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Verification and the Credibility of Sanctions Relief for Iran

Sineva

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The reason that I posted this here in its own separate thread rather than in the dedicated jcpoa thread was because I considered this article to be extremely important,as this was the one single time that I could pretty much find that someone had addressed the glaringly obvious,but incredibly somehow seemingly overlooked,fatal weakness of the jcpoa.
Obama had said that this was not a deal based on trust,but on verification,and this was true...for the americans at any rate as there was the iaea to verify irans compliance......however,and this is a critically important point,there was no international economic/financial equivalent of the iaea to verify the wests compliance with the jcpoa.So for iran ironically the jcpoa ended up being based on trust,NOT verification.The problem of course was that historically the west was about as trustworthy as adolf hitler at munich.
Now perhaps rouhani simply did not care,or perhaps he felt he had no choice,or perhaps he rather naively believed that what could be imposed with the stroke of a pen could be just as easily repealed with another pen stroke,who knows...
Even if the biden regime returns to the deal,which is frankly looking less and less likely as each day goes by,this fatal flaw will still remain....
Hopefully this will serve as a lesson to ALL future iranian politicians,that any deal that does not have robust independent verification measures built in to it,then it simply isnt worth the paper its printed on.

Verification and the Credibility of Sanctions Relief for Iran
https://www.bourseandbazaar.com/articles/2021/2/7/verification-and-the-credibility-of-sanctions-relief-for-iran

Following a week of speculation about the Biden administration’s foreign policy priorities, Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamanei, gave an important speech today in which he outlined Tehran’s “final” stance on US re-entry into the nuclear deal. Khamenei kept the door open for the US to rejoin the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), while declaring that the Biden administration must “completely lift” US sanctions before Iran returns to its nuclear deal commitments in full.

Despite this stance, it appears likely that the US and Iran can find a way to “choreograph” a mutual restoration of their obligations under the nuclear deal. What was significant about Khamenei’s speech was not his declaration on sequencing, but rather the introduction of a new requirement for any choreography that would enable the US to re-enter the deal.

While the sequencing tango was a major part of the negotiations that led to the JCPOA and of Iranian concerns over the optics of that sequencing, the Khamenei’s specific concern over the verifiability of sanctions relief is new. To understand the context of this concern speech, it is useful to refer back to a speech made by then Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew five years ago, just a few months after the implementation of the JCPOA.

Taken together, these two speeches point to a fundamental—if overlooked—asymmetry within the JCPOA. Iran’s commitments under the nuclear deal are subject to extensive verification. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has in place the world’s most extensive inspection regime to keep tabs on Iran’s nuclear program. In return for compliance with limitations on its nuclear program, the JCPOA parties committed to the lifting of a wide range of UN, EU, and US sanctions. But there is no verification mechanism in place to ensure that sanctions relief has been implemented “in practice,” and not just “on paper”—a distinction Khamenei highlighted today.

Iran’s experience with sanctions relief under the JCPOA has been bitter. Even prior to the Trump administration's reimposition of secondary sanctions in May 2018, Iran had felt that it was not receiving the full benefits of sanctions relief. There were a number of reasons for this, but the primary barrier to increased trade and investment was the resilience of major banks to facilitate transactions or provide financing for Iran-linked projects. As a result, most of the milestone deals signed around the time the JCPOA was implemented—including orders for Boeing and Airbus aircraft, joint ventures with automakers Renault, Peugeot, and Daimler, energy deals with Total and CNPC, and rail projects with Siemens and Alstom—hit a roadblock even before Trump was elected to office and the future of the nuclear deal was thrown in doubt. Obama administration officials acknowledged these challenges at the time. Lew and Secretary of State John Kerry were even drafted-in to provide reassurances to global banks and economic actors about the reliability of US sanctions relief commitments. But their efforts largely failed.

In March 2016, just a few months after the implementation of the JCPOA, Lew gave a major speech on the future of US sanctions policy—sanctions lifting was a key focus. He noted how the “experience with Iran demonstrates how difficult [sanctions lifting] can be, essential as it is.” Commenting on the quid-pro-quo of the nuclear deal, Lew noted that “since Iran has kept its end of the deal, it is our responsibility to uphold ours, in both letter and spirit.” He cited the “global outreach” that the Treasury Department was undertaking to provide guidance to foreign business and governments in how to conduct compliant trade with Iran. But reading in Lew’s remarks today, it’s clear that he knew at the time that this guidance would prove insufficient, and that a dilemma had presented itself for US foreign policy. “Since the goal of sanctions is to pressure bad actors to change their policy, we must be prepared to provide relief from sanctions when we succeed. If we fail to follow through, we undermine our own credibility and damage our ability to use sanctions to drive policy change,” he warned. Not only would the Obama administration fail to follow-through on sanctions relief, but the Trump administration would take the betrayal one step further, reimposing secondary sanctions despite Iran’s verified compliance with its commitments under the deal.

It is the Biden administration’s undermined credibility, five years in the making, that led the Supreme Leader to insist that the US must lift sanctions “in practice, not verbally or on paper” and that Iran would seek to “verify” the implementation of sanctions lifting before fulfilling its own commitments. Importantly, the Supreme Leader believes that verification is possible, stating that if the international community wants “Iran to return to its obligations under the JCPOA,” it will do so after the US verifiably lifts sanctions.

The focus on verification suggests that Iranian leaders see dealing with the United States as a technical challenge. Iran is not going to take it on faith that the Biden administration will make good on its obligations—it will seek to ascertain that obligations have been met. This is an interesting echo of how President Obama justified the nuclear deal to the American public in July 2014, insisting that the deal was built “not on trust, but on verification.” The key difference, of course, is that the US had the means by which to perform its verification—the authority and access afforded to IAEA inspectors put American stakeholders at ease that Iran was making good on its commitments. It would seem that some effort needs to be made to give Iran similar tools of verification, both for its own sake, but also for the sake of Europe, Russia, and China, whose economic relations with Iran so vastly outweigh those of the United States. It is through these relations that the economic benefits of the deal must flow.

The Biden administration should work closely with the other JCPOA parties to devise new mechanisms to verify that sanctions relief is being successfully implemented and identify where relief may be following short. One option might be to establish a new panel of experts or special rapporteur at the United Nations responsible for gathering, interpreting, and assessing evidence on the implementation of sanctions relief.

There several reasons why the United Nations may be the ideal organisation to establish such a verification mechanism. First, the nuclear deal is enshrined as a matter of international law in United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231, establishing an obligation for “promoting and facilitating the development of normal economic and trade contacts and cooperation with Iran.” Second, a United Nations agency, the IAEA, is already involved in verifying half of the nuclear deal’s quid-pro-quo. Third, Iran has itself turned to United Nations bodies to seek recourse for the failure of the United States to hold up its end of the nuclear deal, for example by filing suit at the International Court of Justice against the US. Fourth, the issue of sanctions relief impacts Iran’s relationships with the wider international community, and not just its relations with the United States nor the other parties to the JCPOA. Countries which are not parties to the deal may not wish to raise politically-sensitive concerns over the impact of sanctions on their bilateral economic relations with Iran directly within a forum that will be dominated by the United States. The UN offers as much impartiality as is possible in the international system. Finally, the issue of credible sanctions relief is not relevant to the Iran nuclear deal alone, but will be of concern for the growing number of economies subject to restrictive measures. A UN verification capacity could prove important for countries such as Venezuela, Cuba, Syria, and North Korea should a political breakthrough lead to the prospect of sanctions relief in any of those cases.

Of course, setting up a new verification mechanism for sanctions relief won’t be possible in the short period that Tehran and Washington have to save the nuclear deal. But should the Biden administration acknowledge this concern and set in motion steps to create a verification mechanism, it may reassure stakeholders in Tehran that the bitter experience of the JCPOA is not bound to be repeated. This would also be consisted with the interim step of “freezing” Iran’s move away from the nuclear deal that is reportedly being considered by the Biden administration. The provision of economic relief, whether in the form of oil waivers or eased access to foreign exchange reserves, would offer an instance where Iran could “verify” that the US has made good on a promise of sanctions relief prior to the delicate choreography of mutual restoration of the nuclear deal. Such a step would enable Khamenei and other voices in Iran to suggest that a new condition of JCPOA re-entry, set by Iran, had been provisionally met, opening the door to talks fuller sanctions relief.

What is clear is that Iran to wishes to build a deal not on trust, but verification. The international community ought to afford Iran the means to do so.
 
Not gonna happen. I don't think americans would drop sanctions as tool ... what Trump did to mount sanctions & what both seek is forcing Iran to negotiate ...they have no other stick but sanctions
I agree.
The problem that the americans now have and indeed are really only just belatedly starting to discover is that altho sanctions are easy to apply,they are not quite so easy to remove and without the ability to actually remove sanctions in a meaningful way they effectively lose a lot of their coercive power.Basically you have a stick but no carrot and there are real limits to what weilding a stick alone will get you.
Ultimately at this point the us/eu have pretty much sanctioned themselves out of all remaining influence over iran economically,and the longer the sanctions continue for the more likely iran will either find various other alternate sources for the items in question,or will be able to produce the items themselves or will simply learn to do without them entirely.
 
There’s is nuclear sanctions

Then sanctions for human rights, missiles, terrorism, nefarious activities, money laundering, etc.

So who cares if nuclear sanctions get lifted.
 
Khamenei's target audience is Reformists who are eager to make another useless deal with US, otherwise he knows Americans are not ready to remove the sanctions, that's why in his previous speech he advised the government to consider the remain of sanctions for a decade.
 
I agree.
The problem that the americans now have and indeed are really only just belatedly starting to discover is that altho sanctions are easy to apply,they are not quite so easy to remove and without the ability to actually remove sanctions in a meaningful way they effectively lose a lot of their coercive power.Basically you have a stick but no carrot and there are real limits to what weilding a stick alone will get you.
Ultimately at this point the us/eu have pretty much sanctioned themselves out of all remaining influence over iran economically,and the longer the sanctions continue for the more likely iran will either find various other alternate sources for the items in question,or will be able to produce the items themselves or will simply learn to do without them entirely.
Well back in 2016 I said whatever JCPoA is it's indeed our policy regarding it that makes it profitable for us or not ... current situation is the same and it is all about how we seize the moment & use it ..
american & EU decision to revive the deal is mostly about Iran's obligations not theirs and they have no shame to violate 2231 as law biding document .. be it now or under Trump.
So sanctions ain't out there for removal and it's been proven over & over that no matter what Iran does it get more sanctioned ...
So let them stick to their sanctions & we sticking to the policy of no removal no obligation ... they have no other way but to change their policy or start a war ... the later is unlikely.
 
This is the best time for Iran to break out of NPT and all nuclear commitments and go for the Max enrichment and stockpile as much as needed...With COVID-19 and China-Russia issues getting hot no western country is in a mood for a big war with Iran..so seize the moment (max 6 months to a year) and go for it...As they say..when sanctioned you go nuclear young man..lol..sounds good..eh!!!
 
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