Shaping Eurasia’s future: Unintended consequences of abrogating Iran’s nuclear deal
Source: Nuclear News Net
By James M. Dorsey
US President Donald J. Trump’s targeting of a two-year-old
agreement curtailing Iran’s ability to produce nuclear weapons could not only
spark a nuclear arms race in the Middle East, but also tilt European-Chinese
competition for domination of Eurasia’s future energy infrastructure in China’s
favour.
As Mr. Trump keeps the world in suspense
by declining to disclose how he intends to correct what he calls an
embarrassment, Iranian leaders are betting against the odds that European
signatories of the nuclear agreement will persuade him to stop short of pulling
out of the nuclear deal and avoid steps that would effectively undermine the
accord.
In doing so, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is relying on
common interests with Europe: a desire to keep the deal in place, prevent
Iranian hardliners from getting the upper hand in his country’s power
struggles, avoid a nuclear arms race, and ensure a European role in shaping the
future architecture of Eurasian energy.
However, if Mr. Trump’s record is anything to go by, he is
unlikely to heed European calls for keeping the nuclear deal in place, much
like he ignored pressure from Europe and others not to pull out of the Paris
climate accord.
A more likely scenario is that Mr. Trump will refuse to
certify Iranian compliance with the deal by October 15, a quarterly requirement
mandated by Congress. That would open the door to Congress re-imposing
secondary sanctions lifted as part of the nuclear deal.
Renewed secondary sanctions would put Europe in an
impossible position. They would not only put European companies and banks at
risk of running afoul of US law if they continued to do business with Iran, but
also unleash consequences that could significantly increase tension in the
Middle East and ripple across Eurasia.
De facto European compliance would significantly weaken the
agreement’s value to Iran, boost pro-Chinese Iranian hardliners opposed to the
deal and eager to free Iran from restrictions on its nuclear program, risk a
nuclear arms race in an environment in which the US is losing out in the Middle
East’s quest for nuclear energy that contains tacit building blocks for
programs to develop nuclear weapons, and potentially tilt Iran towards China in
determining the flow of its natural gas – a key factor in the quest to shape the
future architecture of Eurasian energy.
“If the United States leaves the treaty and Europe follows,
then this deal will certainly collapse and Iran will go back to what it was
before and, technically speaking, to a much higher level,” said Ali Akbar Salehi, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy
Organization.
The United States may be unprepared for the fallout of Iran
pursuing an unfettered nuclear program, beyond its ability to tighten the
economic screws, wield military power, and support potential efforts to destabilize
Iran in a bid to achieve regime change.
A
group of former senior US government and military officials recently warned
that the United States in the absence of a strategy to promote the peaceful use
of nuclear energy was lagging behind China and Russia in helping Middle Eastern
states develop programs of their own. The officials cautioned that Mr. Trump’s failure
to articulate a policy undermined “Washington’s ability to shape the highest
standards of non-proliferation safeguards, safety, and security.”
Noting that “the Middle East is in the process of going
nuclear,” the officials went on to say that “the big question is whether the
nuclearization of the region will be dominated by Russia and China, or by the
host countries in partnership with the United States and its allies under a
proven program that ensures absolute safety, security and standardization throughout
the nuclear fuel cycle.”
Most Middle Eastern states are signatories to the
Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). They have disavowed the pursuit of nuclear
weapons and called for a nuclear-free zone in the region in a bid to force
Israel to declare its nuclear weapons and join the NPT and at the same time
avert a nuclear arms race with Iran.
Saudi cooperation with nuclear power Pakistan has
nonetheless long been a source of speculation about the kingdom’s ambition.
Pakistan’s former ambassador to the United States, Husain Haqqani, asserted
that Saudi Arabia’s close ties to the Pakistani military and intelligence
during the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan in the 1980s gave the kingdom arms’
length access to his country’s nuclear capabilities.
The Washington-based
Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) said earlier this
year that it had uncovered evidence that future Pakistani “assistance would not
involve Pakistan supplying Saudi Arabia with a full nuclear weapon or weapons;
however, Pakistan may assist in other important ways, such as supplying
sensitive equipment, materials, and know-how used in enrichment or reprocessing.”
The report said it was unclear whether “Pakistan and Saudi
Arabia may be cooperating on sensitive nuclear technologies in Pakistan. In an
extreme case, Saudi Arabia may be financing, or will finance, an unsafeguarded
uranium enrichment facility in Pakistan for later use, either in a civil or
military program,” the institute said.
Rather than embarking on a covert program, the institute
predicted that Saudi Arabia would, for now, focus on building up its civilian
nuclear infrastructure as well as a robust nuclear engineering and scientific
workforce.
This would allow the kingdom to take command of all aspects
of the nuclear fuel cycle at some point in the future. That process could
accelerate if US actions undermine the nuclear agreement with Iran.
Saudi Arabia has in recent years significantly expanded
graduate programs at its five nuclear research centres as part of a $100
billion program to build 16 nuclear reactors by 2030.
Saudi King Salman earlier this year signed an agreement with
China on cooperation
on nuclear energy. The agreement is for a feasibility study for the
construction of high-temperature gas-cooled (HTGR) nuclear power plants in the
kingdom as well as cooperation in intellectual property and the development of
a domestic industrial supply chain for HTGRs built in Saudi Arabia.
The agreement was one
of number nuclear-related understandings concluded with China in
recent years. Saudi Arabia has signed similar agreements with France, the
United States, Pakistan, Russia, South Korea and Argentina.
Lurking in the background of the battle for the future of
the Iranian nuclear agreement is an unrelated but no less important issue: the
future of Eurasia’s energy architecture. US efforts to undermine the deal and
de facto European compliance with US sanctions could push Iran to favour China
rather than Europe in allocating its estimated surplus over the next five years
of 24.6 billion cubic metres of natural gas. Iran boasts the world’s second
largest natural gas reserves and its fourth largest oil reserves.
“Not enough to supply all major markets, Tehran will face a
crucial geopolitical choice for the destination of its piped exports. Iran will
be able to export piped gas to two of the following three markets: European
Union (EU)/ Turkey via the Southern Gas Corridor centring on the
Trans-Anatolian Natural Gas Pipeline (TANAP), India via an Iran-Oman-India
pipeline, or China via either Turkmenistan or Pakistan. The degree to which the
system of energy relationships in Eurasia will be more oriented toward the
European Union or China will depend on the extent to which each secures Caspian
piped gas exports through pipeline infrastructure directed to its respective
markets,” said energy
scholar Micha’el Tanchum.
The lifting of international sanctions as part of the
nuclear agreement gave Iran a vested interest in deploying its energy wealth in
ways that would allow it to balance its relations with China and Europe. A
Europe incapable of developing economic ties with the Islamic republic, including
the expansion of pipeline infrastructure, could undermine Iran’s calculus to
China’s benefit.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with
the same title, Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and four forthcoming books, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa as
well as The Gulf Crisis: Small States Battle It Out, Creating Frankenstein: The
Saudi Export of Ultra-conservatism and China and the Middle East: Venturing
into the Maelstrom.
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