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18/2/2019 Is Washington Too Focused on Iran's Nuclear Program?

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Wednesday, May 9, 2018 - 12:00am


Is Washington Too Focused on Iran's Nuclear Program?
Why It's Time for the U.S. to Prioritize Rolling Back Tehran's Regional Gains
Michael Singh

MICHAEL SINGH is the Lane-Swig Fellow and Managing Director at the Washington Institute for
Near East Policy.

In announcing the United States’ withdrawal [1] from the Iran nuclear agreement, U.S. President
Donald Trump made clear his disapproval of the accord and outlined a laundry list of complaints
about Iranian policies. But he left perhaps the most critical question unaddressed: What, precisely, is
U.S. policy toward Iran? 

For nearly a decade, the nuclear question has crowded out serious deliberations over a broader
policy toward Iran [2]. Yet Iran’s nuclear program is inseparable from its overall national security
strategy, which focuses on the projection of nonconventional power far from Iran’s borders. Similarly,
U.S. concerns about Iran’s nuclear endeavors are rooted not just in a principled stand against the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction but in deep unease about the Iranian regime’s broader
actions and intentions. And it is easy now to forget that prior to the conclusion of the nuclear deal—
also known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)—U.S. allies in the Middle East
other than Israel were more concerned about Iran’s regional policies than its nuclear pursuits.

One of the chief criticisms leveled against former U.S. President Barack Obama by critics of the
JCPOA was that he focused on the nuclear issue to the exclusion of all others and that the
agreement itself institutionalized this focus by trading comprehensive sanctions relief for Tehran’s
restraint solely in the nuclear realm. Ironically, first by emphasizing the need to fix the agreement,
and now in insisting that a new deal be negotiated, Trump risks repeating the error.

While the United States has debated the JCPOA, Iran has advanced in Syria, Yemen, and
elsewhere with little resistance, and prospects for war between Iran and Israel, or Iran and Saudi
Arabia, have increased significantly. What Washington really needs is a new Iran policy, not just a
nuclear policy—and the will to roll up its sleeves and carry it out.

WASHINGTON'S BROADER SHIFT IN POLICY

Despite the polarized debates among outside analysts pitting regime change against rapprochement
with Iran, U.S. officials have been less sharply divided. Successive presidents have employed some
combination of carrots and sticks, engagement and pressure, with Iran. The George W. Bush
administration employed sharper pressure than most but never went so far as to adopt regime
change as a policy; and the Obama administration was further leaning in its outreach to Iranian
leaders but never seriously adopted the policy of rapprochement or offshore balancing that Obama
sometimes intimated he would prefer. 

When U.S. policy toward Iran has shifted, it has been less the result of presidential ideology and
more a reflection of Washington’s changing perceptions of the threats it has faced and its own
capacity to confront them. From the middle of the last decade to the present, the United States has

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18/2/2019 Is Washington Too Focused on Iran's Nuclear Program?

slowly shifted from regarding terrorism and its state sponsors as its chief threat to regarding large,
nuclear-armed states such as Russia and China as more worrisome and prolonged
counterinsurgencies as a distraction from this priority. The United States has also come to view with
greater skepticism its own ability to take on tasks such as regime change, nation building, and
counterinsurgency, even as worries have grown about rival states’ erosion of the United States’
advantage at the cutting edge of military technology.

Given the outsize role the United States has long played in the Middle East, it is unsurprising that
the U.S. shift has had broader reverberations. As the United States has engaged in a form of
strategic retrenchment, there has been no other entity—whether an organization endogenous to the
region or another external power—ready or able to step forward to exercise leadership. The result
has been the replacement of one ad hoc security architecture with Washington at its center with
another that features competing informal blocs of regional powers jockeying against one another
with often devastating results.

This chaos in the Middle East has proven a boon for Iran. Since 2011, Iran has expanded its
influence and its footprint in Iraq, Lebanon, Syria, Yemen, and elsewhere, often filling vacuums that
ultimately result from the weakness of many of the region’s states, in which Iranian authorities are
themselves often complicit, and U.S. disengagement. The turbulence has suited Iran’s long-standing
national security strategy, which has long focused on cultivating proxies within states and using
asymmetric tactics to keep adversaries preoccupied and off balance. In Syria, Iran has found a
ready partner in Russian President Vladimir Putin, himself looking to expand Moscow’s influence
and capitalize on U.S. diffidence. The result is an Iran that has expanded its regional power even as
it has reportedly complied with the JCPOA.

The challenge faced by the United States in recent years has been to square its own reluctance to
increase its involvement in the Middle East with the desire to confront an increasingly aggressive
Iran. This is not simply a political or ideological imperative, as U.S. allies in Europe and Asia
sometimes suspect, but one rooted in national interests. In the American view, Iran’s actions
threaten not only the stability of the Middle East, such as it is, but freedom of commerce and
navigation in the region’s waterways and the security of U.S. allies.

For Obama, the JCPOA was a way to square this circle. Although his critics have described the
agreement as having opened the path to U.S. disengagement from the Middle East, Obama himself
likely saw it as paving the way for decreasing the U.S. military commitment to the region while
limiting the fallout of such a step by curbing Iran’s most dangerous activities and providing an
alternate means, through diplomatic engagement, of addressing others over time. 

Trump, for his part, has made clear his disdain for the JCPOA and skepticism toward the notion of
rapprochement with Iran. Initially, he considered a compromise—strengthening the JCPOA without
renegotiating it, by concluding a protocol with like-minded parties to the deal regarding how it would
be implemented and how destabilizing Iranian activities not covered by the agreement would be
addressed. Eventually, however, the Trump administration set aside that effort and announced that it
would instead abandon the nuclear accord and reinstate U.S. sanctions.

Although this approach is a repudiation of the JCPOA, it does not mark a return of deep U.S.
involvement in the Middle East. By emphasizing sanctions and capitalizing on the United States’
preponderant role in the international financial system, it represents a continuation of Washington’s
arm’s-length approach to Iran policy. Even as the United States under Trump has threatened the
return of harsh sanctions against Iran and those who do business with it, it has not taken substantial
new steps in the past 18 months to counter Iran’s regional ambitions. Indeed, U.S. Central
Command chief General Joseph Votel told Congress that he had no orders to counter Iran in Syria.  

THE END AND THE BEGINNING

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Reversing this state of affairs will require a deeper reconsideration of U.S. policy toward the Middle
East. Washington will need to dispense with the black-and-white, all-or-nothing policy debates that
have prevailed since the Iraq war and more seriously consider middle courses that entail greater
U.S. engagement in the region’s crises without overcommitment. Moreover, Washington should view
its Middle East policy as essential to its strategic future in Asia and Europe, where U.S. allies are
often dependent on energy imports from the Persian Gulf and preoccupied with terrorist threats
arising from the region. 

More effectively countering Iran will require that the United States reach more deeply into its policy
tool kit, beyond economic sanctions alone. They should be buttressed both by the low-level use of
military force—for example, retaining a small American presence in Syria, empowering local allies,
and using the threat of U.S. airpower to prevent entrenchment in Syria by Iran and its proxies—and
by continued U.S.-Iranian engagement. The former is often regarded as escalatory and the latter as
appeasement or legitimation of the Iranian regime, but in reality both are essential elements of a
strategy of deterrence. Diplomacy is necessary to convey redlines, explain the U.S. agenda in the
region, and understand Iran’s intentions; a willingness to use limited force is necessary to lend
credibility to that engagement.

In addition, the United States should not only impose costs on Iran for threatening U.S. interests but
erect obstacles to Iran’s doing so in the first place. This calls for ensuring that there are no further
easy opportunities for Iranian intervention around the region, by promoting the resilience of regional
states in the face of the sort of political and economic meddling that features heavily in the Iranian
playbook. Success would also be aided by the development of more functional regional security
organizations—one need only look at the current rift within the region’s most coherent multilateral
group, the Gulf Cooperation Council, to understand that Iran hardly faces a united regional
opposition.

All of these actions—strengthening allies, promoting regional integration, and utilizing diplomacy and
force—would be made more effective if done in concert with international partners. This was one of
the primary arguments in favor of “fixing” rather than abandoning the JCPOA and should motivate
the Trump administration to move quickly to repair international relations damaged by the U.S.
withdrawal. This will be an uphill struggle, but the alternatives—tackling the Middle East’s problems
alone or neglecting them altogether—are worse.

Leaving the JCPOA marks the end of a road, in one sense. In another, it is just the latest twist, albeit
a momentous one, in a decades-long confrontation with Iran that has offered little satisfaction to
U.S. policymakers. Success will require not just a plan for reinstating sanctions in hopes of one day
bringing Iran back to the negotiating table but a strategy that tackles with urgency the broad and
growing set of challenges in the Middle East in which Iran plays a role.

Copyright © 2019 by the Council on Foreign Relations, Inc.


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Source URL: https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/middle-east/2018-05-09/washington-too-focused-irans-nuclear-


program

Links
[1] https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/iran/2018-05-04/challenge-reinstating-sanctions-against-iran
[2] https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/middle-east/2018-02-13/iran-among-ruins

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