📄 Extracted Text (9,736 words)
From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen
Sent: Wed 11/27/2013 4:41:09 PM
Subject: November 27 update
27 November, 2013
Article 1.
Agence Global
The Iran Agreement Could Reconfigure the
Middle East
Rami G. Khouri
Article 2.
The Guardian
After Iran deal, the next step is to end the Middle
East proxy war in Syria
Jeremy Shapiro and Samuel Charap
Article 3.
Stratfor
Israelis, Saudis and the Iranian Agreement
George Friedman
Article 4.
The Washington Institute
An Israeli Assessment of the Iran Deal
Michael Herzog
Article 5.
The New-Yorker
Why the Iran Deal Scares Saudi Arabia
F. Gregory Gause
Article 6.
TIME
Saudi Arabia Considers Nuclear Weapons
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Aryn Baker
Art1C1e
7.
Project-Syndicate
The Perils of Backseat Negotiating
Christopher R. Hill
Article 8.
Al-Monitor
Hamas mixed on Iran nuclear deal
Asmaa al-Ghoul
Article I.
Agence Global
The Iran Agreement Could
Reconfigure the Middle East
Rami G. Khouri
27 Nov 2013 -- The most striking implication of the agreement
signed in Geneva last weekend—to ensure that Iran's nuclear
industry does not develop nuclear weapons while gradually
removing the sanctions on the country—is more about Iran than
it is about Iran's nuclear industry. The important new dynamic
that has been set in motion is likely to impact profoundly almost
every significant political situation around the Middle East and
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the world, including both domestic conditions within countries
and diplomatic relations among countries.
This agreement breaks the long spell of estrangement and
hostility between the United States and Iran, and signals
important new diplomatic behavior by both countries, which
augurs well for the entire region. It is also likely to trigger the
resumption of the suspended domestic political and cultural
evolution of Iran, which also will spur new developments across
the Middle East.
Perhaps we can see the changes starting to occur in Iran as
similar to the developments in Poland in the early 1980s, when
the bold political thrust of the Solidarity movement that enjoyed
popular support broke the Soviet Union's hold on Polish
political life, and a decade later led to the collapse of the entire
Soviet Empire.
The resumption of political evolution inside Iran will probably
move rapidly in the years ahead, as renewed economic growth,
more personal freedoms, and more satisfying interactions with
the region and the world expand and strengthen the relatively
"liberal" forces around Rouhani, Rafsanjani, Khatemi and
others; this should slowly temper, then redefine and reposition,
the Islamic revolutionary autocrats who have controlled the
power structure for decades, but whose hard-line controls are
increasingly alien to the sentiments of ordinary Iranians.
These domestic and regional reconfigurations will occur slowly,
comprising the situations in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq, and the Gulf
Cooperation Council (GCC) states led by Saudi Arabia. The
critical link remains a healthy, normal, non-hostile relationship
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between Saudi Arabia and Iran, which I suspect will start to
come about in the months ahead, as both grasp the exaggerated
nature of their competition for influence in the region and learn
to behave like normal countries. They will learn to compete on
the basis of their soft power among a region of half a billion
people who increasingly feel and behave like citizens who have
the right to choose how they live, rather than to be dictated to
and herded like cattle.
Should a more normal Iran-Saudi relationship occur, as I expect,
this will trigger major adjustments across the entire region,
starting in Syria and Lebanon where the proxies of both
countries face off in cruel and senseless confrontations. The
Geneva II conference in January, to explore a peaceful transition
in Syria, will be the first place to look for signs of an emerging
new order in the region that will be shaped by a healthier Iranian-
Saudi relationship.
The reason that Iran will be able to impact conditions around the
region so significantly stems from what I believe is the most
significant underlying lesson of the Iran sanctions/nuclear
agreement: It reflects the fact that Iran steadfastly resisted and
boldly defied American-Israeli-led sanctions, assassinations,
industrial sabotage and explicit military threats for over a
decade, and finally caused the United States and allies to accept
the two long-standing principal demands from Tehran: to accept
the enrichment of uranium in Iran for peaceful purposes, and to
drop the threats of changing the regime in Tehran through
military force. In this dangerous game of diplomatic chicken,
which nearly brought the region to a deadly war, the Americans
blinked first, and then they sensibly engaged Iran in serious
negotiations that have achieved an initial success.
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This is coupled with a parallel historic development inside the
United States, which is the successful determination of the
Obama administration to stare down Israel and its powerful
lobby in Washington and complete the agreement with Iran. In
fact, the Obama administration has now done this twice in a
row—first by going against the Israeli government's strong
advocacy for an American military attack against Syria a few
months ago, and now in completing the Iran agreement which
Israel's lobby institutes and proxies in Washington worked hard
to stop.
Obama has shown that a policy that is in the best interest of the
United States and has the support of the American public will
always prevail against even the most intense lobbying efforts by
Israel and its American surrogates. This has profound and
positive implications for future U.S. policy-making in the
Middle East, which will benefit all concerned, including Israel.
These breakthroughs reflect the fact that both the American and
Iranian leaderships conducted policies that reflected the
sensible, non-violent preferences of their own people. They
should both be congratulated, and let us hope that other leaders
in the region follow suit.
Rami G. Khouri is Editor-at-large of The Daily Star, and
Director of the lssam Fares Institutefor Public Policy and
International Affairs at the American University of Beirut, in
Beirut, Lebanon.
Article?.
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The Guardian
After Iran deal, the next step is to end
the Middle East proxy war in Syria
Jeremy Shapiro and Samuel Champ
26 November 2013 -- On the heels of a successful Geneva
agreement between the P5+1 and Iran, the announcement on
Monday that the peace conference for Syria's civil war — the so-
called Geneva II conference — will be held on 22 January is
welcome news. But even if all sides actually show up to the
meeting, there is considerable doubt as to whether a political
settlement between the warring Syrian parties is possible at this
stage. To increase the chances of success, the US and Russia
should pursue a ceasefire among the regional supporters of the
war as a precursor to Geneva II. Let's call it "Geneva 1.5".
The conflict in Syria is no longer a domestic struggle. It has
become a regional proxy war, principally between Saudi Arabia
and Iran, but with important roles played by Qatar, Turkey and
Iraq. These external actors are fanning the flames of conflict and
actively dissuading their Syrian allies from committing to
Geneva II.
The record on resolving such wars is clear. Until the external
actors reach some sort of accommodation, they will continue to
fund and arm their proxies and the war will continue
indefinitely. We saw this unhappy dynamic frequently in civil
wars that often lasted decades during the Cold War. In Iraq and
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Afghanistan, all of the might of the US military could not end
civil wars fueled by outside powers. By contrast, in Lebanon in
1989, the regional supporters of the various sides of the civil
war first had to agree to de-escalate before 15 years of bloody
conflict could come to an end.
Thus far, no effort has explicitly addressed the role of regional
actors in Syria and the conflicts between them. The Syrian
factions would not be present as in Geneva II. Geneva I, which
took place in July 2012, also did not include the Syrians but it
focused on the principles of civil war resolution and excluded
some of the key regional actors — particularly Iran and Saudi
Arabia. The purpose of a Geneva 1.5 conference would be to
facilitate eventual political resolution within Syria (executed in
Geneva II) by first cutting off the activity of regional actors that
fuels the conflict. The goal would be a ceasefire agreement.
The US and Russia could begin by bringing the key regional
actors together to work on the question of humanitarian
assistance in Syria and use that effort to move into discussions
about the conflict and Syria's future. The very act of getting the
Saudis and the Iranians around the same table to discuss Syria
would be a major breakthrough, but once they're there,
Washington and Moscow should push for genuine de-escalation.
The key will be convincing all parties that they have little hope
of realizing their maximalist goals and then finding a formula
that can accommodate all sides' interests in a future Syrian
settlement.
Despite the myriad difficulties associated with this approach,
there are reasons to think that such a deal might be possible. In
Syria, Iran is wasting precious resources on a struggle that it
cannot win and in the process validating the Saudi narrative of
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the Sunni-Shi'a split, destroying its standing in the Arab world.
Iran may accept a settlement that protects its core interests of
ensuring its connection with Hezbollah and Lebanon and
preventing Damascus from being controlled by a puppet
government of another power. The success of the nuclear talks
might also have made Tehran more likely to engage.
Meanwhile, the Saudis are facing the growing threat that Syria is
becoming an incubator of a brand of al-Claida-linked extremism
that might eventually threaten their own rule. Their path to
victory in Syria looks increasingly unclear as the Assad regime
continues to demonstrate its resilience. Simply put, the Saudis
do not have the capacity to win a long proxy war with Iran.
Therefore, they might see the benefits of a power-sharing
arrangement in Damascus that would give them some influence
with a Syrian transitional government. Despite these incentives,
Turkey and Qatar, which maintain somewhat better relations
with Iran, would have to be enlisted to pressure Saudi Arabia to
attend and negotiate.
The United States and Russia are not neutral parties in the
Syrian war, but they are nonetheless best positioned to lead a
Geneva 1.5. They share an interest in ensuring that Islamist
extremists do not gain control of Syria. The US has closer
relations with Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Turkey and Russia has
better ties with Iran. If Washington can demonstrate that it is
serious about reining in its regional allies, Moscow might make
a similar attempt to bring Iran to the table. Russia traditionally
relishes the role of "guarantor" of the settlements to others' wars.
Convening a Geneva 1.5 would not be easy for Russia or the
United States — there remains considerable distrust and
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differences between them over Syria. But as the chemical
weapons deal demonstrates, US-Russia cooperation on Syria can
pay significant dividends. Since agreement at Geneva II is
probably beyond reach at the moment, pursuit of a regional
ceasefire is the best option moving forward.
Stratfor
Israelis, Saudis and the Iranian
Agreement
George Friedman
November 26, 2013 -- A deal between Iran and the P-5+1 (the
five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus
Germany) was reached Saturday night. The Iranians agreed to
certain limitations on their nuclear program while the P-5+1
agreed to remove certain economic sanctions. The next
negotiation, scheduled for six months from now depending on
both sides' adherence to the current agreement, will seek a more
permanent resolution. The key players in this were the United
States and Iran. The mere fact that the U.S. secretary of state
would meet openly with the Iranian foreign minister would have
been difficult to imagine a few months ago, and unthinkable at
the beginning of the Islamic republic.
The U.S. goal is to eliminate Iran's nuclear weapons before they
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are built, without the United States having to take military action
to eliminate them. While it is commonly assumed that the
United States could eliminate the Iranian nuclear program at will
with airstrikes, as with most military actions, doing so would be
more difficult and riskier than it might appear at first glance.
The United States in effect has now traded a risky and
unpredictable air campaign for some controls over the Iranian
nuclear program.
The Iranians' primary goal is regime preservation. While Tehran
managed the Green Revolution in 2009 because the protesters
lacked broad public support, Western sanctions have
dramatically increased the economic pressure on Iran and have
affected a wide swath of the Iranian public. It isn't clear that
public unhappiness has reached a breaking point, but were the
public to be facing years of economic dysfunction, the future
would be unpredictable. The election of President Hassan
Rouhani to replace Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after the latter's two
terms was a sign of unhappiness. Supreme Leader Ali IChamenei
clearly noted this, displaying a willingness to trade a nuclear
program that had not yet produced a weapon for the elimination
of some sanctions.
The logic here suggests a process leading to the elimination of
all sanctions in exchange for the supervision of Iran's nuclear
activities to prevent it from developing a weapon. Unless this is
an Iranian trick to somehow buy time to complete a weapon and
test it, I would think that the deal could be done in six months.
An Iranian ploy to create cover for building a weapon would
also demand a reliable missile and a launch pad invisible to
surveillance satellites and the CIA, National Security Agency,
Mossad, MI6 and other intelligence agencies. The Iranians
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would likely fail at this, triggering airstrikes however risky they
might be and putting Iran back where it started economically.
While this is a possibility, the scenario is not likely when
analyzed closely.
While the unfolding deal involves the United States, Britain,
France, China, Russia and Germany, two countries intensely
oppose it: Israel and Saudi Arabia. Though not powers on the
order of the P-5+1, they are still significant. There is a bit of
irony in Israel and Saudi Arabia being allied on this issue, but
only on the surface. Both have been intense enemies of Iran, and
close allies of the United States; each sees this act as a betrayal
of its relationship with Washington.
The View from Saudi Arabia
In a way, this marks a deeper shift in relations with Saudi Arabia
than with Israel. Saudi Arabia has been under British and later
American protection since its creation after World War I. Under
the leadership of the Sauds, it became a critical player in the
global system for a single reason: It was a massive producer of
oil. It was also the protector of Mecca and Medina, two Muslim
holy cities, giving the Saudis an added influence in the Islamic
world on top of their extraordinary wealth.
It was in British and American interests to protect Saudi Arabia
from its enemies, most of which were part of the Muslim world.
The United States protected the Saudis from radical Arab
socialists who threatened to overthrow the monarchies of the
Arabian Peninsula. It later protected Saudi Arabia from Saddam
Hussein after he invaded Kuwait. But it also protected Saudi
Arabia from Iran.
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Absent the United States in the Persian Gulf, Iran would have
been the most powerful regional military power. In addition, the
Saudis have a substantial Shiite minority concentrated in the
country's oil-rich east. The Iranians, also Shia, had a potential
affinity with them, and thereby the power to cause unrest in
Saudi Arabia.
Until this agreement with Iran, the United States had an
unhedged commitment to protect Saudi Arabia from the
Iranians. Given the recent deal, and potential follow-on deals,
this commitment becomes increasingly hedged. The problem
from the Saudi point of view is that while there was a wide
ideological gulf between the United States and Iran, there was
little in the way of substantial issues separating Washington
from Tehran. The United States did not want Iran to develop
nuclear weapons. The Iranians didn't want the United States
hindering Iran's economic development. The fact was that
getting a nuclear weapon was not a fundamental Iranian interest,
and crippling Iran's economy was not a fundamental interest to
the United States absent an Iranian nuclear program.
If the United States and Iran can agree on this quid pro quo, the
basic issues are settled. And there is something drawing them
together. The Iranians want investment in their oil sector and
other parts of their economy. American oil companies would
love to invest in Iran, as would other U.S. businesses. As the
core issue separating the two countries dissolves, and economic
relations open up -- a step that almost by definition will form
part of a final agreement -- mutual interests will appear.
There are other significant political issues that can't be publicly
addressed. The United States wants Iran to temper its support for
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Hezbollah's militancy, and guarantee it will not support
terrorism. The Iranians want guarantees that Iraq will not
develop an anti-Iranian government, and that the United States
will work to prevent this. (Iran's memories of its war with Iraq
run deep.) The Iranians will also want American guarantees that
Washington will not support anti-Iranian forces based in Iraq.
From the Saudi point of view, Iranian demands regarding Iraq
will be of greatest concern. Agreements or not, it does not want
a pro-Iranian Shiite state on its northern border. Riyadh has been
funding Sunni fighters throughout the region against Shiite
fighters in a proxy war with Iran. Any agreement by the
Americans to respect Iranian interests in Iraq would represent a
threat to Saudi Arabia.
The View from Israel
From the Israeli point of view, there are two threats from Iran.
One is the nuclear program. The other is Iranian support not
only for Hezbollah but also for llamas and other groups in the
region. Iran is far from Israel and poses no conventional military
threat. The Israelis would be delighted if Iran gave up its nuclear
program in some verifiable way, simply because they themselves
have no reliable means to destroy that program militarily. What
the Israelis don't want to see is the United States and Iran
making deals on their side issues, especially the political ones
that really matter to Israel.
The Israelis have more room to maneuver than the Saudis do.
Israel can live with a pro-Iranian Iraq. The Saudis can't; from
their point of view, it is only a matter of time before Iranian
power starts to encroach on their sphere of influence. The Saudis
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can't live with an Iranian-supported Hezbollah. The Israelis can
and have, but don't want to; the issue is less fundamental to the
Israelis than Iraq is to the Saudis.
But in the end, this is not the problem that the Saudis and
Israelis have. Their problem is that both depend on the United
States for their national security. Neither country can
permanently exist in a region filled with dangers without the
United States as a guarantor. Israel needs access to American
military equipment that it can't build itself, like fighter aircraft.
Saudi Arabia needs to have American troops available as the
ultimate guarantor of their security, as they were in 1990. Israel
and Saudi Arabia have been the two countries with the greatest
influence in Washington. As this agreement shows, that is no
longer the case. Both together weren't strong enough to block
this agreement. What frightens them the most about this
agreement is that fact. If the foundation of their national security
is the American commitment to them, then the inability to
influence Washington is a threat to their national security.
There are no other guarantors available. Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu went to Moscow, clearly trying to get the
Russians to block the agreement. He failed. But even if he had
succeeded, he would have alienated the United States, and
would have gotten instead a patron incapable of supplying the
type of equipment Israel might need when Israel might need it.
The fact is that neither the Saudis nor the Israelis have a
potential patron other than the United States.
U.S. Regional Policy
The United States is not abandoning either Israel or Saudi
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Arabia. A regional policy based solely on the Iranians would be
irrational. What the United States wants to do is retain its
relationship with Israel and Saudi Arabia, but on modified
terms. The modification is that U.S. support will come in the
context of a balance of power, particularly between Iran and
Saudi Arabia. While the United States is prepared to support the
Saudis in that context, it will not simply support them
absolutely. The Saudis and Israelis will have to live with things
that they have not had to live with before -- namely, an
American concern for a reasonably strong and stable Iran
regardless of its ideology.
The American strategy is built on experience in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Washington has learned that it has interests in the
region, but that the direct use of American force cannot achieve
those goals, partly because imposing solutions takes more force
than the United States has and partly because the more force it
uses, the more resistance it generates. Therefore, the United
States needs a means of minimizing its interests, and pursuing
those it has without direct force.
With its interests being limited, the United States' strategy is a
balance of power. The most natural balance of power is Sunni
versus Shia, the Arabs against the Iranians. The goal is not war,
but sufficient force on each side to paralyze the other. In that
sense, a stable Iran and a more self-reliant Saudi Arabia are
needed. Saudi Arabia is not abandoned, but nor is it the sole
interest of the United States.
In the same sense, the United States is committed to the survival
of Israel. If Iranian nuclear weapons are prevented, the United
States has fulfilled that commitment, since there are no current
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threats that could conceivably threaten Israeli survival. Israel's
other interests, such as building settlements in the West Bank,
do not require American support. If the United States determines
that they do not serve American interests (for example, because
they radicalize the region and threaten the survival of Jordan),
then the United States will force Israel to abandon the
settlements by threatening to change its relationship with Israel.
If the settlements do not threaten American interests, then they
are Israel's problem.
Israel has outgrown its dependence on the United States. It is
not clear that Israel is comfortable with its own maturation, but
the United States has entered a new period where what America
wants is a mature Israel that can pursue its interests without
recourse to the United States. And if Israel finds it cannot have
what it wants without American support, Israel may not get that
support, unless Israel's survival is at stake.
In the same sense, the perpetual Saudi inability to create an
armed force capable of effectively defending itself has led the
United States to send troops on occasion -- and contractors
always -- to deal with the problem. Under the new strategy, the
expectation is that Saudi soldiers will fight Saudi Arabia's wars --
with American assistance as needed, but not as an alternative
force.
With this opening to Iran, the United States will no longer be
bound by its Israeli and Saudi relationships. They will not be
abandoned, but the United States has broader interests than
those relationships, and at the same time few interests that rise to
the level of prompting it to directly involve U.S. troops. The
Saudis will have to exert themselves to balance the Iranians, and
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Israel will have to wend its way in a world where it has no
strategic threats, but only strategic problems, like everyone else
has. It is not a world in which Israeli or Saudi rigidity can
sustain itself.
George Friedman is chairman of Stratfor.
Article 4.
The Washington Institute
An Israeli Assessment of the Iran Deal
Michael Herzog
November 26, 2013 -- BICOM Senior Visiting Fellow Brig. Gen.
(res.) Michael Herzog gave his assessment of the Iran deal and its
implications in a BICOM phone briefing on November 25. The
following is a summary of his assessment, covering the positives and
negatives of the interim deal, concerns around the endgame, and
Israel's position. General Herzog is also a Milton Fine International
Fellow with The Washington Institute.
The Interim Deal
This is an interim deal for six months, so ultimately the
judgment will have to be made in the context of the next phase,
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which is the comprehensive endgame deal. However, we can
identify some positive and negative elements of the interim deal.
Main Positive Elements
• The preamble stipulates that under no circumstances will
Iran seek to develop nuclear weapons. This of course is
only declaratory, but it has significance in case of a future
violation by Iran.
• In practical terms, it more or less stops the clock on Iran's
nuclear programme. Under the deal they stop enriching
uranium to 20 percent and they convert existing stockpiles.
They continue to enrich to 3.5 percent but cannot add
centrifuges, and any addition to their existing stockpile will
be converted to oxide form.
• They are not supposed to manufacture any new centrifuges
except for repairs, or operate the new generation of
centrifuges.
• The inspections will now be on a daily basis, implicitly
involving cameras, and will also cover the manufacture of
centrifuges, which is a new element.
Main Deficiencies
• The deal implicitly recognises Iran's right to enrich. This
was a major stumbling block because Iran wanted a specific
mention of this right. They are allowed to continue to enrich
in the interim period, and the end of the document refers to
guidelines for the endgame, in which it is clear Iran will be
allowed to enrich.
• All the measures which stop the clock are reversible. No
centrifuges are disabled and no site is decommissioned or
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mothballed. Even the stockpiles of enriched uranium
converted to oxide form can be converted back.
• Regarding the heavy water processing facility and reactor
at Arak, which could provide plutonium for a nuclear
weapon, the agreement is that they will not advance the fuel
cycle of the reactor, but it allows Iran to continue the
physical construction.
• The IAEA's concerns on past and current activities dealing
with the military dimension of Iran's programme are not
addressed.
• The deal implicitly legitimises Iran as a member of the
community of nations, and may allow it a freer hand to
continue other negative activities in the region beyond the
nuclear programme, including support for Assad in Syria,
Hezbollah's terrorist activities, etc.
• The significance of the sanctions relief is not clear. There
will be no additional sanctions, no more pressure on Iranian
oil exports, they will be able to export gold and other
precious metals, and sanctions will be lifted on
petrochemicals, automotive industries and more. Estimates
of the benefits to Iran range considerably from $5 billion to
$20 billion. Though this is not the collapse of the sanctions
regime, there is major concern about the psychological
impact of drilling a hole in these sanctions.
Lack of Clarity on the Endgame
• There seems to be no agreement amongst the P5+1 when it
comes to the endgame. The guidelines in the deal regarding
the endgame are not very promising because they implicitly
recognise the Iranian right to enrich and suggest that
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sanctions will be fully lifted, but do not clearly address the
concerns of Israel and many others in the region: will it
really take Iran significantly back from the capacity to
breakout to nuclear weapons through the dismantlement of
core components in its programme?
• On enrichment, there is a need to define the endgame in
concrete terms of setting the clock back on the breakout
capacity (to military grade uranium and a nuclear device).
Today they can breakout in between one and two months to
one bomb's worth of military grade enriched material, so
what is the endgame goal? According to a senior US official
the goal is for the breakout time to be years instead of
months, but this has not been clearly defined.
• On the plutonium track, the deal implies the endgame goal
is to turn the plutonium plant from heavy water use to light
water use (which removes the proliferation risk), but it has
to be clearly defined.
• The endgame has to clearly address IAEA concerns about
the military dimensions of the Iranian programme, to be
included in the monitoring regime. It is not clear how open
files relating to suspicions around military research and
weaponisation will be dealt with.
• The question also has to be asked: What do the Iranians
assume will happen if there is no agreement in six months?
They will still have all their capabilities. Meanwhile, the
threat of more sanctions is not clear, and they do not see
facing them a credible threat of a US military option. It is
also important to effectively enforce existing sanctions
during the interim period.
Israel's Role
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• It is important for Israel to work quietly and efficiently
with the US and the other countries to try and influence the
endgame deal. Israel had some impact on the interim deal
but not a significant amount, and not around the shape of
the endgame.
• Israel is now fixing its sights on the end of the six months
and will start a dialogue with the US on the desired
endgame. The next decision point for Israel will be at the
end of this interim period. If there is a deal, Israel will have
to judge it on its merits and decide how to act.
Alternatively, there will be no deal and talks will continue
beyond the six months, which is a very likely scenario.
Facing a strung out process will put Israel in a dilemma of
deciding if and when to intervene.
Arndt 5
The New-Yorker
Why the Iran Deal Scares Saudi
Arabia
F. Gregory Gause
November 26, 2013 -- After the five permanent members of the
U.N. Security Council and Germany concluded a preliminary
agreement with Iran on Sunday, it did not take long for regional
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critics of the deal to react. The Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin
Netanyahu, blasted the agreement as "a historic mistake." Saudi
Arabia, the other American ally in the Middle East worried
about an opening to Iran, took a different approach, issuing a
carefully worded statement that cautiously welcomed the deal.
The Saudis have no allies in American politics to rally against
the Obama Administration, and no desire to set themselves
against the other international powers who signed the
agreement, including their security partners France and Great
Britain, their fellow oil producer Russia, and their major oil
customer China. But they are as unhappy as the Israelis, if for
slightly different reasons. The Saudis are not merely concerned
about Iran's nuclear ambitions. They have a more profound
fear: that geopolitical trends in the Middle East are aligning
against them, threatening both their regional stature and their
domestic security. The Saudis see an Iran that is dominant in
Iraq and Lebanon, holding onto its ally in Syria, and now
forging a new relationship with Washington—a rival, in short,
without any obstacles to regional dominance, and one further
emboldened to encourage Shiite populations in the Gulf
monarchies, including Saudi Arabia, to oppose their Sunni
rulers.
In recent weeks, that fear has been on display in a series of
vocal complaints about American outreach to Iran and the
Obama Administration's broader strategy in the Middle East.
Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, the superstar Saudi financier, is
something of a black sheep in the ruling family, but a public
criticism of Obama that he made last week reflects a strong
sentiment among Saudi elites. "America is shooting itself in the
foot," Alwaleed told the Wall Street Journal's editorial board.
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"It's just complete chaos. Confusion. No policy." A few days
later, Saudi Arabia's ambassador in London, Prince
Mohammed bin Nawwaf bin Abdulaziz, called the negotiations
with Iran "appeasement," and indirectly threatened that Saudi
Arabia would obtain its own nuclear weapons if necessary.
These very public denunciations of Washington reflect the
same worries that motivated Riyadh to perform an
extraordinary gesture of discontent at the U.N. in October.
Famously low-key in their diplomacy, the Saudis drew attention
to themselves by campaigning for a seat on the U.N. Security
Council and then theatrically rejecting it, something no country
has ever done. (The move even came as a surprise to Saudi
diplomats, who had gone through extensive training to prepare
for their new responsibilities.) "This was a message for the
U.S., not the U.N.," the Saudi intelligence chief Bandar bin
Sultan, who spent twenty-two years as an ambassador in
Washington, reportedly told a Western diplomat.
At that time, the immediate cause for Saudi displeasure was
Syria. Riyadh had enthusiastically backed President Obama's
threat to use force against the Assad regime after a chemical-
weapons attack on a Damascus suburb in August. The Saudis
hoped that an American strike would draw the United States
into greater and more direct military involvement in the
campaign to bring down Assad. The deal negotiated between
the U.S. and Russia to remove Syria's chemical weapons—a
diplomatic victory for the Obama Administration—was seen in
Riyadh as not only a missed opportunity to deal a decisive blow
to Assad but as an acknowledgement that the regime was a
legitimate international partner rather than a pariah to be
overthrown. With the U.N. Security Council committed to the
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chemical-weapons deal, the Saudis decided that it was a club
they would rather not join.
When Secretary of State John Kerry went to Riyadh on
November 4th to reassure the Saudis of the continuing
American commitment to their security, the Saudi Foreign
Minister, Prince Saud Al-Faisal, referred to Syria as "an
occupied land." No one had to ask the Prince, "Occupied by
whom?" Since the mid-aughts, Riyadh has tried to check the
growth of Iranian power in the Arab world, and almost all of its
attempts have failed. The Saudis backed the anti-Syrian March
14th Alliance in Lebanon in two electoral victories, only to see
Iran's ally Hezbollah remain the dominant force in Lebanese
politics. They were powerless to arrest Iran's growing influence
in Iraq, watching helplessly as Tehran orchestrated the coalition
politics that kept Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki in office after
the 2010 elections. In 2007, King Abdullah brokered a deal
between llamas and Fatah, which was intended to draw llamas
away from Iranian patronage. But the deal broke down within
months, after Hamas took control of Gaza and turned again to
Iran for support. Across the region, the Saudis were losing and
the Iranians were winning.
This was not simply a geopolitical setback for Riyadh. The
Saudi leadership believes that increased Iranian power will lead
to political mobilization by Shia inside the Sunni-ruled Gulf
states. The Saudis and their allies in the Gulf remain certain that
Iran meddles directly in their domestic affairs, but they are also
convinced that Iran's heightened regional role will inevitably
inspire Shia discontent, which makes Iran's ascendance an
indirect threat to the stability of the Gulf monarchies.
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It was through this lens that the Saudis viewed the sustained
and peaceful demonstrations in 2011 against the Sunni
monarchy in Shia-majority Bahrain, even though there was no
objective evidence of an Iranian role in the protests. The Arab
Spring also brought down Riyadh's most important Arab ally,
Hosni Mubarak's regime in Egypt. But there was one bright
spot for the Saudis amid the regional upheaval. The uprising
against Assad in Syria, Iran's closest ally in the Arab world,
represented the best chance in a decade for Riyadh to roll back
Iranian power.
For the Saudis, therefore, Obama's refusal to take action
against Assad was seen as another example of Washington's
inability to appreciate both the dangers and the opportunities of
the Arab Spring. Standing aside while Mubarak fell—as the
Saudis saw it—was bad enough, but embracing a Muslim
Brotherhood government in Cairo, which was an unreliable
partner against Iran and a challenger to Saudi authority over the
interpretation of Sunni Islam, was even worse.
The Obama Administration views its opening to Iran as part of
a broader effort to bring stability to the region, and sees an
Iranian commitment to foreswear nuclear weapons as a benefit
to allies like Saudi Arabia. But the Saudis, without a seat at the
negotiating table, fear that Washington will ratify Iranian
hegemony in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and the Persian Gulf in
exchange for a nuclear deal.
Dealing with the United States, the Saudi Foreign Minister
Prince Saud al-Faisal once said, "makes a sane man go mad."
There is no doubt that American policymakers have often felt
the same way about Saudi Arabia. The current tensions between
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Washington and Riyadh, however serious, are hardly
unprecedented: the unlikely allies have never seen eye-to-eye
on regional issues. The Saudis did not like the Egyptian-Israeli
peace treaty of 1979, the crowning diplomatic achievement of
the Carter Administration; nor did they appreciate the American
invasion of Iraq, in 2003. The Americans, meanwhile, have had
their own complaints: on oil policy, the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, and Saudi funding for radical Islamic causes. The
rhetorical volleys of the past few months are minor compared to
the most serious episodes of tension between the two allies: the
oil embargo imposed by Saudi Arabia in 1973 to protest
American support for Israel during the Yom Kippur War, which
sent a permanent shock through global oil markets, and the
aftermath of September 11, 2001, when few Americans thought
it a coincidence that fifteen of the nineteen hijackers were from
Saudi Arabia.
The present disagreements between the Saudi and American
governments will not lead to a permanent rupture in the
relationship, as the Saudis themselves acknowledge. The core
interest that has held the Saudi-U.S. relationship together for
many decades—Persian Gulf security and the free flow of
energy resources from the region—remains intact. But the
nature of the recent disputes suggests an underlying conflict
between the two allies. The problem is not that the U.S. and
Saudi Arabia have divergent goals in the region: both countries
want Assad out, an Iran without nuclear weapons and
diminished regional influence, a stable Egypt, and a two-state
solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The problem is that
they have very different views about how important these goals
are, and how much effort should be expended to achieve them.
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Saudi fears that Washington will sell out their regional interests
in a "grand bargain" with Iran are exaggerated. The American
policy in the Gulf, for many decades, has been to prevent any
other power from becoming dominant, and Washington is not
about to turn the keys over to Iran. But the Saudis are correct to
worry that the U.S. will not insist that any nuclear deal includes
concessions from Iran on regional geopolitics. They are also
right to conclude that Washington regards Assad's ouster as a
lower priority than Riyadh does, and that the U.S. does not see
the Palestinian issue as central to its policy in the region.
The Obama Administration does think that the U.S. is
overcommitted in the Middle East, and seeks to "pivot" at least
some American foreign-policy resources and attention to East
Asia. Substantial increases in domestic production have made
the Middle East less important to American energy
calculations, though Persian Gulf oil and gas will remain
significant for decades to come. Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the
United Arab Emirates have almost all the world's spare oil-
production capacity; only they can bring substantial amounts of
oil onto the market in a short period of time to make up for
production lost elsewhere. That is reason enough for the U.S. to
maintain good relations with Saudi Arabia. But the overall
trend is toward a diminished role for the Middle East in the
global energy market.
Still, there are many common interests to keep the allies united,
including shared worries about Iran's regional influence and
about Al Qaeda and its affiliates. The Saudis do not have any
alternatives at present to the security provided by their ties to
the U.S.: the Europeans are too weak militarily, Russia is in
decline, and China has neither the capability nor the inclination
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to project power into the Persian Gulf. But over time, we can
expect to see more periods of turbulence between Washington
and Riyadh. The allies may not disagree on their goals, but their
priorities will increasingly differ. When the end of the "special
relationship" finally arrives—likely decades from now—it will
end not with a bang but with a gradual drift apart.
F. Gregory Gause is a professor ofpolitical science at the
University of Vermont and a non-resident seniorfellow at the
Brookings Doha Center. He is the author of "Oil Monarchies"
and "The International Relations of the Persian Gulf "
Amick 6.
TIME
Saudi Arabia Considers Nuclear
Weapons After Iran's Geneva Deal
Aryn Baker
Nov. 26, 2013 -- As Middle Eastern nations attempted to elbow
one another aside in their efforts to offer encouraging
statements about the recently concluded nuclear talks between
Iran and six world powers on Sunday, Saudi Arabia took its
time. More than a day later the Cabinet offered its own pallid
take: "If there is goodwill, then this agreement could represent
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a preliminary step toward a comprehensive solution to the
Iranian nuclear program." Behind the gritted-teeth delivery
there lurked an almost palpable sense of frustration, betrayal
and impotence as Saudi Arabia watched its foremost foe gain
ground in a 34-year competition for influence in the region.
As discussions leading up to the historic agreement in Geneva
unfurled over the past several months, Saudi did its utmost to
express its discontent, lobbying behind closed doors for greater
restrictions on Iran's nuclear program and rejecting at the last
minute a long-sought seat on the U.N. Security Council. Saudi
officials even threatened to get their own nuclear weapons; just
before the talks concluded the Saudi ambassador to the U.K.,
Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf bin Abdulaziz, told the Times of
London: "We are not going to sit idly by and receive a threat
there and not think seriously how we can best defend our
country and our region."
"It's as if Saudi Arabia and Iran suddenly traded places,"
marvels Riyadh- and Istanbul-based Saudi foreign-affairs
commentator Abdullah al-Shamri. "Now [U.S. President]
Obama and [Iranian President] Rouhani are talking on the
phone while their Foreign Ministers shake hands, and it's Saudi
Arabia that is throwing the temper tantrums at the U.N.,
shouting about nuclear weapons and trying to show the world
that they are angry."
Saudi Arabia's frustration with the Iranian deal has little to do
with nuclear weapons, and everything to do with insecurity,
says F. Gregory Gause III, a professor of Middle Eastern
politics at the University of Vermont. "It comes from a
profound and exaggerated fear that a nuclear deal with Iran is a
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prelude to an American-Iranian geopolitical agreement that in
essence leaves Iran as the dominant power in Lebanon, Syria
and Iraq." The U.S., of course, is unlikely to turn the keys to
the region over to Iran anytime soon, but the Saudis are not
entirely wrong in thinking the Obama Administration wants to
disengage from the region, says Gause. The U.S. "backed off in
Syria, it's not taking an active role in Iraq, and it does want
better relations with Iran." Fro
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