A Third Option For Peace With Iran
By Tom H. Hastings and Erin E. Niemela
November 17, 2013 -
Tough talk by the U.S. and
Iran — sometimes about nukes — has taken many turns over the
past three decades, but there has been some relaxing of the
tensions recently.
Iran
signed a good-faith agreement with the International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) to allow inspectors broad access to its
nuclear facilities. Signaling change, Iranian President Hassan
Rouhani halted expansion of Iran’s uranium enrichment capacity
since his election three months ago, according to U.N.
inspection reports.
Yet, what
has always been available are conflict management methods
unexamined by our decision-makers. In developing potential
options for adversarial nations, the U.S. government has the
Joint Chiefs and security studies hawks on speed dial. Thus, the
U.S. stumbles into war after war, informed of the full range of
options from A to B. Attack or do nothing. Demonstrate a resolve
to kill or show cowardice. It’s a wonder we haven’t nuked
Canada.
Sometimes
– as we saw in the 1990s with killer sanctions on Iraq – certain
sanctions are hardest on the most vulnerable, innocent children
and other civilians. To a large measure, this is the case
vis-à-vis Iran. Peace scholars have been pushing for alternative
options with Iran, backed by hard data and decades of conflict
management experience, since the inception of the conflict.
These alternatives have remained largely unnoticed amid the
cyclical escalation/de-escalation of war drumming from both
sides of the aisle.
In the
spirit of sharing what we’ve learned in our obscure field of
Peace and Conflict Studies, let’s think about some possible
measures right now vis-à-vis Iran:
–Guarantee
no-first-use of U.S. military force against Iran
As long as
Iranian people and their government fear preëmptive military
attack by the U.S. there will be strong motivation for
development of nuclear weapons, and it will be easier for
Iranian leaders to justify sacrifices, including resolve to
endure crippling sanctions.
–Cease
military aid to Israel
Even
Israeli moderates remain belligerent toward Iran, reserving and
openly referencing preëmptive military attack as an option. This
keeps Iranian moderates on the defensive, emboldens hardliners,
and continually prompts the average Iranian to hate Israel and
its sponsor, the U.S. Stopping U.S military aid to Israel brings
the region many steps closer to peace, helps take the target off
the U.S., and prompts Israel to honestly negotiate its
relationships constructively.
–Apologize
Now that
declassified documents and an acknowledgment by President Barack
Obama have formally recognized the CIA’s role in the 1953
overthrow of Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh, a formal apology
should be made for this outrageous transgression. A simple
apology without qualification, equivocation, justification or
even explanation is best.
–Put
some U.S. nukes on the table
Make the
demand that Iran cease its nuclear ambitions linked to an offer
to dismantle (for example) 200 U.S. nuclear weapons, with each
party subject to IAEA inspections. Treat Iran like a real
country, not a minor player of which we can make demands we
won’t ourselves honor.
–Open
embassies
The two
countries should each invite the other to open an embassy with
the guarantee of the safety of the personnel that is backed by
enormous collateral. The 2011 Obama initiative to maintain an
online embassy is a good gesture and not enough; it is time for
reciprocity and advancements.
–Reframing
U.S.-Iran relations as peaceful scientific collaboration
Iranian
domestic legitimacy rests partially on the option of developing
nuclear capabilities. Iran’s nuclear policy acts as a rallying
point for internal cohesion. Reframe Iran-U.S. relations to one
of peaceful scientific and health research collaboration, taking
care to emphasize Iranian past and present contributions and
collaborations with the U.S.
Give
President Rouhani a fresh rallying point, highlighting Persian
history and collective identity in its peaceful pursuits of
science, engineering, technology, medicine and mathematics, and
reduce reliance on Iranian nuclear policy for domestic
legitimacy. Continuing negotiations would include these peaceful
collaborations as additional bargaining points.
–Banking
channels and medical supplies
Offer to
provide third country banks a waiver against sanctions for
facilitating transactions involved in medicines and medical
supplies, and/or designate certain U.S. and Iranian financial
institutions as open channels for humanitarian transactions. In
exchange, Iran must allow consistent international monitoring of
its medical enrichment facilities.
Most of
these action items would be nonstarters, right? President Obama
would never initiate any of them because, after all, the
minority of Congress would howl and call him a treasonous
coward. Congressional hawks would light up, hair on fire,
bullhorns set on sonic warp kill. Peace-loving people would fear
the dripping scorn.
If we
continue to see the pusillanimity more afraid of knee-jerks in
Congress than of allowing Iran to either get nukes or get
attacked, we will watch as helpless as Junebugs on our backs
while we drift into an ever-uglier world with more nuclear
weapons in more hands — or into a stupendously reckless war of
grand bloodbath proportions with Iran, war that is completely
avoidable.
You do not
need to conduct a multivariate regression analysis to know that
successful negotiation requires both carrots and sticks.
Hardliners are stuck on sticks, both violent and economic, and
even low and no-cost carrots drive them “round the bend.” Fine.
Let them go. Constructive conflict management is the new
realpolitik.
Tom H.
Hastings is
PeaceVoice Director and teaches in the Conflict Resolution
program at Portland State University.
Erin E.
Niemela is
PeaceVoice Research Director and a Master’s Candidate of
the Conflict Resolution program at Portland State University.
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