Peter Oborne writes:
Within 12 months of being elected president, Barack Obama was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2009, although he had done nothing
whatsoever to deserve this famous honour.
The same was true of the next six
years of his presidency.
Finally the US president has
achieved something amazing.
The nuclear deal with Iran is about far more than
ending two decades of squabbling about Iranian nuclear facilities.
It can also end the long period
of Iran's international isolation. It makes the prospect of war in the Middle
East much less likely.
Above all, it brings to a close a long and tortured
period when the US policy in the Middle East was perilously one-eyed and
lopsided.
Today’s announcement will open
the way towards a solution for many of the most intractable problems in the
region. It marks the crowning achievement of the Obama presidency.
Achieving
this has required a lot of guts on both sides. President Rouhani has faced
continued opposition from inside the Iranian right wing, above all the
Republican Guard.
Meanwhile,
President Obama has faced a powerful campaign of opposition from the Republican
Party in the US, supported by key allies such as Saudi Arabia and Israel.
They
have fought long and hard to prevent the deal and will continue to do so.
It is essential to note that
today’s announcement is not the end of the story. President Obama will
face a very long and difficult battle to force his deal through Congress.
Roughly the same applies to President Rouhani who has had to face down the
most militant elements on his own side to get this result.
However,
if this deal can be bedded down I believe it could be as momentous as the
historic reconciliation between the US and China in the early 1970s, which
ended three decades of Chinese isolation and was one of the defining events of
the twentieth century.
The
same applies with Iran.
There has been a cold war (and a series of vicious
proxy wars) between the US and Iran ever since the Shah of Iran, a US puppet,
was overthrown in 1979.
During
this period, visceral hostility to Iran repeatedly caused the US to misread the
entire Middle East.
It forced successive US Presidents into a series of
disastrous alliances with Saudi Arabia, the Gulf dictatorships and Israel.
For
many years the US was a close ally of Saddam Hussein in Iraq, supplying the
blood-stained Iraqi dictator with chemical weapons for use against his Iranian
enemies.
When Iran offered the United Stares help in fighting the Taliban after
the 9/11 atrocity in New York, President Bush turned the offer down.
Successive
American presidents have refused to acknowledge that Iran is a state with an
ancient history and legitimate national interests, and potentially a profound
force for stability throughout the Middle East.
To
give one current example, there is no chance of a peace deal in Syria without
the co-operation of Iran. Likewise, Iran ought to be a key player in the fight
against the menace of ISIS.
For
these reasons the future of the region would have been very bleak without a
deal.
The often well-informed Saudi commentator, Mujtahid Bin Hammaam,
speculated over Twitter a few days ago that war might have broken out if the
talks had failed in Vienna.
Perhaps
Bin Hammaam was overstating the case.
However, the region would certainly have
reverted into two armed camps and this time the Middle East cold war would have
been more dangerous than ever before.
Iran would have been backed by its
neighbour Russia, and even more crucially by China, the emerging global challenger
to the US.
Of
course, this may well still happen, but today’s deal makes that much less
likely.
There is a further point to be made here.
For the last 20 years there
has been a general assumption in the West that conflicts between states were
best settled by military force. Hence the disasters of Afghanistan, Iraq, and
more recently Libya.
It
would have been so easy for the dispute with Iran to have degenerated into
military conflict. On many occasions it nearly did so.
There is always an
alternative to war. It is called diplomacy.
The tools of diplomacy are not
glamorous. Diplomacy is about talking. Cultivating relationships, developing
friendships, endless patience and time.
This
announcement above all is a triumph for diplomacy.
Perhaps it is not
coincidence that the Secretary of State, John Kerry, unlike George W Bush,
actually saw armed combat as a decorated US navy lieutenant in the Vietnam War.
Unlike Bush, Kerry had experienced war and knows what it means.
It
may be impossible to win the Nobel Peace Prize twice, so Barack Obama may miss
out.
But Kerry, who has been the finest US Secretary of State since James Baker
25 years ago, and Iran’s Foreign Minister, Javad Zarif, would be very worthy
winners.
It’s
worth remembering that there would have been no need for an Iranian nuclear
deal had George W Bush and Tony Blair not vetoed Zarif’s offer made to the West
at the Quai d’Orsay in the spring of 2005.
In recent years
Western leaders, influenced by neo-conservatism, have too often chosen to
resolve conflict through war.
What a marvellous signal it sends to the world
that the potentially calamitous conflict over Iranian nuclear ambitions has
been resolved without resort to force.
This is a glorious moment for the world.
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