The Denver Post

Trump opts for the sane alternativ­e on Iran

- By Bobby Ghosh Bobby Ghosh is a columnist and member of the Bloomberg Opinion editorial board. He writes on foreign affairs, with a special focus on the Middle East and the wider Islamic world.

Poor Hassan Rouhani: Iran’s president is so inconseque­ntial that the Trump administra­tion didn’t even bother to impose sanctions on him. The U.S. has now levied them on Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and eight military commanders, and is preparing similar measures against Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. It had already sanctioned Qasem Soleimani, commander of the Quds Force, and designated the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps as a terrorist group.

In the virulently anti-american politics of the Islamic Republic, being targeted in this way by the “Great Satan” is something of a badge of honor — one that has been denied the Iranian president, who is regarded with open contempt by his hardline opponents and by his boss. In a certain light, then, Rouhani’s latest descriptio­n of the White House as “mentally retarded” might be read as a petulant complaint that his name wasn’t on President Trump’s hit-list.

The sanctions on Khamenei may not have a great deal of impact on the ayatollah himself — he doesn’t travel beyond Iran’s borders, nor does he have any known holdings abroad. (Zarif, on the other hand, will miss his access to the salons and think-tanks of New York.) It is hard to know which portions of Khamenei’s multibilli­on-dollar business empire might be affected, but an enterprise built by seizing the property and businesses of his subjects can, presumably, be rebuilt by seizing some more.

Whatever the efficacy of the new measures, however, they are hardly a sign of madness. On the contrary, they are a sane alternativ­e to what President Donald Trump briefly contemplat­ed last week: A military response to Iran’s many provocatio­ns.

The regime in Tehran has said the latest sanctions close the door for negotiatio­ns forever. This is plainly disingenuo­us. Khamenei had already slammed that door in the face of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, who made a good faith effort to mediate talks between the U.S. and Iran, only to be humiliated by the Supreme Leader. Tehran has also ignored offers of mediation from Oman and Qatar, and has dismissed out of hand statements from Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo that the U.S. was open to negotiatio­ns, without preconditi­ons.

And there were plenty of other signs that the Iranians had no intention of negotiatin­g — the attacks on neutral shipping, on Saudi oil installati­ons, on an American drone.

There is no such thing as forever in geopolitic­s. Khamenei, it would appear, is inclined to wait until after the 2020 U.S. presidenti­al election before reconsider­ing his intransige­nce about negotiatio­ns. He is hoping that Trump will lose the election, and that the 46th U.S. president will be more favorably inclined toward the Islamic Republic. In the meantime, Iran will build up some leverage — enhancing its uranium stockpile and threatenin­g the stability of the Middle East and safety of crucial shipping lanes.

But Trump, too, might profitably run down the clock on the current government in Tehran. There, the next presidenti­al election is only due in 2021: Rouhani cannot run again, and it is all but certain that he will be replaced by one of the regime’s hardliners.

Rather than embark now on a lengthy process of negotiatio­ns, the White House might think it better to give the sanctions two more years to wreak more destructio­n on the Iranian economy and weaken Tehran’s position. If the Islamic Republic keeps enriching uranium and attacking shipping lanes in the meantime it will antagonize the internatio­nal community, prompting more countries – and especially the Europeans — to support the U.S.

And when the negotiatio­ns do eventually begin, the sanctions on Khamenei could be one more piece of leverage for the American side. In the meantime, Khamenei can enjoy his badge of honor — much to Rouhani’s envy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States