Obama Suggests Sanctions For Iran: Analysis

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ROBERT BURNS | July 10, 2009 09:15 PM EST | AP

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President Barack Obama waves as he embarks Air Force One with first lady Michelle, in background partially visible, at Pratica di Mare's military airport, near Rome, Friday, July 10, 2009. After attending a three-day G8 (Group of Eight) Summit meeting in L'Aquila, central Italy, President Obama sat down with Pope Benedict XVI at the Vatican on Friday for a meeting in which frank but constructive talks were expected between two men who agree on helping the poor but disagree on abortion and stem cell research. (AP Photo/Riccardo De Luca)

WASHINGTON — After a half-year of extending patient feelers to Iran, President Barack Obama has set a timeline _ warning Tehran it must show willingness to negotiate an end to its nuclear program by September or face consequences.

If the West weighs new moves against Iran this fall, as Obama suggested Friday, it will likely mean new U.N. sanctions or unilateral U.S. penalties, rather than military strikes.

Obama told reporters in Italy, where he met with other world leaders, that there is now a September "time frame" for Iran to respond to offers to discuss its nuclear program. While he did not call it a deadline, he said the world cannot afford to wait long for Iran to make its intentions clear.

"We're not going to just wait indefinitely and allow for the development of the nuclear weapon," he said.

Obama said that in September "we will re-evaluate Iran's posture toward negotiating the cessation of a nuclear weapons policy." If by then it has not accepted the offer of talks, the United States and "potentially a lot of other countries" are going to say "we need to take further steps," he said.

The president did not say what steps he has in mind. He mentioned neither sanctions nor military force. But it seems clear that a next step to pressure Iran would entail some form of sanctions.

"The administration and the other powers would probably like to leave the toughest forms of sanctions to be used if they feel that diplomacy has not gone anywhere _ not in this pre-diplomacy period," said Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council, which supports expanded U.S.-Iranian contacts.

Working against Obama's expression of urgency is the political paralysis in Tehran, where protesters this week sought to revive street demonstrations over the country's disputed presidential election. Iranian authorities, while accusing the U.S. and other Western countries of secretly instigating the protests, seem likely to put nuclear negotiations on the back burner until the election dust settles.

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State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley acknowledged as much on Friday, saying, "This (postelection turmoil) has clearly diverted the attention of the Iranian government from offers of engagement."

At the Group of Eight summit in Italy, world leaders issued a joint statement deploring Iran's crackdown on protesters. They also said they remain committed to finding a diplomatic solution to the nuclear issue and said that in September they would "take stock of the situation" on the nuclear front.

Jon B. Alterman, director of the Middle East program at the Center For Strategic and International Studies, said that if reports of rifts among some of Iran's ruling clerics are true, then it will be hard for the government to agree on a policy response to the West's offer of direct negotiations.

He sees the prospect of movement toward sanctions this fall. That could mean any combination of additional financial penalties, trade restrictions, limits on travel by Iranian government officials and other actions.

"Clearly the world is moving toward presenting Iran a choice" between diplomacy and isolation, Alterman said.

Before the June election, the Obama administration had figured that once the result was in, the Tehran government could be expected to make clear whether it intends to take up the offers of nuclear talks.

"All of that has been completely put on its head" by the postelection turmoil, said Parsi. He believes Iran's political paralysis will continue as long the protest movement is alive.

But the clock keeps ticking, moving Iran closer to obtaining the nuclear bomb that the U.S. and much of the rest of the world says it cannot be allowed.

By U.S. estimates, Iran is one to three years away from the capability to make nuclear weapons. Some think they are closer, and the fact is that no one outside Iran really knows. The five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council _ Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States _ as well as Germany have offered Iran incentives to stop reprocessing uranium that could fuel a nuclear bomb.

Iran so far has ignored the offer and continues to amass enriched uranium, sparking grave fears, especially in Israel, which has not ruled out military strikes to deal with the threat.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad insists the program is intended only for peaceful nuclear purposes.

The U.S. has not publicly ruled out using military force against Iran, but it seems far from that stage.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Tuesday that military action could backfire.

"I worry a great deal about the response of a country that gets struck," he said. "It is a really important place to not go, if we cannot go there in any way, shape or form."

___

Editor's Note: Robert Burns has covered national security and military affairs for the AP since 1990.

WASHINGTON — After a half-year of extending patient feelers to Iran, President Barack Obama has set a timeline _ warning Tehran it must show willingness to negotiate an end to its nuclear progra...
WASHINGTON — After a half-year of extending patient feelers to Iran, President Barack Obama has set a timeline _ warning Tehran it must show willingness to negotiate an end to its nuclear progra...
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- evagorman I'm a Fan of evagorman 10 fans permalink
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I understand that Nico needs a break or that news about Iran is coming in slower now and needn't have a daily blog. But I am saddened to see newsworthy items not making Huf f.Post that should be on their world page such as the fact that Rafsanjani will lead Friday prayers this week.
http://iranquest.com/blog/?p=7765
What can it mean? I'll bite my nails until Friday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:49 AM on 07/13/2009
- evagorman I'm a Fan of evagorman 10 fans permalink
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I understand that Nico needs a break or that news about Iran is coming in slower now and needn't have a daily blog. But I am saddened to see newsworthy items not making Huff Post that should be on their world page such as the fact that Rafsanjani will lead Friday prayers this week.
http://iranquest.com/blog/?p=7765
What can it mean? I'll bite my nails until Friday.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:44 AM on 07/13/2009
- Hirnlego I'm a Fan of Hirnlego 112 fans permalink
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So... no anti- w a r links allowed?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:33 PM on 07/12/2009
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Do we honestly need another war? We are going to be involved in Pakistan before too long, anyway, if things keep going as they have.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 07/12/2009
- Hirnlego I'm a Fan of Hirnlego 112 fans permalink
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"Do we honestly need another war?"

No.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 AM on 07/13/2009
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Sanctions will only strengthen the regime, not weaken it. This is an ill-advised policy that will serve only to reduce the standard of living in the country, and help spread anti-USA sentiment among the population. Also, sanctions have worked so well in Cuba, Iraq, North Korea, etc.

Seriously, if we want to give democracy a chance to bloom in Iran, we should stop providing an enemy that their regime can use to rally the populace around. We should stop dictating terms to their government and normalize relations. The Iranians are more than capable of overthrowing their government by themselves if they determine that the government has proven to be too tyrannical.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:24 PM on 07/12/2009
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"Apparently, Iran is not satisfied with what it has done in the Western Arab countries as is evident from its current attempt to propagate the Persian ideology in Morocco and Algeria. After threatening the security and stability of the Western Arab countries and wreaking havoc in the lives of their people, Iran turned its eyes towards Morocco and Algeria. Many scholars have raised their voices against Iran’s attempt to destroy these two stable countries, which have never experienced any sectarian struggle."

http://www.arabtimesonline.com/kuwaitnews/faqdetails.asp?faid=1530&faqid=9

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 PM on 07/11/2009
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Algeria? Stable? Algeria has an ongoing insurgency that has been active since the election in the early 90's were annulled when the Islamists won the election. I know several Algerians and not a week goes by that they don't mention an ambush on a military convey or a bombing in a barracks.

Not too mention Bouteflika is hardly a popular leader. Algeria is a powder keg, waiting for a spark, I suspect it will occur when Bouteflika dies as he is currently in poor health.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:27 PM on 07/12/2009
- betz55 I'm a Fan of betz55 39 fans permalink

Propogate Persian Ideology in Morocco and Algeria? Really? You better alert the King of Morocco then because as we speak he is hooting with laughter at your assertion. Algeria? You better go back to your 'source' and do some due diligence and fact checking.

Iran has no reason to destroy anything but if it did they sure as hell wouldn't waste their time with Algeria and Morocco. Please stop cherry picking your quotes, you only look foolish quoting them.

Israel has no intention of joining the NPT and dismantling its multitude of nuclear weapons facilities. Israel needs to use the weapon of the "fear of us" in order to threaten every country in the region who dares stand in its way as it continues to expand its theft of Palestinian lands and expand its regional hegemony to steal the resources of other countries in the region.

Israel has zero credibility to say anything about Iran when it has demonstrated that she is the greatest threat to the peace and security of the Middle East. It's continuous preemptive attacks against its neighbors are just one example, let alone its barbaric treatment of the Palestinian people for 60 years.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 PM on 07/12/2009
- betz55 I'm a Fan of betz55 39 fans permalink

Arab states and non-Arab states on the periphery of the Arab world have been living in the shadow of Israeli nuclear weapons for four decades.

The IAEA has issued numerous statements affirming that Iran does not have the bomb, that there are no signs it is trying to develop one. Iran has said it will not produce nuclear weapons. Unlike Israel it has signed up to the NPT and allows inspections.

Not since Mordecai Vanunu provided information and photographs to the London Sunday Times in 1986 has any information leaked out about what is going inside Israel’s main nuclear plant at Dimona.

During the Kennedy years, Israel allowed American nuclear scientists to make ‘visits’ to Dimona but these proved to be so ineffective they were eventually discontinued (by the Nixon administration). When the scientists were allowed into the plant they were rushed through and never allowed to see what they needed to see to confirm that Israel was not developing nuclear weapons.

Of course, a full inspection of the Dimona plant would have revealed that this was exactly what Israel was doing.

Anyone in Iran’s shoes would regard the attitude of the US, the UN Security Council and the EU, both following the US line in support of Israel, as neo-imperialist.

Obama needs to stop the foreign policy hypocrisy and hold Israel to the same standard that Israel and the US are insisting for Iran.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:41 PM on 07/11/2009
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Yet Arab states have come to realize how reliable of a partner Israel is in peace. Due to very stable peace it maitains with its formerly implacable enemies Egypt and Jordan.
Yet most Arab states vehemently oppose Iranian sabotage, rabble rousing and spying it does in their countries.
Countries like Saud, Kuwait, Egypt, Morocco, Bahrain etc are doing all they can to prevent USA from normalizing relationships with Iran.
Get in with the times. Your views are hopelessly outdated.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 07/12/2009
- betz55 I'm a Fan of betz55 39 fans permalink

The facts are never out dated, you just can't handle the truth. Too bad. All those countries you list above have chosen and would chose Iran over Israel any day and you know it and they know it. Israel is a friend to no one except to their welfare provider, the US. Cheer up, that too will end.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:21 AM on 07/12/2009
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 60 fans permalink

Hear, hear.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:20 AM on 07/12/2009
- greatscot I'm a Fan of greatscot 31 fans permalink

A big problem in this world is the arrogance of successive U.S. governments. Who is Obama to tell Iran what it can do and can't do, especially since the U.S. introduced nuclear weapons to the area, has threatened to use them (ie against Iraq in reprisal for their use of any chemical weapons) and tolerates, and may even have helped Israel develop a nuclear arsenal? The rest of the world is saying "says Who?" !!

The Non-Proliferation treaties have two sides. On one hand is the promise of the nuclear club to de-nuclearise. On the other hand is the promise of signatory nations not to develop nuclear weapons. Both sides of the agreement are in violation, yet the West goes on about Iran this, and Iran that. How about a nuclear disarmament agenda first and then talk to Iran and others?

Realistically, If I were Iranian, I'd want the Bomb, and quickly. The U.S. and its helpers tend not to bother countries that have the ability to defend themselves. U.S. hegemony, expanded throughout most of the world by Bush II, makes it extremely risky for a country to establish and maintain a foreign poluicy at odds with the United States, unless, that is, that nation is well-armed with a nuclear deterrent. It's ironic that U.S. government belligerence may be causing the very condition it seeks to cure!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:14 PM on 07/11/2009
- betz55 I'm a Fan of betz55 39 fans permalink

Not to mention the Israeli hegemony.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 PM on 07/11/2009
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 60 fans permalink

Wouldn't a sanction of N. Ireland and Israel be more in order?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 07/11/2009
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"We're not going to just wait indefinitely and allow for the development of the nuclear weapon," he said.
Translation: "You need to hurry, I can't hold them off for long."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:12 AM on 07/11/2009
- zaz33 I'm a Fan of zaz33 32 fans permalink

Has anyone else noticed that whenever accusations of Iran's nuclear weapons ambitions are made, the word EVIDENCE and the IAEA are never used?

The reason is that

there is no EVIDENCE that Iran has ever pursued nuclear weapons - NONE

If anyone has any EVIDENCE that Iran has EVER pursued nuclear weapons, please share it with us.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:36 AM on 07/11/2009
- Hirnlego I'm a Fan of Hirnlego 112 fans permalink
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Bah. More of the same. Sanctions over something which does not exist.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 AM on 07/11/2009
- mamy I'm a Fan of mamy permalink

Obama NEVER extended "patient feelers to Iran". In fact he and Hillary the hawk, never ever had any intentions of engaging Iran! His strongest argument in election period was removing the power of the LOBBYISTS from government, and yet he is completely managed by the powerful Jewish Lobby, who will never allow US to engage with Iran!A figure slightly below $3,000,000,000. is just pushing silently through congress in free aid/arms to ISRAEL, INITIATED BY THE JEWISH Lobby. Listen to Obama carefully, he sounds much WORST THAN BUSH in many policies. Everything he says gets watered down by the lobbyists, and useless by the time it passes through congress. He has moved SOME of the soldiers from Iraq, and has moved them to Afghanistan, and Pakistan, growing the war scopes even larger! Today he said that he will not investigate the war crimes in Afghanistan and Pakistan. So all together he is a 1000 worst than Bush! Forget about PEACE, FREEDOM, ACCOUNTABILITY, ENGAGEMENT, and changing US stature worldwide, he will not DELIVER.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:27 AM on 07/11/2009
- betz55 I'm a Fan of betz55 39 fans permalink

Really? And when he sanctions against Israel ? The Iran issue is 100% Israeli.

When will Obama hold Israel to the same standards that Israel is demanding. Let's level the nuclear playing field here.

Iran has signed the NNPT and allows IAEA inspections. Israel does not.

Iran has declared nuclear intentions. Israel has not and does not..

Israel has their hegemonic aspirations to hide, Iran does not. After all, Iran has not invaded another country for 3500 years. Israel on the other hand, well, their record speaks for themselves.

It is in line with AIPAC rhetoric to demonize Iran. It takes the focus off them and it it their intention to agitate elsewhere so the world does focus on their ulterior motives.

We fought their war in Iraq to the detrimant of the US, isn't that enough ?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 AM on 07/11/2009
- gbrooks I'm a Fan of gbrooks 57 fans permalink
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All excellent points.

The question is, can any of us average citizens do anything about it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 PM on 07/11/2009
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 60 fans permalink

Probably not. Nice to be owned by another government; isn't it?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 07/11/2009
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"Iran has not invaded another country for 3500 years."
Laughably uninformed nonsense.Now back to reality.
Persia invaded and occupied Georgia.
invaded Russia in 1826.
Iran has invaded and NOW occupying territory which belongs to an Arab state.
Iran Invaded Oman in 1970s.
Members of Iranian sabotage teams are spread through out the Middle East from Iraq to Morocco and Algiers.
Example of typical Arab opinion:
"Isn’t it that Iran has collaborated with traitors to wreak havoc in other countries like Iraq, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Yemen and Egypt?...
Yes, we want Iran to stop its wickedness. It is very difficult for us to see the goodness of Iran as it has isolated itself from the rest of the world. "
http://www.arabtimesonline.com/kuwaitnews/faqdetails.asp?faid=1690&faqid=9

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:09 PM on 07/11/2009
- Pye Ian - Huffpost Blogger I'm a Fan of Pye Ian 8 fans permalink

China and Russia won't go for said sanctions proposals. Again.

They've got too much invested in Iran and are hedging with it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 07/11/2009
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But they have in the past. Beside investment there are also strategic and geo-political considerat­ions.Espec­ially for the Russian Federation. I can't name single country ( beside Syria) that would welcome nuclear armed Iran. Certainly Russians consider Iran a competitor in the energy field.
Also, beggars are not choosers, Iranian ruler can count all the states friendly to Iran on one hand.... without using all the fingers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 AM on 07/11/2009
- who38 I'm a Fan of who38 60 fans permalink

And after Israel uses the thumb to count their one "friendship" , they are similar to Iran. But Israel definitely does not see themselves as beggars; so why should Iran?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:55 PM on 07/11/2009
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