Iran poised to choose poverty over nuclear disarmament
Ray Takeyh is a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
As
the Nov. 24 deadline
for Iran and the great powers to negotiate a comprehensive nuclear agreement
approaches, both sides may be confronted with
momentous choices. What happens if the decade-long search for an
arms-control accord falters? Although there is little evidence that the
West is contemplating alternative strategies, important actors in Iran
are beginning to consider life after diplomatic failure.
Since the exposure of its illicit nuclear program in 2002,
the Islamic republic has wrestled with a contradictory mandate: how to
expand its nuclear infrastructure while sustaining a measure of economic
growth. The reformist president Mohammad Khatami avoided debilitating
economic sanctions by suspending nuclear activities. Then came the
tumultuous presidency of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which privileged nuclear
empowerment over economic vitality. Current president Hassan Rouhani has
succeeded in negotiating an interim agreement — the Joint Plan of Action
— but he faces diminishing prospects for a final accord. Iran has
finally come to the crossroads, and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei and many hard-line elements seem ready to forge ahead with
their nuclear ambitions even if they collide with economic imperatives.
During the past few years, Khamenei has been
pressing his concept of a resistance economy whereby Iran would shed its
need for foreign contracts and commerce. “Instead of reliance on the
oil revenues, Iran should be managed through reliance on its internal
forces and the resources on the ground,” he said
last month. Writing in the conservative daily Khorasan last year,
commentator Mehdi Hasanzadeh went further: “An economy that relies on
domestic [production] rather than preliminary agreement or the lifting
of a small part of sanctions or even all sanctions will bring a great
economic victory.” In the impractical universe of conservatives, Iran
can meet the basic needs of its people by developing local industries.
Iran’s reactionaries seem to prefer national poverty to nuclear
disarmament.
The notions of self-sufficiency and
self-reliance have long been hallmarks of conservative thinking in Iran.
Since the 1980s, a central tenet of the hard-liners’ foreign policy
perspective has been that Iran’s revolution is a remarkable historical
achievement that the United States can’t accept or accommodate. Western
powers will always conspire against an Islamic state that they cannot
control, this thinking goes, and the only way Iran can secure its
independence and achieve its national objectives is to lessen its
reliance on its principal export commodity. Hard-liners believe that
isolation from the international community can best preserve Iran’s
ideological identity. This siege mentality drives Iran’s quest for
nuclear arms and their deterrent power.
Although many in the West may privately hope
that the interim accord will simply roll on in absence of a
comprehensive agreement, Iranian adherence is hardly assured. The
history of Iran’s nuclear diplomacy suggests that it will abandon the
agreement when it has sufficient technological capacity to carry out a
rapid surge of its program. Between 2003 and 2005, while the Europeans
negotiated a suspension of Iran’s program, Tehran continued to
accumulate nuclear materials and hone its research skills and, when it
was ready, abandoned its pledges.
Ali Akbar Salehi, head of Iran’s Atomic Energy
Organization, has already established the pretense for introducing
speedier centrifuges. “New centrifuges will be used for production of
vaccines,” he noted last month. Then, in an uncharacteristically honest
moment, Salehi acknowledged that “such kinds of machines cannot be
purchased at the world market. They are not sold as they are said to be
of dual use.” And it is precisely that duality that attracts Iran to
machines that can produce highly enriched uranium with speed and
efficiency. Once Iran’s skilled scientists are confident of their
mastery of the new machines, the Joint Plan of Action is likely to meet
the fate of the other agreements that Tehran has negotiated with
European powers.
In the coming weeks, the ebb and flow of the
high-wire negotiations are sure to capture headlines. We will see
furious diplomacy and foreign ministers journeying back and forth to
European capitals. But it already seems clear that Khamenei and the
hard-liners are poised to choose nuclear power over economic prosperity —
a decision that would probably prove catastrophic for their country.
Rouhani may yet be able to temper, for a while, such rash impulses. But
by loudly contemplating alternative strategies should diplomacy exhaust
itself, Iran seems to be crossing a dangerous threshold.
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