Did you notice the part where I specifically mention Khamenei, who actually controls foreign policy in Iran and is much more moderate that Ahmedinijad, who plays largely to a domestic audience?
So he's responsible for exporting terrorism?
Great that you can use bold and color sequences, but I'm asking you personally, because all I see is this supposed indisputeable perpetual meatshield of using Iraq and the 2003 war when addressing issues like nuclear weapons and their proliferation.
Sure. Just like the American CiC is responsible for exporting terror to wherever they choose to fight proxy wars. Currently, one of those places happens to be Iran. Funny that.
I "admit" that Iran has involved itself in regional conflicts like Iraq and Lebanon.
You'll find most Shia Muslims support Hezbollah, where the Sunnis will always condemn them.
It's also interesting to note that in places touched by the Arab Spring - Egypt, Bahrain, Syria - Hezbollah has been condemned as a terrorist organization.
I guess support for Iran's intervention in those countries is just as divided as American intervention in Iraq and Afghanistan.
and that Iran doesn't want conflict with the West
it wants dialogue
People don't like my realpolitik so so try to distract from it by framing emotive arguments that exploit the apparent barbarity of the regime. I don't doubt the barbarity but I also acknowledge the nature of international relations, we ain't so snow-white ourselves
The leaders of Iran and the mullahs are just scaring their citizens into supporting the regime for a little while longer. I would agree that they don't want conflict with the U.S. (I hate using that term 'The West'), as it would end in their defeat. Much against the idea of martyrdom on a whole, I think those in power in Iran would like to remain alive and in power. Nukes won't be used against the United States.
However, whose to say they won't use Nuclear weapons to threaten or blackmail the other gulf states? Considering Saudi Arabia's opinion of Iran, I'd think Iran would use Nuclear leverage/deterrence to somehow meddle in the Saudi's affairs.
Speculation, but valid I would say.
I do not like this tu quoque argument. The nature of the Iranian regime is very barbaric, and very authoritarian - it has to be dealt with eventually. If you think authoritarians typically concede power after open dialogue (with no military or economic action taken by its enemy), I would like you to support that position with examples.
I guess the question I have for you is this:
What would you like to see in Iran, insofar as a change in regime, and how do you propose it is accomplished?
Iran doesn't have nukes and there is very little evidence to support the idea that they are trying to develop them.
But there are better ways to prevent proliferation than trying to menace states into submission. That's what the NPT is all about.
I think world security is better served by the world engaging states like Iran - who might be objectionable but are stable, prosperous and are not active aggressors
not isolating and threatening them to the point where they decide that being armed with nukes is the only rational way to prevent outside aggression.
They had a secret plant in Qom. Did they just forget to mention it to the IAEA?
Iran would have to convince the world that the Heavy Water plant in Arak is for a new type of reactor they will be building, then. The only other use for such a facility is for the production of plutonium.
And when peaceful discussions fail? Yes, in hind site, it may have been more prudent to reach out to the Iranians in good faith. Military action cannot be removed from the equation, however.
Define your terms. Half of the Arab world sees Iran's proxy group as being a terrorist group. By your own standards, Iran's action in Lebanon and Iraq violates the sovereignty of those countries. Would that not be a good definition of 'active aggressor'?
I think the Saudis had a bigger hand in isolating Iran.
If Iran are complying, why does the IAEA say they aren't complying?
Longtime investigative journalist Seymour Hersh questions the growing consensus on Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program. International pressure has been mounting on Iran since the U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency revealed in a report the "possible military dimensions" to Iran's nuclear activities, citing "credible" evidence that "indicates that Iran has carried out activities relevant to the development of a nuclear explosive device." In his latest article for The New Yorker blog, titled "Iran and the IAEA," Hersh argues the recent report is a "political document," not a scientific study, in an interview with Democracy Now! Nov. 21. "They [JSOC] found nothing. Nothing. No evidence of any weaponization," Hersh says. "In other words, no evidence of a facility to build the bomb. They have facilities to enrich, but not separate facilities to build a bomb. This is simply a fact."
Is Iran actively trying to develop nuclear weapons? Members of the Obama Administration often talk as if this were a foregone conclusion, as did their predecessors under George W. Bush. There is a large body of evidence, however, including some of America’s most highly classified intelligence assessments, suggesting that the United States could be in danger of repeating a mistake similar to the one made with Saddam Hussein’s Iraq eight years ago––allowing anxieties about the policies of a tyrannical regime to distort our estimations of the state’s military capacities and intentions. The two most recent National Intelligence Estimates (N.I.E.s) on Iranian nuclear progress, representing the best judgment of the senior officers from all the major American intelligence agencies, have stated that there is no conclusive evidence that Iran has made any effort to build the bomb since 2003.
Despite years of covert operations inside Iran, extensive satellite imagery, and the recruitment of many Iranian intelligence assets, the United States and its allies, including Israel, have been unable to find irrefutable evidence of an ongoing hidden nuclear-weapons program in Iran, according to intelligence and diplomatic officials here and abroad. One American defense consultant told me that as yet there is “no smoking calutron,” although, like many Western government officials, he is convinced that Iran is intent on becoming a nuclear state sometime in the future.