Iran-US engagement: ‘It can be done’

Posted By : Telegraf
15 Min Read

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When agreed in July 2015, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, commonly known as the Iran nuclear deal, not only heralded a new period of constructive engagement between Iran and the United States after long years of estrangement but also set the stage for Iran’s integration with the international community – to the chagrin of hardliners in Tehran, congressional hawks in Washington, and Iran’s regional adversaries.

The celebrated diplomatic master stroke, which both President Hassan Rouhani of Iran and then-US president Barack Obama regarded as their seminal foreign-policy achievements, has been going downhill since Obama’s successor Donald Trump walked away from it in May 2018, ruining one of the most representative outcomes of multilateralism in the recent decades and a solid non-proliferation accord.

In June this year, Iranians will go to polls to elect President Rouhani’s successor. Observers expect the new president will be a hardliner or a retired military commander, given that the majority of Iranians are now disillusioned with the state of national economy, downcast about the prospects of better relations with the world and cynical about the resurrection of the JCPOA.

In a presidential race that many Iranians have said they will boycott, a hardliner could clinch an easy victory, as has been the case with all Iranian elections with a low turnout. This likely transition of power from a moderate politician to a radical right-winger could entail serious implications for the direction of Iran-US relations.

Paola Rivetti (left) is an associate professor in government at Dublin City University’s School of Law and Government. A secretary of the Italian Association of Middle Eastern Studies (SeSaMO) and a co-founder and board member of the European Iran Research Group at Sweden’s Lund University, Rivetti has written extensively on Iran’s politics and foreign relations.

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