Tuesday 16 July 2024

Araz News

Azerbaijan National Resistance Organization News Website
araznews2010@gmail.com www.araznews.org

News Headlines:

What the Iran deal is really about-By Mick Krever

Araz News: A deal with Iran isn’t only about nuclear weapons.

It’s about whether diplomacy is an alternative to war; whether adversaries can quarantine their differences and whittle them down for mutual benefit; whether realism can triumph over rhetoric; whether “win-win” can triumph over “zero-sum.”

Negotiators will be quick to tell you that this deal, not yet finalized, is only about preventing nuclear weapons capability in exchange for the removal of Western sanctions hated by the Iranian public.

But let’s not pretend that this is happening in a vacuum.

Iranians and Americans have the chance to prove that it’s possible to reform a relationship that’s been poisoned by mistrust, subterfuge, and war by unconventional means for decades.

Two events loom largest.

For Americans, it was the U.S. hostage crisis in Tehran. On November 4, 1979, Iranian students caught up in the fervor of the Islamic Revolution, stormed the American Embassy, and ultimately held 52 Americans captive for 444 days. In January 1998, President Mohammad Khatami came closest to apologizing for it, during an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.

For Iranians, it is the 1953 CIA- and British-backed coup against democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh. The CIA has admitted its role in ousting Mossadegh, and then-U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright came closest to apologizing for that, in a speech in 2000.

As Stephen Kinzer documented in his book “All the Shah’s Men,” the United States moved against Iran’s democratically elected leader after he moved to nationalize the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and appeared to be cozying up the Soviet Union.

It was an era of seemingly unfettered CIA interference in sovereign affairs, and would lend emotional weight to conspiracy theories about America for decades to come.

The freeze between Iran and the U.S. is unusually deep.

During decades of Cold War, through the era of mutually assured nuclear destruction, the U.S. and the Soviet Union maintained embassies in each other’s capitals, and maintained near-constant dialogue.

Washington and Tehran have hardly maintained contact, let alone kept a hot line to reach each other in an emergency.

When Iranian President Hassan Rouhani traveled to New York for the opening of the General Assembly, and spoke with President Barack Obama by phone in September 2013, it was the first time leaders of the two countries had spoken since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

No doubt, real differences remain. Iran props up Hezbollah and the Assad regime in Syria. It’s a sworn adversary of Israel. It suppresses free expression at home and uses Western journalists like the Washington Post’s Jason Rezaian, imprisoned for nearly a year, as pawns in its game of international diplomacy.

But Iran, a powerful force fighting ISIS in Iraq and a powerful beneficiary of that country’s government, may have a lot to offer.

Thousands of European (and yes, American) tourists travel to Iran every year, dozens of American businessmen are joining their counterparts from other countries eager to exploit opportunities and explore the country’s rich, proud, and unique history that stretches back thousands of years.

A deal may not mean the two countries are friends. But it would be a safer world were they not enemies.

Reprinted from CNN

11 is registered for this post.

  1. I blog frequently and I genuinely appreciate your content.
    This great article has reakly peaked my interest.

    I will bookmark your site and keep checkling ffor new
    detakls about once per week. I subscriibed to your Feed too.

  2. Thanks on your marvelous posting! I definitely enjoyed reading it, you can be a great author.
    I wilol make sure to bookmark your blog and will eventually come bwck in tthe future.
    I want to encourage continue your great job, haqve a nice evening!

  3. Hey! I’m at work surfing around your blog from my new apple iphone!
    Just wantedd to say I love reaqding your blog and look forward
    to all your posts! Carrey on tthe outstanding work!

  4. I used to bbe recommended this blog by my cousin. I’m no longer certain whether this post iss written viia
    him as no one else know such targeterd approximately my problem.
    You’re wonderful! Thank you!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Time limit is exhausted. Please reload the CAPTCHA.