Will energy sanctions stop Iran’s nuke program? (JERUSALEM POST) By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL 07/06/12)
Source: http://www.jpost.com/IranianThreat/OpinionAndAnalysis/Article.aspx?id=276415
JERUSALEM POST
JERUSALEM POST Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
There is a growing consensus that the US and its allies need to
further ratchet up the economic pressure.
The European Union on Sunday implemented tough new energy sanctions,
denying Iranian crude oil imports to EU markets. There is, however, a
growing consensus that the US and its allies need to further ratchet
up the economic pressure on an increasingly recalcitrant and
jingoistic regime in Tehran.
The goal is stop Iran’s drive to become a nuclear-weapons power.
EU sanctions will severely cut into Iran’s energy sector, which
provides roughly 80 percent of the country’s exports, and almost half
its state revenue.
Nonetheless, as the noose of sanctions continues to strangle Iran’s
economy, the country’s leaders are scrambling to show defiance.
Central bank Gov. Mahmoud Bahmani declared on Monday, “We are
implementing programs to counter sanctions and we will confront these
malicious policies.” He cited $150 billion in foreign reserves to be
used to cushion the impact of new sanctions.
In response to repeated Iranian threats to close the Strait of
Hormuz, with a view toward shutting down the vital passageway to
Persian Gulf oil shipments from other countries, the US has stepped
up its military presence in the region. Brig.-Gen. Amir Ali
Hajizadeh, who commands the aerospace division of the Revolutionary
Guards, told Iran’s state-controlled Fars News Service, “We have
thought of measures to set up bases and deploy missiles to destroy
all these bases in the early minutes after an attack.” All of
Tehran’s saber-rattling in the Persian Gulf—coupled with its efforts
to circumvent sanctions—helps to explain why there is a pressing
need for a comprehensive embargo.
In light of Iran’s ability to set up front companies to bust
sanctions, The Wall Street Journal on Tuesday bemoaned, in an
editorial titled “Obama’s Iran Loopholes,” the lack of sanctions
enforcement from the Americans. According to the Journal, “It’s so
weak, in fact, that all 20 of Iran’s major trading partners are now
exempt from them. We’ve arrived at a kind of voodoo version of
sanctions... But if you’re a big oil importer in China, India or 18
other major economies, the sanctions are mostly smoke.”
Writing in late June on the website of Foreign Policy magazine, Mark
Dubowitz, a leading US sanctions expert, urged greater “economic
warfare” targeting Iran’s entire energy apparatus and branches of its
non-gas-and-oil sectors.
Dubowitz,the executive director of the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies, advocates a creative piece of US legislation from Rep.
Ted Deutch (D-Florida), Rep. Robert Dold (R-Illinois) and Sen. Mark
Kirk (R-Illinois) that designates Iran’s entire energy sector as
a “zone of primary proliferation concern.”
The proposed law would bar businesses active in the US and in the EU
from engaging in commerce with the Islamic Republic’s energy branch.
Dubowitz proposes zooming on punitive measures for “Iran’s automotive
sector, which is the largest part of its economy outside the energy
industry” as well as the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps -
controlled construction and engineering sector. He further argues
that the Revolutionary Guards-dominated Iranian telecommunications
and technology sector ought to be designated a “zone of electronic
repression.”
Lastly, the UN Charter permits a full embargo against a country that
consistently violates UN resolutions, permitting the Security Council
to impose a “complete or partial interruption of economic relations
and of rail, sea, air, postal, telegraphic, radio and other means of
communication, and the severance of diplomatic relations.”
The enactment of an exhaustive UN embargo of Iran’s economy remains
largely a utopian idea because Russia and China—Tehran’s main
enablers at the UN—would go to great lengths to prevent it.
Economic warfare might very well have a solid chance of compelling
Iran’s leaders to suspend their illicit weapons-grade nuclear-
enrichment program. The principal challenge is for the US and its
allies to strictly enforce sanctions and to rapidly move toward a
comprehensive embargo of the Islamic Republic’s economic activity.
Underscoring the importance of sanctions, in a column from mid-June,
The New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, writing from Iran,
reported an unemployed salesman as saying, “We blame our regime, not
Western countries.”
The writer of this analysis is a research fellow at the Foundation
for Defense of Democracies. (© 1995-2011, The Jerusalem Post 07/06/12)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY