Israel can clear Mideast of nukes, it just won't
If Israel accepts an invitation to the conference in Helsinki, it will have an opportunity to move ahead on a deal: comprehensive nuclear disarmament in exchange for comprehensive peace, says researchers' position paper.
By Akiva Eldar Tags: Iran nuclear Israel occupationThe Iranian professor burst out laughing when I showed him the report on the Haaretz website about President Shimon Peres' call for the Iranian people to bring down the ayatollahs' regime. His neighbor at the table, also a senior lecturer at the University of Tehran, looked annoyed and scoffed: "Don't you think it takes a lot of temerity to sit next to the Palestinian prime minister, whose people have been living for years under Israeli occupation - and call on another people to rise up against its elected government?"
The conversation took place during a seminar in Barcelona at the end of January. It was one of a series of preliminary conferences initiated by the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt, in cooperation with the Norwegian government, the Friedrich Ebert Foundation and the Protestant churches of Hesse and Nassau, in preparation for a regional conference on Middle Eastern disarmament of weapons of mass destruction. The event is to take place in Finland later this year.
At the request of the organizers, the identity of the two Iranians - like that of the other participants (from Yemen, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Israel, the United States and Europe ) - was kept under wraps. However, they did not keep secret the fact that four Israelis (among them a former senior member of the intelligence community ) had been invited to participate in the discussions about lifting the threat of nuclear weapons and other types of WMDs.
It is possible, of course, that taking part in the conferences is just another Iranian public relations ploy, an effort to throw sand in people's eyes while they develop a bomb. But if we don't try such things, how will we know? And after all, after Iran attains the bomb and the means to deliver it, the cost of disarmament will be much higher, if it can be paid at all.
The attendees were presented with a position paper written by the research institute's director, Prof. Bernd Kubbig and an institute member, Christian Weidlich, in cooperation with Prof. Gawdat Bahgat, an American of Egyptian origin, and Col. (res. ) Dr. Ephraim Kam, deputy head of Israel's Institute for National Security Studies.
The authors of the document mention the traditional support Iran has offered for the idea of nuclear disarmament, since Tehran adopted the 1974 United Nations General Assembly resolution calling for a declaration of the Middle East as nuclear weapons-free zone.
The writers of the paper also quote statements by Ali Asghar Soltanieh, Iran's envoy to the International Atomic Energy Agency, ahead of its board of governors' meeting last November. The ambassador had stressed Iran's central role in promoting the idea of nuclear disarmament, but explained that his country would not take part in the November IAEA meeting. "The Islamic Republic of Iran believes that boosting and raising hopes to create a nuclear-weapons-free Middle East is meaningless while the Zionist regime has not signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and its nuclear activities are not controlled by the IAEA," Soltanieh was quoted as saying.
Since the 1980s, Israel has conditioned its support for nuclear disarmament on peace treaties with all Middle Eastern countries, including Iran. The authors of the position paper state that if Israel accepts an invitation to the conference in Helsinki, it will have an opportunity to move ahead on a deal: comprehensive nuclear disarmament in exchange for comprehensive peace. For instance, Israel will be able to help create a regional coalition of peace and disarmament (accompanied by a reliable monitoring mechanism ) based on the Arab League peace initiative, which was approved by all members of the Organization of Islamic States. That initiative, which next month will be 10 years old, has proposed normalization of ties between Israel and the entire Muslim world.
If this entire move takes place, it would likely allow Iran to take credit for helping to end Israel's occupation, it will extricate Tehran honorably from international isolation and economic sanctions, and it will remove the threat inherent in Iran's implementation of a disastrous military option.
It is not by chance that the Israeli (and the American ) spokesmen who proclaim that "all options are open" ignore this option. To promote it, Israel would have to withdraw from most of the West Bank, divide Jerusalem and propose a fair solution to the Palestinian refugees. But Israel wants to be both the only country in the region that has nuclear weapons (according to foreign sources, of course ) - and also to keep its hold on most of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, while not having to deal with the problem of the refugees.
And what will we do if the new government in Cairo, and then the successors of the murderer from Damascus, decide that they, too, want to develop nuclear programs? Will we send Peres to call on the Egyptian and the Syrian peoples to bring down their regimes?
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Once again a ridiculous proposal by an anti- Israel journalist who never fails to blame Israel for every wrong in the Middle East. Iran is seeking nuclear weapons for many different reasons, threatening and aiming to destroy Israel is only one of them. Iran aims to dominate the Gulf region and nuclear weapons are a further means of intimidation of its neighbors. Iran wishes to have a means to deter any U.S. action against it. Iran believes that Nuclear Weapons will greatly enhance its prestige and power. Whatever Israel does Iran will continue to pursue its nuclear goals.
the interview was that of a servile man flattering his boss.when asked why he went to arafat on this tragic day elder replied "i am on a mission" akiva elder did not specify the nature of the mission
in this case akiva elder is not only an outlier he induces laughter in most israelis.
It is interesting why everyone has a good solid reason why everyone else should take an unpopular step but of course that doesn't apply to them.
the red-green alliance would love to disarm israel. they can wait till the end of time.
Israel should actively participate as a nation directly concerned about this type of proliferation in its neighbourhood, starting with the conference in Helsinki. It's one thing to talk with irrational rhetoric of alienating another nation (as well as causing havoc to others) as Iran has, but to permit its actual possession of nuclear weaponry should be a universal concern. It's a mistake to continue to ignore the Arab League Peace Initiative of 2002 which would entail the whole Muslim nations accepting the Israeli state within its neighbourhood, upon achieving a fair peace agreement with the Palestinians.
Weighing all options I think it is time Israel listened. The senseless sowheadedness has gone on too long.
Israel must retain it's 'ambiguity.' That ambiguity has given Israel almost 40 years of peace only broken by war it sought to have.
One can not expect anything but more war in the middle east until Israel shows responsiblity and joins the global community instead of picking and choosing which directives to capitalize on, and which directive to completely ignore. Attempts at manufacturing nuclear weapons in the middle east could easily be explained using simple logic. "If Israel has them, Why shouldn't we?"
let the entire world have atomic bombs. they call this "logic." maybe if hitler had managed to get atomic bombs, which he was very close to getting, there would be no lunatics around to pontificate on the matter.
Much simpler is the logic:If Israel hasn´t them, Why shouldn't we? Are you still a child or just childish? Israel had these weapons for 40 years. If your logic should hold true, why wasn´t this question asked from begin on by anyone before?