Commentary
It must be said that at this point that the talks between the United States and Iran are quite promising. The stated goal of President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu of Israel is that Iran must not have a nuclear military weapon, and it appears likely to be achieved peacefully.
The old Cold War Western allies—the United States, UK, and France—can justly claim that they took up nuclear arms out of deterrence. The Russians and Chinese cannot make the same claim believably, but as a matter of prestige, they had to have such weapons if the Western allies did. India needed such a capability if China had it, and Pakistan needed such a capability if India did. It is impossible for any fair-minded person to doubt that Israel is entitled to such weapons given the mortal threats to the survival of the Jewish people over many centuries, and particularly within the lifetime and recollection of many millions of people, and surrounded as it is by traditional enemies, some of whom are still technically at war with Israel.
There is a valid distinction between Iran and the existing nuclear powers. Of these, only the United States developed an atomic weapon for deliberate military use to finish the Pacific phase of World War II, which was initiated by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor with no notice or warning. Neither the United States nor any of the subsequent nuclear military powers have ever declared any intention of using such a weapon other than as a response to a nuclear attack upon them. While Iran makes a legitimate point about the pious exclusivity of the present nuclear club, it renders itself ineligible for admission to it because of its frequent and plausible threats to attack Israel with nuclear weapons, despite its certain knowledge that Israel would obliterate it in retaliation. It would be a horrendous destruction of human life.
President Trump withdrew the United States from this agreement in his first term, and President Biden, despite prodigies of concessions, was unable to find acceptable terms for a return to it, indicating Iran’s complete lack of interest in any course except arming itself with the power to be a potentially mortal threat to any state that disagreed with it. Only the actions of the United States and Israel prevent Iran from having a green light from many of the world’s most influential countries to deploy such weapons.
All of these factors are under discussion in Rome and we should all wish success to this negotiation, but not quail from a military solution if Iranian inflexibility forces one.
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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