Europe, Trump and the Iran Deal: The Theme Of Many Bizarre Diplomatic Twists And Turns
01 May 2018By
Amir Taheri
The so-called Iran nuclear deal, a witches' brew concocted by that most
deserving of Nobel peace laureates Barack Obama, has furnished the theme of
many bizarre diplomatic twists and turns. The latest is an attempt by sections
of the European Union to persuade President Donald Trump to renege on his
campaign promise to improve or scrap the "deal."
During the past year, the EU's foreign policy point-woman, Federica Mogherini
has been collecting air-miles calling on world capitals, including Washington
and Rangoon, to demand "commitment" to the "deal" as if this were an article
of faith in an as-yet undefined religion.
The retiring British Ambassador to Washington Sir Peter Westmacott has been
granting interviews to Iranian media demanding kudos for having spent "much
time and energy" trying to persuade the US to stick by the "deal".
Outgoing German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel also boasts about having spent
much energy in his final months in office "defending the deal" as a Crusading
knight protecting a holy relic.
And now is the turn of the French Ambassador to Washington, Gerard Araud, to
launch a Twitter campaign to persuade the Trump administration to "honor" that
most questionable item in Obama's legacy.
Basically, the Europeans advance four arguments.
The first, advanced by Westmacott, is that discarding the "deal" could damage
the credibility of "major powers", that is to say Britain, France, Germany and
the US that signed it along with China and Russia.
There are two troubles with that argument.
The first is that it assumes that any diplomatic deal should be treated like a
Catholic marriage that one abides "till death do us part". Such an assumption
would mean the end of diplomacy as the art of responding to changing
realities.
If we were to go by Mogherini's or Westmacott's "commitment" to an
unchangeable "deal", Britain and France should have never denounced the "peace
accord" that Chamberlain signed in Munich in 1939.
However, the EU argument about "respecting signatures" has another problem
because nobody signed anything.
The so-called Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) is no more than a
press release stating a set of desirable moves by Iran and the P5+1 which,
incidentally, didn't include the EU as such. Moreover, there are significant
differences between the JCPOA's English and Persian versions, making various
imaginative re-readings, a la Roland Barthes or Jacques Derrida, possible.
Mogherini cannot claim respect for "signatures" which never happened and that,
had they happened, would not have included the EU.
The second argument is that the "deal" is working and, thus, the dictum "if it
ain't broken why fix it" applies.
That assumption is not borne out by facts.
Iran and the P5+1 have either tried to circumvent or have brazenly broken
their promises.
Sir Peter, the retired UK diplomat, certainly knows that his government, in
violation of the "deal" still refuses to allow the Iranian Embassy to open a
bank account in London. Nor has the UK government unfrozen more than $600
million in Iranian assets.
The Germans and the French still refuse to issues export guarantees to firms
seeking trade with Iran. Huge memorandums of understanding are signed but put
on the back-burner as Iran remains subject to sanctions by the United Nations,
the EU and US.
As for Russia, during an official visit to Iran last week, Chairman of Russia
Duma Vyacheslav Volodin heard an avalanche of complaints.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown what he thinks of Iran, a supposed
ally notably in Syria, by his recent treatment of Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani in Ankara. At the end of a "summit" with Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, Rouhani demanded a two-some with Putin. The Russian consented
to a brief standing encounter which lasted around eight minutes. The Tsar
Vladimir had no time to sit down with the Iranian mullah for a cup of tea.
As for China, it says Iran could use its frozen assets, piled up through oil
exports to the People's Republic, only by buying Chinese goods.
Beijing even refuses to let the 3,000 or so Iranian students in China to
receive their stipends through banks, forcing the embassy to send people
around to distribute cash among the budding scholars.
Ironically, the only P5+1 member that has partially complied with the "deal"
is the US, including by Mafia-style smuggling of $1.7 billion cash to Tehran
and the transfer of $700 million a month since August 2015.
Iran, for its part, asserts that there has been no change in its nuclear
project.
Earlier this month, spokesman for Iran Atomic Energy Agency Behruz Kamalvand
told a press conference in Tehran that the Iran's nuclear project was "going
full speed ahead" with "new and more ambitious plans under preparation."
More importantly, Iran has managed to block international inspection of key
research and development centers by claiming they are military sites and thus
off limits.
Less than half of Iran's enriched uranium stocks have been shipped abroad,
along with 10 percent of plutonium accumulated at the Arak plant.
Last week, marking National Nuclear Day, Rouhani unveiled what he called "83
new nuclear projects" as slaps in the face of the American "Great Satan."
Why should Mogherini or Araud beat their chests about a "deal" not honored by
either side?
The ambassador advances one last argument: If you scrap the "deal" how could
you be sure Iran will not go "full speed ahead" with its nuclear ambitions?
This is a casuistic argument: accept the bad for fear of getting the worse.
Since the JCPOA was unveiled Iran's national currency has fallen by some 40
percent to an all-time low against foreign currencies, including the Iraqi
dinar and the UAE dirham.
The Tehran government cannot regularly pay the salaries of its employees. Had
it not been for the cash smuggled and funneled by Obama, the mullahs would
have been unable to pay their military either. Right now, Tehran has
difficulty bankrolling the Lebanese "Hezbollah" and paying the salaries of
Bashar al-Assad's regime forces and civil service.
So the Obama "deal", as Trump said during his campaign, is a bad deal.
What Trump didn't say was that the "deal" was bad, both for Iran and the rest
of the world.
Araud would do well to re-read what Laurent Fabius, then France's Foreign
Minister, said in 2015: "France will not accept a deal if it is not clear that
inspections can be done at all Iranian installations ... We'll accept a deal,
but not any deal."
It was partly because of France's refusal to give the JCPOA legal status by
signing that the Obama "deal" was launched as an informal initiative.
Interestingly, Araud who now campaigns for the "deal" was appointed by Fabius,
who took care to have a pinch of salt about it.
Amir Taheri was the executive editor-in-chief of the daily Kayhan in Iran
from 1972 to 1979. He has worked at or written for innumerable publications,
published eleven books, and has been a columnist for Asharq Al-Awsat since
1987
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