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  • Bush's Iran Decision Brings Mixed Reactions

    BUSH'S IRAN DECISION BRINGS MIXED REACTIONS

    New York Sun
    July 17 2008

    WASHINGTON -- Just as Senator Obama was in the process of refining
    his position on the Iraq war, the presumptive Democratic presidential
    nominee is seizing on President Bush's decision to embrace diplomacy
    on Iran as a move that fits with his own plan to begin nuclear talks
    with the mullahs without preconditions.

    The undersecretary of state for political affairs, William Burns,
    will attend European talks with Iran's chief nuclear negotiator, Saeed
    Jalili, on Saturday as part of what has been dubbed "pre-negotiations"
    on unresolved issues dealing with Iran's nuclear program.

    While the Bush administration has sent envoys to meet with Iranians
    in multilateral settings on their support of terrorism in Iraq and
    post-war planning in Afghanistan, the president in 2006 conditioned
    any direct nuclear talks with Iran on the suspension of enrichment
    activities.

    That red line appears to have been crossed, and conservatives are
    outraged. President Bush's former ambassador to the United Nations,
    John Bolton, said the decision legitimizes Mr. Obama's position that
    America should begin talks with Iran without requiring the mullahs
    to stop uranium enrichment.

    "Even if this is a one time only event in the Bush administration,
    it legitimizes the Obama administration to do the same thing,"
    he said. "It undercuts McCain, and Republicans on the Hill. This
    is the State Department effort to insure a smooth transition to the
    Obama administration."

    The executive vice chairman of the Conference of Presidents of Major
    American Jewish Organizations, Malcolm Hoenlein, said he worried that
    the presence of Mr. Burns in Switzerland "could be seen as a victory
    for President Ahmadinejad and his hard-line supporters. Certainly
    in Iran, one has to anticipate that this will be seen as helping
    Ahmadinejad's hard line stance."

    Mr. Obama yesterday had a different view. He said in a statement:
    "I welcome news that the Bush Administration has shifted course and
    will send an envoy for direct talks as part of the P5+1 with the
    Iranians in Geneva this weekend. I commend our European allies and
    other friends on this effort."

    The P5+1 refers to the five permanent members of the U.N. Security
    Council -- America, China, France, Russia, and Britain, plus
    Germany. The Iranians last month rejected an incentives offer from
    these nations of nuclear technology in exchange for a suspension of
    uranium enrichment and transparency with U.N. inspectors, who have
    yet to close the file on the history of Iran's nuclear work since
    they began their probe in 2003. Secretary of State Rice has said
    the offer of incentives only applies when the Iranians end their
    enrichment of uranium.

    Senator McCain's campaign said that sending Mr. Burns as an observer
    in the nuclear talks "is a much more realistic approach than engaging
    in the unilateral cowboy summitry advocated by Senator Obama."

    Senator Kerry, the Democrat of Massachusetts who was his party's
    presidential nominee in 2004, said the decision to send Mr. Burns
    to the meeting in Geneva "could be the most welcome flip flop in
    diplomatic history."

    The decision to engage Iran on its nuclear program comes as the
    mullahs are cracking down again on their own citizens who choose to
    affiliate with American nongovernment organizations. The Asia Society
    yesterday confirmed that two HIV-AIDS activists affiliated with the
    group have gone missing and are likely being detained. The brothers,
    Drs. Arash and Kamiar Alae, were fellows for 2008 and 2009 at the Asia
    Society. The executive vice president of the Asia Society, Jamie Metzl,
    said he was trying to contact the proper authorities to determine their
    whereabouts. Both Alae brothers have been missing since last month.

    Also missing is a program officer in Armenia for the International
    Research and Exchange Board, Harotonian Tazekand. The president
    of that organization, Mark Pomar, wrote a July 14 letter to Iran's
    chief justice, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahrudi, asking about her
    whereabouts after she had gone missing June 20.

    The status of the three Iranian nationals harkens back to the crisis
    last summer when Iran detained scholars affiliated with the Wilson
    Center and the Open Society Institute on charges of trying to spark
    a velvet revolution.
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