Iran Nuclear Deal: Short-Term Benefits and Long-Term Consequences
US President Barack
Obama has won a much-needed foreign political victory by sealing a temporary
nuclear deal with Iran. But while there are some short-term benefits, the long
term consequences of this deal are much more hazy and potentially quite
dangerous. Equally worrying should be the consequences of the deal for nuclear
weapon spreading in the Middle East and the larger political effects on America's
friends and allies, especially in the region and in Asia.
The deal
itself is a clear victory for Iran because it irreversibly enshrines Tehran's
right to enrich uranium. Ever since the secret Iranian uranium enrichment plant
at Natanz was revealed in 2002, Western powers led by Washington had been
arguing that Iran has to shutter these facilities because they violate the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) to which Iran is a signatory. But Iran
argued that uranium enrichment was a peaceful activity and a legitimate right
under the NPT.
Right to
Uranium
Indeed, the UN
Security Council has passed several resolutions in the last 10 years demanding
that Iran close its enrichment facilities. Even after the deal was signed, US
Secretary of State John Kerry continued to claim that the deal does not recognise
any Iranian right to enrich because this was the crux of the problem. But
Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif claimed that it did and he is right: the
text of the agreement explicitly recognises a "mutually defined enrichment
program". Though they might quibble over the level of enrichment, the fact
is that the Iranian right to have an enrichment programme is now official, and
the various UN Security Council resolutions are now so much waste paper. In essence,
Washington cried uncle. There are doubts about how this agreement might pan out
after the six-month pause runs out.
The idea is
that this pause will give time to complete a more comprehensive agreement that
will resolve all outstanding issues regarding Iran's nuclear programme but it is
difficult to see how this would work out. In all likelihood, six months from
now, we will see either a minor agreement or the pause extended. Iran has not worked
this hard this long to sign away its nuclear capability at the negotiating
table. This deal is only likely to encourage further proliferation in the
region.
The Sunni Gulf
states, locked in what they see as a deadly struggle with Shia Iran, will see
this as a sell-out. Even before US's capitulation, Saudi Arabian leaders had
been explicitly threatening to exercise their own nuclear option. The standing assumption
is that they would ask Pakistan for a nuclear deterrent since they bankrolled a
good part of Islamabad's nuclear programme. This deal could also increase the
tacit strategic cooperation between these states and Israel since Iran is a
threat to both.
Unstable
Middle East
Israel is also
furious and USIsraeli relations are at a low ebb. But an angry Israel could
present problems for Obama. Israel's supporters in the US Congress (which
includes both Democrats and Republicans) have threatened to pass additional
sanctions on Iran that could kill this deal.
Israel could
also decide that Obama cannot be trusted and take matters into its own hands
and try to militarily eliminate the Iranian nuclear programme. But there is a
larger political lesson about partnerships and trust that America's friends
from the Mediterranean to the Pacific will note: that small states can be easily
sacrificed by great powers at the altar of expediency.
Even if
overused, the Munich analogy would not be entirely inappropriate here. If
Israel and Saudi Arabia, with as much clout as they can muster in Washington,
can be thrown under the bus, what chance would other American allies and
partners have? In addition to the prospect of having an unstable, nuclearised
Middle East, New Delhi needs to consider these political implications too of
American behaviour. Such concerns could lead to longer-term troubles for the
US.
Smaller powers
in Asia and elsewhere could decide that they cannot depend on a fickle
Washington. They could also decide that the only really safe bet is to follow
Tehran and build their own nuclear capabilities. For the long term, no deal
would have been a better deal than this.
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