By Dina Esfandiary, May 6, 2019
The USS Abraham Lincoln on a 2012
mission in the Persian Gulf. US Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd
Class Jerine Lee.
The Trump administration’s “maximum
pressure” campaign on Iran has picked up pace. Last month, the administration
designated the Revolutionary Guards as a terror organization. Last week, it
cancelled waivers from US sanctions that allowed some countries to buy Iranian
crude oil, aiming to force Iranian oil exports to zero, and only renewed some of the waivers that allowed foreign
countries to engage in civil nuclear cooperation with Iran—key to the
functioning of the Iran nuclear deal. This week, the White House stated that a routine deployment of and aircraft
carrier strike group to the Persian Gulf was in fact intended to “send a clear
and unmistakable message” to Iran.
To date, however, the maximum
pressure campaign has failed to change Iranian behavior. In fact, it seems
designed to push Iran to leave the deal and set the scene for military
confrontation.
When President Trump withdrew the
United States from the 2015 nuclear deal with Iran, he re-imposed a wave of
unilateral sanctions. These sanctions included prohibitions on the purchase of
Iranian oil. But in November 2018, the administration issued waivers to eight countries: China, India,
Greece, Italy, Taiwan, Japan, Turkey, and South Korea, who would all be allowed
to continue importing Iranian oil for six months, provided they showed
significant cuts in their imports. Importantly, though, in issuing these
waivers, the administration made a specific stipulation: For the countries buying Iranian oil to benefit from
US waivers, the income from these oil sales would have to be funnelled into
escrow accounts, to be held for use in the purchase of humanitarian goods. In
other words, the money made from oil sales could only be used to buy food and
medicine. For example, in December 2018, India and Iran agreed on the
exact parameters of the process: India would deposit payments for
oil imported from Iran into escrow accounts at five of its banks held by state-run
UCO Bank Ltd. Iran would then use that money to purchase humanitarian goods
from India.
When Secretary Pompeo announced the
end to the US waivers on 15 April, he said it would deprive the Iranian
government of a key source of revenue—40 percent of it, to be precise. But the November 2018 US
oil waivers had already limited what Iran could do with the money from oil
sales, ear-marking it specifically for the purchase of food and medicine. All
this additional step did was remove the credit that Iran would have accumulated
in each country it sold oil to, to spend on food and medicine. In addition, the
administration is reportedly exploring expanding sanctions to target Iranian ability to
sell other goods, including petrochemicals, abroad. All these measures clearly
go beyond targeting Iranian officials, and now target Iranians directly.
Last week attention turned to the
nuclear waivers, which are necessary for the international community to carry
out the technical work required for the implementation of Iran’s nuclear
agreement with Russia, China, and European countries. That work would convert
Iranian nuclear facilities, so they no longer pose a proliferation concern. The
waivers also allowed Iran to sell the excess nuclear material that it produces
and that poses a proliferation concern to other countries.
The 2015 nuclear agreement,
officially known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), specified that three Iranian
facilities—the Fordow enrichment plant, the Arak heavy water reactor, and the
Bushehr nuclear power plant—would be converted with the help of foreign
countries. The nuclear deal requires both Fordow and Arak to be converted into
research facilities; also, Iran needs waivers to continue buying fuel from
Russia for the Bushehr plant. There was no fact-based argument in favour of not
renewing the nuclear waivers; they enable foreign suppliers and engineers both
to work to convert the Iranian facilities so they can’t be used in a nuclear
weapons program, and to have insight into Iranian civilian nuclear efforts
because of their presence on the ground and access to the facilities.
On 3 May, Assistant Secretary of
State Christopher Ford announced the renewal of the waivers allowing work to
continue on Arak, Fordow, and Bushehr facilities, but only for 90 days, rather
than the previous 180. The decision to renew the waivers is welcome to those
who hope all remaining parties to the nuclear deal will continue to implement
it. But the engineers involved in converting Iranian facilities will not be
able to make significant progress in such a short time. This short extension
move effectively kicks the can down the road for 90 days.
Apparently, the Trump administration
did not want to risk looking lenient by renewing all nuclear waivers and so
revoked two. The first allowed Iran to ship excess heavy-water to Oman, while
the second permitted it to ship excess enriched uranium—any amount above a
300-kilogram limit—in exchange for natural uranium. The JCPOA states that
excess enriched uranium can be either down-blended (converting uranium enriched
to anything above 3.5 percent back to low enriched uranium) or sold. The US
decision prevents Iran from selling the excess enriched uranium, only leaving
Tehran with the option of down-blending it.
The nuclear deal doesn’t address how
Tehran should stay below the 130-ton heavy-water limit contained in the
agreement. Ensuring Iran remains below the limit of heavy-water allowed by the
JCPOA is essential to ensuring that Iran does not retain a second path to a
nuclear weapon. Plutonium—produced in the operation of a heavy water plant—is
the second raw material that could be used to produce a nuclear weapon. As
such, the deal doesn’t force any party to the agreement or third party to help
Iran get the excess heavy water out. But removing the option for other
countries to take the excess heavy water seems designed to make it harder for
Iran to comply with the limit contained in the JCPOA.
It is unclear what the Trump
administration aims to achieve with its “maximum pressure” campaign. Ceasing
the oil waivers only restricts Iran’s ability to purchase much needed
humanitarian goods for a population that Secretary Pompeo repeatedly states the administration “stands with.” The renewal of
the waivers allowing work to continue on Iran’s nuclear facilities is wise, but
the shortening of the timeframe will mean that the administration will merely
have to revisit the issue in 90 days. The work contemplated under the Iran
nuclear deal can’t possibly be completed within three months. What’s more, far
from “tightening restrictions on Iran’s
program,” preventing it
from shipping or selling excess nuclear material abroad seems designed to
interfere with Iran’s efforts to implement its commitments under the JCPOA.
Reframing a routine deployment of the USS Abraham Lincoln strike
force to the region only serves to unnecessarily heighten tensions and foster
the potential for miscalculation. The only reason to do any of this is to push
Iran into a corner, paving the way toward military confrontation—something few
want because it will achieve little.
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