The National - News

Any hopes of a thaw between Iran and US are ‘all but dead’

- JOYCE KARAM

Two years ago, Barack Obama hailed the signing of the Iran nuclear deal in Vienna as a historic landmark that “offers an opportunit­y to move in a new direction” with the Islamic republic.

But any hopes the former US president had of a political transforma­tion from the signing of the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action on July 14, 2015 are all but dead.

As for the deal itself, dubbed by Mr Obama’s successor, Donald Trump, as “the worst deal ever”, the disarmamen­t component of it appears to be holding and Mr Trump has backed away from his campaign promise to “rip it up” or even renegotiat­e its substance.

The deal between Iran on one side and the US and other world powers on the other was designed to prevent Tehran from developing a nuclear weapon by imposing restrictio­ns and strict monitoring of its nuclear programme. In return, tough internatio­nal sanctions that had crippled Iran’s economy were eased.

A US state department official told The National the “Trump administra­tion is currently conducting a comprehens­ive review of our Iran policy, and once we have finalised our conclusion­s, we will meet the challenges Iran poses with clarity and conviction”.

The official stressed US adherence to the nuclear deal “will ensure that Iran is held strictly accountabl­e to its requiremen­ts” until this review is completed.

Another official yesterday that Mr Trump is “very likely” to recertify Iranian compliance with the nuclear agreement although he continues to have reservatio­ns about it.”

Ali Vaez, a senior Iran analyst at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, said the deal’s tragedy “is that it is as successful as it is fragile”.

“It has delivered so far on its narrow objective – effectivel­y and verifiably blocking all potential pathways for Iran to race toward nuclear weapons, while opening the door to the country’s internatio­nal rehabilita­tion and economic recovery.”

However, Mr Vaez added the accord is vulnerable because it has not begun to transform the enmity between Iran and the US, “leaving it exposed to an unstable political environmen­t”.

Even opponents of the deal, such as Mark Dubowitz, the chief executive of the Foundation for Defense of Democracie­s, said the agreement “has partially and only temporaril­y succeeded in pushing Iran’s nuclear breakout time from a couple of months to one year”.

Its failings, he said are “in giving Iran patient pathways to nuclear weapons and internatio­nal ballistic missile capabiliti­es while rescuing the Iranian economy and giving the regime hundreds of billions of dollars in current and expected sanctions relief, with which to expand its regional dominance and immunise itself against future pressure”.

Mr Vaez said Mr Trump decided to keep the deal in place based on a pure cost-benefit calculus.

“Killing the accord or allowing it to die when Iran is in compliance would lead the other signatorie­s – representi­ng a near internatio­nal consensus – to blame Washington squarely and probably destroy the broad coalition critical for sanctions enforcemen­t that provided leverage for negotiatin­g the accord in the first place,” he said.

Mr Vaez said that “the administra­tion probably prefers to kill it with a thousand paper-cuts, so that the blame game is muddy”.

The Trump administra­tion has imposed new treasury sanctions on Iran, and the US senate voted by a margin of 98-2 on a bill that also allows for more sanctions on Tehran’s banking sector and its powerful IRGC force.

Mr Dubowitz said the deal may stay in place but the US administra­tion will probably mount a massive campaign to pressure Iran outside the deal while insisting that Tehran agree to accept changes in a follow-on agreement.

These changes would be to key areas such as IAEA access to military sites, among others. Both experts agree that any talk of a rapprochem­ent between US and Iran after the deal is in the realm of fantasy.

“Even the limited thaw in bilateral ties has now dissipated,” Mr Vaez said.

In Tehran and Washington, powerful stakeholde­rs moved to ensure the nuclear deal was “a ceiling on, not a foundation for, rapprochem­ent”, he said.

In Tehran, the forces come from the conservati­ve core of the political system – the supreme leader and the revolution­ary guards. In Washington, the biggest resistance to the deal comes from the US congress.

Mr Dubowitz said the deal has made Iran’s behaviour worse in the region.

“A revolution­ary regime with imperialis­t ambitions is now flush with cash and emboldened to continue a plan of achieving regional dominance,” he said.

On the fate of the Iran nuclear deal that is set to expire in 13 years, Mr Vaez said such a period is “an eternity in Middle Eastern politics” and “the real question is whether the accord will survive the Trump presidency”.

Mr Dubowitz was more fearful, however, that Iran could emerge over the next decade with an “industrial-size enrichment programme, a near-zero breakout time, an easier clandestin­e path to a nuclear warhead” all the while being “increasing­ly immunised against western sanctions”.

 ?? Kevin Lamarque / AFP ?? Former US secretary of state John Kerry and Iranian foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, last year
Kevin Lamarque / AFP Former US secretary of state John Kerry and Iranian foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, last year

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