russian offer to enrich uranium at facilities in
Russia, which would have saved it considerable costs in
building and operating uranium enrichment facilities. Moreover,
Iran also would have received additional economic benefits from the
EU-3 if it had not broken off those negotiations.
Under these circumstances, the EU-3's recent undertaking to put
together a new package of incentives for Iran is the triumph of
wishful thinking over experience. Beginning a new round of
negotiations while Iran continues to work to perfect its
uranium enrichment technology will enable Tehran to buy time for
its nuclear weapons program, forestall sanctions, and weaken
the perceived costs of violating the nuclear non-proliferation
regime in the eyes of other countries who may consider
following Iran's path. To change Iran's course, the EU-3 should be
considering larger disincentives, not just larger
incentives.
Forge a coalition to impose the strongest possible
sanctions on the Iranian regime.
Although it has greatly benefited from the recent spike in world
oil and natural gas prices, Iran's economic future is not a
promising one. The mullahs have sabotaged economic growth through
the expansion of state control of the economy, economic
mismanagement, and corruption. Annual per capita income is only
about two-thirds of what it was at the time of the 1979 revolution.
The situation is likely to get worse as President Ahmadinejad
follows through on his populist promises to increase subsidies and
give Iran's poor a greater share of Iran's oil wealth.
Iranians are sending large amounts of their capital out of the
country due to fears over 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
Washington cannot rely on the U.N. to halt the Iranian nuclear
program. Russia and China, which have extensive economic,
military, and energy ties to Iran, may veto or dilute any effective
resolution. The U.S. therefore should make contingency plans to
work with Britain, France, Germany, the EU, and Japan to
impose sanctions outside the U.N. framework if necessary.
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. An international ban on
gasoline exports to Iran would deprive Tehran of approximately 40
percent of its daily gasoline consumption. This would
significantly drive up the price of Iranian gasoline and underscore
to the Iranian people the shortsighted policies of Iran's
ruling regime.
In addition to economic sanctions, the U.S. should press its allies
and other countries to ban nuclear assistance, arms sales, and the
export of dual-use technology to Iran. Symbolic sanctions, such as
a travel ban on Iranian officials or prohibition on Iranian
participation in international sports events, would drive home to
the Iranian people that international opposition to Iran's nuclear
program is widespread and not an artificial issue created by the
United States, as their government claims.
Support 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 about its nuclear program.
However, now that it is clear that Iran has 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 by Congress would authorize such aid
and tighten U.S. economic sanctions on Iran.
Iran has a well-educated group of young reformers who seek to
replace Iran's current mullahcracy with a genuine democracy that is
accountable to the Iranian people. They have been demoralized by
the failure of former President Khatami to live up to his promises
of reform and his lack of support for the student uprisings of
1999, but are likely to be re-energized by a brewing popular
disenchantment with the policies of Ahmadinejad's hardliners.
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 NGOs, and
inviting them to attend international conferences and
workshops outside Iran, preferably in European or other countries
where Iranians could 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 also could play a key
role in strengthening support for political reforms among young
Iranian women, a crucial element opposing the restoration of
harsh social restrictions by Iran's resurgent Islamic
ideologues.
The United States also should covertly subsidize opposition
publications and organizing efforts, as it did to aid the
anti-communist opposition during the Cold War in Europe and Asia.
But such programs should be strictly segregated from the public
outreach efforts of the U.S. and its allies 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 encourage them to
cooperate under the umbrella of the broadest possible coalition.
But Washington should rule out support for the People's Mujahideen
Organization (PMO), which is also known as the Mujahideen Khalq, or
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 was
purged in 1981 and 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 arch-enemy 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.
Launch a public diplomacy campaign to explain to the
Iranian people how the regime's nuclear weapons program and
hard-line policies hurt their economic and national
interests.
Iran's clerical regime has tightened its grip on the media in
recent years, shutting down more than 100 independent newspapers,
jailing journalists, closing 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 (Radio Farda), and other information
sources. The free flow of information is an important 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.
The Internet is a growing source of unfiltered information for many
Iranians, particularly Iranian students. Farsi is reportedly the
fourth most popular language used online and there has been a
proliferation of political blogs devoted to Iranian issues.
The U.S. should consider ways of assisting Iranians outside the
country to establish politically oriented Web sites that could be
accessed by activists and other interested people inside
Iran.
Mobilize allies to contain and deter Iran.
The bellicose resurgence of Iran's hardliners, Iran's continued
support for terrorism, and the prospective emergence of a
nuclear Iran pose threats to many countries. President
Ahmadinejad's belligerence gives Washington greater
opportunity to mobilize other states, particularly those living 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.
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 contain the expansion of Iranian power and possibly would
cooperate in facilitating 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 and naval exercises.
In particular, the U.S. and its allies should stage multilateral
naval exercises to demonstrate the will and capability to defeat
Tehran's threats to block the Strait of Hormuz, through which
flows about two-fifths of the world's oil exports.
Prepare for the use of military force as a last
resort.
A strong U.S. military posture is essential to dissuading and
deterring Iran from fielding nuclear weapons and supporting
terrorism, and when necessary responding decisively and
effectively to Iranian threats. To deal with a nuclear or
terrorist threat from Iran several military capabilities are
particularly important. They include (1) expanding and
strengthening the proliferation security initiative; (2) theater
missile defense; (3) robust special operations forces and
human intelligence (HUMINT) assets; (4) assured access to bases and
staging areas in the theater for both special operations and
conventional ground, air, and sea forces; and (5) energy
security preparations.
Proliferation Security Initiative. 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 that can help prevent seaborne trafficking of weapons
material is vital.
Theater Missile Defense. TMD is also essential. Missile
defenses provide the means to intercept a ballistic missile in
flight and destroy it before the missile 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, land, 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 must end the use of special operations forces for training
foreign militaries and other tasks that can be done by conventional
military units. In addition, the Administration must bolster the
ranks of the special forces and HUMINT assets that might be
required to operate in Iran, ensuring they have the right language
skills, area knowledge, and detailed, actionable
intelligence.
Theater Access. The United States must ensure it retains
the means to deploy and sustain forces in the 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 that Iran might employ such as cruise
missiles, sea-based mines, terrorist attacks, and biological or
chemical weapons.
Energy Security Preparations. In the event of a
military clash with the United States, Iran undoubtedly will
try to follow through on its threats to close the Strait of Hormuz
to oil tankers and disrupt oil exports from other Persian Gulf oil
exporters. Washington should take immediate steps to limit the
future impact of such oil supply disruptions by working with the
Arab Gulf states to help them reduce the vulnerability of their oil
infrastructure to Iranian military and terrorist attacks; pressing
U.S. allies and other oil importers to expand their strategic
oil stockpiles; encouraging Saudi Arabia to expand its excess oil
production capacity; and asking Saudi Arabia to upgrade the
Trans Saudi Arabian pipeline to increase its capacity and make
preparations to bring the Iraq-Saudi pipeline back online to
reroute oil exports away from the Persian Gulf to the Red Sea oil
export terminals.
The Nightmare Scenario of a Nuclear Iran
There is no guaranteed policy that can halt the Iranian nuclear
program short of war, and even a military campaign may only delay
Iran's acquisition of a nuclear weapons capability. But U.S.
policymaking regarding the Iranian nuclear issue
inevitably boils down to a search for the least-bad option.
And as potentially costly and risky as a preventive war against
Iran would be, allowing Iran to acquire nuclear weapons would
result in far heavier potential costs and risks.
The U.S. probably would be able to deter Iran from a direct nuclear
attack on American or Israeli targets by threatening massive
retaliation and the assured destruction of the Iranian regime. But
there is a lingering doubt that a leader such as President
Ahmadinejad, who reportedly harbors apocalyptic religious beliefs,
would have the same cost-benefit calculus about a nuclear war as
other leaders. The bellicose leader, who boldly called for Israel
to be "wiped off the map" before he acquired a nuclear weapon,
might be sorely tempted to follow through on his threat after he
acquired one. Moreover, his regime might risk passing nuclear
weapons off to terrorist surrogates in hopes of escaping
retaliation for a nuclear surprise attack launched by an unknown
attacker.
Even if Iran could be deterred from considering such attacks, an
Iranian nuclear breakout would undermine the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty and trigger a nuclear arms race in the
Middle East that could lead Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Turkey, Iraq, and
Algeria to build or acquire their own nuclear weapons. Each
new nuclear power would multiply the risks and uncertainties in an
already volatile region.
Iran also may be emboldened to step up its support of
terrorism and subversion, calculating that its nuclear capability
would deter a military response. An Iranian miscalculation could
easily lead to a future military clash with the United States or an
American ally that would impose exponentially higher costs
than a war with a non-nuclear Iran. Even if it could not
threaten a nuclear missile attack on U.S. territory for many years,
Tehran could credibly threaten to target the Saudi oil fields with
a nuclear weapon, thereby gaining a potent blackmail threat over
the world economy.
I believe that Senator John McCain was correct when he concisely
stated: "There is only one thing worse than the U.S. exercising a
military option, and that is a nuclear-armed Iran."