Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
GARETH PORTER: Hi. This is Gareth Porter for The Real News Network in Baltimore. Welcome
to part two of our interview with Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett.
Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett are the authors of a new book, Going to Tehran,
which challenges all the conventional wisdom about Iran and its nuclear program. They were
both insiders in the U.S. national security state. They both worked as senior directors
on Iran for the National Security Council staff, and then both worked for the State
Department. But they quit the U.S. government in 2003 in disagreement over U.S. policy toward
the Middle East.
Flynt and Hillary, I'm interested in hearing from you about the way in which you have bashed
the conventional wisdom in Washington on Iran and its nuclear program. What are the two
things that you have found most, shall we say, outrageous about the conventional wisdom
on Iran?
HILLARY MANN LEVERETT: There are two things. One I would characterize as the "mad mullah"
myth, that the mullahs in Tehran in Iran are irrational, immature, hellbent on pursuing
nuclear weapons to become history's first suicide mission to bomb Israel.
In fact, if you analyze, if you talk to Iranians inside Iran as we have--Iranian national security
officials, thinkers, academics, analysts--Iran has developed and pursued, implemented a highly
rational foreign policy that is really actually not focused on hard power. It's focused mostly
on soft power. It's making alliances with both ethnic and sectarian groups in the bordering
countries and using its rhetoric, using its belief in, particularly, pan-Muslim causes
and defiance of the United States and Israel to galvanize regional publics to align with
it, to prevent those countries, neighboring countries around Iran, from attacking it.
Iran hasn't invaded anybody. Iran hasn't sanctioned anyone. It is using primarily a soft-power
strategy in its foreign policy to dramatically change the balance of power in Afghanistan,
in Iraq, in Lebanon, even in Egypt, to its favor. It's something that it is doing primarily
through soft power, not through hard power. It's not this kind of "mad mullah" irrational
strategy.
FLYNT LEVERETT: I think the other big myth that we try to take on in our book--and we
get in a certain amount of trouble for doing this--is that the Islamic Republic is fundamentally
illegitimate, it is a system that is so despised by its own population that it is in imminent
danger of overthrow. Foreign policy pundits, Iranian expatriates, others have been telling
Americans this for more than 30 years, virtually since the Islamic Republic was born out of
the Iranian Revolution, and it has basically proven false over a 33 year period.
What we try to show in our book is that for most Iranians living in their country, living
in Iran, the Islamic Republic is in fact a legitimate system with all of its flaws and
faults. It is still a legitimate system for most of the people living under it. And even
those who want that system to evolve, to reform, to change in very significant ways, at the
end of the day, even most of them still want it to be an Islamic Republic of Iran. And
that's a reality that the United States still needs to come to terms with.
PORTER: Let's talk a little bit about the Iranian nuclear program in particular. You
both give the reader the strong view that the Iranians are not interested in having
nuclear weapons. Could you explain to us why you feel that you can make that kind of judgment,
which is pretty much outside the mainstream, in terms of news media for sure?
H. MANN LEVERETT: Part of it is just evidence. You know, after the invasion of Iraq and there
being no weapons of mass destruction there, we think it is incumbent on people to really
look at the evidence, and there is no evidence that the Iranians have nuclear weapons or
are pursuing nuclear weapons. Even the American CIA and the Israeli Mossad agree with that.
The question is just whether or not the Iranians would decide to do so. And many inside the
United States and in Israel think that of course the Iranians have to want to do this.
But this is what we think is really the value in our book. We have had the opportunity to
sit down and actually listen to what Iranian officials, diplomats, strategists, analysts,
academics inside Iran have to say about what they think about nuclear weapons and what
that means for strategy. And as opposed to, for example, the North Koreans or the Pakistanis
or the Indians or the Israelis, Iranian national security thinkers and analysts and officials
have a very clearly well thought out idea of how harmful nuclear weapons would be for
Iran's national security strategy for its defense.
Now, that doesn't mean they don't want a full, thorough nuclear program. They absolutely
want the science and the technology that comes off that. And they want the soft power that
they derive from pursuing a nuclear program under full international rights, their sovereign
rights, their treaty rights under the NPT. They want the soft power they glean from that
from doing it in defiance of the United States and Israel. But to say--.
F. LEVERETT: The United States, which is trying to rewrite the Non-Proliferation Treaty to
say Iran can't do safeguarded enrichment.
H. MANN LEVERETT: Yeah. But when we've heard people from the president to the foreign minister
to others in Iran talk about how they compare their situation where they don't have nuclear
weapons to other countries that have or had nuclear weapons, like the Soviet Union, Israel,
and South Africa, they look at those three states--the Soviet Union being no more; apartheid
South Africa being no more; Israel the Iranians, as clearly delineated from their rhetoric,
think time is not on the side for the Israeli government--that those three systems, their
fatal flaw was the pursuit of nuclear weapons, which push each one of those systems to overreach,
to take decisions, to dominate their neighbors that was essentially the key to their undoing.
PORTER: Let me turn to the question of the U.S. side of the equation on the Iran nuclear
issue. What are the interests, what are the incentives that you think have been driving
U.S. policy toward the Iran nuclear program? How do you explain the--.
F. LEVERETT: I think the big one goes back to what we think ultimately drives, on a bipartisan
basis, across Democratic and Republican administrations, U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, which
is this desire for hegemony, not just to be militarily preeminent, but to be able to use
that military preeminence to coerce and leverage political outcomes to subordinate major states
in the region to a U.S.-managed, U.S.-dominated political and security order in the Middle
East. And from that perspective, the one thing that the United States can't abide, can't
tolerate is an independent power. This is why we had so much trouble historically with
Egypt under Gamal Abdel Nasser. Once we managed to flip Egypt under Sadat into the American
camp, that was fine.
But now we face this Islamic Republic of Iran, which for 30 years has built its foreign policy
on the idea of independence, not anti-Americanism. Iranian officials say at the highest levels
they would welcome better relations with the U.S. But that, from their perspective, can
only happen on a basis of balance, of mutual respect, and American acceptance of the Islamic
Republic. And that, from their perspective, no American administration has been willing
to offer them, and that's because of this drive for dominance.
H. MANN LEVERETT: And the piece with the nuclear program which is so interesting is that we
could essentially at this point [incompr.] ten years later as the Iranians have pursued
their nuclear program, we could essentially live with Iran having its nuclear program
in some ways, as long as it's bombable, if it's in Natanz and we can bomb it. What we
can't tolerate is if they fortify it in a bunker where we can't bomb it. The same kind
of program, same centrifuges, same level of enrichment,--
F. LEVERETT: The same inspectors.
H. MANN LEVERETT: --the same inspectors. What we can't tolerate is that they would be able
to have independent authority over their own nuclear program, that they would [incompr.]
able to have a real deterrent strategy to use against the United States and Israel.
As long as we can bomb it, maybe reluctantly along the road we'll let them have it; but
if we can't bomb it, they can't have it.
PORTER: Sounds like a very perverse policy. Let me ask you both,--
PORTER: --you were in the Bush administration at a time when this issue of the Iranian nuclear
program was still very much--very different from what it is now, when they had no enrichment
going on, when they still had not enriched a single bit of uranium. Can you give us an
insight into what the Bush administration really was trying to do with regard to the
Iranian nuclear program? What was their aim? What was their modus operandi with regard
to that?
F. LEVERETT: I think there is both an Iran-specific goal and a more global goal. The Bush administration
became convinced that there is--they would call it a loophole in the NPT. I would call
it just the text of the NPT that everyone, including the United States, agreed on. But
the Bush administration wanted to try and rewrite the NPT so that states, non-weapon
states would no longer be able to develop indigenous fuel cycle capabilities. I mean,
it's not just Iran that has done this. You know, Japan, Canada, all sorts of Western
countries do it. Among non-Western states, Brazil and South Africa, countries that gave
up nuclear weapons programs in the course of democratization and joined the NPT as non-weapon
states, they insist on their right to continue enriching uranium. But the Bush administration
wanted to find a way to take that away, basically to, you know, maintain American dominance
in this sphere by removing the possibility of non-Western states developing indigenous
fuel-cycle capabilities.
In the Iranian case specifically, this is very important because as the United States
wants to dominate the Middle East, the one most consistent challenger to American and
Israeli hegemonic ambitions in the region is the Islamic Republic of Iran. And you certainly,
from an American perspective, couldn't let the Islamic Republic establish its own independent,
even if internationally monitored, nuclear capability.
PORTER: Thank you, Flynt and Hillary.
F. LEVERETT: Thank you.
PORTER: And thank you for watching The Real News Network.