Diplomatic Impunity

posted by Ari Berman on 12/14/2004 @ 11:27am

Instead of trying to halt Iran's suspected nuclear weapons program through diplomatic engagement, the Bush Administration seems intent on undermining the most respected international diplomat willing to challenge the mullahs on this issue.

In its bid to stop Mohamed ElBaradei from assuming a third term as chief director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)--the UN's nuclear watchdog--the Administration has tapped his phone and is currently reviewing intercepted calls for signs of favoritism toward Iran, the Washington Post reported on Sunday. "The plan is to keep the spotlight on ElBaradei and raise the heat," an unnamed US official told the Post.

So far, the intercepts have produced no signs of improper conduct. But hard-liners in the Administration remain paranoid. "Some people think he sounds way too soft on the Iranians," another US official said. This charge ignores the fact that ElBaradei sharply criticized Iran in June for "failing to come clean" on the status of their weapons program. Or that a few weeks ago ElBaradei and the European troika of England, France and Germany won a hard-fought deal in which the the Iranians avoided economic sanction by freezing their uranium enrichment program.

The recent Iran rift is simply the most disturbing sequence in an unfolding vendetta against ElBaradei. Just before the election, US officials and right-wing commentators accused the IAEA of timing a leaked story about missing explosives in Iraq to benefit John Kerry. "The people I've talked to in the Administration are absolutely convinced ElBaradei is trying to defeat Bush, and what happened means they will do anything to make sure that he doesn't get another term," said David Albright, president of the DC-based Institute for Science and International Security, at the time.

Unsubstantiated attacks notwithstanding, the Bush Administration's real problem with ElBaradei stems from his pre-war assessment that Iraq possessed no chemical, biological or nuclear weapons, and that inspections sufficiently contained Saddam Hussein. Ignoring the accuracy of his claims, top Administration officials (and the press) continued to hype a non-existent WMD threat.

"We believe [Saddam Hussein] has, in fact, reconstituted nuclear weapons," Dick Cheney said before the war's start. "I think Mr. ElBaradei, frankly, is wrong. And I think if you look at the track record of the IAEA in this kind of issue, especially where Iraq's concerned, they have consistently underestimated or missed what Saddam Hussein was doing."

To which ElBaradei replied: "I haven't seen anything on the ground at that time that supported Mr. Cheney's conclusion or statement, so I thought to myself, well, history is going to be the judge."

Now that ElBaradei has been proven right on virtually every claim, he's experiencing how this Administration disarms those who dare to tell the truth.

By firing them.

Comments (0)

Ari Berman Ari Berman

The Daily Outrage aims to shine a spotlight on the forces that corrupt our democracy. The outrages come from all over these days: lobbyists stifling reformers in both parties, defense contractors profiting off pre-emptive war, the mainstream media echoing government deceptions, and a rightwing attack machine defending neo-imperialists and distorting progressive values. These stories rarely make the front-page, penetrate talk-radio, or appear on the evening news. So let The Daily Outrage guide you through the tangled web of media, money and politics at home and abroad. And click here to let us know of any outrages you think we should be covering.

Photo Credit: Michael Lorenzini

Advertisement
Advertisement

Blogs

» The Beat

Facing Bipartisan Criticism, RNC's Steele Asks If Race Is Factor | "Why? Is it because Michael Steele is the chairman, or is it because a black man is chairman?” he wonders. Maybe he could compare notes with Obama.
John Nichols

» Editor's Cut

New Web Column at The Washington Post | Every Tuesday, I'll be featuring progressive thinking about politics and challenging the Right in my new web column for The Washington Post. Read my first one here.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
31 Comments

» The Notion

When Snow Melts: Vancouver’s Olympic Crackdown | Anger is growing in Vancouver in advance of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Like Olympic clockwork, here comes the media crackdown.
Dave Zirin
43 Comments

» The Dreyfuss Report

The Mind-Boggling Stupidity of Michael Rubin | How an AEI apparatchik's love affair for Ahmed Chalabi blinds him to Chalabi's pro-Iran treachery.
Robert Dreyfuss
27 Comments

» Act Now!

Demand Question Time | Join the call for the President and Congress to implement regular Question Time sessions.
Peter Rothberg
56 Comments

» And Another Thing

How to Counterbalance Focus on the Family on Superbowl Sunday | Give to help low income girls and women.
Katha Pollitt
54 Comments

» Altercation

Slacker Friday | James O'Keefe and Alter-reviews.
Eric Alterman