Will a Deal With Iran Render Conflict More Likely?

That’s the contention of Reuel Marc Gerecht and Mark Dubowitz in their WSJ op-ed. I haven’t quite processed their counter-intuitive argument so I don’t know whether I agree or disagree. Here’s the meat of it:

No American president would destroy Iranian nuclear sites without first exhausting diplomacy. The efforts by Mr. Obama and Secretary of State John Kerry to compromise with Tehran—on uranium enrichment, verification and sanctions relief, among other concerns—are comprehensive, if nothing else. If the next president chose to strike after the Iranians stonewalled or repeatedly violated Mr. Obama’s agreement, however, the newcomer would be on much firmer political ground, at home and abroad, than if he tried without this failed accord.

Without a deal the past will probably repeat itself: Washington will incrementally increase sanctions while the Iranians incrementally advance their nuclear capabilities. Without a deal, diplomacy won’t die. Episodically it has continued since an Iranian opposition group revealed in 2002 the then-clandestine nuclear program. Via this meandering diplomatic route, Tehran has gotten the West to accept its nuclear progress.

Critics of the president who suggest that a much better agreement is within reach with more sanctions are making the same analytical error as Mr. Obama: They both assume that the Iranian regime will give priority to economics over religious ideology. The president wants to believe that Iran’s “supreme leader” Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Hasan Rouhani can be weaned from the bomb through commerce; equally war-weary sanctions enthusiasts fervently hope that economic pain alone can force the mullahs to set aside their faith. In their minds Iran is a nation that the U.S., or even Israel, can intimidate and contain.

The problem is that the Islamic Republic remains, as Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif proudly acknowledges in his memoirs, a revolutionary Islamic movement. Such a regime by definition would never bend to America’s economic coercion and never gut the nuclear centerpiece of its military planning for 30 years and allow Westerners full and transparent access to its nuclear secrets and personnel. This is the revolutionary Islamic state that is replicating versions of the militant Lebanese Hezbollah among the Arab Shiites, ever fearful at home of seditious Western culture and prepared to use terrorism abroad.

Above all, the clerical regime cannot be understood without appreciating the centrality of anti-Americanism to its religious identity. The election of a Republican administration might reinvigorate Iranian fear of American military power, as the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 did for a year or two. But it did not stop Iran’s nuclear march, and there is no reason to believe now that Mr. Khamenei and the Revolutionary Guards, who oversee the nuclear program, will betray all that they hold holy.

But a nuclear deal is not going to prevent conflict either. The presidency of the so-called pragmatic mullah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani from 1989 to 1997 was an aggressive period of Iranian terrorism. If President Rouhani, Mr. Rafsanjani’s former right-hand man, can pull off a nuclear agreement, we are likely to see a variation of the 1990s Iranian aggression.

Such aggression has already begun. Revolutionary Guards are fighting in Syria and Iraq, and Iranian aid flows to the Shiite Houthis in Yemen. Wherever the Islamic Republic’s influence grows among Arab Shiites, Sunni-Shiite conflict grows worse. With greater internecine Muslim hostility, the clerical regime inevitably intensifies its anti-American propaganda and actions in an effort to compete with radical Sunnis and their competing claims to lead an anti-Western Muslim world.

Iranian adventurism, especially if it includes anti-American terrorism, will eventually provoke a more muscular U.S. response. The odds of Tehran respecting any nuclear deal while it pushes to increase its regional influence—unchecked by Washington—aren’t good.Mr. Obama may think he can snap back sanctions and a united Western front to counter nefarious Iranian nuclear behavior, but the odds aren’t good once European businesses start returning to the Islamic Republic. Washington has a weak track record of using extraterritorial sanctions against our richest and closest allies and trading partners. The French alone may join the Americans again to curtail Iran and European profits.

I don’t believe that there’s anything the Iranians could do, short of provoking direct confrontation with the U. S., which would cause President Obama to use force against them. However, it is all but inevitable that his successor will be more hawkish than he. Hillary Clinton is certainly more hawkish than President Obama and everyone in the Republican field with the possible exception of Rand Paul is even more hawkish than that.

My worry is that the predisposition to use military force may become a valence issue in U. S. politics.

15 comments… add one
  • CStanley Link

    I don’t know about the questions posed here but I do feel that we’re at a time when we need highly skilled diplomats, a president who puts American interests ahead of personal legacy, and temperance among the hawkish factions in our government- but in all cases we have the opposite. The prospects do not look good.

  • ... Link

    I’ll just skip the WSJ op-ed, and agree w/ CStanley’s comment.

  • Guarneri Link

    I was tempted to do what ice did and just say I agree with CS. But I’m weak. It seems to me that this is the money line:

    “Critics of the president who suggest that a much better agreement is within reach with more sanctions are making the same analytical error as Mr. Obama: They both assume that the Iranian regime will give priority to economics over religious ideology.” Shorter: you are dealing with nut jobs. I watched an interview of Zarif by Charlie Rose last night and my impression is stronger than ever.

    I don’t have an answer, but I do believe Obama’s High School Harry approach will not go well if consummated. It’s not enough to just cast this as hawk and dove. You are talking about irrational actors in an irrational part of the world with weapons far too powerful to be left to irrational people. I watched Zarif use every lame-assed excuse to justify Irans stance, and no doubt Obamas “deal” will be fodder for claiming same.

    Sometimes it’s best to just push away from the table and wait for another day. Our president is simply not up to the task to do that.

  • Two reactions to your comment. First, I’m in broad agreement although I would phrase it a little differently.

    Second, I’m not sure “irrational” is quite the way to phrase it. In their part of the world religious considerations are what put the mullahs into power. Consequently, it’s quite rational for them to consider them in their dealings.

  • jan Link

    The ability to “push away from the table” requires self discipline and a sensibility to the greater good, rather than to the promotion of one’s own legacy. It seems both SOS Kerry and our POTUS are in short supply of these two components in their deal-making efforts.

  • TastyBits Link

    If Iran is irrational, there is no way to come to a rational agreement with them. If you do not want them to have something, you will need to physically take it away from them or physically prevent tham from obtaining it.

    Irrational people do not respond to a “show of force”. Irrational people respond to actual force, and you can never go too far. Irrational people assume that the worst is over with each volley, and therefore, they will always think they are about to win.

    Rational people will call people they do not like irrational, but then, they expect rational behavior out of them. This calls into question the reasoning ability of the so called rational people.

    Once Iran and Saudi Arabia have nukes, they can kill each other and be done with it. Once one side has exterminated the other, they can start rebuilding, and the history of the region will be their history. Like the Picts in England, the losers will be a footnote in the history books.

  • steve Link

    Hate to spoil the party but you guys all predicted that Obama was so desperate for a deal for his legacy that he would give them anything they wanted weeks ago. You guys are already batting zero.

    That said, since you all believe the crazy mullah theory, the only logical argument you have to make is that we should nuke them now.

    CStanley- I will assume you have read the fact sheets on the proposed deal and/or commentary from the technical sites looking at it. Why do you think a treaty which would let us track all of the uranium Iran mines and buys is putting the Obama legacy ahead of American interests? Be specific.

    Steve

  • PD Shaw Link

    you guys

  • CStanley Link

    Steve it’s not about the technical details of the deal (though even there, it seems hard to pin down what has actually been agreed to.) The problem lies in enforcement because the idea of “snapping back” sanctions is a farce. So even in best case, that the deal on paper says that the limits on mining, procuring, and/or enrichment will be stringent, and even if the Iranians allow access for inspections, there will be no means of redress (short of military) if the agreement is breached.

  • Guarneri Link

    Of course you would frame it differently, Dave, you are more measured. I’m a cut and slash type guy. 😉

    We may be dancing on the head of a pin wrt “irrational.” I think by definition election of religious leaders is irrational. In any event, the interview with Zarif was fascinating. I give Rose credit for not simply calling it off as a total BS job, which I would have done. Irrational,or bald faced lying, it matters not. These are not people you can deal with in traditional terms. The notion that the terms of any agreement can be monitored is truly for children, or liars. Better to just re-boot later.

  • steve Link

    “The problem lies in enforcement because the idea of “snapping back” sanctions is a farce. ”

    So your proposal for enforcement is???

    Steve

  • Cstanley Link

    Steve- I don’t have a proposal because we’re already backed into the corner. We should never have agreed to relax sanctions until after the Iranians have earned trust.

    I say this even though I am not a fan of sanctions….partly because of humanitarian concerns (they hurt the people more than the leadership) and partly because they are a dead end. Once imposed, it is a matter of time before companies and countries start finding loopholes which undercuts the effects. And once people start doing business, they do not want to stop (in fact there is pressure to expand the economic opportunities.) Thus we get to the current situation, where the sanctions are ineffective but removing them is even worse. We have no leverage because we can’t convince even our allies (let alone partners that are not allies, like Russia) to sustain or tighten the sanction regime.

  • steve Link

    You do realize that we have not agreed to do away with sanctions?

    Steve

  • Cstanley Link

    Yes, I realize sanctions are still in place but the entire rationale for negotiations from Iran’s standpoint is ending them so we have signaled that this will happen in the framework deal (without a sufficient time for verification first.) And further, we’ve signaled it by agreeing to the repatriation of billions in frozen assets just to keep them at the table.

  • steve Link

    Just to keep them at the table? They agreed to stop making highly enriched uranium, to daily inspections of their sites, stopping construction at the heavy water plant and shutting down some of their centrifuges. We did not change any of the sanctions.

    Steve

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