📄 Extracted Text (807 words)
ashinglan post September 25, 2013
Can Rouhani or Obama deliver on any deal?
By Fareed 2akaria
Hassan Rouhani presents himself as a striking contrast with his predecessor. For the past several years,
the president of Iran has held a breakfast meeting with a small group of journalists during the opening of
the M. General Assembly. In recent years, the event had become a depressing routine. Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad — dressed in his trademark shabby suit — would saunter in, ramble and rant about the
dangers of U.S. hegemony, deny the Holocaust and taunt his invited guests. (By the end of his tenure,
there was one change; his suits got nicer.) Rouhani, by contrast, arrived punctually, elegantly attired in
flowing clerical robes, and spoke intelligently and precisely about every topic discussed. His only
peroration was against "Iranophobia"; he implored the media to visit Iran and present the real picture of
his country to the world.
"The nuclear issue can be resolved in a very short time," Rouhani said, showing a surprising degree of
optimism about an issue that has proved extremely difficult. "The world wants to be assured that our
program is peaceful, and we want to help them gain that confidence." (The meeting was off the record,
but he allowed a few of his answers to be made public.) The economic sanctions against Iran have taken
a heavy toll. Rouhani spoke forcefully about the damage to ordinary Iranians — denying people food and
medicine. He suggested that both the United States and Iran have made miscalculations but said that was
in the past. He was hopeful about better relations.
I came away willing to believe that Rouhani is a pragmatist. ("Moderate" is a misleading term for the head
of a quasi-theocratic regime.) He wants to end his country's isolation. But it remains unclear whether he
has the authority to act on behalf of his government. Consider what happened Tuesday, when the Iranians
turned down a White House offer of a brief meeting with President Obama. Rouhani explained that he
had no problem "in principle" with the handshake but said that this was a "sensitive issue" and that it
would have been the first such meeting in 35 years, so steps have to be taken with proper preparation.
One has to wonder: If Rouhani does not have the freedom to shake Obama's hand, does he have the
freedom to negotiate a nuclear deal?
The Tehran government has another side, made up of the Revolutionary Guard Corps, the special force
whose political influence has grown over the past decade. These people are hawkish on all foreign-policy
issues. They also profit from the sanctions because their businesses have become the only path for trade
and smuggling. Perhaps the most encouraging news from Iran in the past two weeks was that its supreme
leader, Ali Khamenei, publicly addressed the Guard and said its role was in national defense, not "policy."
U.S. doubts about Rouhani's power can be addressed only over time and through Iranian actions. But
Iranians probably also have doubts — about Obama's power. After all, the new Iranian president appears
willing to cooperate on the nuclear issue in return for a relaxing of the sanctions crippling his country. But
can Obama provide any such relief?
Wage of 2
EFTA01091814
Iran has dozens of layers of sanctions arrayed against it. Some are based on •. Security Council
resolutions, others are decisions by the European Union, others are acts of Congress and still others are
executive orders by the U.S. president. Obama can unilaterally lift only the last, which are the least
burdensome. The most onerous by far are the sanctions passed through acts of Congress, and those will
be the most difficult to lift.
In theory, it's possible to devise a rational process that requires concrete actions from Iran, verifiable
checks by inspectors and then a reciprocal easing of sanctions by the United States. But that would require
Congress to behave in a rational manner — which is a fantasy today. The most likely scenario is that any
agreement with Iran — almost regardless of its content — would instantly be denounced by Republicans
as selling out. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has already gathered 10 other senators who insist that, unless Iran
dismantles most of its civilian nuclear program and becomes a liberal democracy, none of the sanctions
can be eased.
The Obama administration is conscious of the other side of American government. Much of the macho
rhetoric emanating from the administration about Iran has seemed designed to inoculate it from charges
of being soft. The reality is that it remains unclear whether Iran can say yes to a nuclear deal — and equally
unclear whether the United States could. Rouhani and Obama are probably each looking at the other and
thinking the same thing: Can he deliver?
Wage of 2
EFTA01091815
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
4e941a3835c603a65633164346c204d5e4a36c13c2ee078a9166b74279fef401
Bates Number
EFTA01091814
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
2
Comments 0