Middle East Progess talks to
Karim Sadjadpour
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Karim Sadjadpour |
Middle East Progress: The
Iranian government has yet to agree to the IAEA proposal for enrichment of
Iran's low enriched uranium in a third country. What do you think are the aims
of the government with regards to the proposal?
Karim Sadjadpour:
Over the last several years-and especially since last June's tainted
presidential elections-any remaining moderates or pragmatists that were once
part of the Iranian government's decision-making structure have essentially been
purged from the system. Today the country is being run by a hardline Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, who is surrounded by likeminded ideologues who have
two overarching instincts: mistrust and defiance. They generally perceive
proposals and overtures that are endorsed by the United States as poison pills.
Individuals who were capable of deal-making-like former President Hashemi
Rafsanjani-are now on the outside looking
MEP: But what about someone like Speaker of the Parliament Ali
Larijani, who seemed willing to make deals when he was Iran's nuclear
negotiator, but is now sounding more strident?
Sadjadpour:
Larijani is a good litmus test. While less than a decade ago he was referred to
in the Western press as an arch hard-liner, in the current context he's thought
of as a pragmatist. If the color spectrum of the Iranian regime now ranges from
pitch black to dark grey, Larijani is dark grey. But given that Larijani's rise
to power has been based on his fealty to Khamenei, he's not going to say
anything out of step with the Leader.
MEP: What do you make of the recent
announcement about the ten new uranium enrichment plants?
Sadjadpour: I think it's mostly
bluster. To put it into perspective: it has taken Iran over two decades to
complete the enrichment facility at Natanz, and it's still not fully
operational. Creating ten Natanz-size enrichment facilities, at a time when
they're facing more international scrutiny than ever, would take decades, and is
certainly not an imminent threat. To the credit of the Obama administration
they've projected the poise of a superpower and have largely chosen to ignore
Iran's bombast.
MEP: If the IAEA proposal doesn't
lead anywhere, what are the options for next steps for the United States and the
international community?
Sadjadpour: I think the door of
dialogue and engagement will remain open, but the Obama administration will be
forced into policies-sanctions and other punitive measures-they would have liked
to avoid.
In contrast to the Bush administration, I think the
Europeans, and even the Russians and Chinese, recognize that since Obama's
inauguration last June the United States has made numerous overtures to Iran,
made a good-faith diplomatic effort to change the tone and context of the
U.S.-Iran relationship, but Tehran was either unable or unwilling to
reciprocate. For this reason the Obama administration is in a much better
position to attain a robust international sanctions regime than the Bush
administration was.
MEP: You spoke a little bit about
Russia and China. What is your sense of how far they are willing to go in terms
of putting pressure on Iran?
Sadjadpour: Both countries are
instinctively opposed to sanctions, but Iranian intransigence has put them in a
bind. In the last few years, Russia's modus operandi has been to endorse
sanctions against Iran that they themselves have watered down. This way they can
claim to the U.S. and EU that they're supportive of their position, while
privately also reassuring the Iranians that they're sympathetic to Tehran's
position. U.S. officials feel more confident than ever that Russian patience
with Iran is waning, but it remains to be seen what that means in concrete
terms.
One of the reasons why Russian support is so
important to the U.S. is because China has tended to follow Moscow's lead on
Iran policy. The China-Iran relationship is a more straightforward commercial
relationship-China needs Iran's energy-and I don't think anyone believes that
China will completely sever its economic ties with Iran. That said, though China
has signed a lot of seemingly lucrative memorandums of understanding (MOUs) with
Tehran, few deals have actually been executed, and because of the headaches of
dealing with Iran the Chinese have increasingly sought out energy relationships
with Saudi Arabia and the UAE. In essence, China will not be willing or able to
singlehandedly fill the enormous vacuum left behind by Western companies in
Iran.
MEP: What do you think is going on
with the Ahmadinejad government's plan to phase out the subsidies? Do you think
that's linked to sanctions?
Sadjadpour: Phasing out the
subsidies has been discussed for years but has always been seen as too risky a
move for any Iranian politician. Ahmadinejad's idea is to discontinue the
blanket subsidies on food items and petrol-which cost the government as much
$100 billion per annum-and instead dole out some of that money directly to lower
income classes that need it most.
There is a great deal of opposition to the plan from
across the political spectrum; many lawmakers, including some Ahmadinejad
supporters, fear that it will cause rampant inflation and further alienate
middle class Iranians whose cost of living will rise dramatically but who will
not receive government stipends. At a time when the government is seeking to
restore stability, they fear that phasing out the subsidies could provoke
further unrest.
It's unclear how much the timing of the subsidy
withdrawal debate is linked to the sanctions debate. I'm sure some elements of
the regime believe that if they phase out the subsidies at the same time they're
hit with sanctions, they can blame foreign powers for the economic tumult. They
may be playing with fire, however; in my experience living in Iran I always
found that people overwhelmingly cited mismanage and corruption as the primary
culprits of the country's economic malaise, not sanctions. Post-June I think the
government will get even less benefit of the doubt.
MEP: What is your sense of the
regional perspective on Iran and what role Iran's neighbors could play, or are
playing?
Sadjadpour: I think Arab
governments were happy to see the Iranian regime get its nose bloodied after
last June's elections, but they are concerned about the prospect of profound
change in Tehran for a couple reasons. First, the arrival of a democratic Iran
has potentially problematic implications for a predominantly autocratic region.
Second, many Arab countries are deeply ambivalent if not down-right opposed to
the prospect of Iran-with its vast natural and human resources-finally emerging
from its largely self-inflicted isolation and beginning to realize its enormous
potential.
With regards to the nuclear issue, in a nutshell,
Arab governments don't want Iran to get the bomb, and they don't want Iran to
get bombed. Their strategy is to essentially let the United States take care of
the problem, though in recent weeks I've heard Arab officials express concern
that the U.S. hasn't presented them with a clear Iran strategy, and how they fit
into that strategy.
Regarding the Arab public, there is an inverse
correlation between U.S. and Iranian popularity in the region. Meaning, when the
U.S. is most unpopular, Iran's ideology resonates the loudest. Opinion polls
indicate that since Obama's arrival, Ahmadinejad and Iran's stock has dropped
among people in the region. I suspect that the post-election tumult also
dismayed many Arabs who once romanticized Iran as a popular government intent on
fighting injustice.
MEP: Israel has so far let the
United States take the lead in dealing with Iran. What is your sense of their
perspective?
Sadjadpour: The Israelis are
impatient; by all accounts Prime Minister Netanyahu genuinely believes that a
nuclear-armed Iran poses an existential threat to Israel, so they obviously have
a far greater sense of urgency. While U.S. officials take the prospect of an
independent Israeli strike against Iran seriously, I think many Israelis
understand that the ramifications would likely be calamitous, particularly
within Iran. I sincerely believe that Khamenei and Ahmadinejad would welcome an
Israeli strike on their nuclear facilities; it is perhaps the only thing that
could mend internal political rifts, silence the opposition movement, and
entrench the most radical elements of this regime for years to come.
MEP: Where do things stand
internally in Iran six months after the election?
Sadjadpour: Both the government and
the opposition are in precarious positions. The regime hasn't recouped its lost
legitimacy, and will continue to lose supporters as the economic situation
deteriorates. They increasingly resemble a military junta, and there is serious
dissent among them; even folks close to Khamenei, like Larijani and Tehran mayor
Mohammed Bagher Ghalibaf, would like to get rid of Ahmadinejad.
As for the opposition, its leadership and brain
trust remains either in prison, under house arrest or unable to freely operate.
Though the scale and frequency of popular protests has subsided, the millions
who took to the streets post-election have not been pacified or co-opted.
Smaller-sized protests, especially at universities around the country, have
continued with great intensity, as we witnessed again yesterday.
MEP: What do you see happening?
Where do you see things heading?
Sadjadpour: I think the regime's
legitimacy will continue to decay, and they will be forced to rely on repressive
measures to keep order. I don't question their willingness to shed blood to stay
in power. Khamenei is unwilling to make any meaningful compromises with the
opposition, for he believes it will make him look weak. Whatever they choose to
do, history is not on their side.
At the same time, the opposition leadership, partly
by design, has not defined a clear game plan or end game, a clear alternative
vision for Iran. They're taking a very deliberate approach, trying to recruit as
many people as possible under the tent of the green movement, including
disaffected clerics and Revolutionary Guardsmen.
It remains to be seen whether the current opposition
leadership-Mousavi, Karoubi, and Khatami-has the will to see this movement
through, or whether they will eventually have to hand the baton off to new
blood.
Just as nobody predicted that millions would take to
the streets post-election, it's a fool's errand to try and foretell how this
might play out. I think the opposition could remain on simmer for quite some
time-years even-but we could reach a tipping point that could change things
quite abruptly.
MEP: How do you think that the
United States and the international community can strike the right balance
between moving forwards and dealing with the Iranian government but also being
sensitive to what you're talking about?
Sadjadpour: I think the United
States should be more outspoken about Iran's inability to adhere to
international standards of justice-a word that Iran's leadership frequently
uses-and human rights and President Obama Should be more outspoken in expressing
solidarity with the Iranian people. I know that young people in Iran would like
to see President Obama make it more clear that he's not indifferent to their
cause, that he's rooting for them.
I think there is a way to dialogue with the Iranian
government on urgent national security issues-like nuclear proliferation,
Afghanistan, and Iraq-without betraying the millions of Iranians who view their
government as illegitimate and continue to strive for political change. U.S.
dialogue with the Soviet Union during the 1980s is perhaps a useful template.
This is an incredibly important time in Iran's history and we want to be able to
look back years from now and say we were on the right side of history. I
sometimes fear that we may look back years from now and see that there was a
tremendous opportunity to help champion and facilitate the cause of political
change in Iran, but rather than taking it seriously we focused all of our
attention on the nuclear issue.
MEP: Part of the reason that it
appears that the U.S. and Iran continue to be unable to communicate with one
another is that they don't trust one another. How then do you balance the fact
that in supporting the opposition you would be playing into the exact fears of
the Iranian regime while trying to communicate with them?
Sadjadpour: The short answer to
that question is I don't think the regime, particularly Khamenei, wants to be
disabused of their mistrust of the United States. It is politically and
ideologically expedient for them to have the U.S. as an adversary, so they have
a convenient culprit when, among other things, their population rises up,
economic malaise worsens, or ethnic minorities agitate.
President Obama has made more effort than any U.S.
president in the last three decades to try and build confidence with
Tehran-including writing two private letters to Khamenei-and the U.S. took great
pains not to intervene in Iran's internal affairs at a time, post-election, when
they were most vulnerable. I think this is clear to most Iranians, and most
European, Russian, and Chinese officials I encounter acknowledge as much.
For many years now, so many of us have argued that
if the U.S. can engage Iran and reintegrate it in the international community
and open up its economy, this would foment political reform in Tehran. I think
people fail to realize that Khamenei understands that argument very well, in
fact he probably agrees with it, and for precisely that reason he's resisted
confidence building with the U.S.
MEP: Then the question is do you
think there is any chance of progress, if accommodation is Khamenei's ultimate
fear?
Sadjadpour: I'm very skeptical
about the prospect of a major diplomatic breakthrough with this Iranian
government. I believe the underlying problem we have with Iran has more to do
with the character of its regime than its nuclear ambitions. In other words, as
long as Khamenei is leader and Ahmadinejad is president, Tehran will not be able
or willing to meet us half-way, or even a third Of the way, on our various
issues of contention.
... Payvand News - 12/09/09 ... --
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