US, allies reviewing sanctions on Iran: How much pain will it take?
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| Washington
When it comes to US policy on Iran, the White House is signaling a move toward a variation of 鈥渘o pain, no gain.鈥
A senior White House official on Friday suggested that the US will soon seek adoption of even tougher sanctions on Iran, having concluded that the international sanctions reinforced this year are hurting but not yet causing enough hardship to alter Tehran鈥檚 behavior.
Gary Samore, President Obama鈥檚 special assistant for arms control and nuclear proliferation issues, told a Washington conference that the US and its partners aligned against a nuclear Iran are likely to 鈥渋ncrease pressure鈥 in the coming weeks in response to Iran鈥檚 refusal to address international concerns about its uranium enrichment program.
鈥淲e need to send the message to Iran that sanctions will only increase if Iran avoids serious negotiations, and will not be lifted until our concerns are fully addressed,鈥 Mr. Samore told a conference organized by the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.
Suggesting that talks this week in Geneva between Iran and world powers including the US fell short of what were already low expectations, the president鈥檚 top nuclear adviser said another round of sanctions would be one way of testing 鈥渉ow high Iran鈥檚 pain threshold is.鈥
The two days of talks in Geneva 鈥 characterized by one European diplomat as the two sides talking past each other 鈥 did conclude with an agreement to meet again next month in Turkey. But the failure to address any substantive issues and the Iranian delegation鈥檚 refusal to entertain discussion of its uranium enrichment program apparently led to the White House decision to speak publicly of additional turns of the screws.
Before this week鈥檚 talks, a senior European diplomat in Washington had said privately that the chief aim of the European countries involved in the talks was to break Iran鈥檚 pattern of agreeing to negotiations to look serious, but in fact only using them to buy time for its nuclear program to progress. In addition to the US, China, and Russia, the talks with Iran involve Britain, France, and Germany.
Samore suggested a similar concern, saying Iran 鈥渂elieves it can manipulate the appearance of negotiations to weaken existing sanctions and avoid additional measures.鈥
鈥淭his ploy will not work,鈥 he said.
Following Samore鈥檚 remarks, a California congressman proposing new measures to close loopholes that Iran has found in existing sanctions told the same conference that tougher sanctions could lead to a more democratic regime in Iran.
Referring to the sanctions that he said helped end apartheid in South Africa, Rep. Brad Sherman, a Democrat, said, 鈥Nelson Mandela has thanked us for those sanctions, and I look forward to the day when a democratic leader of Iran thanks us for these sanctions.鈥
That comment is unlikely to be well-received in Tehran. Officials there have long been convinced that the Western powers鈥 punitive measures are really aimed at achieving regime change and not simply at limiting the country鈥檚 nuclear program.