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Divisions on Iran rattle Bush team

By Robin Wright and Doyle McManus in Washington
May 31 2003


The debate within the Bush Administration over confronting Iran has generated an even deeper divide than occurred during prewar discussions on Iraq, Administration officials say.

The dispute over policy broadly breaks down into two disparate goals: behaviour change versus regime change. The split was more intense this time "for the simple reason that everyone basically agreed on the need for regime change in Iraq", said a well-placed US official.

"On Iran, the debate is much more fundamental. It's whether there should be regime change at all."

The most outspoken advocates of ousting Iran's ruling clerics are the same neoconservatives in the Pentagon, Congress and Washington think tanks who first advocated ending the quarter-century rule of Saddam Hussein.

As on Iraq, the neoconservative lobby is facing serious opposition from the State Department, the CIA and, for now, the National Security Council.

The hawks on Iran want to exploit what they believe is a sharp and growing divide between the hardline religious leaders and the majority of Iran's 65 million people and would like to find a way to support, overtly or covertly, the burgeoning anti-theocracy movement among Iran's young people and women, US officials say.

Pressed on whether regime change was a goal, an Administration official who backs tougher action said in an interview this week: "You bet. We want a regime that reflects the will of the Iranian people" rather than the "thuggish mullahs" who have veto power over virtually all government decisions.

The Administration's disputes with Iran centre on the country's nuclear program, its ties to extremist groups and its role in postwar Iraq. Iran has denied nuclear weapons ambitions.

Although none of the serious players is advocating an imminent new war, the Administration is under growing pressure from neoconservatives to launch more aggressive action to undermine or confront the regime.

Some neoconservatives, such as former CIA analyst Reuel Gerecht, have even dangled the idea of pre-emptive military strikes on Iran's nuclear facilities if Tehran does not come clean on its suspected programs.

But others in the Administration are taking a softer line.

"Are there people who would like to change the regime? Sure. But policy hasn't changed," one miffed State Department official said. "So take the anonymous debate as no more than that until we announce otherwise."

The White House is holding off on discussions with Iran until the Administration sees how Tehran responds to demands on turning over al-Qaeda operatives, including about half a dozen suspected senior officials. The US believes that new operations chief Saif al Adel and Saad bin Laden, a son of al-Qaeda's founder, are both in Iran.

In a reversal, Iran left open the possibility on Thursday that it may have top al-Qaeda operatives in custody. The comments by a Foreign Ministry spokesman, Hamid Reza Asefi, contradicted his statement on Monday, when he was quoted as saying al-Qaeda members detained in Iran "are not senior members of the group".

Instead, he said, Iran was unsure of their identities.

On Thursday, President George Bush said he had no "preoccupation" with Iran, and a government official said consideration of new get-tough measures against Tehran had been put off indefinitely amid divisions in the Administration.

Los Angeles Times, Reuters, Associated Press


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