The United States could better leverage sanctions against Iran while mitigating negative consequences, according to a new report by former U.S. ambassadors, generals, officials and national security experts. International sanctions imposed on Iran over the last three decades have differing goals. Some sanctions focus exclusively on the nuclear program or human rights, while others curtail Iran’s ability to fund Hamas and Hezbollah. They are less effective without a unified strategy and could create further human suffering in Iran or weaken civil society. But The Iran Project report stresses that the negotiating strategy is just as important as the sanctions themselves.
The complexity of the sanctions regime.
·A basis for coalition building...
·Slowing the expansion of Iran's nuclear program...
·Weakening the Iranian economy...
·Regional military balance increasingly unfavorable to Iran...
·Elite distress and public unhappiness over economic conditions...
·Enhanced sanctions might change Iran's nuclear negotiating strategy...
·Disputes with allies and other countries...
·Increased corruption and control of the economy by unaccountable factions...
·A basis for coalition building...
·Empowering anti-reform voices and disempowering civil society...
·Long-term alientation between the United States and Iran...
·Increased potential for conflict...
·Potential humanitarian effects...
·Detrimental economic effects on the United States, its European allies, and the region...
·Detrimental effects on the global energy supply and the stability of the global energy market...
Click here for the full report.