Monday, October 14, 2013

In Case You Missed It: UANI President, Dr. Gary Samore, Interviewed by TIME magazine on Eve of Geneva Talks

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In Case You Missed It: UANI President, Dr. Gary Samore, Interviewed by TIME magazine on Eve of Geneva Talks
"Without Offering Some Kind of Limits on Capacity, any Proposal Iran Makes is Not Going to be Taken Seriously"
"Samore is Now President of United Against Nuclear Iran"


Obama's Top WMD Ex-Official on the Iran Nuclear Talks
Gary Samore on what to expect from this week's high-stakes talks in Geneva

By Michael Crowley
October 14, 2013

... [A] new round of negotiations - the most promising since the West began cracking down on Iran about a decade ago - begins tomorrow in Geneva. ... On the eve of the talks, TIME spoke with Gary Samore, who served until January as the Obama White House's coordinator for arms control and weapons of mass destruction - making him the Administration's point man on the Iran nuclear issue. Samore is now president of United Against Nuclear Iran.

Gary, what's at the crux of these negotiations?

The single most important issue is whether Iran offers to accept limits on its overall enrichment capacity: limits as defined by the number of centrifuges, the type of centrifuges, the number of enrichment locations and the stockpile of enriched material they have on hand.

The goal of these limits is to prevent Iran from enriching large amounts of uranium quickly. If the Iranians had an industrial-scale enrichment facility, with tens of thousands of centrifuge machines enriching low-enriched uranium, they could pretty quickly convert that facility to producing large quantities of weapons-grade uranium. And that is called 'breakout.' The U.S. will try to trade sanctions relief for physical limits on the Iranian nuclear program, and the Iranians will try to get sanctions relief for as few limitations as possible

But without offering some kind of limits on capacity, any proposal Iran makes is not going to be taken seriously.

What's going to happen in Geneva? Put us in the room.

You'll have a big plenary session with all the delegations around a table. The expectation is that the Iranians will come to this meeting with a new proposal. Everyone will listen, and there will be some questions and discussion.

Then there would normally be a break for lunch and hopefully an opportunity for bilateral meetings. The only way to negotiate is to meet bilaterally - you can't negotiate with seven delegations sitting around the table.

What will it mean if the Iranians meet with the Americans privately?

That will show they are taking the negotiations seriously.

Since 2009 the Iranians have completely refused to meet with the Americans bilaterally. We have tried over and over again, and they have always refused and said they don't have authorization. It will be a very important development if Zarif or his delegation is authorized to meet with the head of the American delegation, [Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs] Wendy Sherman.

Are you hopeful we can reach a deal?

I imagine there's a very intense debate going on in Tehran now between those who think they need to come up with something pretty dramatic and interesting, and the Supreme Leader, who thinks the Americans can't be trusted and that whatever concessions Iran makes, the U.S. will simply pocket them and demand more.

I think the proposal they put forward in Geneva is going to be pretty modest - it will fall short of what we consider a dramatic breakthrough. But I think it will be enough for us to schedule another meeting. Even if the Iranians were prepared to make big concessions, they wouldn't show it in the first meeting. That's just not how you negotiate.

Do you have any doubt that Iran wants a nuclear bomb?

There's some ambiguity about their intention. Almost all governments that are involved in this issue believe that at a minimum they want a nuclear-weapons capacity - the option to build nuclear weapons. Whether they have made a decision to build a nuclear weapon, when they think they can get away with it, that's a matter of dispute.

My personal position is if they thought they could build nuclear weapons with impunity they would do so, and that what has held them back so far has been fear of an American or Israeli strike.

Israel isn't a party to the talks, but obviously it's a crucial actor. What role do the Israelis play?

The U.S. has always kept Israel and other interested countries, including Arab countries, very informed about these talks. That has included consultations before and after on tactics and substance. At the end of the day we have to come up with a deal that is acceptable not only to us but to our partners.

Say we reach a deal in the months ahead. Then what?

Then comes the question of sequence: Who goes first? The normal process for that is a step-by-step, phased approach. There's so little trust between the two that neither side wants to give away its bargaining chips.

What's going to be the hardest part of reaching a deal?

There's a fundamental conflict of national interest between the U.S. and Iran. They want to have a nuclear-weapons capability. We're not going to be able to persuade them that having a nuclear-weapons option is a bad idea. They're deeply committed to that and have been for decades. The best we can use is coercive pressure.

We also need to realize that, down the road, the agreement could fall apart - the last one with the Europeans did, when Iran agreed to suspend uranium enrichment from 2003 to 2005.

So people shouldn't view any deal as a comprehensive agreement that ends this once and for all. They should view it as a way to buy time, in the hopes that the next Iranian government has a different calculation of their national interest.

Click here to read the full interview.

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United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.

The prospect of a nuclear-armed Iran should concern every American and be unacceptable to the community of nations. Since 1979 the Iranian regime has demonstrated increasingly threatening behavior and rhetoric toward the US and the West. Iran continues to defy the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the United Nations in their attempts to monitor its nuclear activities. A number of Arab states have warned that Iran's development of nuclear weapons poses a threat to Middle East stability and could provoke a regional nuclear arms race. In short, the prospect of a nuclear armed Iran is a danger to world peace.

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.


The Objectives of United Against a Nuclear Iran
  1. Inform the public about the nature of the Iranian regime, including its desire and intent to possess nuclear weapons, as well as Iran's role as a state sponsor of global terrorism, and a major violator of human rights at home and abroad;
  2. Heighten awareness nationally and internationally about the danger that a nuclear armed Iran poses to the region and the world;
  3. Mobilize public support, utilize media outreach, and persuade our elected leaders to voice a robust and united American opposition to a nuclear Iran;
  4. Lay the groundwork for effective US policies in coordination with European and other allies;
  5. Persuade the regime in Tehran to desist from its quest for nuclear weapons, while striving not to punish the Iranian people, and;
  6. Promote efforts that focus on vigorous national and international, social, economic, political and diplomatic measures. 
UANI is led by an advisory board of outstanding national figures representing all sectors of our country.


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