|
The Real Reasons Why An Iranian
Bomb Matters
Roger Howard
As the
mullahs press ahead with the construction of a new heavy
water reactor at
Arak
and resume the production of centrifuges, the prospect
of an Iranian nuclear bomb looms increasingly large.
Why, though, would such a development be a cause of
serious concern for the watching world?
It is
not because, as often claimed, a nuclear Iran would be
able to pursue a much more aggressive foreign policy
against its archenemy, Israel, and destabilise the
entire Middle East. Reuel Marc Gerecht of the American
Enterprise Institute, for example, has argued that the
Iranians would feel at liberty to use the bomb “as
leverage to enhance their sphere of influence throughout
the Middle East,”[i]
perhaps by using Hezbollah, their Lebanese protégés, to
turn up the heat against the Jewish state or to assert
their claims over disputed areas of the Gulf Straits or
Caspian Sea.
This
argument is, however, fallacious because it exaggerates
the role of nuclear weapons: half a century on, Liddell
Hart’s argument that a nuclear bomb deters only nuclear
blackmail while conventional forces deter the attack of
a conventional army remains unchallenged by experience.
So as long as Israel maintains its overwhelming
preponderance of non-nuclear firepower, an Iranian bomb
will make no real difference to the behaviour of any
conventional forces in the field.
Another
argument, however, is that elites inside the Iranian
regime can secretly pass fissile material along to its
terrorist allies, whose fanaticism renders them immune
from the mutually assured destruction that their use
would invite. “What check is there that Iran would not
transfer even some of its WMD technology to terrorists?”
as Zalmay Khalilzad asked two years ago.
No one
seriously disputes this is a cause for concern – as
serious as the prospect of the Pakistani Inter-Services
Intelligence passing its own nuclear materials into the
hands of its proxy forces in Kashmir. But it is not,
however, the paramount reason why an Iranian bomb really
matters, because it is a threat the outside world can
easily deter: if your protégés use Iranian weapons, the
Iranians will still be accountable and must pay the
price.
Nor is
it enough to say that the development of an Iranian bomb
would provoke a regional arms race that could prove
highly destabilising, just as India’s nuclear programme
during and after the 1960s provoked a comparable
Pakistani reaction. Iran’s current situation differs
considerably from the Indo-Pak model. Israel, its
regional enemy, and Pakistan, a possible future rival
for influence and resources, are already nuclear powers
and the other countries that might feel threatened –
Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Turkey – are already
well-protected by the long arm of the American nuclear
umbrella. With whom, then, is this arms race going to
occur?
The most
convincing reasons to be deeply concerned about an
Iranian bomb are in fact the least mentioned.
The first is that the
development of a warhead would be seen by ordinary
Iranians as a huge national achievement and thereby
enormously boost the prestige of the current regime.
If this helps to sustain the rule of the mullahs, then
the cause of democracy and human rights inside
Iran
would be dealt a very hard blow.
Viewed
in these terms, stopping the development of an Iranian
bomb is one of the very few things the outside world can
constructively do to assist the humanitarian cause. The
decade-long efforts of the European Union to promote
human rights inside Iran has achieved nothing, not least
because anything that smacks of foreign interference
immediately raises hackles and so becomes
counter-productive. “The truth is that European Critical
Dialogue has failed to deliver,” as a senior Western
diplomat told me in Tehran last autumn, admitting that
the single supposed achievement of the policy – a
moratorium on the stoning to death of some criminals –
officially ended a practice that was already dead in
practice. But we are not powerless to prevent the
mullahs reaping a political harvest of nationalism when
they successfully test-fire a nuclear device.
An
Iranian bomb also matters because the possibility of
serious political unrest inside Iran over the next few
years cannot easily be discounted. It is of course
possible that the mullahs will cling to power in the
same way as the Chinese communists have clung to their
own, buying off their enemies and introducing populist
measures as well as ruthlessly suppressing disorder. But
should the regime crumble before violent street
protests, then the ensuing anarchy could easily allow
nuclear materials to be spirited away by anyone who can
bribe or steal their way into nuclear installations. And
just as former Soviet and Iraqi scientists were
headhunted when their own masters fell from power, so
could destitute Iranian scientists one day also prove
easy targets for foreign governments wanting their
expertise.
Finally,
the development of an Iranian nuclear bomb would reveal
an alarming truth that bodes ill for the future: for all
the formidable powers of intelligence gathering that lie
at their disposal, and for all the immense weight of
diplomatic and economic pressure that they can muster,
the Western powers are ultimately unable to prevent a
government from developing a nuclear warhead if it has
sufficient determination and resources. So an Iranian
warhead could conceivably prompt other governments to
introduce or accelerate their own nuclear programmes –
not to deter any threat from Iran, but because such a
development could raise hopes that they, like the
mullahs, can succeed in doing so.
There
are, then, very good reasons to fear an Iranian bomb and
hope that it does not become a reality.
Roger
Howard is a British defense journalist and author of
Iran in
Crisis? (Zed Books,
London &
New York, June 2004 www.zedbooks.co.uk)
[i]
The Weekly Standard, 2 September 2002
|