Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Eye on Iran: Iran Says Nuclear Deal Makes Oil Exports Smoother, Cheaper







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Reuters:
"Iran's nuclear deal with the West will make it easier, cheaper and less stressful to trade its oil, thanks largely to a partial lifting of the European shipping insurance ban, a senior Iranian industry official said on Tuesday. Iran and six world powers reached a deal on Sunday to curb Tehran's nuclear program in exchange for limited sanctions relief, including a pledge to allow some Iran oil shipments to be covered by UK-dominated providers of shipping insurance... 'Based on this deal, Iran's crude oil exports will not decline and our customers will be able to purchase oil from Iran without any anxiety and they will not have to look for alternatives,' Ali Majedi, deputy minister for international affairs and trading, told oil ministry news service Shana. 'No new sanctions will be slapped on Iran's oil industry in the coming six months and our customers can clinch term contracts with Iran instead of spot oil consignments purchased from National Iranian Oil Company.' ... 'Iran crude oil exports costs increased because, besides us, our customers had also to pay more to insure crude oil cargoes,' Majedi was quoted as saying. 'Based on the action plan signed between Iran and P5+1 (group of world powers), the European Union's insurance sanctions against oil tankers carrying Iran's oil have been lifted so crude oil exports will be done more easily, at lower costs and within the framework of international regulations.'" http://t.uani.com/1if9SRY

NYT: "The United States on Tuesday announced one of the biggest settlements ever made for corporate misbehavior overseas, chronicling a litany of charges against a leading energy services provider. The charges included bribery and kickbacks in the Middle East and Africa and systematic defiance of economic sanctions on Iran and three other countries. The announcement came two days after the United States and other world powers reached a breakthrough agreement with Iran that eases, at least temporarily, some of the sanctions over its disputed nuclear program. The timing of the announcement seemed to be partly intended to send a signal that the Obama administration still considers Iran subject to economic isolation, despite the atmosphere of rapprochement embodied in the nuclear agreement. The Securities and Exchange Commission said the company that settled, Weatherford International Ltd., a Swiss provider of oil and gas services that operates in more than 100 countries, had agreed to pay more than $250 million to resolve charges that it violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and other laws from 2002 to 2011... Critics of the agreement with Iran welcomed the Weatherford settlement but noted that it applied to behavior that had been halted years ago. 'The real question is whether the Treasury Department will be permitted politically to enforce current sanctions for current illicit activity,' said Mark Wallace, the chief executive of United Against Nuclear Iran, a New York-based group that has pushed for stronger sanctions on Iran." http://t.uani.com/1eqsvN6

Reuters: "Iran will press on with construction at a nuclear reactor site at Arak, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif said on Wednesday, despite an agreement with Western powers to halt activity. The uncompleted heavy-water research reactor emerged as one of several crucial issues in negotiations in Geneva last week, when Iran agreed with six world powers to curb Tehran's nuclear programme for six months in return for limited sanctions relief. Iran said it would not make 'any further advances of its activities' on the Arak reactor, according to text of the agreement. 'The capacity at the Arak site is not going to increase. It means no new nuclear fuel will be produced and no new installations will be installed, but construction will continue there,' Zarif told parliament in translated comments broadcast on Iran's Press TV. But experts have said an apparent gap in the text could allow Tehran to build components off-site to install later in the nuclear reactor. It was not immediately clear if Zarif was referring to this or other construction activity." http://t.uani.com/1aUQbJV
Nuclear Agreement

Fox News: "Despite the highly touted Iranian nuclear deal announced by the Obama administration over the weekend, the two sides still can't seem to agree on what it is they agreed to. The aftermath of the deal struck early Sunday in Geneva has been marked by confusion. According to Iranian media, the country's Foreign Ministry is now claiming that the White House put out an invalid fact sheet about the agreement. A ministry spokeswoman called it a 'one-sided interpretation of the agreed text,' and said parts of it 'contradict' the actual plan, according to Fars News Agency.  The Foreign Ministry did not specify what language might have clashed with their interpretation of the agreement, but called the White House statement a 'modified version of the deal' -- and released their own version of the plan. That document, among other distinctions, recognizes Iran's 'right to nuclear energy for peaceful purposes,' something the White House statement does not mention." http://t.uani.com/17UbYQx

Free Beacon: "The White House confirmed to the Washington Free Beacon on Monday that the final details of the plan have yet to be worked out, meaning that Iran is not yet beholden to a six month freeze its nuclear activities. 'Technical details to implement the Joint Plan of Action must be finalized before the terms of the Plan begin,' a senior administration official told the Free Beacon. 'The P5+1 and Iran are working on what the timeframe is.' The White House could not provide additional details on the timeframe when approached by the Free Beacon on Tuesday. As the details are finalized, Iran will have the ability to continue its most controversial enrichment program. This drew criticism from proponents of tough nuclear restrictions. 'The six month clock should have started early Sunday morning,' said former Ambassador Mark Wallace, the CEO of United Against a Nuclear Iran (UANI). 'If this is a serious agreement, the P5+1 must ensure that these negotiations do not become a tool for Iran to further increase its enrichment abilities.'" http://t.uani.com/1b4ts9W

AFP: "Iran's President Hassan Rouhani on Tuesday hailed a landmark interim nuclear deal reached with world powers this week as the right step in a 'long' journey to a comprehensive accord. He stressed that Iran's enrichment of uranium -- which according to the deal will be limited to five percent purity -- would continue as his negotiators engage with the so-called P5+1 -- the United States, Britain, France, China, Russia and Germany. 'Agreement in Geneva is a very positive first step, but the journey before us is long,' Rouhani said in a live address on state television to mark his cabinet's 100th day. 'Step by step, we're moving towards achieving a comprehensive agreement with the P5+1.' But he added: 'Enrichment, which is part of our rights, will continue. Iran will never abandon its enrichment activities.' ... 'Everyone is happy about this deal' except for 'warmongers and that regime, which is an illegitimate one that occupies,' Rouhani said, referring to Israel, which Islamic republic does not recognise. The deal, Rouhani said, had already created a 'positive atmosphere' in the Iranian economy, which is enduring a crisis 'unprecedented in 50 years.'" http://t.uani.com/IsEUoU

FT: "Iran's nuclear deal with global powers is 'more dangerous than 9/11,' according to a commentator in the Saudi-owned Asharq Alawsat newspaper, who likened the impact of last weekend's historic pact to the terrorist attacks on the US in 2001. The startling comparison underscores the depth of fear among Sunni Gulf states about Shia Iran's potential rise as a regional superpower and is a reflection of wider Saudi public opinion. 'Obama sold the region, abandoning the US's historic alliance with the Gulf,' Tariq Alhomayed, who is believed to be close to Saudi policymakers, wrote in the pan-Arab newspaper... 'We are seeing a shift in American policy in the Middle East. It looks like they [the US] have lost interest in the region,' says Hussein Shobokshi, a Jeddah-based economist. 'Nothing has changed in Iran, its policy has not changed,' he said. 'Iran is still part of the 'axis of evil.'" http://t.uani.com/1b4pz4K

FT: "Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of Iran's most influential political leaders, has raised hopes of a comprehensive nuclear deal with world powers within a year. In a rare interview with the Financial Times in Tehran, Mr Rafsanjani, 79, declared that Sunday's interim deal was the hardest step because it meant overcoming decades of diplomatic estrangement with the US going back to the 1979 Islamic revolution. 'It was breaking the ice, the second stage will be more routine' ...  He said Iran had no interest in developing nuclear weapons and dismissed Israeli threats of a military strike to curb its nuclear programme. 'Israel is so small; no small fish can eat big fish.'" http://t.uani.com/1cv9Pe4

WSJ: "For a decade, the U.S. military posture in the Middle East has been largely defined by the potential need for a response to Iran-aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf, missile defense programs in Eastern Europe and arms sales to Arab allies among them. Even with an interim agreement in place with Iran over its nuclear program, U.S. defense officials say they have no plans to alter their U.S. strategy or the muscular military presence around the Middle East. 'Our force posture has not changed, nor will it,' Col. Steve Warren, the Pentagon spokesman, said this week." http://t.uani.com/1a48Tu7

AFP: "Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif went before parliament on Wednesday to defend a landmark nuclear deal clinched at the weekend with world powers, media reported... Some parliamentarians, led by hardline MP Rouhollah Hosseinian, expressed misgivings at the agreement. 'We are worried about the consequences of the agreement, and we communicate (this disquiet) with the government to find a more prudent and accurate way,' said Hosseinian. 'The wording of the agreement about uranium enrichment is implicit and it can only mean limiting (Iran's) enrichment right.' Conservative lawmaker Alireza Zakani, as quoted by the Fars news agency, also expressed frustration at deal. 'We are being deprived from having a peaceful nuclear programme while the region's cancerous tumour can use a nuclear bomb,' said Zakani, referring to Israel, widely believed to be the region's sole if undeclared nuclear power." http://t.uani.com/1c8C8R6

Sanctions

AFP: "Kerry, and the US administration of President Barack Obama, are seeking to head off moves in Congress to draw up new sanctions against Iran. In a round of phone calls to lawmakers, Kerry would urge that 'passing any new sanctions legislation during the course of the negotiations, in our view, would be unhelpful and could put the success of the outcome at risk,' State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. The White House echoed the message, warning any 'additional sanctions before this diplomatic window could be pursued would undermine our credibility about the goal of these sanctions.' Deputy White House spokesman Josh Earnest added: 'We're not sanctioning just for the sake of sanctions and we're not sanctioning the Iranians specifically to punish them. We have these sanctions in place to pressure Iran to consider and pursue a diplomatic option.'" http://t.uani.com/1fIZzE1

FT: "Iran's oil ministry has opened contacts with western majors as the government of Hassan Rouhani tries to capitalise on progress in nuclear talks and encourage companies to prepare for an eventual lifting of sanctions. Bijan Namdar Zanganeh, the veteran oil minister who has returned to government after an eight-year absence, told the Financial Times he had held meetings with European companies and 'indirectly' with US firms with a view to inviting them back to Iran. In his first interview with the foreign media, the minister who persuaded the likes of Total, Royal Dutch Shell, Eni and Statoil to invest in the oil and gas sector in the 1990s despite US sanctions, said these companies were now among those he was seeking to attract back to Iran... But it is clear Iran is way down most oil companies' list of priorities. 'With the shale revolution, there are a lot more opportunities out there for us,' said a senior executive at one European oil major. 'Iran will have to compete for investment with lots of other places that offer much more attractive terms.' The Iranian government is reviewing the terms of oil contracts and intends to replace the unpopular agreements known as buybacks with a form of service contract. Production-sharing agreements favoured by companies are not on the table, said Mr Zanganeh, but Iran was planning to offer better terms than its neighbours, including Iraq. Mr Zanganeh was clear that no energy deal could be signed before Iran and world powers agreed on a comprehensive settlement to the nuclear programme, which would lead to a lifting of sanctions." http://t.uani.com/1a4gB7m

Reuters: "India could buy more crude from Iran in the next four months and intends to increase purchases further in the next fiscal year, the petroleum secretary said, after a deal last weekend eased some sanctions on the OPEC member. India is the first of Tehran's four main buyers to say it is looking to buy more oil from Iran after the agreement in Geneva... Although the agreement doesn't allow Iran to boost its oil sales for six months, India has room to increase its imports after they tumbled around 40 percent this year to below even what was permitted by sanctions. India intends to buy up to an average 220,000 barrels per day (bpd) of oil from Iran in the year ending March 31, Petroleum Secretary Vivek Rae said on Wednesday. That's consistent with a goal of cutting India's Iran oil shipments 15 percent this year to win waivers on U.S. sanctions. But India's April-October imports are running at less than 80 percent of that level, at about 170,000 bpd, meaning India could raise its imports between December and March and still hit the target." http://t.uani.com/1ghVeVG

WSJ: "The European Union will maintain sanctions against all but two Iranian firms that won challenges to the bloc's sanctions regime in EU courts in September, an EU official said Tuesday. The EU will on Wednesday formally announce it is maintaining sanctions against almost all the firms by 're-listing' them for new sanctions breaches, the official says. The EU hopes that by re-listing companies and providing additional evidence, it can secure its Iran sanctions regime for the foreseeable future... Tuesday's decision relates to 16 of the 18 companies that won their challenges in the EU's second highest court on Sept. 16 and the effort to relist them will be unaffected by the weekend agreement. The bloc relisted on Nov. 16 eight companies affected by a court ruling on Sept. 6... The EU is relisting all the companies with the exception of two IRISL subsidiaries--IRISL Club and Leadmarine. The reason for the two exceptions wasn't immediately clear." http://t.uani.com/1b4qhPt

Reuters: "Turkish mobile phone company Turkcell has taken to a South African court its $4.2 billion lawsuit against rival MTN Group, alleging it was the victim of 'corruption and bribery' that caused it to lose a contract in Iran. Turkcell originally filed suit in a U.S. court last year, alleging Johannesburg-based MTN used bribery and wrongful influence to win a mobile licence in Iran that was first awarded to the Turkish operator. It dropped that suit in May after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling in a separate case made clear that U.S. courts would not have jurisdiction in a case involving two foreign firms in a dispute outside the United States. In papers filed on Tuesday with the South Gauteng High Court in Johannesburg, seen by Reuters, Turkcell claims that MTN, former CEO and current Chairman Phuthuma Nhleko and former executive Irene Charnley 'acted wrongfully' and interfered with Turkcell's relationship with the Iranian government. The alleged interference involved 'corrupt acts' including 'promises of bribes and the bestowing of gifts and favours to Iranian and South African Government officials,' Turkcell said in its filing." http://t.uani.com/1if9gvR

Human Rights


IHR: "According to reliable sources in Iran eleven prisoners, among them one woman, were hanged in the Ghezelhesar prison of Karaj (west of Tehran). The female prisoner was transferred from the Gharchak prison of Varamin to Ghezelhesar for execution... According to the Iranian State Broadcasting, one Afghan citizen was hanged in public in the town of Khonj (Fars Province, southern Iran) on Sunday. The prisoner who was not identified by name was 32 year old and convicted of two murders allegedly committed in 2006." http://t.uani.com/1ezZAXN

Domestic Politics

Reuters: "President Hassan Rouhani said Iran's economic problems went beyond sanctions, blaming 'unparalleled stagflation' on the profligacy and mismanagement of his predecessor, hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad... 'The stagflation in 1391 was unparalleled,' Rouhani said, referring to the Iranian year that ended in March. During that year, the economy contracted by 6 percent, while inflation rose above 40 percent, he said. The International Monetary Fund expects Iran's economy will shrink 1.5 percent this year in inflation-adjusted terms, after an estimated 1.9 percent contraction last year which was the biggest since 1988, when Iran's eight-year war with Iraq ended. Despite receiving 600 billion dollars in oil revenue over the past eight years, Rouhani said the legacy of Ahmadinejad's two terms was around $67 billion dollars of debt. Iran's nominal GDP was $549 billion in 2012 and will shrink to $389 billion in 2013, according to the IMF's October outlook... Rouhani said reducing inflation was a priority. Inflation had fallen to 36 percent by the end of October and the government aimed to bring it below 25 percent by the end of the following Iranian year - March 2015 in the Western calendar." http://t.uani.com/18792Nt

WashPost: "One hundred days into his first term as Iran's president, Hassan Rouhani offered an upbeat progress report to the country Tuesday, two days after a nuclear deal with world powers gave his young administration a much-needed boost. 'We pride ourselves on being accountable to our people,' Rouhani said at the start of a live television question-and-answer session in which he outlined his administration's handling of Iran's domestic and foreign affairs since taking power in August. Among the successes Rouhani highlighted were a steep drop in inflation, harmony among the three branches of government, reduced domestic security restrictions since he took office and the announcement of a draft charter of citizens' rights for Iranians. 'Citizenship rights is about making all Iranians feel they are part of one nation, one identity, under one umbrella they can feel proud of,' he said... Thus far, there has been little sign of progress on several in¬trac¬table domestic challenges. After promising greater Internet freedoms, Rouhani has not acted to open up access or increase Internet security for Iranians. During his campaign and the early weeks of his presidency, many speculated that social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook, which have been blocked since the 2009 presidential election, would be accessible again... Human rights is another issue that has yet to be fully addressed. In September, several high-profile political prisoners were freed, sparking hope that the leaders of the 2009 post-election protest movement, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, would be released after three years of house arrest. But Rouhani has done little to address the subject, disappointing many supporters of Iran's reform movement who voted for him expecting clearer and more concrete support from the new administration. Rights groups such as Amnesty International also say Iran has increased the rate of executions since Rouhani took office. Political detentions, like capital punishment, are under the judiciary's supervision, but Rouhani has offered no discernible objections to either policy, providing fodder for critics at home and abroad who say he differs little from his predecessors." http://t.uani.com/1gi4tFv
Opinion & Analysis

UANI CEO Mark Wallace & UANI Research Director Matan Shamir in Harvard Belfer Center's Iran Matters: "With the election of Hassan Rouhani as President of Iran, the P5+1 have discussed agreement on a potential interim nuclear accord with Tehran. As part of such an agreement, the notion of 'sanctions-easing' has entered the lexicon as a potentially viable inducement for Iran to assent to such a deal.  President Obama has likened the use of sanctions to that of a spigot - to be turned up or down as needed by the administration.  It is widely accepted that the consequences of the current sanctions law and regulations is what spurred Tehran to come seriously to the negotiating table over the particulars of its nuclear program. The U.S. and international sanctions on Iran have been arguably the most robust sanctions regime in history against any country dependent on trade with the global economy. However, the lessons and experience of Iran sanctions belie comparisons to a spigot and suggest that 'sanctions-easing' is not possible to implement with the precision of a spigot.  The current sanctions regime is similar to the precise architecture of a building made of disparate but necessary elements such as metal, mortar and brick. Take away any of the necessary elements and the building becomes structurally unsound. In the case of Iran sanctions, the architecture has relied on four interdependent elements: (1) Increasingly strict laws and regulations, (2) enforcement action, (3) reputational risk, and; (4) the psychological impact on the Iranian economy. The danger is that if the White House agrees to roll back any of these key elements as part of 'sanctions-easing,' or through a substantial unfreezing of sanctioned assets, the carefully constructed sanctions house will crumble and consequential pressure on the Iranian economy will ease far more than intended... With hundreds of major multinationals like General Electric, Siemens, Caterpillar, Ingersoll Rand, and KPMG leaving Iran, the increasingly successful sanctions regime triggered powerful economic and psychological pressure on the Iranian economy with measureable effect-the collapse of the Iranian rial. From 2002 through 2010, the official and black market rates of the Iranian rial corresponded closely with each other at about 10,000 rials to the dollar. The gulf between the official and black market rate began to widen in January 2011, and by October 2012, the black market rial exchange rate had dropped as low as 40,000 to the dollar, more than three times the official exchange rate of 12,260.  Iran was suffering from hyperinflation with little hope of correction because of the inability to adequately sell its vast hydrocarbon resources and its inability to access sanction-frozen foreign currency reserves that were stranded in various central banks abroad. Iranian consumers and the international currency markets had clearly lost confidence in the Iranian economy. Since President Rouhani's inauguration, the pressure on the Iranian economy has already begun to ease even before agreement on an interim nuclear accord that 'eases' sanctions... President Rouhani's election and the current cycle of apparently friendly negotiation has inspired greater consumer confidence in Iran, and less reputational risk for international companies that have begun to openly prepare themselves to reenter the Iranian market. Just as a result of these factors alone have sanctions been 'eased' and the black market rial exchange rate rallied to 29,950 to the dollar in early November, bringing it nearly in line with the official exchange rate of 24,900. Iran's sanctions-hobbled economy has rallied despite the fact that Rouhani has not yet secured an iota of official sanctions relief. Consequently, entering into continued nuclear negotiations, the leverage of the U.S. and its partners has declined as reputational risk declines, enforcement is loosened and plans for the enactment of more rigorous laws and regulations are shelved. So far President Rouhani has made good on his mandate and sanctions have already been 'eased' without a single legal or regulatory change. The P5+1's leverage will decline much further and the air will effectively be let out of the sanctions balloon if an interim deal is struck that provides actual sanctions-easing. Contrary to the administration's claims, it is a fallacious notion that sanctions are akin to a spigot to turn off and back on. Rather, regulating the severity of sanctions is more like attempting to stop air from escaping a popped balloon.  As soon as a part of the sanctions regime is withdrawn, and enforcement continues on the decline, the reputational risk of business with Iran lessens and the psychological impact on Iran and its rial dissipates -- quickly. The result of so-called limited 'sanctions-easing' will be to strengthen the Iranian rial in a manner far quicker and disproportionate to the notion of 'easing' and will effectively serve to gut the measurable impact of sanctions that has taken years to develop.  In such an event, Iran's economy will rise quickly from its state of duress and the U.S. and its partners will find themselves with insufficient coercive leverage to conclude a minimally acceptable final agreement in which Iran accepts physical limits on the scale and scope of its nuclear program." http://t.uani.com/18nX1ZX

UANI President Gary Samore in Harvard Belfer Center's Iran Matters: "The reason why the P5+1 partners decided to conclude an interim deal as a first step rather than negotiate a final agreement all at once is because Iran is not willing to make the concessions necessary for comprehensive sanctions relief at this time.  Describing U.S. requirements for a comprehensive solution, President Obama said, 'Because of its record of violating its obligations, Iran must accept strict limitations on its nuclear program that make it impossible to develop a nuclear weapon.' For Washington, this means prohibiting Iran from being able to quickly produce large quantities of fissile material for nuclear weapons by limiting the scope and scale of Iran's enrichment program, preventing completion of the Arak heavy water research reactor and imposing strong international monitoring to detect cheating. In effect, these limits would require Supreme Leader Ali Khameini to abandon (at least for the time being) Iran's longstanding efforts to acquire a nuclear weapons capability, which he is loath to do.  Nonetheless, for the P5+1, an interim deal that slows or freezes some critical aspects of Iran's nuclear program is preferable to no deal, which would lead to another escalatory cycle of increased sanctions and increased nuclear activities, moving Iran's closer to nuclear weapons and increasing the risk of military conflict. But, what are the prospects that the Geneva agreement will actually create conditions for negotiating a comprehensive agreement in six months? If the current level of sanctions is not sufficient to compel Iran to abandon its nuclear weapons program, it seems unlikely that reduced sanctions under the six month deal would be enough to fundamentally change Iran's calculations.  However, if the P5+1 are able to sustain the sanctions that remain in place during the six-month negotiations, and if Iran believes that the P5+1 are willing and able to reinstate the sanctions that have been eased and impose additional sanctions in the absence of a final deal, then Iran is more likely to accept demands for additional nuclear constraints. But, the P5+1 will not be in a position to dictate terms to Iran.  Just as the P5+1 can threaten to re-impose and increase sanctions in the absence of sufficient nuclear concessions, Iran can threaten to restart and expand its nuclear program if the P5+1 demand too much or offer too little. Tehran undoubtedly hopes that partial sanctions relief under the six month deal will create new loopholes to evade the remaining sanctions and erode the overall sanctions architecture, as countries and companies maneuver to resume business in anticipation that sanctions will be wholly lifted.   To maintain pressure, Washington and its partners will need to demonstrate that they can enforce the remaining sanctions, including sanctioning countries or companies that seek to exploit the loosening of sanctions, and they will need to convincingly threaten to walk away from the negotiations if Iran rejects their demands.   The U.S. Congress can help strengthen the threat by expressing support for additional sanctions legislation after six months in the absence of sufficient progress towards a final deal. In conclusion, in the interim deal, both sides agreed to stand down from escalating hostile action against the other, but each side retains its biggest bargaining leverage for the much tougher negotiations that lie ahead.   As such, it is unlikely that a final deal can be achieved within six months because the parties remain very far apart on the central issue of whether Iran will dismantle most of its enrichment program, abandon the Arak reactor and accept intrusive monitoring." http://t.uani.com/18nXnjb

Yaakov Amidror in The International New York Times: "Just after the signing ceremony in Geneva on Sunday, President Hassan Rouhani of Iran declared that the world had recognized his country's 'nuclear rights.' He was right. The agreement Iran reached with the so-called P5+1 - the United States, Britain, China, France and Russia, plus Germany - does not significantly roll back Iran's nuclear capabilities. Iran made only cosmetic concessions to preserve its primary goal, which is to continue enriching uranium. The agreement represents a failure, not a triumph, of diplomacy. With North Korea, too, there were talks and ceremonies and agreements - but then there was the bomb. This is not an outcome Israel could accept with Iran. Harsh sanctions led Iran to the negotiating table. The easing of those sanctions will now send companies from around the world racing into Iran to do business, which will lead to the eventual collapse of the sanctions that supposedly remain. Might economic relief, reduced isolation and new goodwill lead to greater pressure on the Iranian regime to reach a fuller agreement later? I doubt it: As recently as last week, Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, denounced Israel as a 'rabid dog,' a jab that Western leaders failed to condemn. The deal will only lead Iran to be more stubborn. Anyone who has conducted business or diplomatic negotiations knows that you don't reduce the pressure on your opponent on the eve of negotiations. Yet that is essentially what happened in Geneva. Iran will not only get to keep its existing 18,000 centrifuges; it will also be allowed to continue developing the next generation of centrifuges, provided it does not install them in uranium-enrichment facilities. Which is to say: Its uranium-enrichment capability is no weaker... The Geneva deal, in short, did not address the nuclear threat at all. This was Iran's great accomplishment. No wonder Mr. Rouhani boasted that the world had recognized Iran's nuclear rights... There is no reason to think that the six powers will have more leverage in the future than they had before the Geneva agreement. On the contrary, they just gave that leverage away. After years of disingenuous negotiations, Iran is now just a few months away from a bomb." http://t.uani.com/1b4nUMr

Roula Khalaf in FT: "Back in 1988, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, founder of the Islamic republic, had a radical change of heart, accepting a UN ceasefire to end Iran's devastating eight-year war with Iraq. Taking the decision, the ayatollah said, was more deadly than 'drinking from a poisoned chalice'. Twenty-five years on, Iran has embraced another momentous shift in policy, agreeing for the first time in a decade to freeze components of its cherished nuclear programme. So has Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, supreme leader and Khomeini's successor, drunk from the same cup? Not quite. The verdict of government insiders and analysts in Tehran is that the leader might have taken a sip, but whether he will swallow the rest is far from guaranteed. In hardline as much as in reformist circles, everyone is agreed: Iran takes on the burden of proving that it will not militarise its nuclear efforts but a comprehensive settlement will only be achieved if it can, at the same time, hold on to its low-level uranium enrichment programme. One person close to the government says that, in backing the negotiations that led to Sunday's six-month agreement with world powers, Mr Khamenei was leaving his options open... To be sure, there is much truth in western governments' assertions that the effectiveness of sanctions forced Iran to compromise. One disheartened official says sanctions have been 'more destructive' to Iran's economy than the eight-year war with Iraq. The 74-year-old leader, however, had additional motivation to roll back the nuclear programme. He had no choice but to recognise in the June election of Hassan Rouhani, the centrist president, the depth of the nation's desperation for an end to isolation - and the danger to the regime of marching against the sweeping mood of discontent." http://t.uani.com/18nSO8z

Sohrab Ahmari in WSJ: "On Sunday, I spoke on the phone with Payam Fazlinejad, a Kayhan writer and senior researcher and lieutenant of Mr. Shariatmadari's. The 32-year-old Mr. Fazlinejad is also a lecturer who addresses Islamic Republic elites on the ideological threats facing the regime-themes he has expounded on in such books as 'Knights of the Cultural NATO' and 'The Intellectuals' Secret Army.' While he emphasized on the phone that his opinions don't necessarily represent those of his employer, Mr. Fazlinejad's views are typical of those held by a large and powerful element of the Tehran regime... Given that the Geneva deal is an interim, six-month arrangement, with a final agreement still to come, Mr. Fazlinejad suggests that Western leaders must 'take into account that the supreme leader's support for the negotiations and agreement has been conditional and by no means absolute. The leader instructed us that if the rights of the Iranian nation and the principles of the revolution are respected and the negotiating team stands up to the overbearing demands of the United States and the global arrogance'-the regime's terms for the West generally-'then he would support their work.' On the other hand, if the agreement denies Iran's absolute right to enrich, 'then it is from our view essentially void.' The Kayhan writer warns against perceiving any diplomatic agreement over Iran's nuclear program as a first step toward broader rapprochement between Washington and Tehran. 'The nature of the opposition of the Islamic revolution with the regime of liberal democracy is fundamentally philosophical,' Mr. Fazlinejad says. 'It's an ideological difference. It is not a tactical enmity, or one that has to do with temporary interests, which can be shifted and the enmity thus done away with... So in contrast to all the punditry of late in the international media, which says that these negotiations are a step toward peace between Iran and the United States-those who take this view are completely mistaken.' Western leaders, Mr. Fazlinejad says, are also misreading the meaning of Mr. Rouhani's election in June and his foreign policy. Pointing to the Iranian president's recent visits with the families of Iran's 'martyrs,' Mr. Fazlinejad says: 'Notice how hard Mr. Rouhani's government works to show itself to be loyal to the revolution's ideological principles.'" http://t.uani.com/1fIXK9X

Eye on Iran is a periodic news summary from United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) a program of the American Coalition Against Nuclear Iran, Inc., a tax-exempt organization under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Eye on Iran is not intended as a comprehensive media clips summary but rather a selection of media elements with discreet analysis in a PDA friendly format. For more information please email Press@UnitedAgainstNuclearIran.com

United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI) is a non-partisan, broad-based coalition that is united in a commitment to prevent Iran from fulfilling its ambition to become a regional super-power possessing nuclear weapons.  UANI is an issue-based coalition in which each coalition member will have its own interests as well as the collective goal of advancing an Iran free of nuclear weapons.

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