The Iran Deal and Its Consequences
Mixing shrewd diplomacy with
defiance of U.N. resolutions, Iran has turned the negotiation on its head.
By Henry Kissinger And George P.
Shultz
The announced framework for an
agreement on Iran’s nuclear program has the potential to generate a seminal
national debate. Advocates exult over the nuclear constraints it would impose
on Iran. Critics question the verifiability of these constraints and their
longer-term impact on regional and world stability. The historic significance
of the agreement and indeed its sustainability depend on whether these
emotions, valid by themselves, can be reconciled.
Debate regarding technical details
of the deal has thus far inhibited the soul-searching necessary regarding its
deeper implications. For 20 years, three presidents of both major parties
proclaimed that an Iranian nuclear weapon was contrary to American and global
interests—and that they were prepared to use force to prevent it. Yet
negotiations that began 12 years ago as an international effort to prevent an
Iranian capability to develop a nuclear arsenal are ending with an agreement
that concedes this very capability, albeit short of its full capacity in the
first 10 years.
Mixing shrewd diplomacy with open
defiance of U.N. resolutions, Iran has gradually turned the negotiation on its
head. Iran’s centrifuges have multiplied from about 100 at the beginning of the
negotiation to almost 20,000 today. The threat of war now constrains the West
more than Iran. While Iran treated the mere fact of its willingness to
negotiate as a concession, the West has felt compelled to break every deadlock
with a new proposal. In the process, the Iranian program has reached a point
officially described as being within two to three months of building a nuclear
weapon. Under the proposed agreement, for 10 years Iran will never be further
than one year from a nuclear weapon and, after a decade, will be significantly
closer.
Inspections
and Enforcement
The president deserves respect for
the commitment with which he has pursued the objective of reducing nuclear
peril, as does Secretary of State John Kerry for the
persistence, patience and ingenuity with which he has striven to impose
significant constraints on Iran’s nuclear program.
Progress has been made on shrinking
the size of Iran’s enriched stockpile, confining the enrichment of uranium to
one facility, and limiting aspects of the enrichment process. Still, the
ultimate significance of the framework will depend on its verifiability and
enforceability.
Negotiating the final agreement will
be extremely challenging. For one thing, no official text has yet been
published. The so-called framework represents a unilateral American
interpretation. Some of its clauses have been dismissed by the principal
Iranian negotiator as “spin.” A joint EU-Iran statement differs in important
respects, especially with regard to the lifting of sanctions and permitted
research and development.
Comparable ambiguities apply to the
one-year window for a presumed Iranian breakout. Emerging at a relatively late
stage in the negotiation, this concept replaced the previous baseline—that Iran
might be permitted a technical capacity compatible with a plausible civilian
nuclear program. The new approach complicates verification and makes it more
political because of the vagueness of the criteria.
Under the new approach, Iran
permanently gives up none of its equipment, facilities or fissile product to
achieve the proposed constraints. It only places them under temporary
restriction and safeguard—amounting in many cases to a seal at the door of a
depot or periodic visits by inspectors to declared sites. The physical
magnitude of the effort is daunting. Is the International Atomic Energy Agency
technically, and in terms of human resources, up to so complex and vast an
assignment?
In a large country with multiple
facilities and ample experience in nuclear concealment, violations will be
inherently difficult to detect. Devising theoretical models of inspection is
one thing. Enforcing compliance, week after week, despite competing
international crises and domestic distractions, is another. Any report of a
violation is likely to prompt debate over its significance—or even calls for
new talks with Tehran to explore the issue. The experience of Iran’s work on a
heavy-water reactor during the “interim agreement” period—when suspect activity
was identified but played down in the interest of a positive negotiating
atmosphere—is not encouraging.
Compounding the difficulty is the
unlikelihood that breakout will be a clear-cut event. More likely it will
occur, if it does, via the gradual accumulation of ambiguous evasions.
When inevitable disagreements arise
over the scope and intrusiveness of inspections, on what criteria are we
prepared to insist and up to what point? If evidence is imperfect, who bears
the burden of proof? What process will be followed to resolve the matter
swiftly?
The agreement’s primary enforcement
mechanism, the threat of renewed sanctions, emphasizes a broad-based asymmetry,
which provides Iran permanent relief from sanctions in exchange for temporary
restraints on Iranian conduct. Undertaking the “snap-back” of sanctions is
unlikely to be as clear or as automatic as the phrase implies. Iran is in a
position to violate the agreement by executive decision. Restoring the most
effective sanctions will require coordinated international action. In countries
that had reluctantly joined in previous rounds, the demands of public and
commercial opinion will militate against automatic or even prompt “snap-back.”
If the follow-on process does not unambiguously define the term, an attempt to
reimpose sanctions risks primarily isolating America, not Iran.
The gradual expiration of the
framework agreement, beginning in a decade, will enable Iran to become a
significant nuclear, industrial and military power after that time—in the scope
and sophistication of its nuclear program and its latent capacity to weaponize
at a time of its choosing. Limits on Iran’s research and development have not
been publicly disclosed (or perhaps agreed). Therefore Iran will be in a
position to bolster its advanced nuclear technology during the period of the
agreement and rapidly deploy more advanced centrifuges—of at least five times
the capacity of the current model—after the agreement expires or is broken.
The follow-on negotiations must
carefully address a number of key issues, including the mechanism for reducing
Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium from 10,000 to 300 kilograms, the scale of
uranium enrichment after 10 years, and the IAEA’s concerns regarding previous
Iranian weapons efforts. The ability to resolve these and similar issues should
determine the decision over whether or when the U.S. might still walk away from
the negotiations.
The
Framework Agreement and Long-Term Deterrence
Even when these issues are resolved,
another set of problems emerges because the negotiating process has created its
own realities. The interim agreement accepted Iranian enrichment; the new
agreement makes it an integral part of the architecture. For the U.S., a
decade-long restriction on Iran’s nuclear capacity is a possibly hopeful
interlude. For Iran’s neighbors—who perceive their imperatives in terms of
millennial rivalries—it is a dangerous prelude to an even more dangerous
permanent fact of life. Some of the chief actors in the Middle East are likely
to view the U.S. as willing to concede a nuclear military capability to the
country they consider their principal threat. Several will insist on at least
an equivalent capability. Saudi Arabia has signaled that it will enter the
lists; others are likely to follow. In that sense, the implications of the
negotiation are irreversible.
If the Middle East is “proliferated”
and becomes host to a plethora of nuclear-threshold states, several in mortal
rivalry with each other, on what concept of nuclear deterrence or strategic
stability will international security be based? Traditional theories of
deterrence assumed a series of bilateral equations. Do we now envision an
interlocking series of rivalries, with each new nuclear program
counterbalancing others in the region?
Previous thinking on nuclear
strategy also assumed the existence of stable state actors. Among the original
nuclear powers, geographic distances and the relatively large size of programs
combined with moral revulsion to make surprise attack all but inconceivable.
How will these doctrines translate into a region where sponsorship of nonstate
proxies is common, the state structure is under assault, and death on behalf of
jihad is a kind of fulfillment?
Some have suggested the U.S. can
dissuade Iran’s neighbors from developing individual deterrent capacities by
extending an American nuclear umbrella to them. But how will these guarantees
be defined? What factors will govern their implementation? Are the guarantees
extended against the use of nuclear weapons—or against any military attack,
conventional or nuclear? Is it the domination by Iran that we oppose or the
method for achieving it? What if nuclear weapons are employed as psychological
blackmail? And how will such guarantees be expressed, or reconciled with public
opinion and constitutional practices?
Regional
Order
For some, the greatest value in an
agreement lies in the prospect of an end, or at least a moderation, of Iran’s
3½ decades of militant hostility to the West and established international
institutions, and an opportunity to draw Iran into an effort to stabilize the
Middle East. Having both served in government during a period of
American-Iranian strategic alignment and experienced its benefits for both
countries as well as the Middle East, we would greatly welcome such an outcome.
Iran is a significant national state with a historic culture, a fierce national
identity, and a relatively youthful, educated population; its re-emergence as a
partner would be a consequential event.
But partnership in what task?
Cooperation is not an exercise in good feeling; it presupposes congruent
definitions of stability. There exists no current evidence that Iran and the U.S.
are remotely near such an understanding. Even while combating common enemies,
such as ISIS, Iran has declined to embrace common objectives. Iran’s
representatives (including its Supreme Leader) continue to profess a
revolutionary anti-Western concept of international order; domestically, some
senior Iranians describe nuclear negotiations as a form of jihad by other
means.
The final stages of the nuclear
talks have coincided with Iran’s intensified efforts to expand and entrench its
power in neighboring states. Iranian or Iranian client forces are now the
pre-eminent military or political element in multiple Arab countries, operating
beyond the control of national authorities. With the recent addition of Yemen
as a battlefield, Tehran occupies positions along all of the Middle East’s
strategic waterways and encircles archrival Saudi Arabia, an American ally.
Unless political restraint is linked to nuclear restraint, an agreement freeing
Iran from sanctions risks empowering Iran’s hegemonic efforts.
Some have argued that these concerns
are secondary, since the nuclear deal is a way station toward the eventual
domestic transformation of Iran. But what gives us the confidence that we will
prove more astute at predicting Iran’s domestic course than Vietnam’s, Afghanistan’s,
Iraq’s, Syria’s, Egypt’s or Libya’s?
Absent the linkage between nuclear
and political restraint, America’s traditional allies will conclude that the
U.S. has traded temporary nuclear cooperation for acquiescence to Iranian
hegemony. They will increasingly look to create their own nuclear balances and,
if necessary, call in other powers to sustain their integrity. Does America
still hope to arrest the region’s trends toward sectarian upheaval, state
collapse and the disequilibrium of power tilting toward Tehran, or do we now
accept this as an irremediable aspect of the regional balance?
Some advocates have suggested that
the agreement can serve as a way to dissociate America from Middle East
conflicts, culminating in the military retreat from the region initiated by the
current administration. As Sunni states gear up to resist a new Shiite empire,
the opposite is likely to be the case. The Middle East will not stabilize
itself, nor will a balance of power naturally assert itself out of Iranian-Sunni
competition. (Even if that were our aim, traditional balance of power theory
suggests the need to bolster the weaker side, not the rising or expanding
power.) Beyond stability, it is in America’s strategic interest to prevent the
outbreak of nuclear war and its catastrophic consequences. Nuclear arms must
not be permitted to turn into conventional weapons. The passions of the region
allied with weapons of mass destruction may impel deepening American
involvement.
If the world is to be spared even
worse turmoil, the U.S. must develop a strategic doctrine for the region.
Stability requires an active American role. For Iran to be a valuable member of
the international community, the prerequisite is that it accepts restraint on
its ability to destabilize the Middle East and challenge the broader
international order.
Until clarity on an American
strategic political concept is reached, the projected nuclear agreement will
reinforce, not resolve, the world’s challenges in the region. Rather than
enabling American disengagement from the Middle East, the nuclear framework is
more likely to necessitate deepening involvement there—on complex new terms.
History will not do our work for us; it helps only those who seek to help
themselves.
Messrs. Kissinger and Shultz are
former secretaries of state.
No comments:
Post a Comment