#Trump sanctions set stage for necessary regime change in #Iran
http://thehill.com/blogs/pundits-blog/foreign-policy/345329-trump-sanctions-set-stage-for-necessary-regime-change-in
With the president’s signature on H.R. 3364, formally known as the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act of 2017,
the Trump administration — eager for legislative accomplishments in the
wake of the GOP failure to repeal the Affordable Care Act — can take
credit for turning the page on failed Obama-era policy toward the
Islamic Republic of Iran.
The
bipartisan passage of the long-anticipated sanctions bill by both
houses of Congress allows the administration to take aim at rogue
regimes in Iran, Russia and North Korea. Disagreements over U.S. policy
toward Russia notwithstanding, the White House can be confident that
legislators overwhelmingly support confronting threats emanating from
Iran and North Korea and are prepared for even stronger measures to
curtail the influence of these dangerous regimes.
The
White House should now build on the successful passage of sanctions
legislation to push for regime change in Tehran as an appropriate next
step.
ADVERTISEMENT
The
latest sanctions legislation effectively accomplishes this latter goal
by extending all terror-related sanctions to the entirety of the IRGC as
a Specially Designated Global Terrorist group. The question now is how
far the Trump administration is willing to go to address the Iranian
threat.
This
question arose in June when the sanctions bill encountered delays, and
it arose again in July when the White House, for a second time,
certified Iranian compliance with the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of
Action (JCPOA). The move surprised many seasoned Iran experts familiar
with Tehran’s belligerence, particularly given the president’s campaign
pledges to scrap the porous agreement altogether.
In
fairness to the White House, the day after certifying Iranian
compliance with the Obama nuclear deal, the administration announced
that it planned a thorough review of U.S. Iran policy. Some critics of
the nuclear agreement believed that simply tearing it up on day one was
not the best way to proceed.
But
virtually all analysts agree that steps must now be taken to address
the significant shortcomings of the JCPOA. The agreement’s weaknesses
and omissions — the result of Obama-era eagerness to secure a deal at
any cost — are well known on both sides of the aisle.
Trump’s
embrace of the sanctions legislation may be an indication that he
intends to adopt a more strategic policy toward Iran that would force
concessions from the Islamic Republic or even encourage the transition
to a new, democratic system of government.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson previewed
this possibility in June and some Iran analysts have suggested that the
Trump administration’s assertive posture toward Tehran points in this
direction. But Trump, Tillerson and others must now pay attention to how
they plan to facilitate regime change via “elements inside Iran” to
ensure a permanent solution to the nuclear issue and other matters.
The
July 1 gathering in Paris of tens of thousands of Iranian expatriates
committed to democratic change, supported by senior members of the
president’s own party, was sufficient to remove any doubts about the
likelihood of regime change being successful. It was clear to all in
attendance that there is a democratic alternative to the ayatollahs and
regime change is within reach.
At
the Free Iran rally, Maryam Rajavi, president of the National Council
of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), characterized the then-pending
blacklisting of the IRGC as necessary to facilitate a domestic uprising
against a weakened Iranian regime. Recent protests suggest that ordinary
Iranians have tired of the regime’s civil and political repression,
human rights abuses and adversarial relationship with global powers,
leaving them vulnerable to a "Persian Spring."
But
Rajavi emphasized that it will take more than a single package of
sanctions to ensure success for the resistance movement. Now that
obstacles to the IRGC’s terrorist designation have been overcome, it is
time to discuss how the U.S. and its allies can further undermine Iran’s
hardline paramilitary and curtail its foreign influence.
With
provocative ballistic missile tests and harassment of American naval
vessels in the Persian Gulf becoming a near routine occurrence, the
Trump administration hardly needs a reminder of the importance of
confronting the IRGC. Now the White House must decide whether it is
prepared to bring an end to the regime that created the hardline
paramilitary organization.
By
taking assertive actions and supporting the Iranian opposition, Trump
can signal not only his displeasure with JCPOA but also write the next
chapter in U.S. policy toward Iran by building on the successful passage
of congressional sanctions legislation.
Tehran’s
rogue status and lack of legitimacy presents the White House with a
unique opportunity to further isolate the Iranian regime and deny it the
resources to suppress its own people the next time they rise up and
demand change. The question is whether the administration is willing to
seize the opportunity and push for regime change in Tehran.
No comments:
Post a Comment