As Sanctions Details Emerge, Hopes for a Fuel Swap Look Bleak
Laicie Olson | May 18, 2010 |The other side of the ‘time’ coin I mentioned yesterday (a far less optimistic side) is Iran’s potential use of the fuel swap to stall sanctions. In the past, this technique has worked out well. If one assumes that, once again, Iran is not sincere in its offer and is simply “playing Lucy and the football with the LEU,” negotiations could be over before they even begin.
Enter Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at this morning’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on New START.
“We have reached agreement on a strong draft with the cooperation of both Russia and China,” she says, at the most inopportune and, frankly odd, time possible:
We plan to circulate that draft resolution to the entire Security Council today. And let me say, Mr. Chairman, I think this announcement is as convincing an answer to the efforts undertaken in Tehran over the last few days as any we could provide.
Hmm – wasn’t expecting that. I am reminded, though, of the reason I decided to support now-President Barack Obama in the 2008 primaries.
If the council adopts the resolution, it would represent the fourth round of sanctions against Iran. Unfortunately for sanctions, many have already accepted their inevitable failure…



