Friday, May 26, 2006

Something to Keep in Mind When the Next War Starts

Continuing the long Bush family tradition of fearing peace initiatives from targeted "enemies," apparently Iran offered the Bush administration recognition of Israel, the cutting off of all support to Palestinian opposition groups, and tighter controls by the International Atomic Energy Agency in exchange for basically a non-agression agreement:

Iran Proposal to U.S. Offered Peace with Israel

Gareth Porter

WASHINGTON, May 24 (IPS) - Iran offered in 2003 to accept peace with Israel and cut off material assistance to Palestinian armed groups and to pressure them to halt terrorist attacks within Israel's 1967 borders, according to the secret Iranian proposal to the United States.

The two-page proposal for a broad Iran-U.S. agreement covering all the issues separating the two countries, a copy of which was obtained by IPS, was conveyed to the United States in late April or early May 2003. Trita Parsi, a specialist on Iranian foreign policy at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies who provided the document to IPS, says he got it from an Iranian official earlier this year but is not at liberty to reveal the source.

The two-page document contradicts the official line of the George W. Bush administration that Iran is committed to the destruction of Israel and the sponsorship of terrorism in the region.

Parsi says the document is a summary of an even more detailed Iranian negotiating proposal which he learned about in 2003 from the U.S. intermediary who carried it to the State Department on behalf of the Swiss Embassy in late April or early May 2003. The intermediary has not yet agreed to be identified, according to Parsi.

The Iranian negotiating proposal indicated clearly that Iran was prepared to give up its role as a supporter of armed groups in the region in return for a larger bargain with the United States. What the Iranians wanted in return, as suggested by the document itself as well as expert observers of Iranian policy, was an end to U.S. hostility and recognition of Iran as a legitimate power in the region.


I say a Bush family tradition because it has been documented in inner-circle memoirs that the only thing Bush I feared about Saddam Hussain was the latter's frantic efforts before the Gulf War (but after the Kuwait invasion) to cut a deal with the United States.

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