As promised, the new IAEA report on Iran’s nuclear activity points to more evidence than ever that it is moving closer to weaponization. Already there has been rather frightening chatter in Washington, Tel-Aviv, and London of pre-emptive strikes and a continued dual track policy towards Iran. But instead of looking at Tehran and wondering why it hasn’t changed its behavior, what we should be doing is looking in the mirror.
What nobody in Washington points out is that our calculus and implementation of policy towards Iran has failed time and time again. What is frightening is that scholars like Ray Takeyh that take credit for the U.S. strategy towards Iran have recently called for the U.S. to “double down” on Iran as a last ditch effort to undermine its nuclear program and force them into submission. Neither sanctions nor the threat of the use of force have deterred Iran from continuing its nuclear program, and quite frankly, there is no reason for Iran to stop it based on these threats.
While sanctions may be hurting Iran a bit financially, the regime, which is obviously the biggest problem, is still intact while Iran’s stockpile of enriched Uranium continues to grow. Sanctions rarely work when used to achieve such lofty goals as regime change and the cessation of nuclear programs, especially if the target country has a rigid infrastructure and lots of friends to use as alternate support.
The “dual track” policy of the United States seeks to both engage diplomatically and pressure Iran into reform through the use of sanctions and the threat of armed force. The problem is that Iran knows that the U.S. is in no position to attack, and it knows that it can withstand sanctions. Furthermore, it has done the math and realized that the cost of acquiescing to U.S. and Israeli demands, which ultimately involves abandoning its sovereignty, is far greater than the cost of non-compliance. Once a country makes that decision, sanctions are no longer a viable strategy.
Read more:
http://www.policymic.com/articles/2332/america-and-iran-compromise-don-t-go-to-war