Iran Nuclear Watch

Iran Nuclear Watch: Iran the Key to Jack Straw’s Ouster?

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice holds a soccer jersey as she poses with Outgoing British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw in northern England, March 31, 2006. Rice called her close friend Straw on Friday after he was dumped from his key post, said a State Department spokesman.
The Guardian: Iran is the key to Jack Straw’s demotion

He said a military strike against Iran was inconceivable. His problem is that Tony Blair thinks differently.

The key to the demotion of Jack Straw from foreign secretary is Iran. Mr Straw for more than a year, in his favourite outlet the BBC Today programme or at various press conferences, said repeatedly a military strike on Iran was inconceivable.

Politicians always try to avoid boxing themselves in, but Straw did on this issue: if a military strike had become a serious option, he would have been forced to resign.

He was reflecting the reality of British domestic politics. Against the background of the Iraq debacle, Mr Straw knew it would be difficult to win support for the military option in cabinet and that it would create even more upheaval among the membership of the already weakened Labour party.

But, Jack Straw has been renown in his fraternization and apologetic policy towards the Mullahs. It is very conceivable that Tony Blair simply had enough of Straw’s misadventures towards his own political expedience.

The problem for Mr Straw is that Tony Blair does not view Iran the same way. He regards the threat posed by Iran as the most serious in the world today, and is even more messianic on the issue than George Bush. That does not mean that a military strike will happen but Mr Blair, like Mr Bush, thinks it is a good idea to keep the option on the table, if only to keep Iran guessing.Downing Street phoned the Foreign Office several times to ask Mr Straw to stop being so categoric in ruling out a military strike. And the White House also phoned Downing Street to ask why Mr Straw kept saying these things. And that was before Mr Straw dismissed as “nuts” the prospect of a tactical nuclear strike on Iran, an option that Mr Bush subsequently refused to remove from the table.

Flap can imagine the diplomatic traffic after Straw’s pronouncements. Flap covered Straw’s statements here.

Margaret Beckett inherits the Iran portfolio. One of her first jobs will be in New York on Monday where she will meet Condoleezza Rice, the US secretary of state with whom Mr Straw built up such a close relationship, and other counterparts to discuss Iran.

One of the first challenges she will face from the media is to confirm that a military strike is “inconceivable”. She is likely to say that a military strike is not being discussed and that she is focused on the diplomatic route. But will she say that a military strike is “inconceivable”?

More than likely, Beckett will avoid the hard questions and let the machinations in UNSC play out. The United States and Britain will put the squeeze on Russia and G-8 membership. China will be dealt with later after Russia is on board.

On other main issue that consumes the time of both the Foreign Office and Downing Street, Iraq, there is likely to be any significant change. There is nothing a foreign secretary can do about Iraq: its fate is in the hands of the new Iraqi government and the insurgents. Britain, like the US, is hoping it can begin to pull out troops before the end of the year.

Ms Rice went out of her way to establish a good relationship with Mr Straw, but she also had a good relationship while she was Mr Bush’s national security adviser with Sir David Manning, at the time Mr Blair’s foreign affairs adviser, with whom she spoke on a regular, almost daily, basis. There is no reason why Mrs Beckett cannot too establish a close working relationship.

President Bush will be winding down the Iraq War as the Taliban resurge in Afghanistan. This will reestablish the political will to take a hard line against Iran and their terrorist friends. Israel has a new government and is set to help.

While the UNSC plays out, Flap is positive WAR PLANS are being finalized and Britain will be an ally.

Stay tuned…….

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The Natanz uranium enrichment complex in Natanz is pictured in this January 2, 2006 satellite image.

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