By Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, from www.RaceForIran.com
We
are just back from another visit to the Islamic Republic and see even
more clearly that the real obstacles to successful nuclear diplomacy
with Iran lie in Washington, not Tehran. Prior to our visit, we outlined
several of the reasons for this in an extended interview on Ian
Masters’ Background Briefing about our forthcoming Going to Tehran; click here to listen.
We
open by taking issue with the conventional wisdom that the upcoming
talks between the P5+1 and Iran will be the “last chance” to reach a
nuclear deal with Tehran before the Islamic Republic gears up for its
presidential election next year. On this point, Flynt notes that the
only reason nuclear talks over the next few months would be a “last
chance” is
“because
of arbitrary deadlines and frameworks that the United States and some
of its partners have imposed on these negotiations. In the end, the
Iranian nuclear problem is actually quite simple: if the United States
was prepared to accept Iran’s right to enrich uranium, under safeguards,
on its own territory, you could have a deal in fairly short order…You
could probably get limits on Iran’s 20-percent enrichment, you could
get much more intrusive verification on its nuclear activities. But you
would have to accept the Islamic Republic as kind of a normal state,
with legitimate interests and rights.”
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