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Chirac Advocates Backing Off UN Sanctions Against Iran

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Why Sanctions on Iran Will Fail    [

    Chirac Advocates Backing Off UN Sanctions Against Iran
    The Associated Press

    Tuesday 19 September 2006

    Paris - President Jacques Chirac proposed a compromise Monday to kickstart talks between Iran and the international community, suggesting the threat of UN sanctions be suspended in exchange for Tehran halting its uranium enrichment program.

    "I don't believe in a solution without dialogue," Mr. Chirac said in an interview with Europe-1 radio. He suggested the international community suspend the threat of U.N. sanctions and that Iran, in turn, suspend enrichment while the two sides talk.

    "I am not pessimistic," Mr. Chirac said. "I think that Iran is a great country, an old culture, an old civilization, and that we can find solutions through dialogue."

    Upbeat about the standoff with Iran over its nuclear program, Mr. Chirac said in the wide-ranging radio interview that he was pessimistic about the outcomes in Iraq and Sudan's war-ravaged Darfur region.

     Mr. Chirac spoke before leaving for New York to attend the annual U.N. General Assembly, which opens Tuesday.

    Asked about Iran, the French president noted that "Iran for years developed a clandestine nuclear program." However, "I am never favourable to sanctions" and, should they be unavoidable, they should be "moderate and adapted," he said.

    In Vienna, Iranian Vice-President Reza Aghazadeh said his country was "ready for negotiations and political compromise." However, he coupled that remark with a warning that "any hostile action by the U.N. Security Council would lead to limitation of co-operation" with the International Atomic Energy Agency.

    The IAEA's inspectors are trying to determine whether Tehran is using its nuclear program to make weapons, as the United States and other countries fear. Iran assures it is for civilian use.

     At an IAEA conference, where Aghazadeh spoke, countries called on Iran to freeze enrichment in accordance with a Security Council demand. The U.N. Security Council has passed a resolution providing for possible economic and diplomatic sanctions against Iran for its refusal to halt uranium enrichment.

    Mr. Chirac suggested Iran and the six countries involved in the issue - France, Germany, Britain, Russia, China and the United States - set an agenda for talks, then move ahead, with both sides removing the burden of threats.

    "We must, on the one hand, together, Iran and the six countries, meet and set an agenda, then start negotiations. Then, during these negotiations, I suggest that the six renounce referring (Iran to) the U.N. Security Council and that Iran renounce uranium enrichment during negotiations," Mr. Chirac said.

    European and U.N. officials said Monday that senior EU and Iranian negotiators planned to meet in New York later this week to try to establish enough common ground to spark negotiations.

    The French president said he has no plans to meet with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad while in New York, saying he "deplores" the anti-Israeli remarks of the Iranian leader. Mr. Ahmadinejad has said Israel should be "wiped off the map."

    The United States and Britain have backed moving quickly to sanctions if Iran does not comply with demands that it cease its enrichment program.

    Russia and China have appeared most hesitant to call for sanctions, while French Foreign Minister Philippe Douste-Blazy said earlier this month that a "gradual approach" was needed.

 


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    Why Sanctions on Iran Will Fail
    By Hossein Askari
    Asia Times

    Tuesday 19 September 2006

    US President George W Bush is calling for multilateral sanctions on Iran. Sanctions won't succeed in cowing Iran, but they will indeed have ominous consequences for the United States and the rest of the world.

    Last Wednesday at the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Bush administration promoted a swift drafting of punitive sanctions by the United Nations Security Council against Iran this month. Economic sanctions only achieve their goals in very special circumstances, and Iran does not fit the bill. Washington should rethink its overall policy toward the country.

    The United States has applied a varied mix of economic sanctions on Iran since 1979, in a bid to reverse a host of Tehran's policies and, ultimately, bring about regime change. Clearly, the sanctions have not worked. And while the US has been busy tightening its screws, average Iranians have become more nationalistic and supportive of the mullahs.

    The only discernible result of US sanctions on Iran has been to delay Iran's development of its energy resources. Iran's oil and natural-gas reserves equal those of Saudi Arabia. The US has obstructed the development of at least two known large oilfields in Iran (Azadegan and Yadavaran), which together could have proven reserves exceeding 35 billion barrels and produce more than a million barrels per day of crude at their expected peak; has hindered oil and gas development in the Caspian Sea by playing the countries of the region against one another; has vetoed the construction of a Caspian pipeline through Iran (even though it would cost only about half the price of alternative pipelines); and has opposed Iranian gas pipelines to Pakistan and India, even offering India nuclear deals in exchange for not buying Iranian gas.

    All these US policies have delayed making Iranian oil and gas supplies available and have increased energy prices. Continued impediments to oil and gas development in Iran could reduce Iranian exports by the oil equivalent of more than 5 million barrels per day over the next decade.

    The US policy is based on the premise that lowering Iranian oil and gas exports would hurt Iranian revenues. But US Middle East policy has in fact buoyed oil prices, which may have increased Iranian revenues, albeit at lower export levels.

    Economic sanctions have come at a huge cost to the United States. Economics 101 tells us that lower supplies mean higher prices for everyone. The oil market is in essence one global market, although crude-oil types do differ; cleaner fuels, natural gas and natural-gas liquids increasingly compete with oil. Because of sanctions, the US does not buy Iranian oil and gas, but if Iranian energy supplies came to market this would, in turn, afford the US more supplies from other countries and lower prices globally. Equally important, piped Iranian natural gas could in time be destined for Europe, reducing Europe's reliance on Russian gas and the potential for blackmail by Russia. The increased availability of Iranian energy supplies could make an increasing difference to energy prices and security over the next decade.

    There have also been political costs. US actions on Iran have made the average Iranian feel more insecure. Iranians haven't forgotten US support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq War, nor are they at ease with the US military presence in Afghanistan, Iraq, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the Central Asian republics. Ironically, sanctions, higher energy prices and bellicose threats from the US have bought more time for the mullahs in Tehran, who now have more money and ample reason to fuel nationalistic fervor.

    At any rate, the UN Security Council will not vote for even limited sanctions on Iran. China, Russia or both will veto such a move. Even if sanctions to freeze all Iranian government assets (about US$70 billion) were adopted by the UN, Iran could still get by. Iran has had plenty of practice and time to prepare for such situations and has placed assets in places where they cannot be readily identified as Iranian. All sanctions, even comprehensive sanctions, are notoriously porous. In addition, sanctions imposed by a "coalition of the willing" will only become an international embarrassment for the US, potentially placating a domestic constituency but succeeding in further alienating Iranians and making ongoing US interventions in the region even more difficult and costly.

    Finally, and most important, it is almost certain that Iran would react to any UN or coalition-of-the-willing sanctions by cutting oil exports by at least 50%, driving oil prices above $100 per barrel, with Americans paying close to $5 a gallon (about $1.30 per liter) for gasoline; a total stoppage of Iranian oil exports (3.2 million barrels per day) would drive oil prices above $150 per barrel, with Americans paying $6-$7 a gallon ($1.60-$1.85 a liter) for gasoline.

    There are about a million barrels per day of global excess capacity today (largely in the Persian Gulf countries), but Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait will think "thrice" before they try to make up any shortfall in Iranian oil exports. And if there is another conflict in the Middle East, Arab rulers could be driven by public sentiment to join Iran in cutting oil exports. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez could lend them a hand too, with even more ominous implications for the global energy market and in turn for the world economy.

    There is a viable alternative to imposing more sanctions: stop threatening Iran, especially in public. And the United States should try to understand (not necessarily agree with) the Iranian perspective, minimize hubris and engage in true dialogue. Iran would be instrumental in allowing the US to solve most of the problems it faces in the Middle East, including achieving peace and stability in the region, saving US lives and treasure, and enhancing global energy supplies.

    --------

    Hossein Askari is the Iran professor of international business and international affairs at George Washington University.


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