The Optimistic Case for Biden and Iran
“It’s over.”
So reads the November 8 headline of Hamshahri, one of the leading newspapers in Iran. The past four years have been brutal for ordinary Iranians. The Trump administration waged an economic war on Iran that exacerbated the political and social tensions endemic to the country. Iranians are hoping that the election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will enable a return to the optimism they experienced in the short period between the implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) in January 2016 and the dismaying election of Donald Trump in November of the same year.
In a CNN op-ed published in September, Biden made clear his intention to “rejoin the [JPCOA] as a starting point for follow-on negotiations” so long as “Iran returns to strict compliance with the nuclear deal.” Here, Biden is accepting the basic premise of “compliance-for-compliance.” In response to Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal, Iran has reduced its own commitments to the deal, particularly by increasing its levels of uranium enrichment beyond what is permitted by the JCPOA. These moves, which have dismayed the remaining parties to the agreement—France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Russia, and China—are nonetheless perceived as tactical and reversible. The administration of Iranian president Hassan Rouhani remains committed to the JCPOA and appears ready to welcome the U.S. back into the deal so long as the U.S. policymakers accept “to be held responsible for damages” caused to “the people of Iran” as a result of Trump’s withdrawal, while also providing “guarantees” that such an event would not be repeated. Notably, Iranian foreign minister Javad Zarif has described the stance of the Biden administration as “promising.”
Despite these encouraging statements by both the Biden camp and officials in the Rouhani administration, there is a remarkable degree of pessimism surrounding the prospect of a U.S. reentry to the JCPOA. These assessments highlight pressure, particularly from U.S. allies in the Middle East, to build on the nuclear deal and achieve diplomatic breakthroughs on issues such as regional security and Iran’s missile program. They also point to the ascendency of Iran’s hardliners, a loose coalition of politicians who savaged Rouhani and his moderate bloc as the nuclear deal faltered. The vocal anti-Americanism of these conservative politicians and their labeling of figures such as Rouhani and Zarif as either naïve or knowing traitors, has furnished dire predictions for the future of U.S.-Iran diplomacy under the hardline president expected to prevail in Iran’s elections next year.
In a recent piece, Ariane Tabatabai and Henry Rome seek to account for the likely victory of a hardliner president, arguing that “the United States shouldn’t rush to secure a deal in the hopes of shaping Iran’s domestic politics, or for fear that the window of opportunity will close.” They observe astutely that “the new administration shouldn’t assume that without Rouhani, diplomacy wouldn’t stand a chance.” Tabatabai and Rome explain that the next Iranian president “will almost certainly be more conservative,” but note that the decision to engage in diplomacy with the United States will not be the prerogative of this hardline figure. Rather, such decisions require “buy-in from the whole system.” So long as Iran’s national security interests would be advanced by negotiations, it is reasonable to expect a receptiveness to talks, even with the U.S.
According to Tabatabai and Rome, it follows that the new Iranian administration will “have no choice but to negotiate” with the U.S. principally because of the country’s weak economic position. But this assessment likely underestimates the ability of the Iranian economy to limp along under sanctions pressure—even for four or more years. Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit the country, the Iranian economy was already returning to growth despite two years under Trump’s maximum pressure sanctions. High inflation has emerged as the single most significant challenge facing Iranian policymakers, but as the case of Venezuela shows, even the most extreme circumstances of hyperinflation can prove insufficient to coerce policymakers to the negotiating table.
Trump’s national security advisor, Robert O’Brien, recently conceded that the administration was seeing diminishing returns from economic coercion, having imposed “so many sanctions” that there was little pressure to add. This view reflects the assessments of the U.S. intelligence community, which is developing a more sophisticated understanding of the Iranian economy and its adaptability to sanctions pressure. The takeaway is that Trump’s sanctions offer Biden no real leverage on Iran and that it will not be possible to coerce Rouhani nor his successor into talks.
Despite this, Tabatabai and Rome are still correct to claim that Biden will have a shot at diplomacy—a very good one at that. To understand why, it is important to look beyond Trump’s withdrawal from the nuclear deal as the critical political act of the last three years. Far more significant is the fact that Iran remains in the agreement. Sure, Iran has reduced its compliance with key aspects of the deal. But the extraordinary political price paid by the Rouhani administration, spurred by a creditable commitment to diplomacy for its own sake and also by the strategic considerations of the wider Iranian “system,” suggests that understanding the logic of Iran’s persistence with the deal is the key to understanding the prospects for U.S.-Iran talks.
Back in 2018, on the eve of John Bolton’s appointment to lead the National Security Council, it appeared that the writing was on the wall for the Iran deal. As I wrote at the time, “by any conventional assessment, then, the Iran deal is dead.” Implementation of the deal was already faltering, and Bolton was hellbent on killing the agreement outright. But I foresaw a different outcome, arguing that “the Iran deal cannot be killed” because of a set of “several undeniable truths about Iran and its place in the world.” My argument focused on three structural factors that underpin Iran’s diplomatic engagement: the geopolitical influence of Iran, the demographic and economic drivers of the Iranian policy of engagement, and the fact that the United States has limited leverage because there is no credible or affordable military threat behind diminishing sanctions pressure.
Each of these structural factors is even more pronounced today. The Islamic Republic is less isolated diplomatically than ever before because it opted to remain in the JCPOA following the U.S. withdrawal. In the face of reduced oil revenues, the Iranian economy is more dependent on economic diversification, including in its trade partnerships. The combination of sanctions overuse and the American public’s calls for a pullback from the Middle East will leave Biden with less scope to coerce or threaten Iran.
The notion that Iran’s commitment to engagement (and the nuclear deal) is structural was underscored in a November 3 speech by Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei. Addressing the possible impact of U.S. elections on U.S.-Iran relations, Khamenei stated, “We follow a sensible, calculated policy which cannot be affected by changes of personnel.” Many took the statement to be Khamenei’s way of pouring cold water on the prospect of a Biden victory revitalizing the JCPOA. But again, in the Iranian assessment, the deal is not yet dead. The calculated policy to which Khamenei is referring is the policy of keeping the nuclear deal alive in accordance with Iran’s strategic interests.
This structural commitment means that the Biden administration does not need to rush to make a deal with Iran—the window of opportunity will not close when Iran elects a new president next summer. However, that does not mean Biden will not need to make some early gestures to signal the depth of his own commitment to diplomacy. In an excellent report envisioning a roadmap for the Biden administration’s reengagement of Iran, Ilan Goldenberg, Elisa Catalano Ewers, and Kaleigh Thomas, point to the importance of an early “de-escalation” phase, stating that the Biden administration “should start with immediate, modest unilateral confidence-building measures” in order to achieve both compliance-for-compliance on the nuclear file and “calm-for-calm” when it comes to regional tensions.
As Edoardo Saravalle has convincingly argued, the Biden administration can use executive orders to implement its sanctions relief commitments under a compliance-for-compliance framework in under sixty days. These moves can be made tangible by coordinating moves with European allies and international bodies to deliver tangible economic benefits to Iran. For example, this coordination can ensure that sanctions relief enables the unfreezing of foreign exchange reserves and the provision of Iran’s requested COVID-19 relief loan by the International Monetary Fund—moves that would ease inflation, delivering appreciable economic relief for ordinary Iranians. Should the Biden administration choose incentivization over coercion and thereby prove itself a credible counterparty for follow-on negotiations by the time of the Iranian election in the early summer of 2021, it is more than likely that any Iranian president elected—even a so-called hardliner—will take up the mantle of new talks.
The fierce opposition of hardliners to the nuclear deal was far more about the stakes of domestic politics than the terms of the deal itself. Even before talks had concluded, hardline politicians were gripped by anxiety that the successful implementation of the nuclear deal would grant Rouhani, a savvy political operator, a diplomatic and economic triumph that would consolidate the dominance of reformist politics in Iran for a generation. The opposition to the nuclear deal, which extended to efforts to undermine the deal itself, was intended to take Rouhani from the heights of popularity—he won two stunning mandates in high-turnout elections—to the depths of disgrace. The hardliners succeeded in this cynical mission and Rouhani was battered. But tellingly, the nuclear deal, as a product of Iran’s largely apolitical strategic decision-making, has survived.
A hardline president in Iran can be confident of his ability to run the country for an initial four-year term without needing a détente with Biden. The economy will limp along, regional tensions will remain high, and domestic unrest will simmer. But the presidential administration will be able to coordinate with state organs to keep Iran resilient to external and internal pressure—even as the Iranian people continue to suffer from the country’s stagnation.
But what president would choose to preside over a constant slow-moving crisis, particularly one that was not of his own making? For hardliners, 2021 represents an extraordinary political opportunity. For the first time since 1989, Iran and the United States will have first-term presidents at the same time. Meanwhile, Iran’s conservative politicians are increasingly concerned about the political legacy and legitimacy of the Islamic Revolution as it enters its fifth decade. Negotiations with the Biden administration offer Iran’s next president, and his political backers, the opportunity to give to the Iranian people that long-awaited gift—a robust, transformational deal with the world powers, chief among them the United States.
The impact of Biden’s election on U.S.-Iran relations has been the subject of strategizing for months. Today, what was once a hypothetical has become a reality. The impetus for U.S.-Iran talks arises from both an emergent political opportunity and the unchanged structural factors that push both sides towards engagement. The mechanics and sequencing of an American reentry into the JCPOA remain to be determined, but it will not be harder than when the deal was originally struck, when taboos needed to be broken in Tehran and Washington alike. Much has been learned over the last four years about what it takes to implement an “Iran Deal” successfully. We ought to be optimistic about comes next.
It’s a beginning.
Photo: Wikicommons