By Pepe Escobar* - Asia Times
PARIS - US Secretary of State John Kerry has famously stated the US "is not
blind" or "stupid" in its push to clinch a historic deal over the Iranian
nuclear program. [1] So now that the world has been informed, he must,
cryptically, have been talking about France.
The failed Geneva negotiations this past weekend over a temporary nuclear
deal at least carried the merit of revealing who is really blocking it: the axis
of fear and loathing composed by the Likudniks in Israel, the House of Saud, and
the Francois Hollande administration in France.
Torrents of bytes have already detailed how Israel routinely hijacks US
foreign policy. Here's yet one more graphic demonstration of how Wag the Dog
works. Last Friday evening, President Barack Obama called Israeli Prime Minister
Bibi Netanyahu asking him not to derail Geneva. Bibi then duly picked up the
phone and called, in succession, British Prime Minister David Cameron, Russian
President Vladimir Putin, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President
Hollande and asked them ... to derail Geneva.
Hollande was the only one who followed Bibi's marching orders. And all this
after Kerry himself had been lectured by Bibi at Tel Aviv's Ben Gurion airport
on Friday morning.
Flash forward to the coda, early Sunday morning. Not by accident, Wendy
Sherman, the lead US negotiator on the Iranian nuclear dossier, a certified
Israeli-firster and borderline racist, [2] flew from Geneva straight to Israel
to duly "reassure" her true leader, Bibi, that no deal would be clinched.
It's no secret that Bibi and the Likudniks also run a great deal of Capitol
Hill. Apart from bombing Geneva, Bibi may also rack up another temporary
victory, with the US Congress about to add even more sanctions on Iran by
attaching them to the National Defense Authorization Act.
Meet Bandar Fabius
As far as French behavior is concerned, it is conditioned as much by the
formidable Israeli lobby in Paris as hard cash from Gulf petro-monarchies.
It certainly helped that, according to The Times of Israel, French
parliament member Meyer Habib - also a holder of an Israeli passport, a former
official Likud spokesperson in France, and a close pal of Bibi's - called French
Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius to tell him Israel would attack Iranian nuclear
installations if the current deal on the table was clinched. [3]
Call it the AIPAC effect. Habib is the vice-president of the Conseil
Representatif des Institutions juives de France, or CRIF - the French equivalent
to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee. The ghostwriter of President
Hollande's speeches also happens to be a member of CRIF.
Fabius, grandiloquent and as slippery as runny Roquefort, invoked - what
else - "security concerns of Israel" to derail Geneva. Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammed Javed Zarif were always extremely worried
about being sabotaged by their own internal opposition, the hard line Islamic
Revolutionary Guards Corps. So their number one directive was that no details of
the deal should be leaked during the negotiations.
That's exactly what Fabius did. Even before Kerry landed in Geneva, Fabius
was telling a French radio station that Paris would not accept a jeu des dupes
("fools' game").
The role of Fabius was pricelessly summed up by the proverbial unnamed
Western diplomat telling Reuters, "The Americans, the EU and the Iranians have
been working intensively for months on this proposal, and this is nothing more
than an attempt by Fabius to insert himself into relevance late in the
negotiations." [4]
Terabytes of spin have been asserting that Washington and Paris are playing
good cop-bad cop on the Iranian dossier. Not exactly; it's more like the Gallic
rooster once again showing off.
Hollande was gung-ho on bombing Damascus when Obama backed off at the 11th
minute from the Pentagon's "limited" attack; Hollande was left staring at a
stale bottle of Moet. On both Syria and Lebanon, Paris is unabashedly playing a
mix of neocolonial hugs and kisses while sharing the bed with Israel and the
House of Saud.
But why, once again, shoot itself in the foot? Paris has lost a lot of
money - not to mention French jobs, via automaker Peugeot - because of the Iran
sanctions dementia.
Ah, but there is always the seduction of Saudi Arabia's intelligence chief
Prince Bandar bin Sultan, aka Bandar Bush, and the Gulf petro-monarchies. In a
nutshell; Bandar Fabius was nothing but playing paperboy for the House of Saud.
The prize: huge military contracts - aircraft, warships, missile systems - and
possible construction of nuclear power plants in Saudi Arabia, a deal similar to
the one energy giant French Areva clinched last year with the United Arab
Emirates (UAE).
The ghost of Montaigne must be squirming; France does not do irony anymore.
Iran has no right to have its own nuclear plants, but France builds them and
operates them for its Wahhabi clients.
The West doing Israel's bidding makes sense; after all Israel may also be
interpreted as a Western aircraft carrier in the heart of the Arab Middle East.
As for France doing the Wahhabis' bidding, just follow the money - from Veolia
building and operating water desalination plants in Saudi Arabia to all those
Rafale fighter jets to be unloaded.
Qatar, that slavery paradise presented by FIFA with a World Cup, has
already invested over US$15 billion - and counting - in France, from shares in
Veolia and energy behemoth Total to construction firm Vinci, media giant
Lagardere, and full control of Paris Saint Germain, home of the new King of
Paris, football icon Zlatan "Ibracadabra" Ibrahimovic. Not to mention that Qatar
has bought virtually every significant square inch between Madeleine and Opera
in Paris.
Hollande is a joke. This week he's on the cover of the Courrier
International weekly (headline: "The Art of the Fall"), with pan-European media
judging him "incoherent", "paralyzed" and "incompetent" (and these are the
merciful epithets). On the weekend edition of the establishment Le Figaro daily,
he was being destroyed because of France's (latest) credit rating downgrade by
Standard & Poor's.
King Sarko The First - aka former president Nicolas Sarkozy - must be
beaming; Hollande is now the most unpopular president in French history. Paris
remains great - but mostly for hordes of fleeting tourists from emerging
markets, not for hordes of unemployed Parisians.
So it's Bandar Fabius to the rescue! Gulf petro-monarchy cash is the
salvation. In thesis, this show of "independence" should translate into billions
of euros in contracts and investments. It also helps that "incompetent" Hollande
is on an official visit to Israel in the next few days.
That pivot to Persia
Forget about finding details of the real reasons for this "show of
independence" in French mainstream media, apart from Le Monde Diplomatique's
Alain Gresh in his blog. [5]
Explanations are absolutely pathetic. France is "alone against all"; it has
shown "responsibility"; it has "reaffirmed its independence". And of course all
the blame lies on Kerry, who allegedly "came up with a text that nobody ever saw
before". Every shill has scrambled to cast Israeli-firster Fabius as savior. And
yet the Elysee Palace has stressed that Fabius was just following Hollande's
orders - which, in thesis, meant renegotiating the "weak points" of the deal.
Call it, essentially, "incompetent" Hollande showing Obama he's got balls.
Paris has spun that the problems with the deal concern Tehran's heavy-water
reactor in Arak and its stock of medium-enriched uranium. US and Iranian
diplomats had been working hard towards a compromise; Tehran would keep building
the reactor over the six-month period of the interim agreement, but tests would
be with dummy fuel rods and ordinary water.
Kerry was working on it until Fabius unleashed his peacock act in a long
session that only finished late into Saturday morning. This led Iranian Foreign
Minister Zarif to note, wryly, that the P5+1 (the United States, Britain,
France, Russia and China plus Germany) needed to negotiate with each other
before negotiating with Iran.
The P5+1 internal mess could seriously compromise the next round of
negotiations next week in Geneva. Yet Kerry, if he noticed it, managed to change
his narrative to something even more theater of the absurd; he's now blaming
Iran for the non-deal. [6] It's as if, after reading the French papers, he
decided to atone for his sins.
Arguably Iran has proved to the whole, real, flesh and blood "international
community" that it wants a deal and it is willing to negotiate. But then there
are the sanctions to be approved by the US Congress - a de facto internal
American sabotage. Yet these are third-party sanctions - where other countries
are "punished" by the US for trading with Iran. No one will take these
seriously, starting with the Asian powers, Turkey and Russia.
For the moment, no deal may seem better than a bad deal. It might happen at
the next meeting, in Geneva on November 22. Most likely, a full interim deal
will happen in a few months. The Obama administration wants a deal. France, for
all its posture, is irrelevant.
Worse. Paris is being "blind" and "stupid" - to adapt Kerry's words - by
alienating French companies, in the energy sector, nuclear energy and
manufacturing, from the fabulous possibilities unleashed by a normalized
relationship between Iran and the West. If the Hollande gang believes they will
be "saved" by the Wahhabis, they must be on mescal.
It may take years - and it will. But Washington will inevitably find some
sort of accommodation with Iran. US corporations want it. The energy-starved
West wants it. Even the US hyperpower complex wants it - as it will give it way
more leeway in Southwest Asia and beyond. The axis of fear and loathing of
Israel, the House of Saud and France may play spoilers - but not for long.
"Pivot to Asia"? Not before a pivot to Persia.
Article: courstey of THE OTHER NEWS
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