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International-UN-NGOs
ElBaradei's Nuclear Pipedream
2005-12-07
YOU cannot fault Mohamed ElBaradei for caring about world peace, at least. The winner of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, who runs the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog, is full of dreams of beating the threat of proliferation — and getting the world’s nuclear powers to give up their weapons too. Yesterday, at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London, he laid out his answer.

He is right, in theory. But the plan (which he has been pushing for some years) is so divorced from reality that it is hard to take seriously. His speech, entitled Reflections, was like a 45-minute rendition of John Lennon’s Imagine, albeit one written by a UN bureaucrat.

There was a hard kernel to his talk — which itself raises questions about his realism. As director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), his most urgent task is to determine whether Iran’s nuclear work is a front for getting weapons, as the US believes. There are “still important pieces missing” in Iran’s account, he said. But he added: “You cannot continue [investigations] for ever. I would hope within a year we should be able to come to a conclusion [about the scope of Iran’s work].”

Why a year? And even if so, why tell Iran now? The new hardline Iranian Government has done nothing but ramp up the rhetoric against the West. It has also restarted preparation of uranium at one facility.

True, in recent weeks it has hinted that it might talk again to Britain, France and Germany. It might consider Russia’s offer to supply it with nuclear fuel, and to take away spent fuel. That would allay concerns about Iran mastering the technology of uranium enrichment or of reprocessing fuel, which could enable it to make bombs. But Iran’s gesture hardly answers the worries. It seems self-defeating for Dr ElBaradei to suggest ending an inquiry, with such good reason still to suspect Iran of wanting weapons.

The Iran case illustrates the weaknesses of Dr ElBaradei’s big idea: creating an international facility for enriching uranium. That would allow any country that wanted nuclear power to acquire fuel, but would stop them mastering weapons technology. That is fine, in theory. It is convenient for Dr ElBaradei, as it happens, because it squares the two notoriously ill-fitting parts of the IAEA’s remit: to promote the spread of civil nuclear power, and to inhibit the spread of weapons.

But who would own this site and where would it be? The big drawback is that no declared nuclear power is treating the notion as practical: not Britain, the US, France, China, and probably not Russia. Although Russia has been encouraging to Dr ElBaradei, he says, its motivation is clear: to explore any chance of selling fuel. But in the one practical test that presents itself to Iran, Russia is offering a simple bilateral deal, as it wants to court Tehran. There is nothing “multilateral” about that.

Dr ElBaradei says Russia’s offer to Iran, if accepted, could be “transitional” on the way to his grand multilateral dream. But there seemed little enthusiasm for his ideas at the UN’s review of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty this summer, which ended in disarray.

Dr ElBaradei, who calls himself “a realistic person”, said that his ideas had been prompted by the world’s “dismal” record in stopping proliferation. But he threw into his wishlist other huge dreams, including one for a “universal” programme of disarmament. The nuclear weapons states’ failure to shed weapons was “not only baffling but absolutely unacceptable”. His remarks yesterday also blamed poverty and the “huge and widening gap in living conditions” for the growing threat to international security.

This speech was the work of a man who has spent a long time in a job that demands an awkward straddle over two conflicting briefs. He is just beginning his third four-year term, and clearly wants now to relay a more ambitious vision as well. His ideas are infused with the spirit of the UN’s early days, when the world warmed to huge pacts. But, until he can demonstrate government support, it is a song that gains little from repetition.
Posted by:Pappy

#2  The winner of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, who runs the United Nation’s nuclear watchdog, is full of dreams of beating the threat of proliferation — and getting the world’s nuclear powers to give up their weapons too.

He left out any mention of the ubiquitous pony.

This maggot is one of those bureaucrats who has breathed his own exhaust for so long he now thinks it's Shalimar and wants to bottle it for sale to the rest of us. It wouldn't be so bad if this moron was in control of place settings at UN banquets, but fer f&%k's sake, this waste of skin is mediating one of the most significant threats to world peace since the Cuban missile crisis. I hope (per .com) that he is caught up in the retaliation against Iran. It couldn't happen to a nicer guy.
Posted by: Zenster   2005-12-07 15:49  

#1  there should be a saying that goes something like....little men accomplish great dreams, Big men have great accomplishments and have little time for dreaming.

I'm working on it.
Posted by: 2b   2005-12-07 06:01  

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