This is probably not something that I
should mention in polite company, but do you think the Presidential election
results in Iran last weekend just might have proved that international
sanctions do work after all?
In many quarters, even to suggest such an
idea is close to heresy. Sanctions, according to the view widely held in
international punditry circles, are a blunt instrument which inflict great
misery on ordinary people while having little or no effect on the government they're
supposed to be squeezing.
But just suppose that isn't the case, or at
least, not always. Suppose one of the reasons why Iranians turned out in such
huge numbers to vote for the most moderate of the candidates on offer, Hassan
Rouhani, was that they judged he was the most likely presidential candidate to
get sanctions lifted or relaxed.
If that is the case -- and I don't say the
case is proved, because it's still much too early to say -- but if it is the
case, then might there be implications for, say, future policy regarding Syria?
After all, if a Rouhani-led government in
Tehran is more inclined to engage constructively with Western powers, then
maybe there's more of a chance of finding some common ground on which to create
a blueprint for the future of Syria.
So why do I make a link between sanctions
and the election result, which seems to have taken most Iran analysts
completely by surprise? (Hardly anyone predicted that Rouhani would emerge
triumphant with more than 50 per cent of the vote in the first round.)
Well, just take a look at this analysis, by
BBC Persian Service, a couple
of days before the poll: "The country's economy is in its worst state for
decades, with high inflation, soaring unemployment and negative growth … The
value of Iran's currency, the rial, has more than halved in a year … [and] has
led to a sharp cut in imports and raised Iran's inflation to its highest level
in 18 years."
Scarcely surprising, then, that one of the
first questions the new president-elect was asked by an Iranian reporter at his
news conference earlier this week was about sanctions. This was his reply:
"In order to reduce and resolve the problem of sanctions step by step, we
will take two measures. First … more transparency. Of course, our nuclear plans
are fully transparent, but we are ready to show more transparency and make it
clear for the whole world that measures of the Islamic Republic of Iran are
fully in the international frames.
"Second, we will increase mutual trust
between Iran and other countries. Wherever trust is to be undermined, we will
attempt to restore it. I believe that mutual trust and transparency within the
framework of international regulations and principles are the solution to put
an end to sanctions."
Which sounds to me like a pretty good
start. But this is where we have to take a step back. In Iranian politics, the
president has only limited powers. The real say remains with the Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose intentions are as opaque as ever.
It may, however, be relevant to recall that
he has in the past been reported by Iranian officials to have issued a
"fatwa", or religious ruling, against the production of nuclear
weapons. Western officials are reluctant to take it at face value as it does
not appear to have the force of law.
Khamenei fell out with the previous
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and presided over (or turned a blind eye to)
what is widely thought to have been wholesale result-rigging at the time of the
last presidential elections in 2009, to prevent a win by the reformist Mir-Hossein
Mousavi. Huge protests followed, they were brutally suppressed, and Iran's
overseas image suffered yet further.
This time, it was different. And it's worth
wondering why. Might Khamenei and his clerical allies be prepared to allow the
new president more breathing space? Rouhani is, unlike the mercurial
Ahmadinejad, a cleric himself, with strong ties to Iran's powerful religious
establishment. But he also knows how to engage with the West, having served as
his country's top nuclear negotiator and having studied in Glasgow in the
1990s. (Some people have been wondering whether that means he speaks English
with a Glasgow accent -- I don't know the answer to that, but would love to
find out.)
So Iranians have elected a president who
promised them a better economic future by engaging more constructively with the
West. Yes, I know all about proofs and puddings and all that, but let's at
least hope -- and consider where we'd be today if, instead of imposing
sanctions, the West had opted for military action and chosen to bomb some of
Iran's nuclear installations. I somehow doubt that Iranian voters would have
chosen a Presidential candidate who advocated better relations with the West.
By the way, you may be interested to know
that I've started a summertime walk along the length of the River Thames, from
the source to the estuary. I'm producing little audio slide-shows as I go, so
if you'd like to keep up with my progress, just click here and subscribe to my
YouTube feed.
1 comment:
Iranian people are always seeking good relation with west but the only obstacle is the group of people who are in minority but they have power and imposing their ideas to the people. I'm living in Tehran form beginning of my life.
Sanctions affected ordinary people life and the value of the local currency dropped 50 percent in just one year. I bought my laptop 2 years ago for 1 million Toman but I have to buy the same model for 4 million Toman this year. But I don't think the only reason behind the result of the election is the west sanctions. Young people do not think like the previous generation and because of the internet and Medias they have access to news and they have seen other people life style. They didn't have freedom but they know what the taste of the real freedom is; they seek it but the hardliners have a special philosophy and they want to limit legal right of freedom for the people.
People chose the candidate who is going to give more liberty to young generation. There are much more things that you don't know because you are not living here. If you follow local news you will read stupid claims and wrong doing by officials who have important posts in the current system and people's votes was a loud response to these inefficient officials.
By the way I do not reject the effect of sanctions on people but I think it's not the main reason for the result in election. And I think sanctions are cruel and people suffer the most. For example medicine became rare here and some patients are struggling with pain because they do not have access to medicine or they cannot effort to buy them.
Iranian people are always seeking good relation with west but the only obstacle is the group of people who are in minority but they have power and imposing their ideas to the people. I'm living in Tehran form beginning of my life.
Sanctions affected ordinary people life and the value of the local currency dropped 50 percent in just one year. I bought my laptop 2 years ago for 1 million Toman but I have to buy the same model for 4 million Toman this year. But I don't think the only reason behind the result of the election is the west sanctions. Young people do not think like the previous generation and because of the internet and Medias they have access to news and they have seen other people life style. They didn't have freedom but they know what the taste of the real freedom is; they seek it but the hardliners have a special philosophy and they want to limit legal right of freedom for the people.
People chose the candidate who is going to give more liberty to young generation. There are much more things that you don't know because you are not living here. If you follow local news you will read stupid claims and wrong doing by officials who have important posts in the current system and people's votes was a loud response to these inefficient officials.
By the way I do not reject the effect of sanctions on people but I think it's not the main reason for the result in election. And I think sanctions are cruel and people suffer the most. For example medicine became rare here and some patients are struggling with pain because they do not have access to medicine or they cannot effort to buy them.
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