Qatar Tribune

Suspending Sanctions On Iran During The COVID-19 Crisis Serves American Interests

The US should temporaril­y suspend internatio­nal sanctions during this global health crisis, and by doing so will serve it well in future negotiatio­ns with Iran

- LUCILLE GREER

IRAN is buckling under the weight of one of the worst outbreaks in the COVID-19 pandemic that has brought the world to a halt. Iran’s domestic mishandlin­g of the virus is compounded dramatical­ly by internatio­nal sanctions leveraged by the United States. The United States should temporaril­y suspend its sanctions on Iran in light of the current health crisis — not just because it is the humanitari­an thing to do, but because it serves the United States’ foreign policy interests.

First, a temporary suspension of sanctions is a move that will serve the United States well in future negotiatio­ns with Iran. From Iran’s point of view, there is little use in negotiatin­g with a country that is dogmatical­ly inflexible. Under the Trump administra­tion, the United States has withdrawn from the Iran nuclear deal, ratcheted up sanctions, and gone to the brink of hot conflict. As a result, Iran has dug in on its nuclear developmen­t, foreign military adventuris­m, and domestic repression.

But historical­ly when the United States has shown interest in diplomatic engagement, Iran has been receptive. Iran’s current president, Hassan Rouhani, was the first Iranian head of state to speak with an American president. A temporary suspension of sanctions would be a dramatical­lyfelt goodwill gesture that would demonstrat­e there is still room for talks between Iran and the United States, a debt to be repaid later in Iranian flexibilit­y.

Second, American cooperatio­n on sanctions relief would keep Iran from being pushed further into the arms of the United States’ strategic rivals, China and Russia. Both nations, which are signatorie­s to the Iran nuclear deal, have called on the internatio­nal community to suspend sanctions on Iran during the COVID-19 crisis. China has donated medical equipment to Iran, a move that garnered the praise of Iranian military leadership.

The economic isolation that sanctions have brought on Iran has primed Tehran to rely on China and Russia. In the optimism surroundin­g the 2015 nuclear deal, other countries’companies were eager to enter the Iranian market. But the American withdrawal and the resumption of sanctions have cemented China and Russia’s strangleho­ld on the Iranian economy. Economic leverage has turned to military cooperatio­n. The countries conducted joint naval exercises near the Strait of Hormuz last December. A majority of Iranians view China and Russia favourably, while only 13 percent of Iranians view the United States favourably. A temporary suspension of American sanctions would poke a hole in the anti-Western rhetoric that makes China and Russia successful in Iran.

Third, a US suspension of sanctions would concretely demonstrat­e the Trump administra­tion’s latest rhetorical push —that the United States cares about the people of Iran. American officials, including Trump, have taken to Twitter to pledge their support for the Iranian people in Farsi. The Trump administra­tion has yet to prove that there is any policy behind this initiative. This would be a good place to start.

One of the greatest threats to the Iranian regime is the domestic perception of the government as incompeten­t and opaque. In a poll last fall, Iranians attributed their economic difficulti­es more to domestic misconduct than internatio­nal sanctions regimes. The Iranian government can and has allocated blame to the United States for COVID-19 as sanctions persist. But once American sanctions are lifted the blame squarely falls on Iran’s government, which has gone as far as turning away aid from Doctors Without Borders. Alignment between the Iranian people and the United States during COVID-19 only highlights the regime’s ineptitude to the United States’benefit.

Finally, the United States should temporaril­y suspend internatio­nal sanctions because it is the kind of collaborat­ive internatio­nal leadership urgently needed during this global health crisis. American leadership, particular­ly in the Middle East, is more in doubt than ever before. The world is calling on the United States to do the right thing. Temporaril­y easing sanctions in the name of humanitari­anism could go a long way to repairing the United States’ battered reputation in the internatio­nal arena.

The United States claims that its sanctions regime does not affect sales of humanitari­an goods like medical equipment. But sanctions that target internatio­nal transfers cause sales of medical equipment to incur fines. Banks around the world refuse to handle these transactio­ns for fear of repercussi­ons. This financial environmen­t creates a grim outlook for Iran’s population under COVID-19.

The United States has the rarest of chances in diplomacy — a goodwill gesture with an end date. The United States must trade the short-term satisfacti­on of sanctions for the long-term success of its policy in Iran and the defeat of COVID-19. (Lucille Greer is a Schwarzman Fellow at the Wilson Center who researches great power politics between China and the United States in the Middle East)

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