Foreign Policy: Hostage to Events

Photo: Christopher Brown-Syed
Photo: Christopher Brown-Syed
U.S.-Iran relations, as characterized by the State Department’s leading Iran expert, John Limbert, is one that is unfortunately troubled by bad timing and missed opportunities. When one side is ready for progress, the other is not. Last year, when the opportunity for negotiations arose, Iran plunged into domestic turmoil following disputed presidential elections. As Limbert put it: “They always zig when we zag.”

Another glaring misfortune, like many relationships that erode, is the inability to engage and communicate with Iran. Traditionally used as a foreign policy tool to persuade nations to negotiate, economic sanctions in Iran were touted as a “failure” by Ahmadinejad, resulting in an uncooperative Iran. Although the U.S. has come far by gradually changing its rhetoric towards Iran, where it is “perhaps doing less yelling at each other”, hostility still remains as Limbert expressed doubt that people can “exchange letters in a professional way”, indicating a strained relationship. Sadly, little progress has been made since the last 30 years.

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NYT: Smugglers in Iraq Blunt Sanctions Against Tehran

Photo: Joe Mabel
Photo: Joe Mabel
Despite the new U.S. sanctions on Iran, hundreds of millions of dollars in crude oil and refined products are smuggled over the mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan every year.

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LA Times: West worries China may undermine Iran sanctions efforts

U.S. and European officials in charge of efforts to tighten sanctions against Iran have expressed new concerns that China is quietly positioning itself to undermine the latest measures.

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McClatchy: Feds won’t charge Blackwater in Sudan sanctions case

Photo: jamesdale10
Photo: jamesdale10
The security contractor Blackwater Worldwide tried for two years to secure lucrative defense business in Southern Sudan while the country was under U.S. economic sanctions. The effort to drum up new business in East Africa by Blackwater owner Erik Prince became a major element in a continuing four-year federal investigation into allegations of sanctions violations, illegal exports and bribery.

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