What if the Iran deal had taken place in 2002, right after the country’s clandestine but nascent nuclear program had begun?
In announcing an historic agreement, President Obama asked skeptics to consider the alternative.
Without a nuclear deal, “Iran could produce, operate and test more and more centrifuges,” he said. “Iran could fuel a reactor capable of producing plutonium for a bomb. And we would not have any of the inspections that allow us to detect a covert nuclear weapons program.”
It was not a hypothetical.
Thirteen years ago, Tehran had fewer than 20 centrifuges that could barely spin. There were no stockpiles of enriched uranium, no U.N. inspectors poking around.
Related: Iran nuclear deal: High hopes for economy amid ‘new beginning’
This was before Mahmoud Ahmedinajad came to power and while 100,000 U.S. troops assembled nearby to invade Iran’s neighbor to the east. The same Iranian Supreme Leader in power today was in power then. The current Iranian foreign minister, Javad Zarif, was serving at the United Nations and meeting, from time to time, with U.S. officials to discuss al-Qaeda and Afghanistan.
But the Bush administration would not discuss the nuclear program. One centrifuge was one too many and the administration’s position, as it prepared for a war in the name of disarmament, was nothing less than regime change and capitulation from “axis of evil” members.
It didn’t work.
By the time Obama was sworn in as the 44th President of the United States in January 2009, thousands of centrifuges were spinning at high speeds at multiple facilities and Iran was sitting on more than 2,200 pounds of uranium it had enriched on its own. Precision engineering was bringing them ever closer to being able to produce bomb grade uranium. Nuclear scientists across the globe were warning that Iran was placing itself well within reach of weapons capability.
Obama hadn’t yet named an ambassador to the U.N. nuclear agency in Vienna when inspectors there reported that Iran was refusing to answer questions about weapon designs.
The agency was barred from inspecting facilities where centrifuge parts were being built and had no access to Iran’s heavy water reactor capable of producing plutonium.
It was the agency’s 23rd report since Iranian exiles first exposed the nuclear program.
Obama and Vice President Joe Biden spent four years together on the Senate foreign relations committee working to reduce nuclear stockpiles around the world and they committed to finding a way to halt Iran’s progress.









