Weststill repeating old mistakes with Iran
By Giulio Terzi
On
July 14, it will be exactly one year since the nuclear agreement between Iran
and the P5+1 group of nations was concluded in Vienna. It will be an
opportunity for the proponents of those controversial negotiations with Iran to
face some harsh realities about the nature of the regime.
Anyone
who understood Iran’s clear patterns of past behavior should have realized how
dim were the chances of a 'Nuclear Deal' - the JCPOA - in getting from the
regime political moderation and compliance with international norms. Yet that
didn’t stop a wide segment of political and economic establishments in both the
US and Europe from embracing Iranian President Hassan Rouhani as a moderate and
holding onto that embrace right up to the present day.
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A one-sided and untruthful narrative has been
willingly spread, to support Iran policies based on plain ignorance of recent
history. Many aspects have been either neglected or twisted. The negative
experience of Western Governments, when they have tried to reach out to
“moderates” inside the Iranian regime, was completely overlooked, since every
attempt has been burned by those same “moderates” – each more predictably than
the last.
In
the year since Rouhani’s charm offensive led to his securing relief from
economic sanctions, he has shown himself to be just as duplicitous and
deceptive as former Presidents Mohammad Khatami and Akbar Rafsanjani. With
them, American and European Governments made huge efforts in promoting dialogue
and understanding about the most important regional and bilateral issues. But
that outreach ultimately led to intensification of anti-Western rhetoric and
crackdowns on actual reformist trends within Iranian society.
President
Rouhani himself is now part of the escalating rhetoric that is emerging out of
the nuclear agreement. In October 2015 Iran did test a ballistic missile with
nuclear capacity - a violation of UN Security Council resolutions that could
imply sanctions broader than those the Obama administration has already
established. Carelessly, in the midst of international outcry the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps carried out other missile tests: four more, as we
know. It did so with the explicit blessing of President Rouhani. When faced
with light enforcement measures by the US, Rouhani ordered his Defense Ministry
to ramp up production of these weapons. The Iranian President apparently
believed that his American counterpart would not respond to further Iranian
provocations. He was right. None of the latest missile tests drew
countermeasures or reactions.
The
West should have read recent history more carefully when the argument was made
regarding the prospects for Tehran’s moderation following the nuclear
agreement. Hassan Rouhani made it clear years earlier that his interest in
negotiations was driven not by moderate views but by the political expediency
of using negotiations in service of hardline goals. When, in the mid-2000s, he
served as the lead negotiator on the nuclear issue, Rouhani boasted to his
fellow officials that he had helped to maintain a calm environment so that
Western powers would alleviate some pressure while Iran continued to develop
its nuclear program and expand its uranium enrichment capabilities. It should
have been clear to Western negotiators in 2015 that this was exactly the
endgame that the recently-elected Iranian President had in mind. It is likely
that the 'P5+1’ knew full well that moderation was not really on the table.
Iran’s
record speaks for itself. It includes an ongoing growth in ballistic missile
stockpiles, provocations toward Western targets, mass arrests of journalists,
activists, and dual nationals, and a skyrocketing rate of executions. Nearly
1,000 people were hanged in 2015. More than 2,500 have been executed since
Rouhani took office. In the meantime, Tehran’s egregious regional policies
dispatch thousands of troops to Syria to keep in place Assad and a regime
responsible for crimes against humanity, as stated by the UN; support
Lebanese Hezbollah, Shia and proxy militias in Iraq and Yemen, not to mention
ransacking the Saudi embassy in Teheran.
Anyone
who understands how small the return has been for the West following nuclear
negotiations, and how many risks exist in promoting business with large
sections of the Iranian economy controlled by the Ayatollah, the IRGC and
entities linked to severe violations of human rights and to terror financing
ought to pay attention to the voice of Iranian dissidents who gathered in a major rally in Paris organized by the
National Council of Resistance of Iran, led by Maryam Rajavi on July 9.
The “Free Iran” gathering, joined by hundreds of European and American
politicians in a bipartisan fashion, as well as prominent Middle Eastern
figures, such as Prince Turki al-Faisal of Saudi Arabia, sent a narrative that is more
reflective of the reality than that which the proponents of the deal wanted us
to believe a year ago.
It
is time to realize that as far as the Iranian people are concerned, the outcome
of negotiations has been overwhelmingly negative. That is the effect of any
Western policy that further empowers regime insiders at the expense of those
who are vying every day to change the regime into a truly democratic system.
An
Iran that is in the hand of religious extremists is an Iran that is harmful to
Western interests. Any successful policy on Iran should hinge any improvement
of relations upon improvement of human rights in Iran, should prevent any
dealings with the Revolutionary Guards, the main apparatus of murder and
terror, and should call for serious consequences for Iran dispatching its
Guards and mercenaries to Syria, Iraq, Lebanon and other parts of the Middle
East.
This
is a policy that is in line with our values and principles, coherent with the
commitment undertaken by the European Union and its member States to put at the
center of their Foreign and Security Policy the promotion of human rights,
fundamental freedoms and the rule of Law - the only policy which provides
assurance to our regional allies and identifies us with the aspirations of
Iranians crying for freedom.
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