JINSA Split on Iran Deal, Urges U.S. Support If Israelis Attack

by Jim Lobe

In its latest report on Iran’s nuclear program, the Iran task force of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs (JINSA) admits that it is divided over the value of the Joint Plan of Action (JPA), the Nov. 24 agreement between Iran and the P5+1, but that if after six months from the date of the JPA’s signing on Jan. 10 no final agreement is reached, the U.S. should support an Israeli attack on Iran if its government decides to carry one out. I’ll reprint the the executive summary below, but here’s the final paragraph:

The United States should move immediately to impose new sanctions and consider even tougher actions against Iran if no acceptable final is [sic] agreement is in place 180 days after the JPA’s formal implementation on January 20. At that time, the United States should do nothing that would impinge upon Israel’s ability to decide what actions it must take at that time, and indeed should support Israel if it takes military action.

This passage, of course, mirrors the provision in the Kirk-Menendez “Wag the Dog” Act of 2013 that similarly urges the U.S. to back Israel if its government feels “compelled to take military action in legitimate self-defense against Iran’s nuclear weapon program,” although it pushes the date forward to July 20 instead of at any time.

Now, JINSA claims that it has U.S. national security interests at heart, but it’s difficult to understand how U.S. backing for an Israeli attack on Iranian nuclear facilities will serve U.S. national interests if negotiators are still trying to work out the details of a final agreement six months from now. Indeed, such a move would be potentially catastrophic, not only for possibly involving the U.S. in a new Middle East war with a much bigger adversary than the Taliban or Iraq or Libya, but also because most experts believe that it would put a swift end to the international nuclear non-proliferation regime, isolate both Israel and the U.S., destroy the sanctions regime that the Obama administration has so painstakingly put together, and induce Iran to kick out IAEA inspectors and take its nuclear program underground. Most experts believe an Israeli attack could set back Iran’s nuclear program two years at most. So here we have JINSA insisting that we shouldn’t do anything to discourage Bibi Netanyahu to go for it!

As reader of this blog know, the JINSA task force is simply the latest incarnation of a mainly neoconservative group originally put together under the hawkish Bipartisan Policy Center in 2008. When its first report came out in the fall of that year, I called it a “roadmap to war” and have been diligently following its periodic reports ever since. Its membership has changed over time–it was weighted heavily toward staunchly pro-Israel personalities from both parties at the outset; it’s now disproportionately populated by former Bush aides, such as former Undersecretary of Defense for Policy Eric Edelman (who is co-chair of the task force), former Assistant Secretary of State for Arms Control and Nonproliferation Steve Rademaker, Dick Cheney’s former national security adviser John Hannah, and former State Department Counselor Eliot Cohen–although its ultra-hawkish message has remained consistent. As has its staff director, Michael Makovsky, a Churchill biographer who served as an oil expert in the Pentagon’s Office of Special Plans in the run-up to the Iraq war and previously lived on a settlement on the West Bank, according to various reports that he has never denied, so far as I am aware. Makovsky became JINSA’s CEO last year, and he took BPC’s task force with him.

Of course, the most interesting member of the task force is Amb. Dennis Ross, who served on the BPC task force at its birth until he entered the Obama administration in Jan. 2009 and soon found himself to be the NSC’s senior director for Iran until he left in late 2011 to become counselor of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Ross co-chairs the task force with Edelman.

Now, what is particularly curious about both Ross and this latest JINSA report is that the report doesn’t seem to correspond to his views. As you can see below, the executive summary asserts that the JPA is “deeply flawed,” but, at the report’s rollout Monday at JINSA headquarters, Ross spent most of his time defending the agreement (contrary to Jennifer Rubin’s assessment of his position–“Ex-Obama Adviser: Interim Deal is a Sham.”

“I’m not one of those who thinks the agreement is that bad,” he said, arguing, in effect, that he “could live with Iran having a limited enrichment program with a highly intrusive inspection regime,” unlike others on the task force who echo Netanyahu’s demand that Iran be permitted no enrichment.

That doesn’t mean that Ross isn’t a hawk. Indeed, he argued that the White House’s warning that adding new sanctions would destroy the diplomatic track and make war the only remaining option could easily be interpreted as bolstering Obama’s previous threat to take military action against Tehran unless a satisfactory agreement is reached. Ross made this argument in a more comprehensive exposition of his views about the JPA and the P5+1 process published in Politico Sunday, not an insignificant amount of which is inconsistent with the report by the task force which he chairs. Ross also made clear that he, like a couple other members of the task force, did not believe that a final agreement would be reached within six months, which, of course, raises the question of why the group set that as the date at which Israel should be given a green light to attack Iran.

I didn’t get a chance to ask Ross about that in the Q&A period. Makovsky, however, insisted that the report–except on the question of whether Iran could be permitted some enrichment as part of a final agreement–represented a consensus by the entire task force, which would include Ross. I asked Rademaker whether he thought that provision for an Israeli attack after 180 days was a good idea. “We didn’t have a long debate about this,” he told me, noting that “Israel is the most immediately threatened by Iran’s program.” He added that “there’s a lot of downsides to using military force,” but the threat of an Israeli attack could “enhance the prospect for successful diplomacy.”

In any event, here’s the executive summary:

Executive Summary

Preventing a nuclear-capable Iran remains the most pressing national security challenge facing the United States and its Middle East allies, and a permanent diplomatic settlement that fully addresses international security concerns remains the preferred means to achieve this objective. We judge this outcome to be more remote and harder to achieve now than before the P5+1 countries and Iran signed an interim deal in Geneva, known as the Joint Plan of Action (JPA), which went into effect January 20, 2014.

The JPA is intended as an interim arrangement that pauses parts of Iran’s nuclear program during negotiations for a longer-term settlement. But it also sets out so-called “elements of the final step of a comprehensive solution.” We believe the JPA is deeply flawed because the combination of interim and final concessions it contains undermine the effort to prevent a nuclear Iran.

Our previous report, issued in the run-up to Geneva, spelled out six principles to which any deal must conform to protect U.S. national security interests. To be acceptable, we argued any deal must require Iran to resolve outstanding international concerns, adhere to international legal requirements and roll back its nuclear program. It would also need to put in place a strict inspections regime and clear deadlines for Iran to uphold its commitments. Finally, we made the case that to obtain such a deal the United States would have to negotiate and enforce it from a position of strength, to make it unmistakably plain to Tehran that it has the most to lose from the failure of diplomacy.

The aim of this report is to: show where this agreement falls short of the parameters dictated by our principles; explain the risks generated by these shortcomings; and provide recommendations for pursuing a final agreement to prevent a nuclear Iran.

The JPA fails to meet the standards we had previously laid out, both in the interim and the long term. It allows Iran to retain enough key aspects of its nuclear program to continue progress toward nuclear weapons capability – including its 3.5 percent enriched uranium stockpile, existing enrichment capacity and ability to improve the performance of its extant centrifuges – and even authorizes it to construct an additional nuclear facility. But the JPA does not require Iran to address its unresolved legal obligations. Instead, it implicitly recognizes Iran’s proclaimed right to enrich in practice, undermining the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), and envisions a time limit on any Iranian concessions. Worse still, it suggests that after the conditions of a final deal lapse, Iran will “be treated in the same manner as that of any” state, as if it had not pursued nuclear weapons in defiance of international law or sponsored global terrorism for more than three decades. Finally, the JPA weakens U.S. leverage to pursue even this flawed long-term deal, both by beginning to unravel the existing international sanctions regime and by seeking to limit Congress’s power to pass additional measures. Overall, this does not buy time for the P5+1 to negotiate a final deal. Instead, the JPA makes it possible for Iran to progress toward undetectable nuclear weapons capability without even violating the agreement.

These shortcomings complicate prevention of a nuclear Iran, undermine the nonproliferation regime and contribute to regional instability. To stave off these risks, the United States must now do the best it can with what time remains to protect its security interests, as well as those of its allies in the region.

As we made clear in our previous reports, this task force continues to believe the optimal outcome would be an Iran with no enrichment capability whatsoever. Because the JPA precludes this, and contains the flaws outlined above, some task force members believe the deal is unacceptable. These task force members believe the United States must still press for a final agreement permitting Iran to keep only a civilian nuclear power program but no enrichment facilities or capabilities.

Other task force members believe the JPA, while not the best solution, provides an opportunity to test Iran’s true intentions definitively with an endgame proposal. By offering Iran much of what it claims to want – civilian nuclear power and enrichment – while also containing the most stringent possible limits to preclude nuclear weapons capability, U.S. negotiators can give Iran the chance to prove whether or not it is serious in its declared peaceful aims. To be acceptable, these task force members believe, a final deal must limit Iran to: no enrichment beyond 5 percent; no 20 percent enriched uranium stockpile, and no more than 1,000 kilograms (kg) of 5 percent; no second-generation centrifuges, and no more than 1,000 installed first-generation centrifuges; deactivation of the Fordow enrichment facility; and no plutonium track.

All task force members agree an acceptable final deal must require Iran to meet all of its international legal obligations, come clean about its past nuclear weapons research and work, and accept a much more intrusive inspections regime.

Given that the JPA grants Iran greater concessions than it extracts, and considering how close Iran is to nuclear weapons capability, it is critical such a final, permanent deal which fulfills our principles be put in place as soon as possible, preferably before the JPA’s six-month interim expires. Achieving this will require the United States to use all forms of leverage available to induce Iran to accept it, including intensified sanctions, credible military preparations, tighter cooperation with regional allies and clear support for a potential Israel strike.

The United States should move immediately to impose new sanctions and consider even tougher actions against Iran if no acceptable final is agreement is in place 180 days after the JPA’s formal implementation on January 20. At that time, the United States should do nothing that would impinge upon Israel’s ability to decide what actions it must take at that time, and indeed should support Israel if it takes military action.

Jim Lobe

Jim Lobe served for some 30 years as the Washington DC bureau chief for Inter Press Service and is best known for his coverage of U.S. foreign policy and the influence of the neoconservative movement.

SHOW 10 COMMENTS

10 Comments

  1. I for one, believe that each and every member of this latest club, and also their immediate family members, along with every other member of the Israel firsters sect, be called up immediately to serve in the service of Israel, while the U.S. sits back and watches. Also, by doing so, those members called up, forfeit their U.S. Citizenship, voluntarily or by revocation by the U.S.Government. Further, Israel should be made to eliminate its own supply of WMDs, with no exceptions what so ever. This end run to give Netanyahoo the cover for his ego driven nightmare, has no place in process, let alone for World Peace. Israel, by allowing Netanyahoo to call the shots, leading to the distinct possibility of destroying the state of Israel, is not a security matter for the U.S. It doesn’t threaten, but it could cause more death and destruction to innocent peoples throughout the M.E. It’s time to turn the process upon Israelis leadership.

  2. Utter lunacy, to urge the US to back an insane Israeli attack on Iran even if negoitations are continuing for permanent deal between P5+1 and Iran.

  3. To impose new sanctions is one thing to propose that Israel should attack and America should join in is entirely a different issue that appears odd in the bill.

    1-For years American and Israeli politicians have impatiently been intensifying their psychological warfare, using all their media resources to unleash an atmosphere of horror that would engulf Iran, failing to realize that the US and Israel’s perpetual declarations of being on the verge of attack has only led to the rapid development and immense innovations in Iran’s massive military capabilities.

    2-Since 1979 – if not since 1953 – American politicians have continued to misinterpret the Muslim world, years after their support for the deposed Shah (leading to the hostage crisis) and for Saddam (in his military and then chemical attacks on Iran, eventually leading to his invasion of Kuwait) Americans again failed to predict outcome of their foolish support for the invasion of Iraq and the horrors that would affect 10,000s of Iraqi and American families; the same with their previous support for Afghans and the emergence of Taliban and Al-Qaeda and their affiliated terror groups and sub-groups, the same with their support for the anti- Asad rebels, to mention just a few, and the list of America’s erroneous foreign policies does not end here.

    3-Societies are like big families, all are composed of individuals subject to the same rules governing human conducts and psychology, so is Israel; Israel has shown she never dares attack Iran, Israel is only too paranoid acting on impulse, desperately seeking attention crying for help mixed with jealousy, rejection and self doubt and delusion of an untested power that it knows cannot confront its rival. All this paranoid child needs is an ignorant adults’ support to inflict pain and feel to be in control of his self proclaimed playground, but both know that their assault will turn to haunt them.

    4-What both America and Israel know with certainty is that any attack on Iran would have far reaching consequences, both in terms of security and economic shocks as well as long term psychological impact on their own populations and on the Muslim world, including a resurgence of anti western feelings and terror regardless of certain rulers’ personal feeling towards Iran, because Iran of 2014 is not Iran of 1980 nor is America of post invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan, Abu Gharib, Renditions, Surveillance, distortions and Drone Assassinations is the America of 1980 – masks have fallen – nor is the Muslim World of 2014 the same: politically, highly volatile and frustrated Muslims are waiting for an excuse to explode to take on the streets to express their rage, if not allowed in condemnation of their own corrupt western dominated rulers, at least in the name of condemning Zionism and America. As well as the economic impact the attacks will also affect tourism and flights, and threaten American lives all over the world.

    5-A lasting war in the Persian Gulf, and waves of military attacks on Israel and American interests, resurgence of waves of terror attacks in the west, violent conflicts in Palestine and Lebanon and Syria and Iraq and Afghanistan and Pakistan as well as economic shocks and troubled relations with the rest of the Muslim World may not be all that American and greedy paranoid Israelis can predict – just as they could not predict the outcome of the military attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan. But perhaps all these are necessary: perhaps the outcome, no matter how bloody the carnage, would bring a fundamental transformation of Israel, Palestine and America; perhaps we should encourage Israel and America to attack tonight, and once again test the limit of their barbarism in the name of humanity.

  4. It seems I may have been a little hasty in suggesting that the American people aren’t interested in more wars. I’ve just finished looking at the latest poll, this one from the Mellman Group, that suggests Americans might well support an attack against Iran.
    Is it a case of the American people thinking: “Congress knows best” after all the chatter about the Senate push for tighter sanctions?
    The poll details are here:
    http://www.scribd.com/doc/202851458/Tip-Mellman-Iran-Survey-Jan-24-2014

  5. In the US media, supporters of the oppressed Palestinians are hard to find. But supporters of Israeli extremism swarm through the media. This accounts for the rampant hypocrisy:

    Iran has no nuclear weapons, nor a program for obtaining them.
    Israel has hundreds of nuclear weapons.

    Iran has not attacked her neighbors.
    Israel has repeatedly attacked her neighbors, and is occupying and ethnically cleansing the West Bank and East Jerusalem.

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