By
Ali Fathollah-Nejad
The prospects for democracy, socio-economic development, and conflict resolution
will suffer if the West continues to rely on punitive measures
This time,
the warmongers'
silly season found its apogée in U.S. neo-conservative
Daniel Pipes' advice to Obama to "bomb Iran," which appeared shortly after
Tony Blair, having outlined why he helped invade Iraq, remarked ominously,
"We face the same problem about Iran today." The Chilcot Inquiry in the
United Kingdom on how the Iraq War was launched ironically coincided with a
considerable
military build-up in the Persian Gulf region. All this occurred amidst the
continued struggle of Iran's civil rights movement and proclamations of Western
leaders to be in support of the latter's efforts. But is there any evidence for
this?
In
contradistinction to war, sanctions are widely portrayed as necessary, almost
healthy medicine to bring about change in the opponent's policies. However, as
the history of the West-Iran conflict proves, sanctions have rather the state of
crisis alive than contributed to its resolution. Nonetheless, Western
governments do not seem to have lost their dubious fascination for them.
As the call for
"crippling sanctions" became morally questionable when last summer the
impressive Green wave shook the streets of Tehran for fear of wrecking the same,
today the benign sounding "smart" or "targeted" sanctions are on the tip of
everyone's tongue. Yet, a close look reveals a great deal of wishful thinking as
to the effects of such sanctions.
Gigantic
dimensions of "smart sanctions"
"Smart sanctions",
it is claimed, are a magic wand with which to decapitate evil. In the Iranian
case, evil is being identified with the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps.
Originally a defense organization erected to counter Iraqi aggression in the
1980s, the Guardians have developed into an expansive socio-politico-economic
conglomerate which is believed to possess unrivalled economic and political
power in today's Islamic Republic.
As we are told,
"smart sanctions" shall target the Guardians' grip on the Iranian power
structure. The much neglected difficulty here - though it is widely acknowledged
that the bulk of Iranian economy is now in the hands of the Guardians - is that
in the end millions of civilians connected to
these wide-ranging sectors
thought to be controlled by the Guardians
will be affected.
Seen in this light,
the gigantic dimension of these alleged "smart sanctions" comes to the fore.
Moreover,
so-called
"crippling sanctions" that target petrol supply to Iran are still
en route. In anticipation of those U.S. unilateral sanctions, the
world's largest insurance companies have announced their
retreat from Iran. This concerns both the financial and shipping sectors,
and affects petrol supplies to Iran which imports 40 percent of its needs. Also
three
giant oil traders ended supplies to Iran, which amounted to
half of Tehran's imports. Needless to say, such sanctions ultimately harm
the population. To add, a complete implementation thereof - i.e. preventing
Asian competitors to step in - would require a naval blockade which amounts to
an act of war.
Crippling the
ordinary population
As stressed by
civil society figures and
economists, the price of sanctions is being
paid by the Iranian population at large. The Iranian economy -
manufacturing, agriculture, bank and financial sectors etc. -
has been hurt from almost three decades of sanctions. Even today, businesses
cannot easily obtain much needed goods on the international market to continue
production and must often pay above-standard prices. Moreover, the
scientific community has faced discrimination in areas of research as has
Iran's technological advances been slowed down.
Reflecting the
dangers sanctions pose to the Green Movement, last fall
Mir-Hossein Mousavi stated: "We are opposed to any types of sanctions
against our nation." The same was recently uttered by his fellow opposition
leader Mehdi Karroubi in
an interview with Corriere della Serra.
Meanwhile a more fundamental problem remains - hardly acknowledged by many
proponents who succumb to the adventurous illusion of having a say in the design
and implementation of sanctions: They are mainly
designed by the
American Israeli Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), introduced to the U.S.
Congress and finally implemented by the Treasury Department's Under Secretary
for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence
Stuart Levey -
an AIPAC confidant. Along this process, the potential suffering by Iran's
civil society hardly plays a role.
Sanctions - either
"crippling" or "smart" - ultimately
harm ordinary citizens. "Smart sanctions"
is as
much of an oxymoron as
"smart weapons"
which supposedly by "surgical strikes" only take out evil components. Indeed,
much as in the case of their militaristic brothers-in-sprit,
in the end the "collateral damages" of "smart sanctions" remain dominant.
A futile political
instrument in today's world
More generally, in
an increasingly multipolar globalized world, sanctions imposed upon energy-rich
countries are basically futile as an effective policy tool. Too numerous are
business-driven actors that are only too happy to jump in. Thus, Chinese,
Russian, and even U.S. companies (acting via Dubai) have hugely benefitted from
the European, U.S.-pressured withdrawal from the Iranian market.
Thus, sanctions -
a medicine with which Western policy-circles are so obsessed with - are not a
cure but a slow poison applied to the civil society and thus the civil rights
movement. Sanctions as prototype of economic warfare in concert with the
seasonal flaring-up of war-mongering are a dangerous mix. The deafening "drums
of war" continue to bang upon the beating heart of Iran's civil society.
Sanctions and
threats of war: Poisonous for democratic development
All this suggests
that sanctions are perhaps a fig leaf for other agendas. For, in contrast to
Western proclamations, sanctions do harm the civil society while cementing the
position of hardliners. Iran's middle class as a result will be affected by this
further isolation of the country as sanctions punish honest traders and reward
corrupt ones. The Guardians with their assumed 60 harbors at the Persian Gulf
control the bulk of imports and sanctions will only bolster the trend of
flourishing "black channels".
One might indeed
argue that the not-so-unconscious "collateral damage" of never-ending sanctions
is any meaningful transition to more democracy in Iran - a prospect which would
set an uncomfortable precedent for the West's authoritarian friends in the
region.
What next:
"Surgical strikes" or serious diplomacy?
At the very least,
the unending story of sanctions bears testimony to Western leaders' commitment
to uphold "credibility" in the face of adverse conditions
as
much as to imposing their will on Iran.
A futile exercise - even a dangerous one - if one begins to contemplate the
aftermath of "smart sanctions" being imposed: Will the next desperate move
entail "surgical strikes"?
Instead of going
on believing that sanctions will one day develop their desired effects, it is
high time to put the brakes. Hence, the only way forward would be to adopt a set
of policies that would disarm hardliners of all sides whose business
flourishes in the vicious cycle of enmity. It is only by détente that
grist to the mills of radicalism can be removed - and a sustainable
de-militarization of Iranian politics attained. Revoking existing sanctions on
goods for civilian use could work wonders that would shake the very fundaments
of confrontational postures.
Despite all
frivolous claims, the diplomatic route has not been exhausted. Indeed, we are
far from it. Since the core problem remains the "security dilemma" in the
region, it would be wise for the West to call upon Israel to join the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The transatlantic "coercive strategy"
vis-à-vis Iran - as it is accurately
described in Diplomatic Studies - must be suspended for it undermines
prospects for peace and development towards democracy.
* * *
About the author:
German-Iranian political scientist; Ph.D. researcher in International Relations
at the universities of Münster (Germany) and London (School of Oriental and
African Studies); currently a Visiting Lecturer in globalization and development
at the University of Westminster, London; author of
The Iran Conflict and the Obama Administration: Old Wine in New Skins?
(in German, Potsdam University Press, 2010); web site:
fathollah-nejad.com.