by Dore Gold
In a rare admission two
 weeks ago, the head of Iran's Atomic Energy Organization, Fereydoon 
Abbasi, was quoted in al-Hayat saying the Iranian government had 
provided false information in the past to protect its nuclear program. 
Abbasi accused Britain's foreign intelligence service, MI-6, of spying 
on Iran to justify the fact that it had decided to lie to the 
international community. To further confuse analysts in the West, Abbasi
 said that sometimes the Iranians had presented certain weaknesses that 
they did not have, and alternatively they presented themselves as having
 strengths they did not possess. 
By admitting that their
 diplomacy was based on a system of lies, the Iranians further put into 
question whether any of their statements to the International Atomic 
Energy Agency could be relied upon in any way. The monitoring of nuclear
 programs around the world has always been based on their transparency 
and the confidence that international inspectors could have in the 
declarations of countries with nuclear technology that had signed the 
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The result of what Abbasi was saying 
was that the IAEA should have serious doubts about what Iran was 
officially reporting.
Abbasi's admission 
should not have come as a surprise considering that deception has long 
played a critical role in Iranian diplomacy. It was Ayatollah Khomeini, 
the founder of the Islamic Republic, who wrote in his book, "Islamic 
Government," published in Najaf in 1970, that "the preservation of Islam
 and the Shi'i school" required that its adherents observe the 
"principle of taqiya" — a term which means "deception" though it is 
taken from the Arabic root "to shield." 
Using taqiya, Middle 
Eastern historians have written that Iranian Shiites facing oppression 
were able to protect their community from external dangers from the 
Sunni world. What Khomeini did was to make a virtue out of what had once
 been a necessity. Thus Abbasi had essentially applied what was part of 
Khomeini's ideological legacy for the Islamic republic to protect its 
nuclear program. He must have known that Iran's use of lies in its 
diplomacy in the past had been surprisingly effective. For one of the 
great problems with Iran's use of deception as a part of state policy is
 that many in the West refused to accept that they have been deceived. 
Just before Ayatollah 
Khomeini arrived in Tehran in 1979, he lived outside of Paris and met 
with Western academics and journalists and told them that he wasn't 
interested in exercising personal power and that he would seek to 
advance the protection of human rights. His deception campaign worked 
with gullible Westerners. Professor Richard Falk, who today attacks 
Israel regularly as a U.N. official, at the time wrote an op-ed in The 
New York Times entitled "Trusting Khomeini." An analysis in The 
Washington Post suggested that Khomeini would set up a western 
parliamentary democracy. 
The Iranians have been 
using the same techniques for years to weaken Western resolve to deal 
effectively with them. There was the case of a message to the Bush 
administration through the Swiss ambassador to Iran in 2003, with a 
supposed roadmap for a "grand bargain" normalizing U.S.-Iranian 
relations, the authenticity of which was denied by those closest to the 
supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Then there was the Iranian claim
 that Khamenei issued a fatwa saying that nuclear weapons were contrary 
to Islam. Yet in 2005 when the deputy director-general of the IAEA asked
 for a copy of Khamenei's fatwa from the Iranian ambassador, Tehran 
never supplied anything in writing. 
The main reason why the
 Iranians use diplomatic deceptions of this sort is that they keep 
getting away with them. In this specific case on Abbasi's statement to 
al-Hayat, there may be an additional factor. In the past, Iran has 
exposed aspects of its nuclear program, like in 2009 when it exposed its
 enrichment plant in Fordow, when it feared it was in danger of getting 
caught. Sometimes, the Iranians unilaterally change the rules of 
inspections, like when they declared in 2007 that they only have to 
admit to the existence of nuclear facilities once they receive nuclear 
material, rather than when their construction is started. This way the 
Iranians try to sneak out of their commitments rather than break out 
dramatically like the North Koreans. 
Because of the use of 
techniques of this sort, the U.S. and its allies still suspect that Iran
 has nuclear facilities which it has failed to declare. It cannot be 
ruled out that Abbasi has tried to set up an excuse for why Iran has not
 accurately presented to the IAEA aspects of its nuclear program that it
 is required to open up to inspections. The motivation of the Iranians 
is ultimately unimportant. What is significant is that any future 
arrangement between the West and Iran must be based on an ironclad 
system of inspections, if such understandings are ever reached, given 
the role that outright deception continues to play in Iran's diplomatic 
relations with the West.
                    Dore Gold
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/site/newsletter_opinion.php?id=2644
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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