by Elan Journo
As Iran continues to expand its nuclear development program and moves ever closer to acquiring nuclear weapons, many agree that something must be done. But what? Bushs disastrous foreign policy especially the Iraq fiasco has led many to conclude that diplomatic engagement is our best hope for stopping Irans nuclear program. But while Bushs policy is a failure, engagement is not the solution.
Bushs moralistic approach, were told, entails denouncing nations as evil, refusing negotiations and isolating and punishing hostile regimes. That, many believe, is how we landed in the catastrophe of Iraq.
And now Bushs moral denunciations of Teheran have supposedly escalated the nuclear standoff, while his policy of pressuring and isolating Iran by limiting its use of foreign banks has made Iran more defiant. That is why, diplomatists claim, Iran responded to the latest American-backed U.N. sanctions by ramping up production of nuclear material. Military conflict, they warn, and an Iraq-like debacle, loom.
But engagement can supposedly end the Iranian threat bloodlessly, because it discards inflexible moral dogmas. Just as Iran has shown it will meet confrontation with confrontation, proponents write in the New York Times, so Iran will respond to what it perceives as flexibility with pragmatism. Irans recent release of 15 British hostages, we are told, was achieved precisely because Britain engaged in nonjudgmental, patient diplomacy. Putting aside our moral qualms about talking with monsters would free us to negotiate a deal whereby Iran stops its nuclear program in exchange for Western carrots.
This scheme presumes that Iran, like us, seeks peace and prosperity and that no one not even the mullahs would put their moral ideals before a steady flow of loot. But in the three decades since its Islamic revolution, Iran has dedicated itself to spreading its moral ideal Islamic totalitarianism by force of arms. Teheran spends millions every year, not to pursue prosperity for its tyrannized citizens, but to finance terrorism and to build a nuclear arsenal to wield against enemies of Allah. It is Irans commitment to the goal of subjugating infidels, not a quest for peace, that motivated its backing of the Hezbollah-Hamas war against Israel and its support for insurgents who slaughter American troops in Iraq.
Would diplomatic incentives encourage Iran to mitigate its ideology? No, they would only intensify its hostility. Negotiations buy Iran time; a settlement would provide loot to fund its nuclear program. Above all, diplomacy grants Iran moral legitimacy as a civilized regime: its hostile goals death to America and its murder of our citizens are made to seem reasonable differences of opinion. Such appeasement confirms the perverse notion that Allahs warriors, materially weaker but morally self-righteous, can succeed in bringing down the mighty infidel West. The real lesson of the recent hostage incident is how readily Western nations will grovel to appease Irans blatant aggression.
The amoral policy of engagement fails for the same reason that Bushs policy fails: both reject the need of morality in foreign policy. Iran is intransigent–but precisely because Bushs policy merely pays lip service to rational moral principles.
What has been the administrations response to Irans nuclear quest, to its funding of terrorists and Iraqi insurgents, to its hostilities stretching back to the 1979 invasion of our embassy? Did it morally judge Iran as an enemy regime waging war on America and fight to defend U.S. lives by militarily crushing Iran?
No. After 9/11, Washington cordially invited Iran into an anti-terrorism coalition; later, Bush denounced Iran as part of an axis of evil; now, he embraces diplomatic talks. To the extent that his administration does momentarily recognize Irans evil, its response has been ludicrous: to thwart Irans nuclear program, U.S. diplomats scrounged for votes at the U.N. to pass toothless sanctions, and tried to put financial pressure on Iran (e.g., by preventing it from trading oil in dollars), an absurdly futile scheme (Iran now trades in euros).
Moreover, when Bush has gone to war, it was not to crush an evil enemy, but to bring it democracy. Bushs messianic crusade in the Middle East is a selfless war of sacrifice to needy Afghanis and Iraqis not a war to uphold the moral goal of safeguarding the lives of Americans.
Bushs self-effacing, immoral foreign policy like the appeasing gambit of engagement licenses Iran to pursue its hostile goals with impunity.
The rational alternative to both of these self-destructive approaches is a policy committed to American self-defense, on principle. It is a policy that morally judges Iran and that ruthlessly renders Iran non-threatening by military force. That does not mean a selfless, Iraq-like crusade to bring Iranians the vote. It means upholding the moral right of Americans to live in freedom by destroying Teherans Islamic totalitarian regime. Nothing less will do.
Elan Journo is a junior fellow at the Ayn Rand Institute (http://www.aynrand.org/) in Irvine, Calif. The Institute promotes Objectivism, the philosophy of Ayn Rand author of Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead. Contact the writer at media@aynrand.org.
How to stop Iran?
by Elan Journo