USA TODAY International Edition

Opposing view: Containmen­t replaces Obama’s mirage

- Michael Doran

Donald Trump has a well-articulate­d strategy toward Iran. Like almost every other Republican candidate for president in 2016, he argued that President Barack Obama empowered Iran at the expense of America’s traditiona­l allies and its own vital interests. Trump has implemente­d instead a policy of containmen­t.

When critics claim that his strategy lacks an “endgame,” they are really expressing nostalgia for the clarity of Obama’s vision. The Iranian regime, Obama told us, was moderating, it was willing to dispense with its ambitions to become a nuclear weapons state and was eager to stabilize the Middle East in cooperatio­n with the West. Taken together, these trends inevitably led to an attractive endgame: strategic accommodat­ion between Washington and Tehran.

This vision, however, was a mirage. Events in Syria during Obama’s administra­tion gave us a preview of the true consequenc­es of his strategy. Out of a misguided belief that recognitio­n of Syria as an Iranian sphere of interest would transform Tehran into an agent of stability, he made no attempt to counter the provocativ­e new moves that Iran and Hezbollah made to save the Assad regime.

This miscalcula­tion allowed Iran and Russia to form a military alliance that bears primary responsibi­lity for the deaths of nearly a million Syrians and the displaceme­nt of well over 10 million more.

Trump’s strategy does not permit him to define a clear endgame. A containmen­t policy does not seek war but will not shrink from it if provoked. Nor does it seek regime change. Rather, it recognizes that a transforma­tion of Iranian politics is an essential preconditi­on for a strategic accommodat­ion between Washington and Tehran.

In the meantime, if the Iranians remain determined to launch suicidal attacks on the United States and its allies and disrupt the oil supply, we can’t necessaril­y stop them — but we can make them pay an exorbitant price, while also ensuring that they never acquire nuclear weapons.

In short, Trump has replaced the clarity of a mirage with the messiness of reality.

Michael Doran is a senior fellow at Hudson Institute.

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