Obama's Iranian Nuke Counterfactual

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    Obama's Iran Nuke Counterfactual

    Ashley Rindsberg

    March 2009

    What if Iran got nuclear weapons? This geopolitical thought-experiment is not as radicalas it might soundat least not for people in the policy world. It is, after all, a scenario ofthe political game Washington is grappling with on the Iran issue and it's almost certain

    that President Obama, as a rational realist, has posed this question to himself and to

    others around him.

    While the question is interesting, it's President Obama's answer that everyone wants to

    know. It's here that another counterfactual can be posed: What if the president considersthat outcome (of Iran possessing nuclear weapons) to be acceptable? As Iran continues to

    close in on nuclear production capability and as President Obama, far from presenting aplan with a definitive endpoint, continues to offer explicitly open-ended discussion, this

    question is now critically important.

    Many people might insist the Acceptable Iran Nuke counterfactual is absurd and notworth considering, but there are three solid reasons which argue for its being meaningful

    and relevant in Washington today.

    The first is that the president seems to consider the Iranian revolutionary leadership to berational. Obama's eagerness to engage in negotiations with the Islamic regime is the

    strongest indicator of this, since it would be patently irrational to engage with a non-

    rational actor, especially for a realist. If Iran's government is rational then it can betrusted to some degree with a nuclear weaponjust as other rational governments, like

    those of France and Britain, are trusted with nuclear weapons and do not face sanctions or

    a military strike for having them.

    Obama's view towards creating a Middle East balance of power is the second factor

    validating the Acceptable Iran Nuke scenario. As a realist, Mr. Obama looks to theconcept of a balance of power to provide stability. In the Middle East, which is a

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    centerpiece of Mr. Obama's agenda, Israel has a military strong enough to defeat

    coalitions of the region's armies, boasts an economy that dwarfs that of its neighbors, and

    has a sound alliance with the world's greatest power, making it dominant in the region.

    For a realist president who seeks to engage everyone and who wants to bring all nations

    into the fold no matter how far they have strayed, the existence of a single, dominant statein the world's most critical and volatile region cannot be acceptable.

    The Iranian nuclear program is a natural consequence to the regions power equations,Khaled al-Dakhil wrote in a piece for the Carnegie Endowment. Apparently, Iran is

    trying to emulate in the Gulf region the strategy of dominance that Israel maintained in

    the Middle East through its conventional and nuclear arsenals. If the nuclear program has

    bolstered Irans position in negotiations with the West, imagine what it could gain if itobtained a nuclear weapon?

    The simple answer to this last question is, at very least, Iran would gain significantly

    more regional power relative to Israel, and maybe even achieve a truly bipolar MiddleEast. Perhaps this is not just something Mr. Obama can live with but somethingto

    continue our counterfactualthat he wants.

    And this leads to the third and last validating factor, the one which brings us out of the

    realm of counterfactuals and into reality: Washington's present course of action on theIran issue. The American diplomatic and political worlds divide the Iran problem into

    two either/or's: either accept that Iran will get nuclear capability or take action to prevent

    it. And if the choice is for prevention, then either the US attacks Iran or it uses diplomatic

    means to slow or stop the country's nuclear march.

    Dennis Ross, President Obama's Iran envoy, posed just this dichotomy in a 2006Washington Post op-ed in which he also seemed to lament that there was no third way.But the most valuable and most real product of the Iran Nuke counterfactual is precisely a

    third way, and it might be the one towards which the Obama administration is driving:

    permit the regime to achieve the nuclear cycle but tacitly refuse it production of nuclearweapons.

    From a bird's-eye view, it seems that the US is on exactly this policy path. Iran, after all,is so close to nuclear capability that some think it might already be there, while at the

    same time the US has neither passed meaningful sanctions nor has it attacked. Allowing

    Iran to have nuclear production capability would fulfill many of President Obama's

    conditions for dealing with Iran.

    With nuclear energy production the regime would be able to cut down energy importcosts and further economic growth, making the regime ostensibly more able and willing

    to return to the community of nations. More importantly, allowing Iran nuclear energy

    production would provide the appetizing carrots, in Dennis Ross' words, to get the

    regime to abandon any drive towards attaining nuclear weapons.

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    We need to offer political, economic and security benefits to Tehran, Ross wrote in

    Newsweek last December, on the condition that Iran change its behavior not just on

    nukes but on terrorism as well. That Ross spoke about Iran changing its behavior onnukes nuclear weaponsand not on nuclear production in general is significant.

    This policy allowing Iran to have nuclear production capability but not nuclear weaponrycould be seen from a realist or neorealist perspective to create a healthier balance of

    power in the Middle East. Israel might be less inclined to act aggressively to protect or

    enhance its own security in the region if it sees that while the Iranians might not actually

    have a nuke, they could very well produce one in the future. In other words, it wouldpresent Iran with a very appetizing carrot, show Israel a very sharp stick, and in sum total

    balance the region's power.

    There are many reasons for the world's nations and their citizens to hope this part of the

    Iran Nuke counterfactual remains just that. The most important, however, has to do with

    the first reason for thinking the Iran Nuke counterfactual is valid: that President Obama

    considers the Islamic regime rational. After all, this is just an assumption, and the test forits soundness in the context of an Iranian nuclear weapon could result in a very loud, verybright, and very real bang.