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Think Progress

September 28, 2009

by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Matt Duss, and Zaid Jilani

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS

Time For Iran To 'Come Clean'

Last Friday at the start of the G20 summit in Pittsburgh, President Obama -- flanked by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and with the support of German Chancellor Angela Merkel -- revealed the existence of a secret Iranian uranium enrichment facility near the seminary city of Qom, 60 miles south of Tehran. Obama reportedly decided to disclose the undeclared enrichment plant after Iran discovered that Western intelligence agencies had breached the secrecy surrounding the project. Last Monday, soon after Iran learned of the Western espionage, the regime delivered a "vague, terse" letter to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). It informed the U.N. nuclear watchdog that a facility is under construction -- "one that had never been mentioned during years" of IAEA inspections at another nuclear facility in Natanz. While the Iranians argued that construction of the site is "completely legal," Obama offered harsh criticism of Iran's covert operation. "Iran's decision to build yet another nuclear facility without notifying the IAEA represents a direct challenge to the basic compact at the center of the non-proliferation regime," he said, adding, "It is time for Iran to act immediately to restore the confidence of the international community by fulfilling its international obligations."

IRAN 'IN A VERY BAD SPOT':
While Iran's nuclear chief said the IAEA would be invited to visit the newly disclosed site, he did not specify a timeframe. Indeed, the Obama administration's first diplomatic encounter with Iran will take place this Thursday in Geneva, along with representatives from the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Russia, and China. Yesterday, Iran test-fired three short range missiles that "appeared to be a show of military power." Nonetheless, President Obama offered tough rhetoric ahead of the talks. "Iran is on notice that when we meet with them on Oct. 1 they are going to have to come clean and they are going to have to make a choice" between giving up nuclear aspirations or increased isolation, the President said. Refusal to give ground will lead to "a path that is going to lead to confrontation," Obama said, adding, "When we find that diplomacy does not work, we will be in a much stronger position to, for example, apply sanctions that have bite." European diplomats sounded the alarm as well. Defense Secretary Robert Gates echoed Obama's stern warnings yesterday, saying that the secret facility puts the Iranian government "in a very bad spot," raising the prospect of "severe additional sanctions." While Gates said any military option would only "buy time," other senior officials said the Obama administration plans to tell the Iranian delegation in Geneva that it must open the new site to international inspectors "within weeks." "If Iran repeats its line on Thursday that the nuclear file is closed and that there is nothing to discuss, then we will move straight to sanctions" an unnamed senior European diplomat on Sunday. "But I don't think the Iranians will be that stupid." 

WILL MOSCOW GET TOUGH?: Another unnamed European diplomat noted that "the Russians feel Iran isn't taking their expressions of concern seriously and that is clearly irritating Moscow a lot." The diplomat cautioned that "it is still unclear how far Russia, or indeed China would go down the sanctions road." But Russian President Dmitry Medvedev "hardened Russia's stance on Iran's nuclear program on Friday after the US, Britain and France revealed that Tehran" has been constructing the secret facility. Medvedev -- who Obama briefed on Thursday about the uranium enrichment site -- said, "I don't consider sanctions the best way to achieve results on Iran...but all the same, if all possibilities to influence the situation are exhausted, then we can use international sanctions." "President Obama is slowly putting Iran in a box," said Juan Cole, Professor of History at the University of Michigan. Despite denials of any quid pro quo, a more cooperative Russian tone has followed Obama's cancellation of "the useless and expensive so-called missile shield program." While China responded to the revelations of Iran's second enrichment facility "more neutrally," many Western diplomats "have long believed that if Russia throws its weight behind sanctions China will follow, wishing to avoid isolation in the UN Security Council."

THE RIGHT WING'S PREDICTABLE REACTION: Conservative senators reacted to the news of Iran's secret facility in predictable fashion, echoing much of the rhetoric coming out the the Bush administration over the last eight years: "regime change." "What we're trying to do here eventually is to get a regime change with a group of people in there that are more representative of the Iranian people," Sen. John Kyl (R-AZ) said yesterday. "At a certain point, talking is counterproductive rather than productive because time is not on our side," he said, adding later that "the carrot approach does not work with these people." Sen. Kit Bond (R-MO) pushed regime change yesterday too. "We have to have strong sanctions, economic sanctions that can force either a regime change or the Ayatollahs to change their policy," he said. But it's clear now that the Bush administration's refusal to engage Iran (at least only until the waning days of Bush's tenure) and its "regime change" rhetoric served only to embolden Iran's hardliners within the country. And instead of accepting -- or even responding to -- Iran's offer of engagement in 2003, President Bush lumped the Islamic Republic into the now infamous "axis of evil." Eight years of the Bush administration's disengagement with Iran has only led to its nuclear program growing in size and scope. "The U.S. right wing accused Obama of a failure of nerve," Cole noted, "But in fact his move was shrewd and gutsy, since he predisposed Russia to increased cooperation."  Jon Ward of The Washington Times writes, "Not only did the president look strong, he looked cunning." 
 

UNDER THE RADAR

HEALTH CARE -- THOUSANDS OF TEXANS SHOW UP AT 'LARGEST FREE CLINIC EVER HELD IN THE UNITED STATES' FOR CARE: Over the weekend, thousands of Texans attended what is being called the "largest free clinic ever held in the United States" to get health care they otherwise could not afford. Local Houston station ABC-13 said that the event showed there is an "epidemic" of people without proper health care coverage in Texas. "More than 2,000 people came to Reliant center to see doctors for free," the station reported. "Many of the people we talked to can't afford health insurance, especially in the rough economy. Some say it shows the need for health care reform." One woman, Vicki Robinson, told the press that she was there to get help for her son's asthma. "My husband's lost his job. We've gone through our savings," said Robinson. "We can't afford medicine," her son added. Texas has the largest uninsured population of any state in the country, yet its senators continue to resist supporting any sort of health care reform.

 


THINK FAST

President Obama said that a world leader approached him at the G20 summit last week wondering why his critics are smearing him. The unidentified world leader told Obama, "We don't understand it. You're trying to make sure everybody has health care and they're putting a Hitler mustache on you -- I don't -- that doesn’t make sense to me. Explain that to me."

On CNN yesterday, Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged that closing the military prison at Guantanamo Bay will take longer than the Obama administration planned. "I think it has proven more complicated than anticipated," said Gates, who said that he had pushed for the deadline of January 2010.

Job seekers now outnumber job openings six to one, "the worst ratio since the government began tracking open positions in 2000." The Labor Department reports that in July, only 2.4 million full-time permanent jobs were open, with 14.5 million people officially unemployed.

The Boston Globe reports that bank lobbyists, who earlier this year killed mortgage cramdown legislation, are funneling millions of dollars to Congress and hiring a number of former congressional and White House staffers as lobbyists in an effort to defeat proposed regulations. Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), one of the chief negotiators in talks on new legislation, has responded to bank lobbyists hiring one of his committee's former aides by barring his staff from talking to him.

More than half of the 2,737 lobbyists "hired to promote the interests of drug companies, insurers, hospitals, health professionals, industry groups and business organizations" used to "work for the government they're trying to influence."

A new "60 Minutes"-Vanity Fair poll released yesterday finds that half of Americans say they support taxing the richest Americans by at least 50 percent. The poll also found that the public as a whole believes that a politician taking bribes is a "greater sin" than engaging in extramarital affairs.

In an interview with Bloomberg, Center for American Progress President and CEO John Podesta expressed his support for a new value-added tax. He explained that while such a tax may be regressive, it can be balanced by exempting some products and using "the money to support low-wage workers."

President Obama will travel to Copenhagen this week "to support Chicago’s bid for the 2016 Summer Olympics, projecting the highest-ever White House profile in lobbying for the international event." Senior Adviser Valerie Jarrett told the AP that Obama will join his wife, Michelle, to make the pitch to the International Olympic Committee. He will be the first ever president to make such an appeal in person.

William Safire, "a speechwriter for President Richard M. Nixon and a Pulitzer Prize-winning political columnist for The New York Times," passed away from pancreatic cancer on Sunday. Safire also wrote the popular "On Language" column for the Times and was "a Pickwickian quibbler who gleefully pounced on gaffes, inexactitudes, neologisms, misnomers, solecisms and perversely peccant puns."

And finally: On Wednesday, Washingtonians will be competing in DC Improv's "Funniest Celebrity in Washington" contest. Rep. Linda Sanchez (D-CA), who won the contest in 2006, advised this year’s competitors to "practice," "consider your audience," and "drink heavily -- just kidding." "If someone yells out, 'You lie!' Just yell back, 'At least I don’t tea bag!'" she added. Sen. Ben Nelson (D-NE) will also be receiving a lifetime achievement award at this year's contest.



BLOG WATCH

Paul Krugman explains the textbook economics of cap and trade.

German cyclists find safety in numbers.

The "natural path of wingnut" brings one of the craziest conspiracy theories about President Obama back to life.

Mike Huckabee bashes the United Nations.

Blue Shield doesn't think a bleeding breast is an emergency.

Chronicling the war on language.

Scientists say political "reality" will lead to climate catastrophe.

Let's listen to Paul Volcker.
 

DAILY GRILL

"Friend, this is the type of propaganda you would see in Stalin's Russia or Kim Jong Il's North Korea. I never thought the day would come when I'd see it here in America."
-- RNC Chairman Michael Steele, 9/24/09, on schoolchildren singing a song about President Obama

VERSUS

"Congress, Bush and FEMA/ People across our land/ Together have come to rebuild us and we join them hand-in-hand!"
-- Schoolchildren singing a song about the Bush administration, 4/17/06


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