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A Neighborly Option For Iran

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  • A Neighborly Option For Iran

    A NEIGHBORLY OPTION FOR IRAN
    By Vartan Oskanian

    www.civilitasfoundation.org
    October 16, 2008

    Yerevan - Once again, the issue of bombing or sanctioning Iran has
    resurfaced. For years, debate about Iran has oscillated between
    two bad alternatives. Some are convinced that a nuclear Iran is the
    worst of all possible scenarios, worse even than the fall-out from
    a pre-emptive strike.

    But neither a nuclear-armed Iran nor air strikes against it are wise
    options, certainly not for this region.

    The repercussions of bombing Iran should be clear: closure of the
    Straits of Hormuz, skyrocketing oil prices, possible retaliation
    against Israel (regardless of the origin of the attack), and even
    greater turmoil in Iraq and Afghanistan. Indeed, the only certainty
    of any pre-emptive strike is irreparable and long-lasting damage to
    regional security and political and economic stability.

    Of course, the alternative is no safer. A nuclear-armed Iran would
    change the entire region's security environment, and, given the enmity
    between Israel and Iran, two such nuclear powers facing off against
    each other would pose a threat.

    The way out of this dilemma is to understand what Iran wants - and
    how to accommodate it without jeopardizing anyone's security.

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has said that Iran wants to
    develop uranium enrichment technology for industrial use. Everyone
    agrees that Iran has the right to=2 0do so. But the world is split
    over whether to believe that Iran is actually doing what it says.

    If as some argue Iran is being disingenuous, then once it achieves
    this first phase - uranium enrichment for industrial purposes - it can
    easily slide into weapons-grade enrichment, leaving the international
    community out in the cold, with no channels of communication, no
    observation teams in place, and no monitors ready to sound the whistle.

    That is why the world must not remain focused on the already-lost
    first phase. Iran has more than 3,000 centrifuges despite all the
    international sanctions and threats. Instead, the world must focus on
    the second phase, because it is weapons potential that is the looming
    danger, and it is here that internationally mandated mechanisms for
    oversight and supervision exist.

    The Iranians have always said that they will continue to honor their
    commitments and open their doors to observation as members of the
    non-proliferation community. But the international community must
    be more respectful of Iran's current industrial aims if it wants
    Iranian cooperation.

    The first step is to assuage Iran's feeling of being besieged.

    Fortunately, there are voices in America and elsewhere that advocate
    engaging Iran at the highest level. But, to talk with Iran effectively,
    one must understand Iranian values and thinking.

    Iranians have a sense of seniority, if not superiority, born of a
    rich and ancient culture that has survived into modern times. But
    they also have a historically ingrained sense of insecurity, owing to
    frequent conquest and domination, which is being aggravated today by
    the presence of American troops to their west in Iraq and to their
    east in Afghanistan. Their outlook nowadays is the product of these
    two worldviews - suspicious of others' motives and proud of themselves
    as smart, tough negotiators and not without their own resources.

    In my meetings with the current and past leaders of Syria and Iran,
    as well as in my meeting with Saddam Hussein, I heard them all say the
    same thing: the West is out to get them. Their explanation was that
    the West is uncomfortable with the motives and behavior of ideological
    states -- Syria, Iran, and Iraq under Saddam were states with causes -
    Islam, Arab unity, or anti-Zionism.

    For Iranians, as bearers of faith and national pride, responses that
    seem to others self-righteous and irrational are, in fact, necessary
    and acceptable.

    The case of Saddam's weapons of mass destruction is a historic example
    of a willingness to go to hell with your head held high. Saddam knew
    that he didn't have weapons of mass destruction, but he was unwilling
    to concede the right of inspectors to ask.

    As in North Korea, Iran's neighbors might provide the right mechanism
    to create a more transparent relationship betwee n Iran and the
    world. In the so-called "six-party talks," North Korea's neighbors
    offered tangible incentives to Kim Jong-il's regime to abandon its
    nuclear program. The most prominent of these was an end to North
    Korea's economic isolation.

    Iran, too, feels besieged, though it is not isolated: it depends
    heavily on trade, and not just as a seller of oil. Two-thirds of
    its population is under the age of 30, and unemployment is high;
    it needs to attract foreign investment for its oil and gas industry,
    and to finance road construction and other infrastructure projects.

    Comparisons with neighboring Turkey are instructive. Before Iran's
    Islamic revolution, it led Turkey in foreign direct investment,
    income per head, and GDP growth. Now Turkey has moved ahead, and may
    even join the European Union.

    Other regional comparisons further reinforce that trend. The Qataris
    have outstripped them in exploiting the huge gas field they share. Tiny
    Dubai draws in far more foreign investment: Iranians go there for
    banking, trade, and fun.

    Iran's neighbors need to convince Iran's rulers that Iranians, too,
    can participate in the region's growth, and even become regional
    leaders. Only an open Iran, fully integrated into the regional economy
    and granted a role commensurate to its size and economic potential,
    will be able to moderate its siege mentality.

    Here, a vital step would b e for the West to begin to envisage Iran
    as a potential alternative supplier of gas, by offering to link Iran
    to the proposed White Stream and Nabucco pipelines that are currently
    under study to bring Central Asian gas to Europe.

    The world's judgments about Iran's motives and actions should not
    be distorted by Iranian pride. We can only understand Iran's real
    intentions by engaging the Iranians - not cornering them.

    Vartan Oskanian, Armenia's Minister of Foreign Affairs from 1998 until
    April 2008, is the founder of the Yerevan-based Civilitas Foundation.
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