China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Finding middle ground

It is in the interests of both the US and Iran to strike an agreement reinstatin­g the nuclear deal

- The author is deputy director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those o

With the Joe Biden administra­tion seemingly signaling a willingnes­s to return to the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, also known as the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the recent changes of Iranian and Israeli government­s, the Iranian nuclear issue is now at a critical juncture. Whether the ongoing Iran nuclear talks in Vienna will succeed and where this issue goes will have a significan­t impact on peace and stability in the Middle East, global security, and relations between major countries.

During his presidenti­al election campaign, Biden promised a return to the Iran policy adopted by the Barack Obama administra­tion, which was to use a strict nuclear agreement to restrain Iran’s nuclear capability and prevent it from developing nuclear weapons.

The United States’ considerin­g a return to the Iran nuclear deal is a bid to repair and strengthen relations with its allies. After all, the Donald Trump administra­tion’s decision to withdraw from the deal in 2018 was one of the many reasons that divided the US and its allies.

The Biden administra­tion also needs to prevent the issue from spiraling out of control and plunging the US into a new crisis. Israel was extremely concerned when Iran backed off from the nuclear deal and began upgrading its nuclear capabiliti­es after the US withdrew from it in May 2018. If the deal is not restored, Iran will continue to develop its nuclear capabiliti­es, leading to the prospect of Israel using force against Iran and plunging the Middle East further into war. The US would then become embroiled in this war, affecting its global strategy.

From the US perspectiv­e, returning to the nuclear deal could also put a brake on the cooperatio­n between China and Iran which have just reached a 25-year comprehens­ive cooperatio­n agreement. If the deal is not restored, an isolated Iran will turn to China and Russia for stronger strategic cooperatio­n, especially on “de-dollarizat­ion”, a major threat to US global interests. However, if the deal is reinstated, Iran will improve its relations with the West and seek to balance them with its relations with China.

As a major oil producer, Iran’s economy and Iranian livelihood­s rely heavily on oil exports. The sanctions on oil exports and finance imposed by the US and other Western countries over the nuclear issue have, as expected, seriously hit Iran’s socio-economic developmen­t and are pushing it to accept some of the harsh conditions the US is proposing.

Following its withdrawal from the deal in May 2018, the US reimposed sanctions on Iran and took “long-arm jurisdicti­on” actions, which greatly hit Iran’s oil exports. According to Reuters, Iranian oil exports plummeted from 2.5 million barrels per day that month to 300,000 barrels per day in June 2019.

With 40 percent of Iran’s fiscal budget coming from oil exports, Iran needs to export about 1.54 million barrels per day (at $54/barrel) to keep its economy running.

Therefore, Iran’s primary goal is to restore the nuclear deal and lift internatio­nal sanctions in order to resume normal economic developmen­t, while preserving its right to enrich uranium. At the same time, Iran can use this opportunit­y to improve relations with the West to create a better external environmen­t for more investment and trade.

The Iran nuclear deal is the result of long and arduous negotiatio­ns among China, France, Germany, Russia, the United Kingdom, the US, the European Union and Iran, endorsed by the UN Security Council. Therefore, the resumption of negotiatio­ns should focus on the “road map” to bring both parties back to the deal, rather than on the deal itself. However, the US is proposing new conditions and seeking to gouge more for a “return”, which is proving to be the biggest hurdle to the negotiatio­ns in Vienna.

The US tabled a stronger version of the deal, going so far as to include non-nuclear issues such as Iran’s ballistic missile developmen­t and support for regional militia organizati­ons, which were firmly rejected by Iran. With the inclusion of these two non-nuclear elements in the agreement clauses ruled out, the US proposed that Iran destroy the new generation of centrifuge­s that are now in operation, the latest achievemen­t in Iran’s nuclear technology developmen­t, and only keep the old centrifuge­s within the scale stipulated in the deal. This is now the crux of the matter.

When the nuclear deal was reached in 2015, the West believed that there was no need for Iran, a country with huge oil reserves, to develop nuclear energy unless it had another agenda. Today, as the existing energy structure undergoes transition toward a clean energy mix, the economic strategies of oil-producing countries will be impacted as oil gradually loses its position as the staple energy resource. Against the backdrop of carbon neutrality, Iran’s eagerness to develop nuclear power is much easier to understand.

Since the US has to abandon the approach of including non-nuclear elements in the deal, the success of the deal will be determined by two factors. The first one is to what extent Iran will accept the strings attached to its nuclear developmen­t. This will be determined by the aforementi­oned change of the Iranian government and carbon neutrality.

The second factor is how far the US is willing to go in lifting the sanctions against Iran. The US claims that even if the Iran nuclear deal is reinstated, not all of the sanctions imposed on Iran since the Trump administra­tion will be lifted, including those related to non-nuclear issues such as alleged violations of human rights and internatio­nal rules.

Iran, on the other hand, insists that all oppressive sanctions must be lifted. The US and Iran have yet to bargain over the scope of the US sanctions against Iran to be lifted. At the same time, given the US administra­tion’s habitual flip-flopping and poor political credibilit­y, Iran’s efforts to seek guarantees from the US and other Western countries regarding the Iran nuclear deal may turn out be in vain.

But from the perspectiv­e of the primary interests and concerns of the US and Iran and the overall situation, it is to be hoped that the US and Iran will make tactical concession­s and meet somewhere in the middle and reinstate the Iran nuclear deal, for such an agreement will help address broader strategic issues between the two sides.

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 ?? LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY ??
LUO JIE / CHINA DAILY

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