Uncovering Iran's Nuclear Past: Where to Start? Where to Stop?
05/24/14
Jon Wolfsthal
Nonproliferation, Iran
"Preventing a nuclear Iran may not require uncovering every last piece of Iran’s nuclear past, or publicly admitting all its previous actions."
Talks over Iran’s nuclear future
have run into the challenging obstacle of Tehran’s nuclear past. It is
impossible and unwise to overlook Iran’s twenty-year history of alleged
nuclear cheating that includes clandestine efforts to develop nuclear
weapon components and deliver weapons by ballistic missile. While
uncovering the truth about Iran’s nuclear past is vital, some areas of
its past are far more critical than others if the goal is preventing
Iran from building a bomb in the future. In fact, seeking to uncover and
publicly disclose every last part of the military dimensions of Iran
previous nuclear work may undermine current negotiation efforts. Policy
makers in the United States must decide if they are willing to put at
risk a deal that restrains Iran’s nuclear future in order to pursue a
complete public accounting of Iran’s nuclear past.
In
2011, the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA)—the UN’s nuclear watchdog— published a report detailing Iran’s
suspected weapons-related work. Iran has yet to provide adequate answers
to most of these questions, in part because it continues to publicly
deny it ever pursued nuclear weapons. This, in the minds of officials,
experts and long-time observers is proof that Iran harbors long-term
nuclear weapon ambitions and cannot be trusted to implement any new
agreement. To others, it seems Iran has painted itself into a corner,
and fears risking additional sanctions and pressure, or even political
humiliation at home.
Fortunately,
not all aspects of Iran’s past work are relevant to whether they can
build a nuclear weapon in the future. It would be useful for the IAEA to
focus on those parts of the nuclear file pertinent to Iran’s ability to
rapidly build a nuclear weapon in the future. While this may leave some
questions unanswered, it may unlock the door to an agreement that both
sides appear ready to make.
Read full articlehttp://nationalinterest.org/feature/uncovering-irans-nuclear-past-where-start-where-stop-10527
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