The National - News

Iran sanctions must be part of wider plan

▶ While Iranians should not be made to suffer, pressure on the regime is vital for change

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As thousands of disillusio­ned Iranians continue to protest the regime’s failures in providing basic services and the Iranian rial falls to a record low, it is plain to see we have reached a watershed moment. From Syria to Yemen, the adventuris­m of the regime has made Tehran the single greatest source of regional instabilit­y. The flawed 2015 nuclear deal, which liberated billions of dollars for the regime, was a facilitato­r. It is the meddling of Iran that has brought us to this point and on Tuesday, the Trump administra­tion will reinstate stringent sanctions on the country. Falling between dialogue and outright warfare, economic sanctions are a valuable tool but can hit ordinary people hardest and are dependent on being upheld and respected internatio­nally. At this critical juncture, it is worth asking whether sanctions could really be effective in curbing such adventuris­m.

Tuesday’s restrictio­ns will block Tehran’s access to US dollars and target the country’s trade in commoditie­s. Those making large transactio­ns in Iranian rial will face scrutiny. With corruption and mismanagem­ent rife, the economy is already struggling. Meanwhile more than a dozen major companies – including Total, General Electric and Boeing – have already ceased to operate there. Such losses might initially hit citizens harder than leaders but anger from a civilian population as sanctions bite can prompt a behavioura­l change at the top. The question is whether a regime that has shown little regard for its people, choosing to spend billions of dollars on exacerbati­ng regional conflicts rather than vital infrastruc­ture, fits that pattern. A bigger problem, perhaps, is that targeted sanctions exert little power over third parties. Since UN Security Council sanctions first hit Iran in 2006, China has become one of Tehran’s foremost trading partners. And in recent days, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif has been courting his counterpar­ts at the Asean summit in Singapore, where the EU’s Federica Mogherini said the bloc planned to increase “legitimate economic and trade engagement with Iran even if the United States has decided to impose sanctions”. Nor are Russia or Turkey likely to re-evaluate their ties with Tehran.

History offers mixed results. After Iraq invaded Kuwait 28 years ago, the US imposed heavy sanctions on Saddam Hussein’s regime. While the results were devastatin­g for ordinary Iraqis, the regime rumbled on for more than a decade. Sanctions on Chinese-backed North Korea, where famine is frequent, failed to prevent its nuclear proliferat­ion. And even in countries where radical change did occur, such as apartheid South Africa, sanctions were one factor among many. Economic restrictio­ns cannot work in isolation. While Iranians should not be made to suffer, further pressure on the regime is vital. Sanctions should be part of a concerted move to bring the regime to account.

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