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Iran, Israel and the West | Iran, Israel und der Westen

Das deutsche Original befindet sich weiter unten.


Iran, Israel and the West: Is There a Way Out of the Crisis?

Interview with Ali Fathollah-Nejad & Hillel Schenker

 

Possible alternatives and the perception of the spiral of violence discussed in Berlin by German–Iranian political scientist Ali Fathollah-Nejad and Israeli journalist and peace activist Hillel Schenker at the invitation of German branch of the International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW Germany) and the Friedrich Ebert Foundation (FES). The debate on which the following text is based upon was held on 23 April 2012 at the FES before an audience of over 150 diplomats, politicians, academics, students, NGO activists and other concerned citizens.

Moderator: Does the Middle-East face an armed, nuclear conflict between Israel and Iran? In the public discussion there are only three options: military action with conventional weapons, a nuclear attack or a continuation of the sanctions policy against Iran.

Ali Fathollah-Nejad: From the beginning, the West has used coercive diplomacy against Iran. This strategy does not aim at reconciliation of interests, but at a de facto capitulation of Iran. From the Iranian perspective, there has been a security deficit, which was enforced by the neoconservative wars of the last decade through the increased military presence of the Americans in the region. Due to the fact that the West didn’t take into account Iran’s legitimate security interests, coercive diplomacy has failed. The lack of any solution to the conflict has led to a continuing escalation.

Moderator: What are the effects of the sanctions policy of the West in Iran?

Ali Fathollah-Nejad: To put it briefly, sanctions have made legal trade illegal. The situation in Iran has dramatically tightened in the last few months. Prices are rising and the currency has lost nearly half of its value. It is the population who has to pay the price of sanctions. The élite owns the resources and has ways to withstand the sanctions. Hence, the sanctions actually widen the power gap between the ruling structures on one side and the civilian economy and society on the other. As a result, civil society finds itself in a state of siege, pressured by both an authoritarian regime and by sanctions and the permanent threat of war. Overall the policy of the West in the region pushed forward a process of securitization in the country. Instead of running towards an armed conflict, the focus should be on the process of balancing interests and perspectives for security and collaboration. It is alarming that there are no clear signals for de-escalation and conflict resolution, and this is true for Germany as well.

Moderator: Which are the reactions of the Israeli population on the debate around a possible attack on Iranian nuclear facilities?

Hillel Schenker: In Israel everyone is frightened of the possibility of Iranian nuclear armament. Public opinion surveys show this. For example the Israeli population was asked how they would react in case of a nuclear armament of Iran. 25% of the questioned answered they would possibly leave the country. Another survey shows that the majority of Israelis would be for giving up the Israeli nuclear weapons and becoming a part of a nuclear-free zone if this would prevent Iran from getting nuclear weapons.

Moderator: Is the statement from Iran that they are only interest in nuclear energy is the civil use convincing?

Ali Fathollah-Nejad: Due to its geography, its demography and its long cultural history, Iran has a particular place in the region. The country has a quasi-natural geopolitical influence. An important component of the strategic thinking in Tehran is that a nuclear bomb is counter-productive to their grand-strategic interests. If Iran went nuclear, it is probable that other states in the region, states which Iran is not friends with, like the countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), such as Saudi Arabia, would get nuclear weapons. Such a nuclear stand-off would lead to the loss of the natural geopolitical importance of Iran.

Moderator: Which options about the Iranian nuclear program are discussed in the Israeli public?

Hillel Schenker: In the public discussion there are currently two strategies of how to deal with the Iranian nuclear program. One idea is an Israeli or American or coordinated nuclear attack against the Iranian nuclear facilities. A large amount of military experts expect that this will lead to a spiral of violence in the region with a lot of civilian victims without leading to success. Another option would be a combination of sanctions and negotiations. But there is a third: direct negotiations between the two parties on neutral ground. These negotiations should aim to create a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East. In 2010 at a NPT (Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty) review conference, it was decided that an international conference should be held to create such a nuclear weapons-free zone. The conference will be held at the end of this year, 2012, or at the beginning of next year in Finland, with the facilitation of Finnish Under-Secretary of State Jaakko Laajava.

Moderator: How can civil society help lead this conference to success?

Hillel Schenker: From the point of view of the civil society it is essential that Israel and Iran will be attending this conference. If either does not attend, the conference will be a failure. The second point is the conference should not be a one-time event. It has to be the beginning of a process. Thirdly, all the participants have to recognize that a nuclear and mass destruction weapons-free zone and peace in the Middle East are not mutually exclusive; they depend on each other and they have to take place simultaneously.

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A previous version has been posted on the website of the Palestine–Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture on 25 July 2012. Fathollah-Nejad’s statements were originally made in German; the present version presents an edited translation thereof.

 

SOURCE

Ali Fathollah-Nejad & Hillel Schenker (2012) “Iran, Israel, and the West: Is There a Way Out of the Crisis?“, Palestine–Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture (online), 25/07

▪ slightly edited version republished on Fair Observer, 27/08 ▪ Global Research, Montreal: Centre for Research on Globalization, 28/08 ▪ Arab Spring Collective (Cairo), 29/08.

▪ posted on Red Horse Down, 12/09, Alex(ander) Patico (co-founder of the National Iranian American Council [NIAC] and member of the Board of Advisory of the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention in Iran [CASMII]).

 

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Iran, Israel und der Westen: Auswege aus der Bedrohungsspirale

Ein Interview mit Ali Fathollah-Nejad und Hillel Schenker

 

Droht im Nahen Osten ein militärischer Konflikt mit unabsehbaren Folgen, eine nukleare Auseinandersetzung zwischen Israel und dem Iran? Wenn man die öffentliche Diskussion aufmerksam verfolgt, dann scheint es im Nahen Osten zurzeit nur drei Optionen zu geben. Einen Militärschlag mit konventionellen Waffen, einen Nuklearschlag oder weiterhin eine scharfe Sanktionspolitik gegen den Iran.

Welche Alternativen möglich sind und wie die Spirale der Gewalt in beiden Ländern wahrgenommen wird, darüber diskutierten der israelische Journalist und Friedensaktivist Hillel Schenker und der deutsch-iranische Politologe Ali Fathollah-Nejad in Berlin auf Einladung der IPPNW und der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.

[Lesen Sie hier weiter.] (pdf)

 

QUELLE

Ali Fathollah-Nejad & Hillel Schenker (2012) “Iran, Israel und der Westen: Auswege aus der Bedrohungsspirale” [Iran, Israel and the West: Exiting the Dangerous Spiral], interview, IPPNWforum, Berlin: International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War (IPPNW) Germany, No. 130 (June), pp. 10–11.

 

REAKTIONEN

Iran-Termine der IPPNW Deutschland

Eine Dokumentation

IPPNW-Jahrestreffen 2012

22. April 2012

Der Iran-Atomkonflikt: Gibt es einen Weg aus der Bedrohungsspirale? | Öffentliches Symposium mit Ali Fathollah-Nejad, Hillel Schenker (Mitherausgeber, Palestine–Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture) & Prof. Dr. Udo Steinbach (ehem. Direktor, Orient-Institut [später: German Institute of Global and Area Studies GIGA], 1976–2006) | Jahrestreffen der deutschen Sektion der Internationalen Ärzte für die Verhütung des Atomkrieges/Ärzte in sozialer Verantwortung (IPPNW Deutschland), Braunschweigisches Landesmuseum.

Video-Aufzeichnung

Medien

Erklärungen der IPPNW Deutschland

Photos

 

Pressekonferenz

23. April 2012 Iran, Israel und der Westen: Gibt es einen Ausweg aus der Bedrohungsspirale? | Pressekonferenz mit Ali Fathollah-Nejad, Hillel Schenker (Mitherausgeber, Palestine–Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture) & Dr. Jens Wagner (Vorstandsmitglied der IPPNW Deutschland | Veranstaltet durch die deutsche Sektion der Internationalen Ärzte für die Verhütung des Atomkrieges/Ärzte in sozialer Verantwortung (IPPNW Deutschland) | IALANA-Hauptstadtbüro, Schützenstrasse 6a, 10117 Berlin, 11 Uhr.

Medien

 

Podiumsdiskussion in der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung

23. April 2012 Iran, Israel und der Westen: Gibt es einen Ausweg aus der Bedrohungsspirale? | Diskussion mit Ali Fathollah-Nejad, Hillel Schenker (Mitherausgeber, Palestine–Israel Journal of Politics, Economics and Culture) | Veranstaltet durch die deutsche Sektion der Internationalen Ärzte für die Verhütung des Atomkrieges/Ärzte in sozialer Verantwortung (IPPNW Deutschland) und der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung (FES), FES, Berlin.

 

Bericht der FES (23. April 2012)

  • Diskussionsveranstaltung mit Hillel Schenker, israelischer Journalist und Friedensaktivist, und Ali Fathollah-Nejad, deutsch-iranischer Politologe und Iran-Experte

Zwar ist die Debatte um einen Angriff auf Iran etwas abgeflaut, doch wenn die derzeitige Gesprächsrunde mit Iran scheitert und die im Juli einsetzenden Sanktionen gegen den Öl- und Finanzsektor keine Wirkung zeigen, werden Möglichkeiten und unabsehbare Folgen eines Angriffs auf iranische Nuklearanlagen erneut diskutiert werden. Was sind die Hintergründe dieser Bedrohungswahrnehmung? Was sind Ergebnisse bisheriger westlicher Iranpolitik und was kann getan werden, um weitere Regelungsmechanismen, wie zum Beispiel eine nuklearwaffenfreie Zone in der Region, zu forcieren? Über diese und weitere Fragen diskutierten Hillel Schenker, israelischer Journalist und Friedensaktivist, und Ali Fathollah-Nejad, deutsch-iranischer Politologe und Iran-Experte, im Rahmen einer Diskussion in der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung. Beide Teilnehmer betonten die bisher kaum gehobenen Potentiale zivilgesellschaftlicher Initiativen für eine Konfliktregelung, etwa die einer massenvernichtungsfreien Zone im Nahen und Mittleren Osten. Dabei hoben sie hervor, dass westliche Politik mittel- und langfristig dann erfolgreich sein kann, wenn mit Blick auf Iran und Israel mehr für gegenseitige Anerkennung und Gewaltverzicht geworben würde – auch mit aktiver Beteiligung der Zivilgesellschaft.

FES-Audio-Podcast

Medien

  • Deutsche Welle TV Arabic, Interviews mit Hillel Schenker und Ali Fathollah-Nejad, 24. April 2012;
  • Xanthe Hall [Koordination der politisch-strategischen Arbeit, Internationales, Frieden, Atomwaffen für die IPPNW Deutschland], “Was tun mit Iran und Israel?“, atomwaffenfrei.jetzt (Blog des Kampagnenrats “unsere zukunft – atomwaffenfrei”), 26. April 2012.