Tag: China
Peace picks, December 16-20
DC is beginning to slow down as the holiday season is fast approaching, but there are still some great events this week. We won’t likely publish another edition until January 5, as the year-end doldrums will likely last until then:
1. The Middle Kingdom Looks East, West, North, and South: China’s Strategies on its Periphery
Monday, December 16 | 9:00am – 10:30am
Woodrow Wilson Center, 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Fifth Floor
China’s recent declaration of an air defense identification zone in the East China Sea and its territorial claims over 80% of the South China Sea are focusing renewed American attention on Chinese strategy. To understand China’s policies, deployments, and ambitions in the Western Pacific, we must analyze China’s attitudes toward all of its 14 border States and Pacific neighbors, and toward its near and more distant seas.
The Kissinger Institute’s 2013 series of public programs will conclude with a talk by renowned author Edward Luttwak, who will lead a discussion of China’s strategy throughout its periphery, with an emphasis on the Diaoyu/Senkakus and other regional disputes.
We are Kim’s kin too
I can’t even pretend to know something about North Korea, but it seems to me The Daily Beast has it right: rather than being a sign of strength, Kim Jong Un’s purge and execution of his uncle reflects weakness and foreshadows instability. The military is coming out on top, regime cadres will be running scared and Pyongyang will become more isolated. Uncle Jang Song Thaek was a key liaison with the Chinese, which had been encouraging economic opening and discouraging nuclear adventurism.
This is a difficult situation for the rest of the world. North Korea is a threat to regional stability either way: Kim may gain full command and brandish nuclear weapons against his neighbors (and Washington, though no one thinks he has the capability to target the continental United States), hoping to be paid off in fuel and food. The US has done that several times, but President Obama has sworn off the practice. Or North Korea might collapse, sending refugees into China and the South and leaving behind nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction in the hands of who knows who. Read more
The risks of overplaying a hand
With the snow blanketing Washington, it is time for a post on the things I haven’t recently discussed. Two in particular have been gnawing:
1. Afghanistan
President Karzai has negotiated a long-term security agreement with the United States and convened a loya jirga (grand council) to approve it. Now he is hesitating to sign it, demanding that the US clear all raids with his government and release Afghan prisoners from Guantanamo.
The explanations for this behavior are many and various (and more): Read more
Peace picks, December 2-6
After a week of Thanksgiving festivities, here are this week’s top events:
1. CHP’s Vision for Turkey: An Address by Chairman Kılıçdaroğlu
Monday, December 2 | 11:30am – 1:00pm
Brookings Institution, Falk Auditorium, 1775 Massachusetts Avenue NW
On December 2, the Center on the United States and Europe at Brookings will host Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, chairman of Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), for an address on Turkey, its foreign policy and its relations with the United States. In his remarks, Mr. Kılıçdaroğlu will offer CHP’s vision for the future of Turkey with a particular focus on Turkish democracy and economics. He will also reflect on Turkey’s role in its neighborhood and offer thoughts on its transatlantic relations.
Mr. Kılıçdaroğlu has served as the chair of the Republican People’s Party since May 2010. He was first elected in 2002 as a member of the Turkish Parliament for the Istanbul province. He was reelected as an MP in 2007 and served as CHP’s Group Vice President until declaring his candidacy for the leadership of the party. Prior to his political career, Mr. Kılıçdaroğlu served in numerous high-ranking positions in the Turkish Ministry of Finance and the Social Security Organization.
Senior Fellow Ted Piccone, acting vice president and director of Foreign Policy at Brookings, will introduce Mr. Kılıçdaroğlu. At the conclusion of his remarks, Brookings TUSIAD Senior Fellow Kemal Kirişci will moderate the discussion. After the program, Mr. Kılıçdaroğlu will take audience questions.
Introduction |
Ted Piccone Acting Vice President and Director, Foreign Policy The Brookings Institution |
Moderator |
Kemal Kirişci TUSIAD Senior Fellow and Director, Turkey Project The Brookings Institution |
Featured Speaker |
Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu Chairman Republican People’s Party |
It’s the next six months that really count
If you are interested in today’s news about the six-month nuclear deal with Iran, read no further. You’d do better to go to the New York Times for Michael Gordon’s piece on the important details and David Sanger’s on the broader issues of significance and impact on international relations.
My interest is in the prospects beyond six months. Is this
- a step in the right direction towards a broader agreement that ends Iran’s nuclear weapons ambitions, or
- is it a relatively insignificant pause in a decades-long march that will necessarily end, even if Israel or the US intervenes militarily, in a nuclear-armed Iran?
I don’t think we know the answer to that question. What we need to think about is how to make sure the answer is 1. and not 2. What will Tehran more likely to stop and even roll back its nuclear progress? What would push Tehran in the wrong direction?
Sanctions
There is little doubt that sanctions have brought Iran to the negotiating table, and the propect of lifting them will be a major factor in Tehran’s thinking about whether to continue to pursue a potential nuclear weapons capability. So should we tighten them further, or not?
I depart from the Administration and more dovish colleagues on this question. If this is a six-month agreement, I think there is virtue in Congress making it clear what happens after the six months are up if the negotiations fail to produce a more permanent agreement. Passing sanctions now, with a six-month trigger that the President can renew once or twice if he certifies real progress is being made, makes negotiating sense.
The trouble of course is that the Iranians will see this as pointing a gun at them while they sit at the negotiating table (there was a poster plastered all over Tehran recently with just that picture). The majlis will likely respond with some six-month trigger of its own. I don’t see that as a terrible thing. There is something to be gained by being clear with each other about the consequences of a negotiating failure in the next stage.
There is also something to be gained from clarity about what happens if there is a permanent agreement. The Congress may not like it, but it will need to act to lift sanctions and enable Iran to return from the penalty box we have put it in.
Security
The international community’s failure to respond effectively to India, Pakistan and North Korea as they each went nuclear has given Tehran good reason to believe that we won’t do much if they follow in that path. Even bombing won’t do much more than postpone what it at the same time make inevitable. For understandable and good reasons, we have no record of attacking a regime that succeeds in making nuclear weapons.
So somehow the non-nuclear path has to be made to look at least as secure for Tehran’s rulers as the nuclear path. That’s distasteful, but necessary. President Obama has already gone a long way in this direction by eschewing in his General Assembly speech last fall any intention of pursuing regime change in Iran. If Iran wants more than that, it will need to end the tense relationship with the U.S. it has cultivated and enjoyed for more than 30 years. And we will need to do likewise, reducing the threat of military action.
Rapprochement
That’s what diplomats mean when they talk about rapprochement. No one snuggles with someone they don’t trust. We don’t trust Iran. They don’t trust us. That makes snuggling dangerous.
Building trust is something that requires a far broader effort than what has been going on between us in Geneva in the last month or so. The Iranians understand that. Witness their Foriegn Minister’s unsuccessful Youtube video. We do the same stuff: our virtual embassy has been up and running for years, with little detectable effect on the Iranian leadership.
Trust requires personal contact. Apart from President Rouhani’s fall visit and the Geneva meetings, there is precious little other than the nuclear negotiations themselves. The various Track 2 dialogues (those are unofficial meetings to discuss substantial isses) have been useful, but their reach into Iranian and American society is limited. We need far broader exchanges to build trust: between universities, thinktanks, parliaments, research centers. That is going to take a long time, as it did with the Soviet Union and with China.
Verification
In the meanwhile, we need verification. Even if we decide in favor of rapprochement, we will want to be morally certain that Iran is not violating a permanent nuclear agreement behind our backs. There is good reason to believe that they conducted some nuclear weapons research and development in the past. They have not owned up to that or allowed verification at key sites. This makes trust harder than it would be otherwise, and verification all the more necessary.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has been good at verification in the past, and Iran has reached agreement with it on important issues. The IAEA will be the centerpiece of any verification effort. But neither the Americans nor the Israelis will be satisfied with only the IAEA. They will maintain their own national means for verification, but Israel (which has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty) will refuse the IAEA access to its own nuclear facilities. NPT parties and non-parties are not equal. Verification will be lop-sided, and therefore difficult to arrange with Tehran, which is highly sensitive to any sign of “disrespect.”
Bottom line
The next six months are more important to resolution of the Iranian nuclear issue than the last six. Getting a permanent nuclear agreement will require progress on sanctions, security, overall rapprochement, and verification that will not be easy.
Deal, or no deal?
The nuclear talks with Iran are officially with the P5+1 (that’s the US, UK, France, Russia and China). But they are increasingly looking like a negotiation (at a distance) between Israel and Iran, with the P5+1 acting as mediators and looking for a mutually acceptable compromise. What are the odds of finding one? It depends on what we all call leverage. That comes from being able to walk away, because you’ve got a “best alternative to a negotiated agreement” (BATNA) that you prefer over the agreement on offer.
Iran’s BATNA is clear: it can continue its nuclear program, which entails continuing also to endure increasingly tight sanctions as well as the risk an Israeli or American attack. President Rouhani doesn’t like this option, because he has promised Iranians relief from sanctions, improved relations with the rest of the world, and an improved economy. Iranians are not interested in going to war. But Supreme Leader Khamenei can still veto any proposed agreement. There is every reason to believe he would do so if somehow his negotiators dared to bring home an agreement that completely dismantled Iran’s nuclear program, blocking it from any future enrichment (or reprocessing). Read more