U.S. promotes assassination threats against Iranian scientists
By Sara Flounders
Nov 23, 2011
The International Atomic Energy Agency made public the names of Iranian
nuclear scientists in a new report released this week. Publishing their names
makes these scientists targets for assassination.
This unprecedented violation of international guidelines, and of the
IAEA’s own Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement, is the most menacing proof
to date that the agency is not even superficially a neutral U.N. body that
monitors nuclear weapons. Showing the agency’s bias, IAEA Director
General Yukiya Amano met with the White House before meeting with U.N.
officials on this latest report.
Several Iranian scientists have already been killed by bombs and drive-by
shootings. The secretary general of Iran’s High Council for Human Rights,
Mohammad Javad Larijani, says the U.S. and Israel were behind the murders.
Exposing that these targeted killings are considered acceptable practice,
U.S. presidential candidate Newt Gingrich declared that Washington is seeking
to stop Iran’s nuclear program through maximum covert operations,
including the assassination of scientists.
U.S. CIA or Israeli Mossad agents have also carried out virus attacks on the
computers of legal Iranian centrifuges, explosions at Iranian industrial sites
and continuing acts of sabotage. All this is part of an ongoing U.S. war that
attempts to set back Iran’s development as a modern, self-sufficient
country.
A new round of demands that other countries join in sanctions against Iran
comes at a time of increasing crisis and upheaval in the region. The impact of
an intractable capitalist economic crisis turns Pentagon war planners in an
increasingly threatening direction.
The IAEA report was leaked to the press before its official release. Rather
than presenting information from the agency’s countless inspections in
Iran, it repeated discredited allegations originally made four years ago
regarding a laptop computer “found” by U.S. authorities. The laptop
supposedly showed Iran’s “intention” to construct atomic
warheads.
The leak of the report follows a bourgeois media frenzy over a wild claim
that Iran was planning to execute a Saudi ambassador in Washington,
D.C.
Most ominous are the media reports of a possible Israeli military attack on
Iran. Israel is totally dependent on U.S. financial, diplomatic and military
aid to survive. Any attack on Iran could occur only with U.S. authorization and
overflight clearance of regions where the Pentagon has controlled the sky for
decades.
The right to develop nuclear energy
Like every other country, Iran is guaranteed the right to develop and
acquire nuclear technology. Iran is also a signatory to the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Today, at least 30 countries have nuclear power plants. According to the
IAEA’s most recent “International Status and Prospects of Nuclear
Power” report, another 65 countries “are expressing interest in,
considering, or actively planning for nuclear power.” (iaea.org, March
2011)
But only Iran has faced every form of attack to block development of a
nuclear energy program.
Every Iranian nuclear facility is under 24-hour-a-day surveillance by IAEA
cameras, and Iran has not one nuclear weapon. Yet the U.S. continues to demand
that Iran stop the development of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, because
it could potentially lead to a nuclear weapon sometime in the future.
The IAEA does not criticize, attack or demand inspections of the more than
10,000 nuclear weapons that the U.S. holds, nor of the hundreds of nuclear
weapons developed by Israel.
The bogus charges of Iraq having weapons of mass destruction to justify the
U.S. invasion of Iraq — despite years of total monitoring of every
industrial plant in Iraq — confirms that no inspection can satisfy
Washington’s demands.
Sanctions on Iran’s oil refineries
The most recent U.S. sanctions are not focused on nuclear research. Instead,
they are an attempt to hamper Iran’s petrochemical industry.
Iran nationalized its production of oil after a revolutionary upheaval drove
U.S. and British imperialism out of Iran in 1979. Since then, every effort has
been made to destabilize Iran and regain the vast wealth that once flowed into
Western banks and corporations.
Due to its past unequal relation with imperialism and the years of sanctions
since, Iran has had to import large amounts of refined oil and petroleum
products, from gasoline to jet fuel, cooking gas and more. In 2008, Iran still
had to import nearly 40 percent of its market needs.
However, after completion of seven new refineries and improvements to
existing refineries, Iran is now almost self-sufficient in oil refining needs.
This is why the U.S. is so determined to again block Iran’s refining
capacity by hampering all forms of international investment.
As this entire resource-rich region continues to slip from U.S.
imperialism’s control and domination, the danger of a Pentagon-inspired
provocation against Iran escalates. All those who oppose imperialist war should
be on heightened alert.