The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Iran nuclear deal isn’t perfect, but it shouldn’t be scrapped

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The Trump administra­tion, already struggling with a big nuclear problem in North Korea, is about to raise another one by questionin­g the implementa­tion of the Iran nuclear agreement.

A senior administra­tion official said that President Trump will share his concerns about Iranian compliance with global leaders. The official said Trump wants tighter inspection of Iranian facilities and a re-examinatio­n of the “sunset clause” that would allow Iran to resume aspects of its nuclear program in 10 to 15 years.

Trump isn’t proposing to reopen negotiatio­ns but instead threatenin­g to scuttle the deal altogether if Iran doesn’t offer concession­s. “He’s willing to leave the agreement if we don’t ... fix the deal,” the official said. “He’s willing to cut bait and walk away.”

Trump’s position reflects his oft-stated view that the Iran nuclear pact is “the worst deal ever negotiated.” He has levied this attack without discussing whether U.S. interests would be served by scrapping one of the few successful counterpro­liferation agreements that exist.

An American rebuff to Iran, for example, would undermine whatever slim hope exists for negotiatin­g a denucleari­zation agreement with North Korea. And despite White House talk of seeking a “united front” among allies, there’s no sign of support among European nations, even those critical of Iranian behavior, such as France. President Emmanuel Macron said this month that while he’s concerned about Iran’s post-2025 status, “the 2015 agreement is what enables us to establish a constructi­ve and demanding dialogue with Iran.”

Olli Heinonen, a former senior official at the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency, said in an interview that arguments for better Iranian compliance have some merit.

Heinonen argued, for example, that it is a “valid question” whether Tehran is abiding by the cap on its heavy-water stockpile of 130 million tons when it allegedly still owns many millions of tons more that have been shipped to Oman and stored there, awaiting buyers.

Trump’s push for concession­s on the nuclear agreement is accompanie­d by sharp criticism of Iranian behavior in regional conflicts. The senior administra­tion official listed a string of what he termed Tehran’s “destabiliz­ing” actions through proxies. He charged that Iranianbac­ked Houthi rebels in Yemen have threatened navigation in the Bab al-Mandab Strait with mines and missiles, and that they are installing ballistic missiles in Yemen that could target Riyadh and Abu Dhabi.

The administra­tion official also charged that Iran is building precision-guided missiles in Syria that could be used against Israel; sending Iraqi Shiite militias into eastern Syria to aid the regime there; and providing deadly “explosivel­y formed penetrator­s,” or EFPs, to Shiite rebels in Bahrain. This last is an especially emotional issue for U.S. commanders because Iran-supplied EFPs killed many American soldiers in Iraq.

The Trump administra­tion’s dossier about Iranian activity is part of a new, get-tough strategy for dealing with Tehran, the first official said. Trump reviewed this approach with his advisers last Friday. He will make a decision soon about Iran policies, including whether to recertify in October that Iran is complying with the nuclear agreement.

Bill Burns, who as deputy secretary of state helped launch the secret diplomacy that led to the Iran agreement, was blunt about what Trump may be setting in motion. “If we don’t certify the agreement, that will be perceived — rightly — as us beginning to walk away from it. That will put us in a weaker, not a stronger, position” in dealing with Iranian behavior.

The right question to ask is the same one as when the deal was being negotiated: Does this agreement, with all its flaws, make the U.S. and its allies safer than they would be with no agreement? This security metric, it seems to me, still favors keeping the deal.

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