Source: Euronews
May 12 2020
By Ambassador G.Hossein Dehghani
8 May 2020 marked the second anniversary of the US withdrawal from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), or the Iran Nuclear Deal, and the re-imposition of all US sanctions that had been lifted in concert with the treaty. It is a well-substantiated and globally acknowledged fact that the US is no longer a JCPOA participant, and I do not intend to discuss the obvious here. Instead, I would like to dissect the idea of balance, which is the vital element for the successful implementation - or under current circumstances the survival - of the JCPOA.
From a textual perspective, this balance is struck between Iran’s nuclear commitments and its enjoyment of economic benefits thereof. This is essentially a rather legal take on the idea of “balance” in the nuclear deal and fails to capture the overall goal and ambitions as perceived by the agreement. There is more to the JCPOA than it is narrowly perceived through perusal of its meticulously fashioned text.
To better comprehend the current situation, we should look at the nuclear agreement in its wider political, security and economic context. The JCPOA was only a means to an end, not an end in itself. From a security and economic perspective, the JCPOA is set to yield the bulk of its positive outcomes on multi and bilateral fronts. That is to say, in return for the temporary and voluntary measures taken by Iran beyond its commitments under the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the Safeguards Agreement, all international restrictions and constraints against Iran - including, amongst other things, the automatic termination of the arms embargo on 18 October 2020 - will be terminated according to an established timetable.
From a textual perspective, this balance is struck between Iran’s nuclear commitments and its enjoyment of economic benefits thereof. This is essentially a rather legal take on the idea of “balance” in the nuclear deal and fails to capture the overall goal and ambitions as perceived by the agreement. There is more to the JCPOA than it is narrowly perceived through perusal of its meticulously fashioned text.
To better comprehend the current situation, we should look at the nuclear agreement in its wider political, security and economic context. The JCPOA was only a means to an end, not an end in itself. From a security and economic perspective, the JCPOA is set to yield the bulk of its positive outcomes on multi and bilateral fronts. That is to say, in return for the temporary and voluntary measures taken by Iran beyond its commitments under the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and the Safeguards Agreement, all international restrictions and constraints against Iran - including, amongst other things, the automatic termination of the arms embargo on 18 October 2020 - will be terminated according to an established timetable.
"On the economic plane, the deal was envisioned as a path towards the normalisation of trade and economic relations with Iran."
Hossein DehghaniOn the economic plane, the deal was envisioned as a path towards the normalisation of trade and economic relations with Iran. In this context, the idea of balance is tied to the 2012 status quo ante when the EU was Iran’s biggest trade partner.
Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Belgium and the European Union
In a sense, up until 8 May 2019 - the date on which Iran announced its reversible phased plan to cease performing in part its nuclear commitments after a year of patience - the narrowly defined textual balance had been fully maintained, and technically verified, by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). On the wider plane, however, Iran was losing its economic benefits as the landscape did not offer any positive sign, as far as the promised normalisation of trade and economic relations were concerned. From a strictly JCPOA standpoint, it meant that the normalisation of trade and economic relations with Iran remained elusive, becoming a distant unattainable goal. The short period from Implementation Day on 16 January 2016 to 2018 indicated the huge economic gains for the EU as it managed to almost reach its pre-sanctions export to Iran. To the EU, the political, security and economic functions of the JCPOA were in perfect shape.
"Arguably, from an economic, political and security perspective, the EU was one of the major winners of the JCPOA."
Hossein DehghaniAnother important element integral to the successful implementation of the JCPOA is the more nuanced political benefits which are to accrue from the lifting of UN sanctions, i.e. the multilateral aspects of the deal. Under Security Council resolution 2231 (2015), a batch of UN arms embargoes on Iran will automatically expire on 18 October 2020. Although it falls way short of what the JCPOA promised, it nonetheless injects a semblance of balance into the deal.
Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Belgium and the European Union
Convoluted in a flawed logic, the fresh US onslaught on the JCPOA, if it materialises, may throw the deal irredeemably off-balance. Arguably, from an economic, political and security perspective, the EU was one of the major winners of the JCPOA. The nuclear deal is a major EU foreign policy achievement, and I am inclined to believe that the EU – the EU triumvirate in particular - is in a good place to maintain the existing frail balance on the multi and bilateral front by standing against the latest US offensive on the JCPOA, as well as restoring the balance on the economic front, thereby resuscitating the moribund nuclear agreement.
Hossein Dehghani is the Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to Belgium and the European Union.




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