Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Iran got the better deal

The U.S. played checkers while the mullahs played chess

- Aaron David Miller Aaron David Miller, a U.S. diplomat for 24 years, is vice president for new initiative­s at the Woodrow Wilson Internatio­nal Center for Scholars and author of “The End of Greatness: Why America Can't Have (and Doesn't Want) Another Grea

Unsurprisi­ngly, the Obama administra­tion is excited about the nuclear agreement with Iran. Having spent years in negotiatio­ns, I know how hard it is to get anything done — I mean anything, let alone an agreement this complex, with so many moving parts. So in the interests of a reality check, let me offer some politicall­y incorrect observatio­ns and inconvenie­nt truths of what two years of negotiatio­ns hath wrought.

First, whether you like it or not, this agreement is a big deal. For almost 40 years, Washington based its Iran policy on containmen­t and confrontat­ion. But from now on, the default position will be cooperatio­n. This doesn’t mean the beginning of some Golden Age in U.S.Iran relations. But the efforts to keep this accord alive will create new patterns of behavior, new efforts to thaw other iceberg issues and an inclinatio­n to test whether Tehran is ready to cooperate on regional matters.

The Obama administra­tion will have little choice but to play this game. After all, this is President Barack Obama’s signature Middle East success. And he will go to great lengths to protect it. The president was never interested in regime change. What he wants is to change regime behavior.

Indeed, the Obama administra­tion will be hardpresse­d to sustain an agreement on the nuclear issue if the mullahs continue to sponsor terrorism and pour new money into propping up Syrian President Bashar Assad. Still, old habits die hard.

In the interests of this accord, during the negotiatio­ns we’ve acquiesced to Iran’s egregious behavior at home and abroad, and I suspect we will continue to do so during implementa­tion. The administra­tion’s overriding logic is that this deal is too big and important to fail. And such a deal requires a certain amount of mullah-coddling.

Don’t rule out the possibilit­y of a senior U.S. official traveling to Tehran before January 2017. But don’t expect diplomatic ties between Washington and Tehran to be restored anytime soon, either.

Second, this agreement is neither the catastroph­e its detractors fear, nor the historic breakthrou­gh its cheerleade­rs claim. The old saw that “if there was a real problem, it wouldn’t have a solution” applies here.

There is no agreement — comprehens­ive or otherwise — that will end Iran’s nuclear weapons program, or produce a satisfying, secure end state. This accord, arguably the least-worst of a series of bad options, is a mere transactio­n, a narrowly focused business deal designed to defuse a shortterm problem — Iran’s nuclear weapons ambitions — with some long-term and likely unrealisti­c hopes for how it may change the Iranian regime thrown in for good measure. It’s not a transforma­tion that will make Tehran more compliant, or willing to respect internatio­nal norms or accommodat­e U.S. interests.

Third, the United States will accomplish what it wanted, or at least get what it settled for: a slower, smaller, more easily monitored and verifiable Iranian nuclear program for at least a decade. Iran, likewise, will get what it sought: sanctions relief. There will be no preemptive Israeli military strike, and no need for U.S. military action.

The president’s view that keeping Iran from the bomb is a goal worth pursuing in its own right, whether or not Iran changes its policies in the region, is certainly the right one. And it’s just as well, because there’s little chance of any imminent improvemen­t in Iran’s respect for human rights or its support for bad actors like Assad, Hezbollah, Iraqi Shiite militias and Hamas.

Indeed, Iranian views of the region, despite some confluence of goals on stopping the Islamic State, are inimical to U.S. aims. Trying to square this circle will become the bane of the Obama administra­tion’s Iran policy now that the nuclear deal is done.

Fourth, we’re paying a high price for an arms control agreement. Don’t forget that this isn’t a disarmamen­t agreement. It won’t prevent Iran from enriching uranium or from becoming a nuclear weapons threshold state. Nor, despite all its safeguard provisions, will it stop Iran from weaponizin­g should it choose to do so. Even 15 years from now, Iran will still possess an industrial-size nuclear infrastruc­ture and, by the president’s own admission, the capacity to “break out” potentiall­y at will. Let’s be clear: We’ve created a mechanism to constrain Iran’s nuclear weapons pretension­s, not eliminate them.

In exchange for these limitation­s, we’re giving up a lot more to the mullahs than they’re giving to us: Billions in sanctions relief. Legitimacy to a repressive regime. The alienation of key allies in the region. A boost to Iran’s own expansioni­st designs in the Middle East. That there’s no relation between this nuclear accord and curtailing Iran’s egregious behavior both at home and abroad implicitly legitimize­s a nasty regime’s attitudes and actions toward the United States.

Finally, as negotiatio­ns go, we got the short end of the proverbial stick. A good many sensible Republican­s and more than few Democrats understand that. Still, one way or another — either because Congress really doesn’t want the responsibi­lity for killing the deal or via a sustainabl­e presidenti­al veto — this accord will move to the implementa­tion stage.

But we need to be clear about what we’re getting. In exchange for a nuclear weapon the Iranians don’t yet possess and may never develop, they get billions of dollars in sanctions relief, an “open-for-business” sign that’s worth even more, the pleasure of sticking it to Israel and Saudi Arabia, an administra­tion in Washington so eager to get and preserve the deal that it shies away from confrontin­g Iran’s regional ambitions and the capacity to weaponize should they so choose.

Iran isn’t 10 feet tall, and it has a bunch of regional allies who are pretty weak tea. But when it comes to the art of the deal, we’re not playing in Tehran’s league. On this one, we played linear checkers and the mullahs played three-dimensiona­l chess.

I hope I’m wrong. But I worry that the future course of Iran’s role in the region will make it painfully clear that I’m not.

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