Wikileaks Cablegate: Iran could follow India's path in going nuclear
Wikileaks Cablegate: Iran could follow India's path in going nuclear
The latest WikiLeaks expose of classified US documents include many with an India connection.

Cable 10DAMASCUS8, CODEL GREGG'S DECEMBER 30 MEETING WITH PRESIDENT

Reference ID: 10DAMASCUS8

Date: 2010-01-04 09:09

Classification: SECRET

Origin: Embassy Damascus

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RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 0781

S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 06 DAMASCUS 000008

SIPDIS

DEPARTMENT FOR NEA/FO, ELA

NSC FOR SHAPIRO/MCDERMOTT

PARIS FOR NOBLES

LONDON FOR LORD

E.O. 12958: DECL: 01/03/2029

TAGS: PREL IR LE IZ SY

SUBJECT: CODEL GREGG'S DECEMBER 30 MEETING WITH PRESIDENT

ASAD

Classified By: CDA Charles Hunter for reasons 1.4 b and d.

¶1. (S) Summary: In a frank one-hour meeting with Syrian

President Bashar al-Asad, Senators Gregg, Bayh, Specter,

Enzi, Cornyn, and Klobuchar affirmed Washington's interest in

better U.S.-Syrian relations and pushed Asad to take positive

steps as well. The senators urged Syria to move forward on

security cooperation with the U.S. on Iraq, facilitating the

release of three detained Americans in Iran, and re-opening

the Damascus Community School. Asad welcomed the prospect of

more Congressional visits and candid exchanges, saying

diplomacy had failed to solve the region's problems during

the last two decades.

-- On comprehensive peace, Asad reiterated Syria's strong

desire to return to Turkish-facilitated indirect talks with

Israel as a means to establish agreed terms of reference for

direct negotiations. Syria's relations with Iran should not

be linked to Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations. Syria's ties

to Hamas, Hizballah, and other groups could be satisfactorily

resolved only after the achievement of a comprehensive

regional peace, Asad maintained.

-- The U.S. and Syria should use the next several months to

improve bilateral relations so that both sides could overcome

mutual distrust that would hinder U.S. credibility as an

honest broker, Asad told the senators. Later in the

discussion, FM Muallim argued the onus for taking the next

positive step lay with the U.S. Syria could not move on

issues such as the American school or the Cultural Center

unless Washington lifted its ban on the sale of new

commercial aircraft to Syria.

-- Calling Iran the region's most important country, Asad

said the West could improve the prospects for peace by

acknowledging Iran's NPT-protected right to enrich uranium

under IAEA monitoring. Asad argued the West should accept

Iran's "reasonable" counter-offer to ship several batches of

low-enriched uranium (LEU) abroad for enrichment by other

countries, instead of insisting Iran ship all of its LEU at

once. Asad said he believed Iran was not interested in

pursuing a nuclear weapon, but warned that an Israeli

military strike on Iran's nuclear infrastructure would fail

to disable the program and would only increase Iran's

determination. End Summary.

--------------------------------------------- --

Doctor Asad: Treat, Don't Condemn, the Illness

--------------------------------------------- --

¶2. (S) A confident President Asad greeted the six visiting

senators and accompanying staff of CODEL Gregg on December 30

with a call for frank discussion of "the facts" rather than

an exchange of opinions. Only the facts, he said, would

enable both sides to focus on the critical issues of common

interest and lead to a process of identifying solutions to

shared challenges. The international community had failed

for two decades to solve the region's problems. Now, there

were new challenges on top of these that required direct, not

diplomatic, solutions. He welcomed the delegation, saying he

hoped for more meetings with Congressional groups.

¶3. (S) Senator Specter expressed the delegation's

condolences after the death of the President's younger

brother Majd and recalled his numerous meetings with

President Asad since their first meeting in 2000 at the

funeral of former Syrian President Hafez al-Asad. Senator

Specter referred to his earlier discussions with Syrian

officials about Israeli-Syrian peace talks and suggested

DAMASCUS 00000008 002 OF 006

Israel would benefit from peace with Syria. The U.S.

recognized Syria's deep and long-standing ties to Iran, but

it also saw dangers if Iran acquired nuclear weapons.

Stipulating that the Israeli government would have to make

its own decisions on how to proceed in peace talks with Syria

without U.S. pressure, Specter suggested the U.S. would

positively view Syrian efforts to use its influence to alter

Iranian policies. Iranian policies currently opposed the

achievement of peace between Syria and Israel, even as Syria

recognized such a development would have a positive impact on

defusing other regional tensions.

¶4. (S) Asad asserted he wanted peace with Israel, but the

issues were complex and required an organized frame of

reference. Both sides might agree on the shared objective of

peace, but they differed on preferred approaches. Calling

for a fact-based approach to identifying the obstacles to

peace, Asad likened the process to how a doctor should treat

cancer. Condemnations and mutual recriminations might be

self-satisfying, but the cancer still grows unless the doctor

is able to treat the root illness. Syria, Asad continued,

had begun indirect peace talks with Israel in May 2008 under

Turkish auspices. In roughly eight months, these talks had

achieved more than several years of direct negotiations with

Israel in the 1990s. The U.S. and Europeans needed to

support the Turkish track, argued Asad. They also should

convince Israel that only peace will protect Israel.

Israel's military superiority would not secure it from attack

against missiles and other technologies. President Obama's

tenure might represent the last opportunity for peace, Asad

told the senators.

-----------------------------------------

Asad on Necessity of Indirect Peace Talks

-----------------------------------------

¶5. (S) Senator Gregg asked why Syria insisted on pursuing

indirect peace talks via the Turks. Why couldn't Syria and

Israel move to direct talks brokered by the U.S., while Syria

helped on issues important to the U.S., such as Hizballah,

Hamas, and relations with Iran? Asad replied Hamas and

Hizballah should be a part of the peace, but not organizing

principles for conducting peace discussions. Syria, as

demonstrated by then-lead negotiator Muallim's efforts in the

1990s, had no problems with direct negotiations. But those

negotiations failed; failing again might foreclose future

opportunities. U.S. ambitions to push the peace process

forward only resulted in spoiling the process because of the

lack of "rules of negotiation." Indirect talks represent the

best way to establish terms of reference similar to those

reached by Secretary Baker during his intense shuttle

diplomacy in 1991. While no one called these talks indirect

negotiations, they functioned comparably to Syria's indirect

talks under Turkish auspices.

¶6. (S) Syria, Asad continued, saw the indirect talks as a

way to institutionalize the process and reach agreed terms of

reference on which to base direct negotiations. This basis

was absent in the 1990s and explained why the direct

negotiations ultimately failed. Referring to the "elephant

in the room," Gregg asked whether it would be possible to

reach peace with Israel without first resolving the Iranian

nuclear issue. Asad cautioned against linking Iran's nuclear

program to an Israeli-Syrian peace deal, arguing such a link

would only complicate both sets of issues. "Too many cooks

spoil the meal," he said. Later in the conversation, however

(in the context of a request for Syrian intervention with

Iran to free detained American hikers), Asad noted every

person and nation was key in bilateral and regional dynamics.

DAMASCUS 00000008 003 OF 006

Syria had cut relations with the U.S. after the 1967

Arab-Israeli conflict, but bilateral relations had improved

markedly after President Nixon visited Syria in 1974 to

discuss peace with Israel. "That's our issue," he stressed,

noting that the Golan track had been active under President

Carter but then dormant through most of the 1980s and the

early part of the current decade.

--------------------------------------------- ---------

Iraq: Political Cooperation, Then Security Cooperation

--------------------------------------------- ---------

¶7. (S) Senator Bayh observed that many things in Syria had

changed for the better since his 2002 visit. Now, there were

positive indicators that bilateral relations might be on the

upswing as well. One area, however, in which relations had

not improved was intelligence cooperation. The U.S. and

Syria appeared to have common interests in seeing a stable

Iraq, not dominated by Iran. Yet, foreign extremists

continued to travel through Syria into Iraq. The U.S. had

provided information regarding four named individuals to the

Syrian government, but nothing had happened. Perhaps now was

a propitious moment to consider re-establishing intelligence

ties, Bayh suggested. Asad concurred with the idea of

overlapping U.S.-Syrian interests in Iraq. He noted,

however, that the main obstacle to increased U.S.-Syrian

security cooperation stemmed from the absence of political

cooperation. The U.S. possessed a "huge information

apparatus" but lacked the ability to analyze this information

successfully, maintained Asad. "You're failing in the fight

against extremism. While we lack your intelligence

capabilities, we succeed in fighting extremists because we

have better analysts," he claimed, attributing the superior

analysis to living in and understanding the region.

¶8. (S) Syria, Asad explained, had refused to cooperate with

President Bush because it did not trust him and because the

Bush Administration had wrongfully accused Syria of

supporting foreign fighters. When President Obama assumed

office, Syria tried to be positive. Asad he had proposed to

Special Envoy Mitchell the idea of a border security

cooperation initiative with Iraq as a first step. (Post

Comment: Asad's recollection is both selective and

inaccurate. U.S. officials first proposed a border security

cooperation initiative to a reluctant FM Muallim in May 2009.

President Asad agreed to participate after meeting S/E

Mitchell in late July 2009.) "This was a small step for me,

but big for you," Asad argued. Citing the U.S. inability to

control its long border with Mexico, Asad said the border was

not the major challenge. Syria's close intelligence

cooperation with Turkey enabled both countries to prevent

terrorists from crossing their 860-kilometer border without

relying on a huge border security presence. This

intelligence cooperation enabled Syria to "suffocate"

logistical networks critical to the movement of terrorists.

"In the U.S., you like to shoot (terrorists). Suffocating

their networks is far more effective," said Asad.

¶9. (S) Asad said Syria required a positive first step prior

to resuming intelligence cooperation, a position that Senator

Mitchell had accepted. Syria had succeeded in convincing

Iraqi PM Maliki on August 18 to reverse its opposition to the

trilateral border security initiative and was ready to

participate. After the August 19 bombings and Iraqi

accusations against Syria for facilitating the terrorist

attacks, Syria remained willing to participate in the border

assessments. It was the U.S., Asad insisted, that had backed

away. Syria had no interest in supporting extremists, who

weren't killing Americans but rather Iraqi civilians. "That

DAMASCUS 00000008 004 OF 006

hurts us," Asad claimed. U.S. "mistakes in Iraq" had cost

Syria and the region a great deal. Syria had out of

self-interest sought to deter terrorists who popped up.

Still, despite a shared interest with the U.S. in ensuring

Iraqi stability, Syria would not immediately jump to

intelligence cooperation without ensuring its own interests

would be respected. "I won't give it (intelligence

cooperation) to you for free," he said. Senator Bayh replied

that the U.S. was working to normalize relations and

considering positive steps to take along the way. Syria,

Asad commented, had been clear on how to start rebuilding

relations. "We didn't say no," he said, "but we have to

build from an absence of trust."

----------------------------------------

Asad: Door Open to Iranian Nuclear Deal

----------------------------------------

¶10. (S) Senator Cornyn commented the most dire threat to

regional peace stemmed from Iran's nuclear aspirations.

Syrian interests could well suffer if there were a conflict

between Israel and Iran and possibly others. Asad replied no

one could predict the course of a conflict; therefore, it was

better to avoid one. The Bush Administration took a

political approach to Iran instead of dealing with the

nuclear issue in the context of the Non-Proliferation Treaty.

Under the NPT, Iran enjoys the right to enrich uranium,

provided there is IAEA monitoring. Instead of trying to stop

Iran's program, the international emphasis should shift to

ensuring proper monitoring. Iran had accepted the principle

of enriching uranium outside of its borders. Now the

challenge was how to meet Iran's concern that shipping all of

its LEU at once would risk not receiving any in return. Asad

claimed Iran sought only to enrich its uranium to 20 percent,

well bellow the 95 percent threshold necessary for

weapons-grade material. If the international community

agreed to divide Iran's shipments into four or five parts,

Iran would be flexible, Asad argued. In the meantime, Israel

had to forget about attacking Iran. Such a move would only

encourage Iran to follow the path of India, Pakistan, and

others in seeking a nuclear weapon. Syria opposed this

outcome, but viewed the only solution was to recognize Iran's

rights and demonstrate flexibility in foreign enrichment,

Asad said.

¶11. (S) Later in the conversation, Senator Specter argued

Iran appeared to be blocking a deal. Asad claimed Iranian

diplomacy was now more flexible because the government was

stronger and more confident after the 2009 elections. Noting

he had shared this assessment with French President Sarkozy,

Asad said he judged Iran to be looking for cooperative signs.

Iran represented the most important country in the region,

Asad assessed, ranking Turkey second and Syria third. The

U.S. had troops in Afghanistan and needed better relations

with Iran. Specter agreed the enrichment issue could be

solved; Russia had offered to enrich Iranian uranium several

years ago, subject to international monitoring. Iran had

answered yes, replied Asad, but the issue was how to proceed.

Iran's desire to divide the uranium shipments represented

the only difference: if the West agreed, the issue would be

solved. There was an open door; if the nuclear issue could

be solved, the peace process would proceed more easily. But

if conflict erupted, the regional context would become

extremely complicated.

------------------------------------

Discussion of Detained Amcits in Iran

-------------------------------------

DAMASCUS 00000008 005 OF 006

¶12. (S) Senator Klobuchar commented that she had supported

Barak Obama because of his promise to advance a new approach

to international relations. While there were no easy

solutions in the region, the U.S. and Syria appeared to have

overlapping interests in avoiding war and in ensuring a

strong and stable Iraq. From the U.S. perspective, Syria

might demonstrate as a goodwill gesture its interest in

better relations by helping obtain the release of three

American citizens -- Joshua Fattal, Shane Bauer and Sarah

Shourd -- who apparrently crossed into Iran while hiking in

northeastern Iraq. Swiss officials had visited them, but

they were isolated and the U.S. lacked information on their

whereabouts and any pending charges.

¶13. (S) Asad replied he was unfamiliar with their case and

requested that the Embassy send more information. Senator

Specter interjected later in the conversation that the

Embassy had delivered a letter to the MFA that week from the

Secretary. Specter added he had personally raised the matter

in Washington with Syrian Ambassador Imad Mustafa. The U.S.

would view positively Syrian efforts to secure the three

Americans' release, Specter said, comparing the case to the

Iranian detention of UK sailors whom Syria helped to free.

"We'll try our best," replied Asad, saying it would be

necessary to ask about the legal aspects of the case.

Specter clarified there had been no charges filed. It had

started as a trespassing case, but U.S.-Iranian relations

were so poor it was impossible to resolve.

--------------------------------------------- ---

Re-Opening DCS: Syria Awaiting U.S. Steps First

--------------------------------------------- ---

¶13. (S) Senator Klobuchar and Senator Enzi argued Syria

might demonstrate good will by re-opening the Damascus

Community School (DCS), whose closure had hurt not just

American students, but also many foreigners and Syrians.

Senator Enzi said his committee's purview on education

created a personal interest in seeing the DCS re-opened; the

school's closure represented a step away from moving towards

positive relations. Asad replied he wanted to open Syria to

the rest of the world. In September 2008, for example, the

French Embassy opened a new international school. Asad

explained he had ordered DCS's closure after a U.S. military

attack on Syrian soil had killed seven innocent civilians in

late October 2008. "We had to respond," he argued, saying

the school's closure "was the only step we could take" in

response to the Bush Administration. President Carter, Asad

continued, had urged the reopening of DCS during his December

2008 visit. "I told Carter that we are ready," said Asad,

who noted the Syrian government wanted to send positive

signals to the Obama administration and had done so by

re-opening the American Cultural Center (ACC).

¶14. (S) FM Muallim noted that only part of the American

Language Center portion of ACC had been allowed to re-open.

He argued that he and other Syrian officials had told State

Department officials that steps by Syria to improve relations

first required U.S. steps. "We can't move without a waiver

for Syrian Airlines," he argued, citing the threat to Syrian

civilians posed a U.S. ban on the sale of civilian aircraft

and spare parts. Asad noted that a good friend who ran a

medical laboratory was similarly unable to import U.S. lab

technology. The bigger issue, Asad said, was about bilateral

relations. Syria's intent was to re-open the DCS. Asad said

he trusted President Carter and supported President Obama.

"We know he has other problems and priorities, but there must

be U.S. steps," Asad insisted.

DAMASCUS 00000008 006 OF 006

¶15. (C) U.S. Participants:

CDA Charles Hunter

Senator Judd Gregg

Senator Evan Bayh

Senator Arlen Specter

Senator Michael Enzi

Senator John Cornyn

Senator Amy Klobuchar

Mr. Paul Grove, Clerk, Senate Appropriations Committee

Mr. Christopher Gahan, Staff Member, Senator Gregg's Office

Mr. Michael Pevzner, Staff Member, Senate Select Committee on

Intelligence

Mr. Tom Sullivan, Staff Member, Senate Judiciary Committee

Mr. Christopher Bradish, Staff Member, Senator Specter's

Office

¶16. (C) Syrian Participants:

President Bashar al-Asad

Foreign Minister Walid Muallim

Vice Foreign Minister Faisal Miqdad

Presidential Advisor for Media and Policy Affairs Bouthaina

Shaaban

MFA America's Desk Director Dr. Muhammad Khafif

¶17. (SBU) Mr. Paul Grove of CODEL Gregg cleared on this

cable.

HUNTER

Reproduced from cablegate.wikileaks.org


List of India-related documents from the first batch of 226 documents released by WikiLeaks

(India-specific portions highlighted in bold)

- To avoid hurting Pakistan, Turkey didn't invite India

- Bahrain's King Hamad on India's role in Afghanistan

- UN Security Council expansion and India

- Indo-Pak relations and Musharraf

- Pakistan's obsession with India

- India critical of sanctions on Iran

- Saudi Arabia expanding relations with India

- 'Little to fear about India having nuclear weapons'

- Iran could follow India's path in going nuclear

- Differing opinions of US and India

- India benefitting from international security

- Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty and India

- Nuclear facility safeguards in India

- Israel-India strategic partnership

- Non-proliferation and India

- Indo-US trade relations and foreign aid

- Sanctions and German business interests in India

- Some Indian-origin people supplying equipment to Iran

- Germany on US-EU position towards India

- Israeli relations with India

- Reliance Industries oil and gas exploration

- US-Indian economic cooperation and Indo-Pak relations

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