This is the latest Trump administration initiative to redo (or undo in many cases) various international deals brokered by previous administrations that resulted in a strategic loss for the United States. And if there鈥檚 one deal in particular that resulted in an obvious, and gratuitous, loss for the United States, it鈥檚 the Obama administration鈥檚 Iran deal.
In his to decertify the Obama brokered Iran deal (the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or 鈥淛CPOA鈥�), President Trump underscored that the fundamental problem with the deal is that it focused on only one fundamental problem with Iran鈥搕he regime鈥檚 nuclear program鈥搕o the exclusion of all the other serious problems with Tehran. For example, Iran remains a very active and prominent state sponsor of terrorism, the IRGC carries out many of the regime鈥檚 acts of terror, and鈥搒o obviously problematic鈥搕he Iranian missile program. Long-range missiles are the delivery systems for nuclear payloads. And missile technology is much harder to master than building a nuclear weapon. We can see this with North Korea. It has had a nuclear weapon for some time, but delivery systems are harder to acquire.
The new Trump plan to deal with Iran does not require immediate U.S. withdrawal from the Iran deal. Instead, the United States will work with allies to ensure that the Iranians are truly complying with the deal. There will be zero tolerance for the cheating that is discovered. It will remain a challenge to verify if Iran is, in fact, cheating since the Iranians do not believe international inspectors have access to its military sites, where previous illicit activity has occurred. Nevertheless, the aspects of the deal that can be verified, will receive serious scrutiny. It鈥檚 worth remembering that even President Obama admitted that this deal would only postpone the Iranians鈥� break-out time from a few months to a year, if Teheran decided to outright cheat and break-out or simply wait out the sunset provisions and then break-out. Of course, by then, if the United States doesn鈥檛 stop Iran鈥檚 missile program, the regime could have a working intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) with a nuclear payload.
This is why it鈥檚 critical to address all of the dangers the regime, rather than merely one small aspect of its weapons program; that is, if the United States is to learn from history. The regime is the problem, and merely restricting one aspect of its nuclear weapons program, while granting it access to billions of dollars not only has the effect of rewarding the regime for decades of malign behavior, it actually ends up funding the activity that directly harms the United States and our allies. Recall, Iran is responsible for , and this was known when President Obama was working to legitimize Iran by way of the Iran deal.
Also, importantly, President Trump recognized the Iranian people in his address. He emphasized that the United States has a problem with the Iran鈥檚 ruling regime, not with her people. Iranians are often the worst victims of the regime鈥檚 brutality and aggression. And unless the regime changes course or is weakened so much that the Iranian people鈥搘ho desire pluralism and independence from the mullahs鈥揷an alter or overthrow the regime, isolated actions like the Iran deal are merely tinkering on the margins. The problem with the Iran deal is that it won鈥檛 ultimately deal with the problem. The president has made the first move to rectify this error.
It鈥檚 now up to Congress, in close coordination with the Administration, to pass legislation that will appropriately sanction the regime for its terrorism and missile program. If these actions prompt Iran to walk away from the deal, then so be it. In the words of Obama officials: no deal is better than a bad deal.
Bottom line: This is a very good strategy. What the United States needs is a clear-eyed, realistic approach to Iran, that will help preserve peace in the near and long term. Implementation will require enormous diplomatic heavy-lifting. But if the United States pulls it off, it portends a victory for long term stability that is difficult to overstate.