US Under-Secretary of State for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns on
Jan. 23 ruled out direct negotiations with Iran and said a rapprochement
between Washington and Tehran was "not possible" until Iran
stopped its uranium-enrichment programme. Burns made his comments while
addressing academics and reporters at the Gulf Research Centre in Dubai.
The visit of the third highest-ranking official in the State
Department comes amid a flurry of US diplomatic activities led by
Secretary Rice and Defence Secretary Robert Gates to explain the
rationale behind Washington's policies in the Middle East. Burns
said: "The Middle East isn't a region to be dominated by Iran.
The Gulf isn't a body of water to be controlled by Iran.
That's why we've seen the United States station two carrier
battle groups in the region". The US is clearly seeking a
diplomatic solution, he said, "but Iran is miscalculating the
scenario. The US has always had the stability of this strategic region
in mind and Iran has been trying to alter it by attempting to dominate.
The US will not let that happen. We don't want Iran to dominate the
region. When challenged, we respond - economically, financially,
politically, and not necessarily just through military means".
US policy towards Iran and Iraq is conditioned by the concerns of
the countries in the Gulf and the Middle East, and not by US interests
alone, he added. He said: "We want peace, stability and security in
the region. For this we have to work together. Pakistan, India, France,
Germany, China, Australia, South Korea and Russia are our friends".
Burns singled out Syria, Belarus, Venezuela and traditional US Cold War
foe Cuba as being aligned against the US with Iran. He said : "The
Arab voice is very important in this issue", referring to
Iran's uranium-enrichment programme.
Saudi Arabia has openly declared its opposition to another nuclear
power in the region, but supports any country's right to a nuclear
energy programme. The problem lies in the fact that the same process
used to refine uranium for nuclear power can easily be used to refine
the "super-rich" uranium needed for nuclear weapons. The
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is supposed to play a
regulatory role, but Iran has recently barred 38 IAEA inspectors from
entering the country. Adding to the diplomatic non-proliferation
problems is the fact that the US - one of the most vocal critics of
Iran's nuclear policy - has one of the largest stockpiles of
nuclear weapons and has made only nominal progress in the past decade in
reducing the number of arms it possesses. Nevertheless the UN Security
Council, including Russia, China and France, has voted in support of
sanctions on Iran.
Burns put Iran's nuclear programme as the most worrying issue
for the US, its allies in the region and the rest of the world. He said
192 countries in the UN urged Iran to give up its nuclear programme and
accept a peaceful solution, but the defiant regime in Tehran refused all
"generous" offers. Burns said: "The whole world is
supporting the US stand towards Iran, except for Cuba, Venezuela,
Belarus and Syria". He said the world was convinced that Iran was
seeking nuclear weapons. In addition to its nuclear ambitions, Iran
continued to be the central bank of terrorism in the Middle East.
Iran appears to be flexing its muscles to be the dominant country
with President Mahmoud Ahmadi-Nejad exporting his radical philosophy.
Burns said life will be difficult for the Iranian regime if they ignore
the demands of the international community, adding: "As I look
around the world, I can see a strategic landscape that is in many ways
beneficial to the United States and to the goal of peace and stability.
As we look at the Middle East we are impressed by the enormity of the
challenges before us. And I think it is fair to say that for the final
two years of President Bush's term in office, the Middle East will
be the focus of the administration".
Concerning Iraq, Burns said the US was trying to help the elected
government overcome the terrible sectarian war, adding: "We have a
job that is not complete. And we have a job that we can't walk away
from and we will not walk away from just because it is difficult. When
President Bush gave his speech on Jan. 10, he focused it on the Iraqi
issue. We have a responsibility and we shall stay to exercise that
responsibility. We will try to help the Iraqis to restore basic elements
of stability and security of Baghdad, al-Anbar province and other major
cities of the country. That is our primary job in Iraq. We are trying to
quicken the pace of the economic reconstruction. We want Iraq to
succeed. We hope that the neighbours of Iraq will be more responsible,
particularly Iran and Syria, in being agents of unity as opposed to
agents of division".
Burns said the tasks in Iraq were really enormous. "These are
daunting responsibilities and yet the price of walking away would be
even worse. The consequences of walking away would be far worse than the
challenges of staying. So we choose to stay as long as the Iraqi
government and the people would wish us to stay - and until we see what
we can do to help return Iraq to a state of normalcy and security,
perhaps far in the future, but we have to keep our sight on that".
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