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Lift the cruel, unfair sanctions on Iran, and you can close the nuclear dossier

Catherine Ashton
Catherine Ashton

With the recommencement of nuclear talks between Iran and the six world powers, hopes have been revived that more than a decade of conflict and dispute between the two sides can finally come to an end and the concerns over the possible diversion of Iran’s nuclear activities toward an atomic weapon will be completely allayed.

The international observers hailed the latest round of nuclear negotiations between Iran and the P5+1 (Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the United States) on October 15 and 16 in Geneva as constructive, calling it a step forward on the path of finding a conclusive and definite resolution for Iran’s nuclear standoff.

The Iranian negotiators demanded that the contents of the talks remain undisclosed until an agreement is reached. Their demand sounds reasonable as it will prevent the mass media from spreading falsehoods regarding the details of the agreement yet to be reached and also impede the efforts made by the extremist and neo-conservative elements in the Western governments to bring the negotiations to a dead-end.

During the talks, Iran presented a three-phased PowerPoint proposal in English entitled “Closing an Unnecessary Crisis, Opening New Horizons” which drew a roadmap for the future of the talks. According to the proposal, Iran would remove the concerns of the P5+1 group of world countries through confidence-building measures and increased transparency in its nuclear activities, and in return, the Western powers will offer incentives to Iran by lifting the unilateral and multilateral sanctions on a step-by-step basis.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif told the reporters following the conclusion of talks in Geneva that “the negotiations will be done in the negotiating room, and not in the press.” He said that Iran is not after creating some kind of media hype over its proposal and rather, takes a down-to-earth and practical approach toward the talks.

Iran’s presentation was welcomed by the P5+1. According to Reuters, Michael Mann, the spokesman for EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton, said Iran made a “very useful” presentation during the talks. Even the United States, which usually expressed disappointment over the nuclear talks with Iran in the past, couldn’t hide its tacit satisfaction with the Iranian proposal. “The Iranian proposal was a new proposal with a level of seriousness and substance that we had not seen before,” White House spokesman Jay Carney told reporters.

A senior U.S. State Department official also praised the negotiations, saying that “for the first time, we had very detailed technical discussions”

Ashton, who became the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy for the European Union in 2009 and who took the lead as the coordinator of P5+1 in talks with Iran, also underlined her “cautious optimism” but “a real sense of determination” toward the new round of negotiations with Iran.

Since the details of the Iranian proposal didn’t leak out and Iran has rejected allegations made by the Israeli military intelligence website, Debka File, which had claimed to be possessing information on the contents of the Iranian proposal, it’s not sensible to make suggestions and gossip on what Iran has offered to the West. But what is clear is that Iran will be making reasonable compromises, in a balanced manner, that will not sacrifice its nuclear rights under the Non-Proliferation Treaty, but ease the tensions with the West; and this is something which seems to be completely logical and fair. On the other side, what the Iranian nation expects to be high on the agenda of the P5+1 is the complete removal of the economic sanctions that have caused serious damage to Iranian lives.

The sanctions which were imposed upon Iran after the Islamic Revolution of 1979, especially following the escalation of controversy over Iran’s nuclear program in the past decade, are so diverse and extensive that it’s virtually impossible to elaborate on all of them in a single article, but it is worth alluding to some of them in passing. These sanctions have had such devastating impact on the Iranian people that even a large number of American officials, think tanks and advocacy groups have called on the U.S. government and its European allies to freeze them.

As an instance, the banking sanctions, which disrupt and block Iran’s access to international financing systems, have prevented the Iranian companies from importing vital medicine for chronic disorders, and the Iranian patients suffering from different types of cancer, hemophilia, thalassemia, hepatitis, multiple sclerosis, diabetes and psychiatric disorders are struggling with dire conditions resulting from their inability to find medicine for their diseases.

According to a report released by the U.S. Department of Commerce last February, the exports of pharmaceutical products to Iran had decreased by half. This is while the United States claims that it doesn’t block the exports of medicine to Iran and that it has issued some licenses for the sale of medical goods and foodstuff to Iran; however, there have been several reports of deaths as a result of the scarcity or shortage of foreign-produced medicine in Iran. Even those patients who can find the medicine they need must buy them at extremely high prices, because they are being imported through intermediaries and third parties. This is the direct, undeniable impact of the anti-Iran sanctions.

The U.S.-based news, analysis website Al-Monitor published a report last July, detailing the pain and suffering of the Iranian patients who are grappling with the problem of finding medicine for their diseases.

Hessam, a 27-year-old veterinary student with MS told Al-Monitor, “I have managed to buy Rebif every month, but the price has tripled over the past year.” He added, “Those who need to use other Western-made medicines, like Avonex and Betaferon, have been facing extremely serious problems buying them. Betaferon’s price has risen from 980,000 rials [$40] to 16,000,000 rials [$649] a box. You cannot find them even at this price at any drugstores.”

The insufficiency of medicine and pharmaceutical products in Iran as a result of the sanctions is a fact reflected in different outlets. Joy Gordon wrote in an article for Foreign Policy on October 18, that the sanctions have complicated the health conditions of the Iranian patients and are leading to a kind of humanitarian crisis, one the International Crisis Group has also verified in a detailed, 70-page report published in February 2013 about the consequences and impacts of the anti-Iran sanctions.

“The most effective medicines to treat cancer and AIDS, which are manufactured only by Western pharmaceutical companies, can no longer be gotten within Iran. Ordinary commerce, as a matter of necessity, is now deeply dependent on the international criminal network in order to function at all,” Gordon wrote.

Citing reports published by Iran’s major pharmacies, BBC Persian published a report in November a year ago that a 350% increase in the price of imported medicine had taken place at that time, and the majority of experts and analysts attribute this surge to the sanctions.

The human costs of the sanctions are not limited to medical shortages. The devaluation of Iran’s national currency, rial, as a result of the sanctions, has made it extremely difficult for thousands of Iranian students studying in the foreign universities to afford their tuition and accommodation fees. Their families in Iran are not able to deposit into their accounts considerable amounts of financial assistance needed, and many of such students have chosen to return to Iran to continue their education. The depreciation of the rial has also made it quite unreachable for Iranian citizens to travel abroad for personal purposes– since the air fares have increased almost threefold in the past 3 years and many European carriers have stopped their flights to or from Iran.

These are the ordinary Iranian citizens who bear the brunt of the sanctions against their country, and one of the country’s major demands is the complete lifting of all the unilateral, multilateral and private sanctions. This demand was echoed in their election of Dr. Hassan Rouhani as the Iranian President who had promised to work toward persuading the West to lift all the sanctions.

Iran and the P5+1 are slated to meet once again on November 7 and 8. Before the main meeting, nuclear and sanctions experts from the two sides will hold technical meetings to reach a consensus over a systematic framework for putting into practice the agreements reached in the first meeting in Geneva.

It’s not in the interests of the six world powers to continue pushing for new sanctions, as some Republicans in the U.S. Congress have urged, or leaving the previous sanctions in place. It will not contribute to the positive course of negotiations, and will simply add to the suffering and economic woes of the Iranian people and further complicate the dispute.

The most rational decision the United States and its European allies can take is to lift the sanctions, for two reasons: first, to respect the demands of the Iranian people who feel it’s not righteous and justifiable to be under the pressure of unfair and cruel sanctions that are violating their basic rights according to the Fourth Geneva Convention, and second, because the lifting of the sanctions will be a great step on the path of striking a deal with Iran to close the nuclear dossier forever.

This piece was also posted at Dissident Voice.

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Complete and utter nonsense. Iran has complete control over the exercise of the sanctions, simply stop the activities that are generating the sanctions. Problem solved.

Be prepared for a flood of speculative drivel from the warmongers

The cruelty of these sanctions — and of those who impose them — is unforgivable. We did similarly with Iraq after 1990. Perhaps some of those responsible for imposing the sanctions do not know what they have done. This is likely. But it is not likely that those at the top of the various governments are ignorant of what the sanctions have been doing — and the impact of the sanctions on world opinion of the rich-and-powerful who’ve imposed them. Al Qaida, for instance, must know and must be telling the people of the world in which it operates. They are likely to agree with me that the sanctions are unforgivable.

Let us not forget that the sanctions were an alternative to war. Iran is also in effect a military dictatorship cum theocracy ans threatened Arabs and Israel (with which it conducted proxy wars for decades) – all that is the main cause of the problem, not the sanctions – those are just reactions and quite mild at that, given the extensive maliciousness of the regime there.

Something strange has been happening at CNN for the past few weeks. On an almost daily basis, it has been presenting reporting out of Iran that is concentrating on showing the kinder and human side of Iranians. Today’s report is about the American football coach that has been with the Iranian national team for 3 years and how he was successful in getting his team to qualify for the Mondial. In his CNN interview, he explained at length how the Iranians had been demonized by the West and that they are not at all as they have been presented. This is so unlike of CNN to be presenting such positive sides to the Iranian people and as I said, it has been ongoing on an almost daily basis. It’s a nice refreshing change at CNN.