Can the Obama administration refrain from confrontational rhetoric on Iran?
By Saeed Isayev
Thus far, the fragile-looking nuclear deal between Iran and the
P5+1 group has been respected. The IAEA chief Yukiya Amano recently
said the nuclear deal is being implemented as planned, and yet much
remains to be done.
Success of the interim, yet historic, nuclear deal that was reached
between Iran and P5+1 in November 2013 depends on a range of
factors.
Teaching fellow of the Department of Politics and International
Studies of SOAS (University of London), Dr. Shirin Shafaie believes
that both parties (Iran - P5+1 group) are expected to respect their
obligations according the mutually agreed deal and refrain from
contradicting the essence of the agreement either with their
rhetoric or in action.
"If that's the case, then follow-up meetings will have a good
chance of ironing out the details of a permanent and more
comprehensive agreement, an agreement that would eventually lead to
the normalization of Iran's nuclear file and hopefully even to
normalization of relations between Iran and the United States," she
told Trend.
"So far Iran has kept its commitments under the interim nuclear
deal - a fact that is also confirmed by the US government.
Moreover, China, Russia and the three European states (UK, France
and Germany) have also taken steps to ensure the long-term success
of the recent nuclear deal," Shafaie said.
And yet, she adds, there are certain elements within the US foreign
policy circles which have a vested interest in the failure of this
historic deal with Iran.
"These politicians constantly try to insert influence on the Obama
Administration and thus manipulate the organic and
non-confrontational development of negotiations between Iran and
P5+1," she said.
"Therefore, the question is not whether monthly meetings will be
useful for safeguarding and further developing the Interim Deal,
but whether the Obama Administration is ready, willing, and most
importantly strong enough to refrain from taking contradictory
measures and confrontational rhetoric in the critical months
ahead," Shafaie added.
Among the "contradictory measures and confrontational rhetoric",
Shafaie named a military option on Iran, passing more sanctions
while the negotiations are ongoing, and other measures.
On the other hand, Shafaie said that Israel will be "extremely
unhappy with a permanent mutually acceptable deal" between Iran and
P5+1.
From the perspective of Israeli leaders, any genuine deal between
Iran and P5+1 will be construed as a threat to the significance of
Israel's "special relationship" with the West," she said. "Thus we
could expect a sabotage campaign emanating from Israel should a
permanent agreement be reached between Iran and the West in the
coming months."
Iran and the P5+1 held meetings in Vienna in February to work on a
comprehensive deal. Iran and the P5+1 (Russia, China, France,
Germany, UK and the US) signed an interim deal on Iran's nuclear
energy program in Geneva on November 24, 2013. The deal took effect
on January 20.
Under the agreement, six major powers agreed to give Iran access to
its $4.2 billion in revenues blocked overseas, if the country
fulfils the deal's terms, which offer sanctions relief in exchange
for steps on curbing the Iranian nuclear program.
Iran and P5+1 aim to continue their talks to reach a final
agreement to fully resolve the decade-old dispute over the Islamic
Republic's nuclear energy program. The next round of negotiations
will begin with a meeting between technical experts from the P5+1
and Iran on March 5.
Shafaie went on to add that some of the countries in the Gulf have
also benefited from the "Iranian nuclear scare" and are not very
enthusiastic about a possible rapprochement between Iran and the
US.
"However, they are also concerned with the internal security of
their regimes and realize that a more regionally interconnected and
independent security system in the Gulf would be more beneficial to
them in the long-term as opposed to excessive military and
political dependency on the US and increasing proximity of shared
interests with Israel," she believes.
As for the rest of the world, Shafaie said that indeed, there are
regional economic rivals and peer competitors who may not be very
enthusiastic about the return of a powerful Iran with its very
large natural and human resources to the realm of global trade.
"However in the long-term, virtually all countries will benefit
from more stability and prospects of long-term peace and security
in the Middle East. And normalization of Iran's relations with the
US would be an indispensable element of such promising future."
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