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The Great Iran Charade


By Rich Lowry/King Features Syndicate
Posted April 15, 2010 - 9:28am

The rules of the great Iranian nuclear charade are simple: We pretend to punish the Iranians for the nuclear-weapons program that they pretend doesn’t exist.
The Obama administration is about to go to the United Nations Security Council for a fourth round of sanctions. Remember the first three rounds? Models of collective international action, they passed unanimously (with the exception of an abstention by Indonesia in 2008) while Iran spun ever-more centrifuges and enriched ever-more uranium.
It’s a two-track process. On one track, the West feels as though it’s doing something; on the other, the Iranians advance the nuclear program the West is purportedly doing something about.
The Obama administration will tout any action by the Security Council as a success. Its reset-hitting diplomacy will have overcome resistance by veto- wielding permanent Security Council members Russia and China. But at the predictable price of gutting the sanctions it has waited more than a year to get around to moving.
The sanctions won’t be “crippling,” the Obama administration’s old standard, and will hardly even have “bite,” Hillary Clinton’s latest promise. They will be carefully “targeted,” U.N.-speak for limited to the point of meaninglessness.
Sanctions against Iran have had an unhappy career. Foreign companies that do proscribed business with Iran employ a variety of ruses -- new names, the use of shell companies -- to evade bans on trading with U.S. companies, according to a Wall Street Journal account. 
Comedy routines in the inner sanctums of Tehran must begin, “Did you hear the one about the asset freeze?”
Barack Obama entered office laboring under the misapprehension that only George W. Bush’s belligerence blocked progress with Iran. If we reached out, the mullahs might realize that we meant them no harm and talk in good faith. Failing that, advertising our good intentions for the world would ease the way for those “crippling” sanctions.
For all the time Obama spent in 2008 defending talking with our enemies, he didn’t seem to count on our enemies not necessarily wanting to talk to us. Nor to realize that demonstrating our niceness wouldn’t lull other countries into abandoning their strategic and economic interests. Even Brazil, a significant exporter of food to Iran that covets a role as an international mediator, has balked at tough measures at the U.N.
The upshot is that Obama has adopted a version of the Bush approach of wheel-spinning negotiations and occasional sanctions, producing the same result: futility.
The fact is that sanctions are an unwieldy instrument and often fail to achieve their intended goal. All that they may be good for is distracting us from the inevitable. Absent a revolution, there are two ways for the charade to end -- with a nuclear Iran, or an Israeli or American military strike. Everything else is commentary.
Rich Lowry is editor of the National Review.
(c) 2010 by King Features Synd., Inc.

 

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If a new restaurant franchise were to come to Gonzales, which one would you like to see?
Chili's
24%
Taco Cabana
1%
IHOP
13%
Jack in the Box
3%
Taco Bell
4%
Hooter's
4%
Burger King
1%
Quizno's
0%
Wendy's
2%
Joe's Crab Shack
9%
Long John Silver's
8%
KFC
3%
Applebee's
2%
Olive Garden
16%
Papa John's
2%
Denny's
4%
Some other restaurant (please leave comment)
4%
Total votes: 289