Sanctions have succeeded in bringing Tehran back to the
negotiating table, but they are a tactic, not a strategy. Any long-term policy
has to aim for a democratic Iran.
At a bazaar in Tehran. (Raheb Homavandi / Courtesy Reuters)
By Patrick Clawson
At a bazaar in Tehran. (Raheb Homavandi / Courtesy Reuters)
To
judge the effectiveness of Western sanctions against Iran, it is important to
first establish their purpose. U.S. officials and their European counterparts
have set out a number of different goals for the sanctions regime, including
deterring the proliferation of nuclear technology across the Middle East, as
other countries imitate Iran, and persuading Iran to comply with the UN
Security Council’s orders to suspend all nuclear enrichment. The sanctions have
met some of those aims and failed to meet others. But for the Obama
administration, they have succeeded in one crucial way -- bringing Iran back to
the negotiating table. The question, then, is not whether sanctions have worked
but whether the strategy they serve is correct.
To
begin with, Tehran’s decision to re-enter discussions about the future of its
nuclear program represents a dramatic about-face. During the January 2011 round
of negotiations between Iran and the so-called P5 plus 1 (the five permanent
members of the UN Security Council and Germany), for example, Tehran rejected
any talk of its nuclear program. For the next 15 months, it refused to meet
until the P5 plus 1 accepted the precondition of Iran’s right to enrich
uranium. In new talks in Istanbul this past March, however, Iran agreed to
discuss its nuclear efforts and dropped its precondition.
The
Islamic Republic did not do this out of goodwill but because of tougher
sanctions. By demonstrating a willingness to negotiate and working closely with
Europe, the Obama administration has rallied many countries behind its efforts.
This broad coalition has established increasingly severe sanctions -- results
that the United States could not have achieved alone. In March, for example,
the European Union banned the largest Iranian banks from the Society for
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, the main institution used for
transferring money between banks across the globe, thereby crippling the
ability of Iranian financial institutions to conduct business. And earlier this
year, the European Union began imposing an oil embargo on Iran that has already
reduced the country’s oil exports. In the last six months, these measures,
along with Iran's erratic economic policies, have robbed the currency of half
its value and, according to Iranian estimates, caused inflation to soar above
20 percent (and likely much higher). Iranian Central Bank Governor Mahmoud
Bahmani described the sanctions “as worse than physical war,” proclaiming Iran
“under siege.” And Iranian business leaders worry that more sanctions are on
the way, since the United States and Europe have made clear that the longer the
impasse over its nuclear ambitions continues, the more economic and political
trouble Iran will face.
The
sanctions have also helped Washington slow Tehran’s nuclear progress. Alongside
sabotage, defections, cyber attacks, and assassinations, sanctions -- such as
the UN ban on the acquisition of so-called dual-use items, seemingly benign
technologies that could be applied to the nuclear program -- have hampered
Iran’s technological advancement. For example, the Islamic Republic, despite
its best efforts, continues to use a poor, outdated design for its centrifuges,
which frequently break down because the country cannot obtain better technology
or high-quality materials.
Yet
the sanctions do have limits. The EU oil embargo and U.S. and EU financial
restrictions have largely failed to decrease Iran’s oil revenue. Those
sanctions would have had much more impact a decade ago, when Iran averaged $19
billion a year in oil income. Oil prices are now so high that Iran can compensate
for Western pressure. Prior to the recent sanctions, the International Monetary
Fund estimated that revenue from Iran’s oil and gas exports in 2012–13 would
reach $104 billion, $23 billion more than in 2010–11. In March, The Wall Street
Journal cited estimates that sanctions could cut Iranian oil income in half --
painful but still equal to the $54 billion Iran earned from oil sales in
2005–6, the year when it decided to provoke the West by resuming nuclear
enrichment after a three-year pause. Even if sanctions could somehow decimate
Iran’s economy, there is still no guarantee that the regime would end its
pursuit of nuclear technology.
Whether
or not diplomacy results in an agreement, the sanctions have already fulfilled
the core objective of the Obama administration -- namely, kick-starting
negotiations. But that is not the right goal. Given Iran’s poor track record of
honoring agreements, negotiations remain a gamble because they may never lead
to an agreement, let alone one that can be sustained. Rather than focus on
talks that may not produce a deal, then, the United States should place far
more emphasis on supporting democracy and human rights in Iran. A democratic
Iran would likely drop state support for terrorism and end its interference in
the internal affairs of Arab countries such as Iraq and Lebanon, improving
stability in the Middle East. And although Iran’s strongly nationalist
democrats are proud of the country’s nuclear progress, their priority is to
rejoin the community of nations, so they will likely agree to peaceful
nuclearization in exchange for an end to their country’s isolation.
The
United States could assist democratic forces in Iran by providing money and
moral support. It could fund people-to-people exchanges and student
scholarships; support civil society groups providing assistance to Iranian
activists; work closely with technology companies such as Google on how to
transmit information to the Iranian people; and overhaul Voice of America’s
Persian News Network, where journalistic standards have suffered under uneven
management. It could also raise human rights abuses in every official meeting
with Iranian officials, such as the ongoing nuclear negotiations, and bring
Iranian rights violations to the United Nations and the International Court of
Justice. Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, understands the danger
of a popular revolution in his country and has done everything in his power to
prevent it. If the United States is going to take a risk, it should aim not for
a partial, insecure nuclear arrangement but the best return possible -- a
democratic Iran.
-This commentary was published in Foreign Affairs on 08/05/2012
-Patrick Clawson is Director of Research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and the editor of numerous books and studies on Iran
-Patrick Clawson is Director of Research at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and the editor of numerous books and studies on Iran
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