European Press Review
December 5, 2007Writing on Wednesday, Dec. 5, from Munich, the Süddeutsche Zeitung said the recent US report, which stated that Iran had halted its nuclear weapons program in 2003, was intended to avoid a mistake similar to the invasion of Iraq in 2001.
"The domestic consequences of the reversal are incalculable," continued the paper. "The distrust will now intensify in favor of the Democrats."
Only Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton's popularity will suffer from the report as she had been the most outspoken against Iran in her party, opined the Süddeutsche Zeitung.
The Berliner Zeitung, writing Tuesday from the German capital, said the security report would impact elections in Iran as well.
"In Iran, all of the political camps will have to attentively follow the developments," wrote the paper. "Parliamentary elections are next year and the policy of the West will help decide how the advocates of reform fair."
Other newspapers focused on the effects the latest intelligence report will have on peace elsewhere in the Middle East.
While some, especially Israel, concentrated on the news that Iran indeed had a nuclear weapons program prior to 2003, others saw the new information as "a success for diplomacy that sweeps all military options off the table," wrote Vienna's Der Standard on Wednesday.
"But one pillar of [the US'] Middle East policy has just collapsed -- one that played a role in the Israeli-Palestinian peace conference in Annapolis in the form of a security guarantee for Israel," concluded the paper.
Similarly, London's The Guardian saw the intelligence paper as a potential danger for Israel.
"No matter who is president in Washington, Israel now confronts a united American military and intelligence front declaring that the Iranian nuclear issue is not urgent and probably not dangerous and rejecting an American military response," commented the paper Wednesday.
Bush, however, "judging by his immediate reaction to the NIE [report], will continue to be sympathetic to Israel's concerns."
In contrast, others expressed the hope that the knowledge that Iran does not possess nuclear weapons could encourage negotiation and diplomacy on all sides.
"When we assume that Tehran doesn't have any military nuclear program, then, first of all, the danger of a military attack is reduced and, secondly, it means that negotiation is possible," wrote Le Figaro Wednesday from Paris. "A detente would also help peace in Lebanon and Palestine. But Tehran has to respond to Washington's open door."
From Rome on Tuesday, La Repubblica agreed that the US would have had to make good on its promises of "terrible consequences" if Iran had attacked Israel -- even though the US "had stuck its neck out too far" -- but conceded that it can now "allow itself the liberty of not doing anything (…) and dream the dreams of reconciliation with Iran and negotiations with Palestine."
After all, "the Third World War that George Bush had threatened last month as an inevitable reaction to Iran's nuclear bomb plans won't happen -- at least not at the moment."