Jessica Mathews: why scuttling the Iran deal is MAD

Summary: Trump apparently intends to scuttle the nuclear arms control deal with Iran. Here an expert explains that the reasons he gives are wrong and that the consequences will be ugly for both us and for them. For more information see the previous posts in this series, listed at the end.

Iranian students with pictures of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei
before the former US embassy in Tehran, November 2011.

Iranian students with pictures of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei in front of the former US embassy, Tehran, November 2011

The Iran Deal: Whatโ€™s at Stake

By Jessica T. Mathews at the New York Review of Books, 23 November 2017.
Published with their generous permission.

Imagine a business deal among multiple parties. It is so complex that after years of negotiation the contract runs to 159 pages. Once agreed upon, the project proceeds without problems, but two years later one of the signers changes his mind. His lawyers rewrite some of the dealโ€™s provisions, and he announces heโ€™ll pull out unless the other parties accept the new terms.

That, in essence, is what Donald Trump announced on October 13 when he refused to certify to Congress that the Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), was working. Certification does not affect the deal itself. It is a purely domestic act. The president is required to do it every ninety days by the terms of the legislation with which Congress approved the JCPOA in 2015. Repeated certifications of this kind are commonly used in contentious situations, such as when sanctions are waived or arms are sold to a problematic buyer, to assure Congress that its conditions are still being met. It is difficult to imagine a president taking what should have been a routine official signature as a reminder of his predecessorโ€™s achievement and therefore an intolerable personal insult. But that is what happened.

On the occasion of his second required certification last July, Trump exploded in anger at his aides for not providing him with an alternative course and made it clear that he didnโ€™t intend to sign again โ€” whether Iran had violated the deal or not. Since then his national security team has frantically sought to come up with a ploy that would satisfy the president without immediately pulling the United States out of the nuclear deal. They have tested various options in public settings and private conversations with European cosigners of the agreement. None was well received, to put it mildly.

Nuclear Kraken
Arms control treaties have prevented this, so far. Art by lchappell.

At the same time, stunningly, the intelligence community and the leaders of the State Department, the Pentagon, the military, and the National Security Council all publicly attested that Iran is, in fact, meeting its commitments under the deal. Secretary of Defense James Mattis went further. At a hearing of the Senate Armed Services Committee, when he was pressed by Maine senator Angus King into a yes or no answer as to whether he believed that staying in the deal was in the United Statesโ€™ national security interest, Mattis paused, swallowed, and finally choked out, โ€œYes, Senator, I do.โ€

Though the presidentโ€™s refusal to certify has no direct international consequence, what he said on October 13 casts the dealโ€™s future into grave doubt, has shifted the political ground in Tehran, and created new strains across the Atlantic. The speech was a hash of inflammatory rhetoric, gratuitous insults, false claims of Iranian violations, and a recital of the dealโ€™s flaws, real or imaginary. Then, in what is becoming a familiar move, he tossed the ball to Congress, directing it to unilaterally alter the deal to his specifications, with the threat that if โ€œwe are not able to reach a solution working with Congress and our allies, then the agreement will be terminatedโ€ฆby me.โ€ Congress has sixty days to follow decertification by reimposing the sanctions on Iran that were waived under the JCPOA (requiring only fifty votes in the Senate), follow the presidentโ€™s direction to rewrite the deal (requiring sixty votes), or follow its natural inclination and do nothing. For once, this would be the path of wisdom.

The Iran nuclear deal was trashed as a โ€œhistoric mistakeโ€ and worse by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu before it was concluded, a view picked up in an aggressive AIPAC lobbying campaign and echoed by Republicans in Congress, often out of a purely partisan desire to deny Barack Obama a major diplomatic legacy. Dumping on the agreement became a litmus test in the GOP presidential primaries. Candidates one-upped one another to take the most extreme stand. Scott Walker promised to revoke the deal โ€œon day oneโ€ in the White House. Ted Cruz said that he would โ€œrip [it] to shreds.โ€ This was the crucible from which Trumpโ€™s โ€œdumb,โ€ โ€œstupid,โ€ โ€œone-sided,โ€ โ€œworst-everโ€ rhetoric emerged. He is now trapped in it. One wouldnโ€™t expect him to have read the dealโ€™s text, but judging by his shifting criticisms, he has no idea of what it actually requires.

He is not alone. Many legislators who voted for the Iran nuclear deal in 2015, as well as some who criticize Trump for threatening to overturn it, now feel compelled to join the chorus of criticism to some degree. They have been misled.

About the deal.

In fact, the deal is technically very strong. Iran was on the threshold of acquiring nuclear weapons when the last phase of intensive negotiations began in 2013. Under the deal it gave up all of its highly enriched uranium and 97% of its low-enriched uranium. The 300 kilograms it is allowed to keep (for fifteen years), if it were fully enriched, would not be enough to make a single bomb. Iranโ€™s centrifuges were cut from 19,000 to 6,000, and its underground enrichment facility (which is relatively impervious to bombing) has been converted to a research-and-development facility. All of this shuts down the pathway to a bomb fueled by uranium for at least fifteen years. The pathway to a plutonium bomb is shut down by an agreement to disable Iranโ€™s single plutonium production reactor (in perpetuity), to cut its heavy water stockpile, and to prohibit reprocessing, the technique that separates plutonium from spent nuclear fuel.

The nuclear deal subjects Iran to a range of monitoring and inspection requirements, covering declared and undeclared sites, including military ones, and facilities and processes that have never been subject to international inspection elsewhere. The critically important terms of the Additional Protocol give the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) the most comprehensive inspection authority โ€” in perpetuity. This and much more is overseen by a Joint Commission of the JCPOAโ€™s signatories, to which disagreements and charges of violation can be brought. Trump couldnโ€™t have been more in error when he described all this as โ€œweak inspections.โ€ To the contrary, in the words of the IAEAโ€™s director general, Yukiya Amano, โ€œIran is subject to the worldโ€™s most robust nuclear verification regime.โ€

Bomb Iran sign

About Iran.

Criticisms of the deal have evolved over time. Initially, many simply opposed any deal on the grounds that Iran would cheat, as it had on nuclear issues for years. That fear has dissipated since 2015 as Tehran met the dealโ€™s exigent requirements and did so much more quickly than expected. A couple of minor transgressions (for example, a stockpile 0.08% over an allowed limit) have been detected, raised in the Joint Commission, and corrected, demonstrating that both close inspections and prompt enforcement mechanisms are working.

Netanyahuโ€™s fierce early opposition, and to a lesser degree that of the Gulf states, was based on the belief that any deal would give Iranโ€™s government greater legitimacy and the fear that if the nuclear issue were resolved, the frozen relations between Iran and the United States that have lasted since the Islamic Revolution of 1979 would begin to thaw. That, in turn, could shift the balance of power in the Middle East in a major way. The administration has picked up this argument wholeheartedly, arguing, as Secretary of State Rex Tillerson put it in a meeting of the nuclear dealโ€™s signatories, that โ€œlifting the sanctions as required under the terms of the JCPOA has enabled Iranโ€™s unacceptable behavior.โ€

In fact, Iranโ€™s growing influence in Iraq, Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, and Lebanon has nothing to do with the nuclear deal. It is, above all, the result of the US having removed Tehranโ€™s two most serious enemies โ€” the Taliban and Saddam Hussein โ€” and, to a lesser degree, of the major part in the battle against ISIS played by Iranian forces and Iranian-funded proxies and terrorist groups. Iran has exploited the strategic vacuums created by the many states in the region that are mired in conflicts to which it has been a major contributor but not the primary cause. The $50 billion in frozen Iranian assets that were released as part of the deal do not make a critical difference. Tehran had enough money for these uses even under the most severe sanctions. Nor is there a shred of evidence, as Trump is in the best position to know, that the deal has caused the US to refrain from standing up to Iranโ€™s nonnuclear transgressions out of fear that Tehran would abandon the deal.

More seriously, with the deal in force, attention has shifted to its sunset provisions and to what it does not cover. Critics argue that when various prohibitions end in ten, fifteen, twenty, or twenty-five years, Iran will be free to sprint to a nuclear weapon. The most important provisions of the deal last at least fifteen years. A vast amount can change in that time.

Iranโ€™s revolutionary generation, for instance, will have left the scene by then. The younger generations are more secular, highly educated, and eager to end Iranโ€™s international isolation so that they can find ways to use their skills. And of course the most important prohibitions โ€” on having a nuclear weapon or a weapons program โ€” are permanent, as are the Additional Protocol and Iranโ€™s membership in the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT). Nearly all arms control agreements, it is worth noting, are time-limited, because they entail the scary risk of giving up military assets. The NPT itself, the long pole in the global nonproliferation tent, was initially only a twenty-five-year commitment. It was not until the end of that period that its then nearly two hundred members voted to make the treaty permanent.

Donald Trump's nuclear proliferation policy

Limitations of the deal.

There were two powerful reasons why the negotiations for the Iran deal did not cover ballistic missiles, support of terrorists, and other issues on which American and Iranian interests clash. Sanctions brought Iran to the table, but what made the difference was that they were not just multilateral but nearly universal. Major non-Western purchasers of Iranian oil like Japan and India were persuaded to find alternative suppliers. But this unanimity, which rests on decades of building international norms, treaties, and institutions to halt nuclear proliferation, does not extend to any other issue.

Also, as former secretary of state John Kerry has recently pointed out, putting more issues on the table would have multiplied the number of tradeoffs in play, thereby weakening the purely nuclear provisions. The strongest nuclear deal comes from an undiluted focus on the nuclear issues.

The Iran deal is by no means perfect. There is ambiguity in some of its provisions, especially regarding what research and development are permitted. The uncertainties are particularly fraught where there is ambiguity in the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, as in the case of research that has more than one application but could contribute to making nuclear weapons. Some of the disagreements that must be hammered out divide the Joint Commissionโ€™s non-Iranian members. Above all, effective enforcement over time requires that no violations be swept under the rug and that all parties be confident that when an issue is raised, it is in the interest of preserving and strengthening the deal, not destroying it. That assurance has already suffered a significant blow.

Trump’s actions.

In short, the Iran deal barely resembles the deal its opponents denounce. It does not provide โ€œa coverโ€ for an ongoing nuclear program. Quite the reverse. If it collapses, its intrusive inspections will no longer provide assurance that Iran is not engaging in a weapons program. If the administrationโ€™s concern is truly about what might happen in a decade or more, by what twisted logic does it make sense to remove the constraints and allow such programs to begin right away?

The best light that can be cast on the policy announced on October 13 is that officials tried to find a path between the presidentโ€™s refusal to certify the deal and an immediate pullout and collapse of the JCPOA. Perhaps if they could buy some time, especially if a way could be found to avoid the need for future signatures, they could come up with an alternative. After a high-profile speech, replete with fierce denunciations of Iran and the nuclear deal, the president might have felt he had fulfilled his campaign pledge and could go on to other things, even if actual policy didnโ€™t change all that much. โ€œItโ€™s hard to think of a policy that makes less sense than the prior administrationโ€™s terrible and misguided deal with the Castro regime,โ€ Trump thundered last June. โ€œTherefore, effective immediately, I am canceling the last administrationโ€™s completely one-sided deal.โ€ Yet he left the main pillars of Obamaโ€™s Cuba policy intact.

If this was the hope, it has to some degree already faded. Regardless of what Congress does during its sixty-day window, and what Tehran and European governments do in response, the administration has managed to craft something rare, if not unique: a policy that has only downsides for the United States. The possible consequences, short- and long-term, can range only from bad to awful.

The least damaging outcome would be the following: Congress sidesteps the trap Trump has laid, neither reimposing nuclear sanctions on a compliant state nor trying to unilaterally alter a multilateral international agreement; the administration does not reimpose sanctions by executive order or a โ€œsnapbackโ€ vote in the UN Security Council; Tehran chooses to stick with the deal; and Europe does the same, proceeding with investments made in Iran by Airbus, Siemens, Total, Renault, Peugeot, and others after sanctions were lifted.

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani seen on a monitor during his address to the UN General Assembly, September 2017.ย Chang W. Lee/The New York Times/Redux.

Hassan Rouhani

Consequences.

Even so, the shift in political strength in Iran from moderates led by President Hassan Rouhani to hard-liners led by the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), the Guardian Council, and others would be significant. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, no moderate but a skeptical supporter of the nuclear deal and its promised economic gain, would move rightward with that shift. Trumpโ€™s insults of the Supreme Leader, the IRGC, and Iranians in general draw all factions closer together, narrowing the gap between the solid majority that gave the moderate Rouhani a landslide reelection victory last spring and the hard-liners who oppose domestic reforms and reengagement with the world for both ideological and personal economic reasons.

At a minimum, a rift would open between the United States and its closest allies in Europe. How deep it goes would depend on how aggressively Washington pressures France, Germany, and the UK to follow its lead and what it does with direct and indirect (so-called โ€œsecondaryโ€) sanctions on entities that do business with Iran. Fomenting divisions across the Atlantic is a major Russian goal, so the rift would be an unexpected gift to Moscow. Russiaโ€™s aim to raise its influence across the Middle East would also benefit since its principal ties in Iran are with the IRGC.

Even if the deal does not collapse, continuing uncertainty about what America might do next would take a toll. Fear of the reimposition of sanctions has already led Apple and Google to drop apps produced by exactly the younger, internationally oriented Iranians that US policy should be reaching out to. Economic recovery in Iran will falter as investors hang back.

The greatest loss will be to the value of Americaโ€™s word. The most obvious immediate effect may be on the already slim hope of a diplomatic settlement to the North Korean nuclear crisis. But the loss will potentially be felt on any issue, from the largest negotiations to the smallest, in private talks and in military-to-military contacts. In Iran and worldwide, friends and adversaries will conclude that the United States canโ€™t be trusted.

If, instead, the nuclear deal falls apart, through any one of a dozen scenarios made possible by the new policy, the consequences will be far worse. Hard-line opponents in Iran will get precisely what they wish for: the demise of the deal without any of the blame. If Iran brings a charge to the Joint Commission that the US has violated the deal, the US will be isolated. With an increase in the power of conservatives at home and greater legitimacy abroad for having agreed to and abided by nuclear constraints, and a heightened sense of America as an enemy, Tehran may well pursue a more aggressive foreign policy in the region. Active conflict with the US โ€” planned or unplanned โ€” is not unlikely.

If the dealโ€™s other six parties decide to continue it without the United States, Washington would look weaker โ€” or at least easier to ignore โ€” than at any time since it launched the creation of a rules-based international order at the close of World War II. Alternatively, if the US overuses economic sanctions to coerce others to its chosen path, it will jeopardize the long-term status of the dollar as the worldโ€™s reserve currency. Nothing would make China and Russia happier.

A collapse of the deal would have profound effects on global efforts to control nuclear weapons. If Iran restarted its weapons program, there would be little hope of reconstituting a global coalition against it, or at least doing so under US leadership. Washington would be back where it was in 2013, facing a choice between accepting a new nuclear-armed state or starting a major war against an adversary more than twice the size of Iraq. If Iran became a nuclear state, others in the region, beginning with Saudi Arabia, would be determined to follow. At the very least, the enormous boost to the half-century-long global nonproliferation effort that the successful negotiation of the Iran deal represented would be lost.

One outcome the administration seems to be counting on will almost certainly not occur. If the Iran nuclear deal collapses through a US walkout or a slow death by escalating assertions of violations and bad faith by both sides, no better deal will be found. Either weโ€™ll โ€œput more teeth into this obligation,โ€ Secretary Tillerson blithely explained to the press, โ€œor letโ€™s just forget the whole thing. Weโ€™ll walk away and start all over.โ€ Short of war, that will not happen. The US could never reassemble the coalition that made the Iran deal possible. Iran would not return to the bargaining table. If, by some unlikely circumstance, negotiations did resume, the US would find that it had to put more โ€” not less โ€” on the table to get more concessions from Iran.

Trumpโ€™s October 13 speech suggests that the president has allowed himself to be convinced by the familiar neocon argument that the adversary of the moment is politically fragile and an economic weakling: if the US applies more pressure for a little longer, the argument goes, its goals will be achieved. Lifting of sanctions under the Iran deal โ€œthrew Iranโ€™s dictatorship a political and economic lifeline,โ€ Trump claimed, โ€œjust before what would have been the total collapse of the Iranian regime.โ€ This is so far from reality that it would be funny if it were not such a perilous illusion.

How we got here. How to move forward.

The history of USโ€“Iran relations, stretching back to 1953 when a US-British coup overthrew Iranโ€™s democratically elected prime minister, is an almost surreal tale of mistakes, miscalculations, policy reversals, and upheaval on both sides. The US remembers the hostage crisis of 1979โ€“1981, screams of โ€œDeath to America,โ€ and being called โ€œthe Great Satan.โ€ Iran remembers that in the formative event of the Islamic Republicโ€™s history, the eight-year Iranโ€“Iraq war, the US sided with the invader, Saddam Hussein, and ignored his use of chemical weapons. The US remembers Iranian mines and naval attacks in the Persian Gulf and Hezbollahโ€™s attacks on Israel. Iran remembers the โ€œaxis of evil,โ€ the shooting down of a passenger airliner by a US Navy ship, and talk of regime change. The distrust generated by this saga will not soon be overcome.

The only alternative is a less emotional, forward-looking approach to policy guided by a few truths about the Gulf region that cannot be wished away. Iran, by virtue of its size, population, resources, strategic location, and deep historical roots, is the dominant power there. None of the conflicts currently roiling the region can be resolved without its participation. It is the leading Shia state. Aside from Israel, the USโ€™s regional allies are principally Sunni, but US interests are emphatically not served by taking sides in that sectarian divide. The region is home to an enormous US military presence, and the risk of inadvertent military conflict is high.

Looking ahead, the primary US goal must be that Iran not become a nuclear power. Every Iranian threat and every one of the issues on which Washington and Tehran disagree becomes far more dangerous if that happens. Continuing with the agreement now in place, strengthening it, and building on it when conditions allow are the obvious priorities. Beyond that, the US should be supporting Iranโ€™s slow evolution into a country that is less revolutionary and more interest-driven, which means strengthening its moderate political forces at the expense of the ideologues and the isolationists. Trumpโ€™s policy, including his officialsโ€™ sly allusions to regime change, does precisely the reverse.

As it defends its regional allies and searches for sustainable political solutions to the regionโ€™s conflicts, Washington should be encouraging Iranโ€™s economic development and international engagement, for a pariah state will always behave like one. Enriching oneโ€™s adversary may seem counterintuitive, but Tehranโ€™s support of Hezbollah and numerous militias is determined by what it sees as its interests, not by its budget. Even in the deep economic hole created by the sanctions, Iran made room for the funds to support its proxies abroad. Political solutions to the regionโ€™s conflicts require Iranโ€™s participation, and this means more normal relations between Tehran and Washington. Both governments need to recognize the risk in having no official lines of communication. Not talking, then Joint Chiefs chairman Michael Mullen warned in 2011, means that โ€œwe donโ€™t understand each other. If something happens, itโ€™s virtually assured that we wonโ€™t get it right.โ€

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Jessica T. Mathews

About the author.

Jessica Tuchman Mathews is a distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peaceย after serving as president for 18 years. Before that she served in both the executive and legislative branches of the US government, in management and research in the nonprofit arena, and in journalism and science policy.

She was director of the Council on Foreign Relationsโ€™ Washington program and a senior fellow from 1994 to 1997. While there she published her 1997ย Foreign Affairsย article, โ€œPower Shift,โ€ chosen by the editors as one of the most influential in the its seventy-five years.

From 1982 to 1993, she was VP and director of research of the World Resources Institute, a center for policy research on environmental and natural resource management issues.ย She served on the Editorial Board of theย Washington Postย from 1980 to 1982. Later, Mathews wrote a popular weekly column for theย Washington Post.

From 1977 to 1979, she was director of the Office of Global Issues at the National Security Council. In 1993, she returned to government as deputy to the undersecretary of state for global affairs. Before that she served on the staff of the Committee on Energy and the Environment of the House Interior Committee.

Mathews also has an extensive history of leadership roles in non-profit, academic, and scientific organizations, and many publications in foreign policy and scientific journals. She has a PhD in molecular biology from the California Institute of Technology.

See her Wikipedia entry. Also see her recent articles at the New York Review of Books.

For More Information

Important: Understand the context of Trumps decision —ย For 50 years Republicans have fought against treaties that broughtย peace.

If you found this post of use,ย like us on Facebookย andย follow us on Twitter. See all posts about Iran, about Iran’s conflict with America,ย about nuclear weapons, and especially theseโ€ฆ

  1. Iran will have the bomb in 5 years (again) โ€” Forecasts of an Iranian bomb really soon, going back to 1984.
  2. What happens when a nation gets nukes?ย  Sixty years of history suggests an answer.
  3. What happens if Iran gets nukes? Not what weโ€™ve been told.
  4. Stratfor describes the Middle East โ€“ after the Iranย deal.
  5. Stratfor: Trumpโ€™s art of wrecking the nuclear deal withย Iran.
  6. We pay for Trumpโ€™s gift to the hard-liners of Iran & America.
Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran, and the Triumph of Diplomacy
Available at Amazon.

How the deal with Iran was born.

I recommend reading Losing an Enemy: Obama, Iran, and the Triumph of Diplomacy by Trita Parsi (2017). Heย is the founder and current president of the National Iranian American Council (see his Wikipedia entry). From the publisherโ€ฆ

“The definitive book on Obamaโ€™s historic nuclear deal with Iran from the author of theย Foreign Affairsย Best Book on the Middle East in 2012.”

“This timely book focuses on President Obamaโ€™s deeply considered strategy toward Iranโ€™s nuclear program and reveals how the historic agreement of 2015 broke the persistent stalemate in negotiations that had blocked earlier efforts.

“The deal accomplished two major feats in one stroke: it averted the threat of war with Iran and prevented the possibility of an Iranian nuclear bomb. Trita Parsi, a Middle East foreign policy expert who advised the Obama White House throughout the talks and had access to decision-makers and diplomats on the U.S. and Iranian sides alike, examines every facet of a triumph that could become as important and consequential as Nixonโ€™s rapprochement with China. Drawing from more than seventy-five in-depth interviews with key decision-makers, including Iran’s Foreign Minister Javad Zarif and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, this is the first authoritative account of President Obamaโ€™s signature foreign policy achievement.”

3 thoughts on “Jessica Mathews: why scuttling the Iran deal is MAD”

  1. In ten years, more of OUR hardliners will be out of the picture too, I hope.

    At least it will make Trump and some of his supporters feel tough, strong and powerful. And what could be more important than their feelings? (Offer does not apply to individuals under the age of 50.)

    1. Larry Kummer, Editor

      SF,

      “In ten years, more of OUR hardliners will be out of the picture too, ”

      I suspect people have been saying that since 1955. So far in vain. I can’t imagine why they would not be replaced by yet another generation of hawks. It’s a lucrative ecological niche. Hoping for that is like going to Central Park and expecting to see no squirrels.

      “And what could be more important than their feelings?”

      I am repeatedly amazed that people think our elites are motivated by such petty things. Especially given their multi-generational record of winning.

    2. Oh, I agree with you on the elites, but I was speaking casually and meant the voters. (Potentially also Trump in his person, if not in terms of the people in his administration. And even he no doubt makes some distinction here, even if less than we might want.) “Being strong and tough to foreigners” is easy to sell to people who want their politics sold to them as a product, which is, unfortunately, a whole lot of us.

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