Farewell. The Flying Pig Has Left The Building.

Steve Hynd, August 16, 2012

After four years on the Typepad site, eight years total blogging, Newshoggers is closing it's doors today. We've been coasting the last year or so, with many of us moving on to bigger projects (Hey, Eric!) or simply running out of blogging enthusiasm, and it's time to give the old flying pig a rest.

We've done okay over those eight years, although never being quite PC enough to gain wider acceptance from the partisan "party right or wrong" crowds. We like to think we moved political conversations a little, on the ever-present wish to rush to war with Iran, on the need for a real Left that isn't licking corporatist Dem boots every cycle, on America's foreign misadventures in Afghanistan and Iraq. We like to think we made a small difference while writing under that flying pig banner. We did pretty good for a bunch with no ties to big-party apparatuses or think tanks.

Those eight years of blogging will still exist. Because we're ending this typepad account, we've been archiving the typepad blog here. And the original blogger archive is still here. There will still be new content from the old 'hoggers crew too. Ron writes for The Moderate Voice, I post at The Agonist and Eric Martin's lucid foreign policy thoughts can be read at Democracy Arsenal.

I'd like to thank all our regular commenters, readers and the other bloggers who regularly linked to our posts over the years to agree or disagree. You all made writing for 'hoggers an amazingly fun and stimulating experience.

Thank you very much.

Note: This is an archive copy of Newshoggers. Most of the pictures are gone but the words are all here. There may be some occasional new content, John may do some posts and Ron will cross post some of his contributions to The Moderate Voice so check back.


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Thursday, December 17, 2009

Nothing Says Lack of Imagination Better Than Sanctions

By Russ Wellen



THE DEPROLIFERATOR -- Last week Secretary of Defense Robert Gates accused Tehran of "stiffing the international community" by failing to hold up its end of the October United Nations agreement. Iran, of course, had agreed to send low-enriched uranium to Russia and then France. In return, it would receive uranium that was highly enough enriched to run a reactor producing medical isotopes.



Gates wasn't rattling the national saber, though, with his colloquial turn of phrase. Military action, he said, would only slow down, not halt, Iran's nuclear program (however he perceives it). Instead, Gates was trotting out that old scourge sanctions.



Sure enough, by an overwhelming margin, the House of Representatives approved sanctions legislation aimed at depriving Iran of gasoline. But the Senate has yet to vote and, in fact, the administration would prefer to hold out for multilateral, rather than unilateral sanctions (as in the House bill).



In the interim between Gates's comments and passage of the bill, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki volunteered to hand over 400 kilograms of uranium in exchange for an equivalent amount of enriched material traded up front. According to Mottaki, the "remainder of the material would be traded over 'several years.'"



But the agreement had called for Iran to hand over all 1,200 kilograms in one batch. The idea on the part of the West was to reduce the amount of uranium remaining in Iran to a level which was insufficient to enrich for military purposes. Iran's offer, a "desperation" move, in the words of Steve Hynd of Newshoggers, proved too little too late. Recent reports, however questionable their provenance, that Iran is working on the trigger for a nuclear bomb couldn't have helped.



If Iran really doesn't plan to develop nuclear weapons, as it continues to assert, why does it insist on retaining that much uranium? Experienced Iran observer Gareth Porter explains that its removal. . .

. . . would deprive Iran of the bargaining leverage [it has] so painfully accumulated in the form of its LEU [low-enriched uranium] stocks. Senior Iranian national security officials had acknowledged in informal conversations that their main purpose in accumulating low-enriched uranium was to compel the United States to sit down and bargain seriously with Iran. They had observed that. . . before the enrichment program began, the United States exhibited no interest in negotiations.
Sanctioning (v. authorizing) Sanctions (n. penalty)



A professor of law and former attorney for the U.S. government named Orde F. Kittrie makes the case for sanctions at Arms Control Today. He declares: "Strong international sanctions on�Iran�have yet to be tried." Thus far, Kittrie writes, they consist of:

(1) a ban on supplying Iran with various nuclear and ballistic missile items and technology, (2) a freeze on overseas assets of a few dozen named Iranian officials and institutions, (3) a ban on the export of arms by Iran, and (4) a ban on the overseas travel of a handful of Iranian officials.
Furthermore, he maintains, sanctions on Iran are far from the level of, for instance, those imposed on Yugoslavia during the Bosnia crisis. In fact, he calls them "a missed opportunity because�Iran's heavy dependence on foreign trade leaves it potentially highly vulnerable to strong economic sanctions."



Which, no doubt, would hit the Iranian man on the street hard. But Kittrie's as quick with a response to that question as former Secretary of State Madeline Albright was when she was questioned about the effect of sanctions on innocent Iraqis and replied, "We think the price is worth it." Kittrie writes:

. . . whatever harm the Iranian people might incur. . . would pale in comparison to the humanitarian costs. . . of an Iranian nuclear arsenal [which] would almost certainly embolden�Iran�to increase its sponsorship of deadly terrorism, [cause] nuclear proliferation in the�Middle East [and] increase the risk of a nuclear 9/11.
For the sake of argument, what forms would strengthened sanctions take? First of all, Kittrie explains, Europe needs to match our level of embargo (the principal form of sanctions prohibiting commerce). This "would almost immediately bring the Iranian economy to its knees." (We get it, Professor. You mean business.)



Furthermore, squeezing "Iran's gasoline imports would remind the Iranian people that instead of investing in oil refining capacity [its] government has chosen to invest in a nuclear program that is contrary to international law, is economically inefficient, and has resulted in. . . sanctions targeting�Iran."



Iranians blaming their own government for sanctions imposed by the West? At least it's not as far outside the realm of reality as hawks who believe that, were we to bomb Iran, its citizens would rise up against its government en masse.



Sanctions Unsanctioned



Also at Arms Control Today, Jim Walsh, Thomas Pickering, and William Luers disagree that a joint U.S.-Europe embargo would, in Kittrie's words, "bring the Iranian economy to its knees." Indeed, they write that. . .

. . . the Iranian nuclear case presents a particularly tough challenge for sanctions.�� With a declining global supply of oil, countries such as�China�will not agree to do the one thing that would most affect�Iran's economy: refuse to buy its oil. [Besides Iran] can build centrifuges faster than others can impose sanctions.
It's not that they're entirely closing the book on sanctions, which, they write. . .
. . . can be a complement to negotiation. [But the] historical record suggests that the most probable scenario is one in which Iran agrees to a negotiated settlement [that includes] enhanced transparency and new arrangements for some fuel cycle activities. [It] would be a mistake to assume in advance. . . that negotiations will fail. [But] one senses in the strongest advocates of sanctions and deadlines an almost religious faith that negotiations will fail and that, ultimately,�Iran�will acquire nuclear weapons.
Steve Hynd seconds that (emphasis added):
. . . the narrative the Beltway foreign policy elite have imposed upon the whole process is a self-fulfilling prophecy. Indeed, one of the most thorny problems so far has been that Iran has been pretty sure that America and its allies didn't really want a deal either, and were just going through the motions before an attack could be justified to the world.
Walsh, Pickering, and Luers again:
. . . an assumption that�Iran�is going nuclear can lead decision-makers to miss the signals and signs when a negotiated settlement is actually possible. [The United States and Europe] should avoid all-or-nothing gambles, artificial deadlines, and a preoccupation with tactics.
At Huffington Post, Democracy Arsenal's Patrick Barry points out another problem with sanctions:
In testimony before the Senate Banking Committee in October. . . Undersecretary of the Treasury Stuart Levey expressed concern that unilateral sanctions would undermine efforts to impose 'smart sanctions' on the Iranian regime. "[N]ot only do we want to have the impact on the economy, we want to make sure that [the sanction] is going to affect the decision making in Iran and not target the wrong people."
At Foreign Policy, Jamsheed K. Choksy writes: "The targeting of assets, communications, and mobility was deployed successfully against the leadership of al Qaeda in the wake of 9/11." He explains how, ideally, a similar program might succeed against Iran:
The time has come to utilize sanctions sparingly [and] strategically. � Financial, travel, communication, and legal restrictions could be placed against Iranian leaders, their immediate families, prominent political supporters, business partners, scientists, [etc., who] seek nuclear weapons, fund terrorism. . . and trample on basic rights. � Their personal and organizational bank accounts outside Iran can be frozen. � [Movement] beyond Iran could be restricted by international arrest warrants for human rights violations. [Among those] warranting these types of sanctions include Iran's supreme leader, [the] president. . . the Guardian Council [and] the Revolutionary Guard. �
Meanwhile. . .
Individuals rising up against the theocracy will benefit from an easing of current sanctions that restrict their ability to communicate, access technology, travel. � If international action is directed specifically against high-ranking Iranian individuals and corporations causing internal repression and external strife, rather than the Iranian people as a whole, those sanctions will send an unmistakable, tangible, message that the world seeks to be just and fair.
Dislodging Israel's Nuclear-Weapons Program From Iran's Craw



Thus the failure of imagination with sanctions isn't across the board. It's true that such a program might succeed in coercing Iran to cease and desist its nuclear program (if not its internal repression). But the hostility -- and sense of injustice at the thwarting of its nuclear program -- on the part of Iran's government will linger.



For example, anyone who can't understand why Tehran -- not to mention the Iranian street -- wouldn't resent Israel's don't ask-don't tell nuclear-weapons program is as guilty of a failure of imagination as those to whom sanctions are inevitable. After all, Israel has signed no international nuclear conventions, like Iran has the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Its facilities crawling with IAEA inspectors on a recurring basis.



The United States is finally demonstrating some palpable leadership on disarmament. But it needs to go the extra mile and strong-arm Israel into taking its first step: coming clean about its open secret of a nuclear weapons program. Otherwise, along with its treatment of the Palestinians, Israel's nuclear-weapons program will remain an insurmountable barrier to nonproliferation, as well as lasting peace, in the Middle East.



First posted at the Faster Times.

1 comment:

  1. Please correct me if i'm wrong, but isn't an embargo technically an act of war under international law?
    And if that's the case, what makes people think that such an act would make Iran more likely to negotiate?
    Oh never mind, this is all coming from the same august bodies that believed Iraq would welcome the US occupation with flowers. These are people who create a reality in their tiny little minds and then try to pound square facts into round holes.
    Gates says that bombing Iran won't stop the program. Swell, that's all we really have since we're not going to raise/send the requisite number of troops to actually invade Iran.
    So we'll sanction Iran after publicly declaring that the threat behind the sanctions is, realistically, toothless.
    Just imagine what kind of world we'd be living in if the nation wasn't run by its "best and brightest".

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