Why Iran Has All The Leverage Over Obama
Sometime
next week, perhaps as early as Tuesday, President Obama will most
likely announce that his administration has reached a political
agreement with Ayatollah Khamenei’s regime on nuclear weapons.
The
deal may not be signed, it may not have any real specifics, but Obama
will hail it as the only way to stop a war with Iran and delay them from
getting a bomb.
Whatever
the contours of the “agreement” Obama announces next week, it will look
far weaker than it was supposed to look just months ago. Over the past
week alone, U.S. negotiators reportedly have conceded to Iran: 1) the need for a written agreement; 2) the ability of Iran to use nuclear centrifuges underground; and 3) the need for Iran to disclose the full range of its current nuclear capabilities.
Why, as Lando Calrissian might ask, is this deal getting worse all the time?
The simple answer is that Obama’s broader Middle East strategy leaves him with zero leverage over Iran. The New York Times Thomas Friedman explains:
The Obama team’s best argument for doing this deal with Iran is that, in time, it could be “transformational.” That is, the ending of sanctions could open Iran to the world and bring in enough fresh air — Iran has been deliberately isolated since 1979 by its ayatollahs and Revolutionary Guard Corps — to gradually move Iran from being a revolutionary state to a normal one, and one less inclined to threaten Israel.If one assumes that Iran already has the know-how and tools to build a nuclear weapon, changing the character of its regime is the only way it becomes less threatening.
The
only reason Khamenei’s regime is negotiating with Obama at all is
because they want the world’s economic sanctions on Iran lifted. In
return for lifting those sanctions, Iran is supposed to give up its
ambitions for a nuclear weapon. That’s the basic outline of the deal:
Iran gets the sanctions lifter and Obama gets an end to their nuclear
weapons program.
But
read the above Friedman paragraphs again. Obama’s Middle East strategy
is premised on “transforming” the current Iranian government by ending
sanctions on Iran. This means that Obama wants the sanctions on Iran
lifted just as badly as Ayatollah Khamenei.
Now, granted, Obama and Khamenei have very different ideas about what the outcome of the end of sanctions will be. Obama
believes an Iran without economic sanctions will lead to if not
Kamanei’s demise, than it least the marginalization of him and his
followers. Khamenei, on the other hand, believes an Iran without
sanctions will allow his regime to strengthen their control over not
just Iran, but also the entire Middle East.
Who
has a better understanding of Iran, its politics, its people, and the
impact of ending economic sanctions? Is it Khamenei, who has ruled his
country for over two decades? Or is it Obama, who honestly thought the
power of his own celebrity could save Democrats from crushing defeat in
2010? We’ll see.
The
answer to that question is ultimately irrelevant though when judging
who currently has more leverage in the nuclear weapons talks. Since both
Obama and Iran want sanctions on Iran to be lifted, Obama has no way to
force any real concessions from Iran on nuclear issues. His threat to
continue the current sanctions, or enact new ones, are hollow. Everyone
knows he wants the sanctions lifted anyway. Why should Iran concede
anything?
That’s why they are not.
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