The Niagara Falls Review

The U.S. hawks have trapped Trump

- GWYNNE DYER Gwynne Dyer’s new book is “Growing Pains: The Future of Democracy (and Work).”

Iran has “begun its march ... toward nuclear weaponry,” said Israel’s energy minister, Yuval Steinitz, And that is technicall­y correct.

Only one year and 60 days after President Donald Trump ripped up the treaty that guaranteed Iran won’t make nuclear weapons, Iran has taken a tiny step toward reviving its nuclear program.

Just a baby step: On Monday, Tehran announced it would start enriching uranium fuel to more than 3.67 per cent, the limit set by the treaty that it signed in 2015.

Until last week it was fully obeying all the terms of the treaty, as France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Russia and China — the other signatorie­s to the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA) — all confirmed.

The fuel Iran is making now will be used in its reactor at Bushehr, which requires fuel enriched to just below five per cent, so this is not a very big breach of the treaty.

Indeed, Iran says it is not a breach at all, quoting the part of the JCPOA that says a party can “cease performing its commitment­s ... in whole or in part” in the event of “significan­t non-performanc­e” by any of the other parties.

You could certainly argue that the United States “ceased performing its commitment­s ... in whole or in part” by abandoning the JCPOA, but there would be no point. This is about power, not legality or fairness, and the United States has the power.

The United States has blocked all trade with Iran and used its power to force most of the other countries that signed the treaty to stop trading with Iran too. Unfortunat­ely, it’s not “Germany” or “France” that trades with Iran; it’s German and French companies, which will not be allowed to buy or sell in the United States if they trade with Iran.

The European government­s have no legal power to force their companies to trade with Iran, and they have not offered to compensate companies that do so and as a result lose American contracts. They all acknowledg­e that Iran is in the right and Donald Trump is in the wrong, but they lack the courage to act accordingl­y.

So Iran has been hung out to dry. Its foreign trade has collapsed, including the oil sales that kept the economy afloat.

Inflation has quadrupled, its currency has lost 60 per cent of its value, household incomes have fallen sharply, and the economy is predicted to shrink by six per cent this year.

It’s what Trump calls “maximum pressure,” and ordinary Iranians are hurting.

Iran’s response, after more than a year of this, was to become just a little bit non-compliant with the JCPOA. Its clearly stated policy, however, is to ratchet up the scale of the breach a bit more every 60 days, applying pressure back in a quite different mode.

You can only sub-divide the move back to a full civil nuclear program into so many steps, however, and even at 60 days per step Iran will probably be there by this time next year.

That doesn’t mean it will be making nuclear weapons next year. It had a full civil nuclear program for several decades before the JCPOA was signed, and it didn’t get nuclear weapons then. But without the treaty the “break-out time” to Iran’s first nuclear weapon, if Tehran decided to go for broke, would drop from one year to only a couple of months.

This is what the JCPOA was really about. Iran always swore it would not make nuclear weapons — Ayatollah Khomeini even called them “unIslamic” — but a lot of other government­s hated or at least mistrusted the Iranian regime. Before the 2015 deal, there was much wild talk in the U.S. and Israel about the need to make a “pre-emptive attack” on Iran’s nuclear facilities.

The JCPOA kicked the can down the road for 15 years. Iran dismantled various nuclear facilities and agreed to intrusive inspection­s so that if it ever did decide to cheat, everybody else would have a year or more to respond. Nobody loved the deal, but everybody agreed it was the best available.

So why did Donald Trump trash it? His obsession with destroying Barack Obama’s political legacy undoubtedl­y provided the initial impetus, but he also probably believed that putting “maximum pressure” on Iran would make it crumble.

The hawks in the White House (John Bolton, Mike Pompeo et al.) probably do know that Iran is too proud to crumble, but they don’t care because they actually want a war.

Trump is trapped between them and his promise not to lead the United States into another Middle East war — which is why we have crazy episodes like the air strikes on Iran he allegedly cancelled on June 20 just 10 minutes before they hit.

No wonder Sir Kim Darroch, British ambassador to the U.S. (he has since resigned), said in a confidenti­al dispatch leaked to the media that Trump’s White House is “uniquely dysfunctio­nal” and “divided”.

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