15 Nov 2024
Wednesday 31 July 2013 - 12:20
Story Code : 42205

As Iran installs new leader, House could pass more sanctions. Right signal?

Hassan Rohani, a moderate cleric, is set to take office as Irans president on Sunday. Some say new sanctions send the right message about Irans nuclear program, while others say they could stifle any improvement in relations.
WhenIranelected a moderate cleric to succeed the fiery Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as the countrys president last month,President Obamasought to encourage what some saw as an important political shift by calling for improved US-Iran relations.

Mr. Obama said the election of Hassan Rohani opened the way to a more serious, substantive relationship with Iran interpreted widely as the presidents hope that theUnited Statesand Iran might add bilateral negotiations to international talks on Irans nuclear program.

But now that Mr. Rohani is about to take office as Irans president, some in Congress want to send a different signal to Tehran by approving a new round of sanctions aimed at further stifling the Iranian economy. Rohani is set to be inaugurated Sunday.

The House is expected to answer that question Wednesday by voting to slap tough new limits on Irans already heavily sanctioned oil industry, as well as on other sectors of the ailing Iranian economy.

Yet even though the House measure could not take effect until the Senate can act on its own version of the bill probably in September advocates of a more cooperative approach with the new Iranian leadership say the House vote is coming at the wrong time. They worry that any vote in the US for new sanctions would be received in Iran as a slammed door just as Rohani takes office and would probably snuff out any hope of better US-Iran relations.


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A House vote for new sanctions will be seen as the first formal American response to Rohanis victory, says Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, a group that advocates improved relations with Iran. Sending such a signal now would be seized upon by Irans hard-liners to undercut Rohanis stated desire for more cooperative engagement with the West, he says, and makes sense only if the objective is to prevent talks [between the US and Iran] from happening.

For others, however, now is precisely the time as Iran anticipates a return to talks on its nuclear program with the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council, plus Germany to let Iran know that the US and the West are not going to let their guard down.

The [Obama] administration must go into the next round of negotiations with significant, re-enhanced leverage, said Mark Dubowitz, executive director of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, in a recent conversation with reporters.

Advocates of tough new sanctions scoff at the notion that Rohani is a harbinger of a new moderation among Irans leadership or that he (or the countrys supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei) has any intention of dialing back on Irans nuclear program. Western powers worry that the program is aimed not at delivering civilian nuclear energy, as Iran claims, but at building a nuclear weapon.

Rohani reinforced the skeptics of his moderation with his own postelection words when he flatly ruled out ending Irans uranium enrichment program the Iranian nuclear activity that worries the West most. All should know that the next government will not budge defending our inalienable rights, he said, adding that the days of any suspension of Irans program are behind us.

For his part, Obama who came into office as a new president in 2009 with an extended hand to Iran has taken steps to signal a willingness to engage with Rohani. Last week the administration eased some sanctions on Iran, approving the export of some medical devices as part of an effort to ease restrictions on legitimate humanitarian trade.

But Obama has also made it clear that his new tone does not extend to Irans nuclear program. Even as he hailed Rohanis election in June, Obama insisted that the tough sanctions inhibiting Irans economy would not be eased in the absence of significant steps by Iran to ensure the world that it is not seeking to build a nuclear weapon.

By The Christian Science Monitor

 

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