The Sunday Telegraph

Iran’s bare-faced lies have finally been exposed

Tehran’s nuclear ambitions are anything but peaceful. It is time for the West to take a firm line

- CON COUGHLIN

For decades Iran’s ayatollahs have insisted that, despite all the evidence to the contrary, their nuclear intentions are entirely peaceful, and forcefully rejected any suggestion that they seek to acquire nuclear weapons.

Even when presented with highly incriminat­ing proof, provided by Western intelligen­ce agencies like the CIA, that Iran seeks to build nuclear weapons, the regime has pointed to a fatwa allegedly issued by the country’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, that prohibits Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons.

The fatwa is said to originate from comments Mr Khamenei made in 2003 forbidding the production and use of weapons of mass destructio­n, which the regime has convenient­ly referred to when questioned about undeclared aspects of its nuclear programme, such as the Natanz uranium enrichment facility, which has the ability to produce material for nuclear warheads.

Moreover, Western leaders have naively taken Iran’s denials of bad behaviour at face value. Former US president Barack Obama, for example, as part of his ill-judged effort to agree a nuclear deal with Tehran, the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action (JCPOA), declared in his address to the UN General Assembly in 2013 that: “The Supreme Leader has issued a fatwa against the developmen­t of nuclear weapons.”

Now Iran’s protestati­ons of innocence lie in tatters following the extraordin­ary admission by one of the country’s leading nuclear experts that Iran has maintained a clandestin­e nuclear weapons programme for many years. In an interview published on the eve of the reopening of talks in Vienna aimed at reviving the JCPOA, Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani, who formerly headed the Iranian Atomic Energy Organisati­on, revealed that Iran had created a “system” to develop an atomic weapon in spite of the Supreme Leader’s fatwa.

The purpose of the interview, given to mark the first anniversar­y of the assassinat­ion of chief Iranian nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizade­h, was to explain the late scientist’s working methods. Instead, Mr Abbasi-Davani, wittingly or otherwise, provided the first confirmati­on by a senior regime official of Iran’s long-held ambitions to acquire nuclear weapons. “Although our stance on nuclear weapons based on the Supreme Leader’s explicit fatwa regarding nuclear weapons being forbidden is quite clear, Fakhrizade­h created this system, and his concern wasn’t just the defence of our own country,” Mr Abbasi-Davani explained. In other words, Iran’s intention all along has been to develop weapons that can be used to threaten its adversarie­s in the region, such as Israel.

In many respects, Mr Abbasi-Davani has done the world a great favour, as his helpful explanatio­n means that, with the resumption of nuclear talks in Vienna aimed at reviving the JCPOA, Western negotiator­s no longer have to labour under the fiction that Iran’s nuclear intentions pose no threat.

And, while Mr Abbasi-Davani’s revelation­s present an inconvenie­nt truth for Iran apologists like Lord Lamont of Lerwick, the chairman of the British-Iranian Chamber of Commerce, they should encourage the West to take a far harder line with Iran, whose participat­ion in the Vienna talks is aimed more at getting economic sanctions lifted than making any real concession­s on its nuclear activities.

Iran’s attitude towards the talks, which reconvened in Vienna at the start of this week, was summed up in the draft document it submitted, which placed the emphasis on Western leaders agreeing to lift sanctions, with only minimal concession­s offered on its nuclear activities.

This prompted the United States’s usually dovish Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, to play down any possibilit­y of a breakthrou­gh. “I have to tell you, recent moves, recent rhetoric, don’t give us a lot of cause for optimism,” he said.

Iran’s approach prompted the Israeli Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, to call for the “immediate cessation” of the talks.

Indeed, if anything, Iran’s attitude has become far more confrontat­ional since the election of hardline cleric Ebrahim Raisi as president in the summer. Britain has accused Iran of subjecting internatio­nal nuclear inspectors to invasive physical searches in an intimidati­on campaign designed to block monitoring of sensitive nuclear facilities.

And, while the Biden administra­tion still clings to the belief that the nuclear deal can be revived, US military officials are less convinced. At the recent Manama Dialogue security conference in Bahrain, senior US military officers made it clear that military solutions for dealing with Iran’s nuclear programme were very much on the table.

The Israeli Foreign Minister, Yair Lapid, who met with Britain’s Foreign Secretary, Liz Truss, in London last week, takes a similar view, warning that only a credible military threat will stop Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Certainly, given the appalling prospect of Iran acquiring nuclear weapons, the world can no longer accept Iran’s bare-faced lie that its nuclear intentions are peaceful.

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