Cables From The Diplomatic Frontlines
As the Iran nuclear deal talks approach culmination, Washington is tempted into making unacceptable concessions.
These cables have always opposed the reinstatement of the JCPOA/Iran nuclear deal.
Here, we shall not once again revisit the fundamentals and prosecute the argument - new readers are welcome and encouraged to delve in deeper into archives.
But throughout the talks, these cables have repeatedly raised the alarm that the US was playing a strong hand in a very ineffective manner.
DC strategists and policymakers have repeatedly closed their eyes to Iranian intransigence, actual missile strikes against the US and its allies, and even kidnapping attempts on the US soil.
Added to this passive acquiescence, the US also displayed overeagerness to conclude the deal - precisely what encouraged the Ayatollahs to press their advantage and demand ever more unreasonable concessions.
With any other party aware of its leverage, Iranian regime would have been overplaying its hand in these negotiations.
But repeated and unearned concessions from DC have incentivized the Ayatollahs to amp up their demands - and as a result, this is exactly what they ended up doing.
The Wall Street Journal came out with a report that apparently, a remaining major hurdle to the conclusion of this deal, is Iran’s insistence that their military arm - the IRGC (Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps) be removed from the State Department’s FTO (Foreign Terrorist Organizations) list.
If agreed to, (and there are suggestions that the Biden admin is actively considering this) such a concession would lead to some extremely damaging consequences.
And not (in the main) for the often-cited reasons: the IRGC can still be effectively sanctioned irrespective of the FTO designation.
But there will certainly be some unacceptable strategic costs to this potential giveaway.
We shall unpack them in turn, and explore what the US should be demanding for instead of offering this unearned and highly damaging concession.
But first.
What the FTO designation removal will not do
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