Chattanooga Times Free Press

U.S. SHOULD LEVERAGE IRAN’S NUCLEAR SECRETS FOR A BETTER DEAL

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WASHINGTON — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed a treasure trove of secrets on Monday about Iran’s hidden nuclear activities. But it would be a waste of this extraordin­ary intelligen­ce to use it as a pretext for American withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal. Much better to use it as a pressure tool to squeeze Tehran.

The Israeli intelligen­ce coup should open the way for a much smarter U.S. campaign to isolate Iran and tighten the deal — and bring Europe, Russia and China along in a common push for a better agreement. This approach would keep the internatio­nal community together and avoid handing Iran the propaganda victory that unilateral American withdrawal would provide.

The bold Mossad operation to grab the files in Tehran in January has caught the Iranians red-handed. Now let them squirm awhile, as the internatio­nal community sifts the evidence of Iranian deception.

Acting through the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, the world should demand answers about the issues framed by the harvest of secrets: Why did Iran repeatedly lie about its past nuclear activities? How did it shape its program of deception? What stronger provisions are needed to make the 2015 agreement real and binding?

Skeptics are right that, despite Netanyahu’s theatrical presentati­on, the documents aren’t a smoking gun that shows Iranian violation of the nuclear agreement. But they do provide a ton of new informatio­n about Iranian lying, cheating and deception. Above all, they shatter Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei’s claim that Iran has never pursued nuclear weapons. Sorry, Mr. Leader, but the documents show otherwise. Rarely have a leader’s lies to his people and the world been clearer.

The Israelis made off with a veritable encycloped­ia of secrets that the Iranians had stashed in big, refrigerat­or-like safes in a warehouse in the Shorabad district of Tehran in 2017. Netanyahu said the haul includes 50,000 pages in notebooks and folders, and 50,000 more files contained on 183 CDs.

U.S. and Israeli officials familiar with the documents say there’s far more that Netanyahu didn’t disclose — revealing Iranian research sites, key scientific and technical personnel, and other informatio­n that should allow much better insight into the Iranian nuclear effort — and make it easier to strengthen and enforce the 2015 agreement.

The hottest items Netanyahu revealed were the 2003 quotes from top Iranian officials about how they intended to continue secret work after the official program, called “Project Amad,” was stopped. “Work would be split into two parts: covert and overt [dual use],” said a document citing orders from Ali Shamkhani, who was then minister of defense. “The general aim is to announce the closure of Project Amad. … Special activities will be carried out under the title of scientific know-how developmen­ts,” said Mohsen Fakrizadeh, a physicist who ran the Amad effort and now heads the defense ministry’s Organizati­on of Defensive Innovation and Research.

President Trump’s challenge is to use Iran’s new vulnerabil­ity, now that its secrets have been exposed, to get the tougher deal he wants. The problem with Trump’s strategy has been that it’s not clear what he intends to do, after withdrawin­g from the 2015 deal, to get a better one — assuming, that is, that he doesn’t plan to go to war against Iran.

Trump’s choice on May 12 is clearer now: If he scuttles the deal, he risks isolating the U.S., rather than Iran. If he instead uses Israel’s intelligen­ce windfall to fuel a global pressure campaign, he may actually have a pathway for getting a better, longer-lasting and more enforceabl­e agreement.

Thanks to Israeli intelligen­ce, Trump just got lucky on Iran. But will he be smart?

David Ignatius

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