Obama has, I believe, made history in sowing a new seed of reconciliation and rapprochement with Iran. I am sure more cautious analysts and observers, and also those with an agenda, would say it is too early to be so optimistic. True, very true, but what I am talking about is the first step, the seed and the direction. This is no mean achievement by itself; it is a great stride that will change the dynamics of conflict, peace, stability and many confused calculations of friendship and enmity in the region.
There is another reason for my raw optimism; the Iranians have taken the call, listened to the other side and are willing to engage with the US with dignity, respect and without any compromise on their sovereign national interest. Actually, the rush of steam that melted the ice came from remarkable developments, in Iran, in the recent past — notably, the election of Rouhani. He is moderate, pragmatic and flexible. He succeeds a hardliner patronised by the hard core elements of the clergy. Rouhani was not the preferred candidate of the clerical establishment. He rode to splendid victory on account of public disgust with the domestic and foreign policies of the hardliners.
Western sanctions and isolation for decades now have badly hurt the Iranian economy. It cannot produce and sell its essential natural resources, oil and gas without new technologies of production and access to markets that the sanction regime has blocked. The clerical establishment has in a way shown some realism by allowing President Rouhani some flexibility.
The big question is how flexible will he be on the nuclear issue. The United States and some of its regional European allies want to make sure that the Iranian nuclear programme remains under control and limited to the declaratory objective of Iran that it is only for ‘peaceful’ purposes. That is the ruse every proliferator has used. The Americans would insist on verifiable actions, timelines and quite intrusive inspections, if and when a deal is negotiated.
The road to Tehran is going to be rough and the diplomats traveling on it may encounter blind turns, considering the nuclear nationalism of Iran and its regional power ambitions that often don’t match its capacity. At the same time, President Rouhani has a limited window of opportunity provided by the clerical establishment to get Iran out of the present economic woes. Washington will do well by showing greater understanding of Rouhani’s domestic constraints. It will be sad if another reformist president after Mohammad Khatami is discredited by a weak international response.
The stage for a historic breakthrough between Iran and the West, if not fully set, is, at least, emerging. We, in the region, must watch carefully what follows the phone call. We expect great courage, prudence and statesmanship on both sides in the coming weeks and months. Keeping Iran isolated, heavily sanctioned and on the margins of the world community doesn’t serve the interest of regional and international peace.
Published in The Express Tribune, October 1st, 2013.
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@Nusrat Normalization of ties with the West will bring economic boost and lots of dollars for Iranis. It will also raise their stature, giving them more 'dignity.' That's one of the major reasons behind the normalization of relations in the first place. Pakistan should learn from this and stop trying to be the global pariah state. Instead it should improve ties with the West.
@SK5. Hahaha "world power." Once again, delusions of grandeur. Reza Shah and Iran under him were not any more "brutal" than 90% of Muslim-majority failing states, including Pakistan, that have had and continue to have assorted crack-pot dictators ruling over them. Certainly, he was not worse than Saddam or Bashar. Bashar is no one's "ally." Persians used to live with their heads held high before their revolution and they will do so again if their repressive rulers normalize relationship with the West. Good days are coming for Persians. So stop sulking!
@Well wisher:
That "Proud Persia" who was allied to the west were betrayed by the same allies. Remember Mossadiq?, what happened to democracy there aye?. Your "Allied Persia" gave Iran a dictator in Reza Shah who was the most brutal Iran has ever seen in its history. Iran has gained respect and sovereignty through its Islamic revolution, if it weren't for illegal sanctions applied by the west Iran would be a significant world power right now!
About time Persians reject the almost barbaric clerical establishment of their country and enter the 21st century by once again normalizing ties with Washington and the rest of the world. Remember before its stupid revolution, a proud Persia were one of the closest allies of the the US and UK. There is no reason why that shouldn't or can't be the case again.
Pakistan should learn from it,should learn live with dignity and without dollars
Rather than anything to do with Obama/Rouhani's charm, it simply comes down to economics. In Iran, no major decision is made without approval of Khamenei. They had a choice between trying to continue developing nuclear program and defying the west, versus preventing the further collapse of their economy (reduced to trade by barter),which would have risked the regime going down at the same time...so they chose the latter option.