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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
May 18September 5, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL32048
CRS Report for Congress
Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Summary
The issue of Iran and its nuclear program has emerged as a top priority for the Obama
Administration. A sense of potential crisis in late 2011 and early 2012 was generated by growing
suspicions in the international community that Iran’s nuclear program is not for purely peaceful
purposes, and the determination of the government of Israel, in particular, that it might take
unilateral military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities if its progress is not soon halted.
The heightened tensions follow three years in which the Obama Administration has assembled a
broad international coalition to pressure Iran through economic sanctions while also offering
sustained engagement with Iran if it verifiably assures the international community that its
nuclear program is peaceful. None of the pressure has, to date, altered Iran’s pursuit of its nuclear
program: Iran attended December 2010 and January 2011 talks with the six powers negotiating
with Iran, but no progress was reported at any of these meetings. In early 2012, Iran began
uranium enrichment at a deep underground facility near Qom to a level of 20% enrichment.
However, sinceAddressing the perceived threat posed by Iran to a broad range of U.S. interests has been a top
priority for the Obama Administration. A sense of potential crisis with Iran has taken hold since
late 2011 as Iran’s nuclear enrichment program continues to advance. That Iranian progress has
caused the government of Israel to assert that it might take unilateral military action against Iran’s
nuclear facilities unless the United States provides assurances that it will act, militarily if
necessary, to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. Aside from the nuclear issue, the
United States has long seen a threat to U.S. interests posed by Iran’s support for militant groups in
the Middle East and in Iraq and Afghanistan. U.S. officials accuse Iran of helping Syria’s
leadership try to defeat a growing popular opposition movement and of taking advantage of Shiite
majority unrest against the Sunni-led, pro-U.S. government of Bahrain.
To counter the perceived threat from Iran, the Obama Administration has orchestrated broad
international pressure on Iran through economic sanctions, while also offering Iran sustained
engagement if it verifiably assures the international community that its nuclear program is
peaceful. Since the beginning of 2012, as significant multilateral sanctions have been added on
Iran’s oil exports—including an oil purchase embargo by the European Union to gothat went into full
effect by July 1, 2012—there are growing indications that the regime feels economic pressure.
Iran’s leaders have responded not only with threats to commerce in the Strait of Hormuz, but an
acceptance of new nuclear talks without preconditions. Talks between Iran and the six negotiating
powers took place on April 13-14, 2012; the talks yielded no substantive results but built
sufficient confidence to schedule another round on May 23, in Baghdad, and to lower the
prospects for Israeli or U.S. military action.
The United States has long seen a threat to U.S. interests posed by Iran’s support for militant
groups in the Middle East and in Iraq and Afghanistan. U.S. officials accuse Iran of helping
Syria’s leadership try to defeat a growing popular opposition movement and of taking advantage
of Shiite majority unrest against the Sunni-led, pro-U.S. government of Bahrain. However, to
date, these issues have not generated the same sense of crisis that the nuclear issue hason July 1, 2012—the regime has begun to acknowledge significant economic pressure.
Iran’s leaders returned to nuclear talks with six powers in April 2012 after a one year hiatus.
Three rounds of talks held in April, in May, and in June yielded no breakthroughs, but did explore
a potential compromise under which Iran might end uranium enrichment to 20% purity (a level
not technically far from weapons grade) in exchange for substantial sanctions relief. Technical
talks were held on July 3, 2012, with further conversations between Iranian and EU negotiators
on July 24, and August 2, although still without a firm decision to hold another round of high
level talks. The Administration expresses frustration that neither the pressure nor the diplomacy
has, to date, altered Iran’s pursuit of its nuclear program, but it asserts that there is time and space
for these policies to succeed before contemplation of other options, such as U.S. military action.
The Administration and many outside experts also perceive that the legitimacy and popularity of
Iran’s regime is in decline, although not to the point where the regime’s grip on power is
imminently threatened. The regime has sought to use the international pressure to rally the public
to its side, playing on nationalist sentiment to encourage high turnout in the March 2, 2012,
parliamentary elections. The boycott of the poll by reformist groups rendered the election a
contest between factions supporting either President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Supreme Leader
Ali Khamene’i. Khamene’i supporters were elected overwhelmingly, helping him solidify his
control over day-to-day governance. Over the past two years, the United States has increased
public criticism of Iran’s human rights record, an effort broadly supported in the international
community.
Some in the 112th Congress, aside from supporting additional economic sanctions against Iran,
assert that the United States should provide additional political support to the democracy
movement in Iran, despite the relative quiescence of the opposition since early 2010. The
Administration argues that it has supported the opposition through civil society and other
programs, and by using recent authorities to sanction Iranian officials who suppress human rights
in Iran and help Syria repress human rights. For further information, including pending Iran
sanctions legislation, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, and CRS Report R40094, Iran’s
Nuclear Program: Tehran’s Compliance with International Obligations, by Paul K. Kerr.
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threatened. There are few outward signs that the opposition in Iran or in exile have gained
traction against the regime, even though international sanctions are causing clear public
frustration over deteriorating economic conditions. The reformist boycott of the March 2, 2012,
parliamentary elections rendered the election a contest between factions supporting either
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or Supreme Leader Ali Khamene’i. Khamene’i supporters
were elected overwhelmingly, helping him solidify his control over day-to-day governance. It is
likely that only hardliners will be significant candidates in the next presidential election to be held
in June 2013.
The 112th Congress has supported additional economic sanctions against Iran, most recently with
enactment of H.R. 1905 (P.L. 112-158), which expands sanctions against companies that conduct
energy and financial transactions with Iran. Some in Congress assert that the United States should
provide additional political support to the democracy movement in Iran. The Administration
argues that it has done just that, in part by using recent authorities to sanction Iranian officials
who suppress human rights in Iran. For further information, including pending Iran sanctions
legislation, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, and CRS Report R40094, Iran’s Nuclear
Program: Tehran’s Compliance with International Obligations, by Paul K. Kerr.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Contents
Political History ............................................................................................................................... 1
Regime Structure, Stability, and Opposition.................................................................................... 2
Unelected Governing Institutions: The Supreme Leader, His Powers, and Other
Ruling Councils...................................................................................................................... 2
Council of Guardians and Expediency Council .................................................................. 3
Elected Institutions: The Presidency, the Majles (Parliament), the Assembly of
Experts, and Recent Elections ................................................................................................ 87
The Presidency .................................................................................................................... 87
The Majles........................................................................................................................... 98
The Assembly of Experts .................................................................................................... 98
Recent Elections: First Ahmadinejad Election in 2005....................................................... 9
Ahmadinejad (Disputed) Reelection on June 12, 2009: Protests Erupt and Second
Term is Riven by Schisms................................................................................................ 9
Next Presidential Election 10
March 2, 2012, Majles Elections Weaken Ahmadinejad Further Amid Reformist
Boycott ........................................................................................................................... 13
The Opposition ........................................................................................................................ 14
The Green Movement and Its Uprising............................................................................. 14
Exiled Opposition Groups: Supporters of the Son of the Late Shah of Iran ..................... 15
Exiled Opposition Groups: People’s Mojahedin ............................................................... 16
Armed Groups: Pro-Monarchy Radicals........................................................................... 2019
Ethnic or Religiously- Based Armed Groups ..................................................................... 2019
Iranian-American Groups.......Interest Groups........................................................................................... 21 20
Other Human Rights Practices....................................................................................................... 21
Criticism of Iran’s Record in U.N. Bodies .............................................................................. 2221
Special U.N. Rapporteur Reestablished ............................................................................ 22
Iran’s Strategic Capabilities and Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs ................................... 2524
Conventional Military/Revolutionary Guard/Qods Force ....................................................... 25
Nuclear Program and Related International Diplomacy.......................................................... 28
Iran’s Nuclear Intentions and the November 8, 2011, IAEA Report................................................................................................... 28
Iran’s Position and Counter-Arguments ............................................................................ 29
Nuclear Weapons Time Frame Estimates.......................................................................... 29
Status of Enrichment ......................................................................................................... 30
The International Response and Policies.........................International Efforts to Address Iran’s Nuclear Program .................................................. 31
The International Response Under the Obama Administration......................................... 34
Chemical Weapons, Biological Weapons, and Missiles .......................................................... 3940
Ballistic Missiles/Warheads .............................................................................................. 40
Foreign Policy and Support for Terrorist Groups .......................................................................... 4143
Support for International Terrorism......................................................................................... 4243
Foreign Policy: Relations with the Persian Gulf States........................................................... 4345
Yemen................................................................................................................................ 48
Iranian Policy in Iraq ............................................................................................................... 4648
Supporting Palestinian Militant Groups .................................................................................. 4749
Iran and Hamas.................................................................................................................. 4749
Lebanese Hezbollah................................................................................................................. 4850
Syria......................................................................................................................................... 4951
The Caucuses and Central Asia ............................................................................................... 5053
South Asia: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India.......................................................................... 5153
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Afghanistan ....................................................................................................................... 5153
Pakistan ............................................................................................................................. 5255
India................................................................................................................................... 5356
Al Qaeda.................................................................................................................................. 5356
Latin America .......................................................................................................................... 5457
Venezuela and Cuba .......................................................................................................... 5558
Other Ties in the Region.................................................................................................... 5659
Africa....................................................................................................................................... 5659
U.S. Policy Approaches and Additional Options ........................................................................... 5760
Background on Relations Since the 1979 Revolution ............................................................. 5760
George W. Bush Administration Policy ............................................................................ 5861
Overview of Obama Administration Policy: StraddlingCombining Engagement and Pressure
Strategies .............................................................................................................................. 59 .............. 62
2010-2012: Focus on Pressure .......................................................................................... 6063
U.S. and Other Military Action: “On The Table” as Iran’s Nuclear Program Continues
to AdvanceIsrael Threatens a Unilateral
Strike .................................................................................................................................... 61
Other64
Iranian Retaliation and Alternative Scenarios of U.S.-Iran Conflict ............................................................................... 62 65
U.S. Defensive Preparations, Containment, and the Gulf Security Dialogue ................... 66
Presidential Authorities and Legislation on Military Action............................................................................ 62 67
An Israeli Strike?............................................................................................................... 6368
Reported Covert Action........................................................................................................... 64
Containment and the Gulf Security Dialogue.......................................................................... 6469
Regime Change ....................................................................................................................... 6569
Pursuing a Middle Ground: Democracy Promotion and Internet Freedom Efforts .......... 6670
Additional Sanctions ............................................................................................................... 7276
Conclusion ..................................................................................................................................... 7579
Figures
Figure 1. Structure of the Iranian Government .............................................................................. 7781
Figure 2. Map of Iran..................................................................................................................... 78
Tables
Table 1.82
Tables
Table 1.Supreme Leader: Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamene’i ............................................................. 3
Table 2. Major Factions, Personalities, and Interest Groups ........................................................... 4
Table 23. Human Rights Practices: General Categories .................................................................. 2322
Table 34. Iran’s Conventional Military Arsenal............................................................................... 26
Table 45. The Revolutionary Guard................................................................................................. 27
Table 56. Summary of Provisions of U.N. Resolutions on Iran Nuclear Program
(1737, 1747, 1803, and 1929)..................................................................................................... 3940
Table 67. Iran’s Ballistic Missile Arsenal ....................................................................................................... 4142
Table 78. Major Past Acts of Iran or Iran-Related Terrorism .......................................................... 4345
Table 89. Iran Democracy Promotion Funding................................................................................ 7175
Table 910. Digest of Existing U.S. Sanctions Against Iran ............................................................... 74 78
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Table 1011. Selected Economic Indicators ........................................................................................ 7679
Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 7882
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Political History
Iran is a country of about 75 million people, located in the heart of the Persian Gulf region. The
United States was an ally of the late Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (“the Shah”), who
ruled from 1941 until his ouster in February 1979. The Shah assumed the throne when Britain and
Russia forced his father, Reza Shah Pahlavi (Reza Shah), from power because of his perceived
alignment with Germany in World War II. Reza Shah had assumed power in 1921 when, as an
officer in Iran’s only military force, the Cossack Brigade (reflecting Russian influence in Iran in
the early 20th century), he launched a coup against the government of the Qajar Dynasty. Reza
Shah was proclaimed Shah in 1925, founding the Pahlavi dynasty. The Qajars had been in decline
for many years before Reza Shah’s takeover. That dynasty’s perceived manipulation by Britain
and Russia had been one of the causes of the 1906 constitutionalist movement, which forced the
Qajars to form Iran’s first Majles (parliament) in August 1906 and promulgate a constitution in
December 1906. Prior to the Qajars, what is now Iran was the center of several Persian empires
and dynasties whose reach shrunk steadily over time. Since the 16th century, Iranian empires lost
control of Bahrain (1521), Baghdad (1638), the Caucasus (1828), western Afghanistan (1857),
Baluchistan (1872), and what is now Turkmenistan (1894). Iran adopted Shiite Islam under the
Safavid Dynasty (1500-1722), which ended a series of Turkic and Mongol conquests.
The Shah was anti-Communist, and the United States viewed his government as a bulwark
against the expansion of Soviet influence in the Persian Gulf and a counterweight to pro-Soviet
Arab regimes and movements. Israel maintained a representative office in Iran during the Shah’s
time and the Shah supported a peaceful resolution of the Arab-Israeli dispute. In 1951, under
pressure from nationalists in the Majles (parliament) who gained strength in the 1949 Majles
elections, he appointed a popular nationalist parliamentarian, Dr. Mohammad Mossadeq, as prime
minister. Mossadeq was widely considered left-leaning, and the United States was wary of his
policies, which included his drive for nationalization of the oil industry. Mossadeq’s followers
began an uprising in August 1953 when the Shah tried to dismiss Mossadeq, and the Shah fled.
The Shah was restored in a CIA-supported uprising that toppled Mossadeq (“Operation Ajax”).
The Shah tried to modernize Iran and orient it toward the West, but in so doing he also sought to
marginalize Iran’s Shiite clergy. He exiled Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1964 because of
Khomeini’s active opposition, which was based on the Shah’s anti-clerical policies and what
Khomeini alleged was the Shah’s forfeiture of Iran’s sovereignty to the United States. Khomeini
fled to and taught in Najaf, Iraq, a major Shiite theological center that contains the Shrine of
Imam Ali, Shiism’s foremost figure. There, he was a peer of senior Iraqi Shiite clerics and, with
them, advocated direct clerical rule or velayat-e-faqih (rule by a supreme Islamic jurisprudent). In
1978, three years after the March 6, 1975, Algiers Accords between the Shah and Iraq’s Baathist
leaders, which settled territorial disputes and required each party to stop assisting each other’s
oppositionists, Iraq expelled Khomeini to France, from which he stoked the Islamic revolution.
Mass demonstrations and guerrilla activity by pro-Khomeini forces, allied with a broad array of
anti-Shah activists, caused the Shah’s government to collapse in February 1979. Khomeini
returned from France on February 1, 1979 and, on February 11, 1979, he declared an Islamic
Republic of Iran. His political system of velayat-e-faqih was enshrined in the constitution that
was adopted in a public referendum in December 1979 (and amended in 1989); it provided for the
post of Supreme Leader. The regime based itself on strong opposition to foreign, particularly
Western, influence, and relations between the United States and the Islamic Republic turned
openly hostile after the November 4, 1979, seizure of the U.S. Embassy by pro-Khomeini
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radicals. Ayatollah Khomeini died on June 3, 1989, and was succeeded as Supreme Leader by
Ayatollah Ali Khamene’i.
The regime faced serious unrest in its first few years, including a June 1981 bombing at the
headquarters of the Islamic Republican Party (IRP) and the prime minister’s office that killed
several senior leaders, including Khomeini confidant Mohammad Hossein Beheshti. These
events, along with the hostage crisis with the United States, provided cover for the regime to
purge many of the secular, liberal, and left-wing personalities and parties in the anti-Shah
coalition. Examples included the Tudeh Party (Communist), the People’s Mojahedin Organization
of Iran (PMOI, see below), the first elected President Abolhassan Bani Sadr, and the Iran
Freedom Movement of the regime’s first Prime Minister Mehdi Bazargan and, later, Ibrahim
Yazdi. The regime was under economic and military threat during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War,
which resulted, at times, in nearly halting Iran’s oil exports. Still, during these years, there was
diversity of opinion in ruling circles.
Despite these struggles, during 1982 until 2009, the regime had faced only episodic, relatively
low-level unrest from minorities, intellectuals, students, labor groups, and women. Since the June
2009 presidential election, the regime has struggled to contain popular dissatisfaction. In late
2009, several Iran experts believed this opposition movement—calling itself “The Green Path of
Hope” or “Green Movement” (Rah-e-Sabz)—posed a serious challenge to the current regime. The
regime subsequently pushed the Green Movement underground through harsh repression,
including imprisonment or house
arrests of its leaders or main activists.
Regime Structure, Stability, and Opposition
Iran’s Islamic regime, established in a constitution adopted in a popular referendum, is widely
considered authoritarian but not “one-man rule.” The system provides for a degree of popular
input and checks and balances provided by elected institutions. The Supreme LeadersLeader is not
directly elected by the population; the president and the Majles (parliament) are. There are also
direct elections for municipal councils, which in turn select mayors. Even within the unelected
institutions, factional disputes between those who insist on ideological purity and those
considered more pragmatic have been frequent and highly consequential.
Unelected Governing Institutions: The Supreme Leader,
His Powers, and Other Ruling Councils
At the apex of the Islamic Republic’s power structure is a “Supreme Leader” who has vast formal
powers and no term limits. He is chosen by an elected body—the Assembly of Experts—which
also has the constitutional power to remove him. Upon Ayatollah Khomeini’s death, the Assembly
selected one of his disciples, Ayatollah Ali Khamene’i, as Supreme Leader.1 Although he has
never had Khomeini’s undisputed political or religious authority, the powers of the office have
enabled Khamene’i to
preserve his status as the most powerful Iranian ensure that he is Iran’s paramount leader. Formally, the Supreme Leader is
commander-in-chief of the armed forces, giving him the power to appoint commanders and to be
represented on the highest national security body, the Supreme National Security Council,
1
At the time of his selection as Supreme Leader, Khamene’i was generally referred to at the rank of Hojjat ol-Islam,
one rank below Ayatollah, suggesting his religious elevation was political rather than through traditional mechanisms.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
(formerly called the Supreme Defense Council), composed of top military and civilian security
officials. The Supreme Leader also has the power,
under the constitution, to remove the elected
president if either the judiciary or the elected Majles
(parliament) saydecide that the president should be
removed, with cause.
Still, the growing dependence of the regime on internal security forces caused Secretary of State
Clinton to assert in February 2010 that the Supreme Leader’s authority is being progressively
usurped by regime security forces, most notably the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC).
This viewassessment is disputed by some outside experts who continue to see the clerics in firm control of
regime decisionmaking.
Council of Guardians and Expediency Council
The Supreme Leader appoints half of the 12-member Council of Guardians;2 and the head of
Iran’s judiciary (currently Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani). Headed by Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, the
conservative-controlled Council of Guardians reviews legislation to ensure it conforms to Islamic
law, and it screens election candidates and certifies election results. The Supreme Leader appoints
members of the 42-member “Expediency Council,” set up in 1988 to resolve legislative
disagreements between the Majles and the Council of Guardians. The Expediency Council’s
powers were expanded in 2006 to include oversight of the executive branch (cabinet)
performance. Its members serve five-year terms; its chairman, Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani,
was reappointed in February 2007 and again in March 2012 . The March 2012 reappointment
defied predictions of many experts that he would be removed because of perceived disloyalty to
the Supreme Leader, and the reappointment has been widely interpreted as a Khamene’i effort to
co-opt Rafsanjani. Earlier, he was removed in March 2011 as head of the Assembly of Experts
(see below). The Expediency Council’s executive officer is former Revolutionary Guard
commander-in-chief Mohsen Reza’i.
2
The Council of Guardians consists of six Islamic jurists and six secular lawyers. The six Islamic jurists are appointed
by the Supreme Leader. The six lawyers on the Council are selected by the judiciary but confirmed by the Majles.
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Table 1. Major Factions, Personalities, and Interest Groups
Conservatives
Supreme Leader Ali Khamene’i
several outside experts who continue to see the Supreme Leader
and his allies in the clerical establishment in firm control of regime decision making.
Table 1.Supreme Leader: Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamene’i
Born in July 1939 to an Azeri (Turkic) family from Mashhad. Was jailed by
the Shah of Iran for supporting Ayatollah
Khomeini’s revolution. After the
regime took power in 1979, helped organize Revolutionary Guard and
other security
organs. Lost use of right arm in assassination attempt in
June 1981. Was elected president during 1981-1989 and was selected
selected Khomeini’s successor in June 1989 upon his death. Upon that selection,
Khamene’i religious ranking was
advanced in official organs to “Grand
Ayatollah” from the lower ranking “Hojjat ol-Islam.” But, still lacks the
undisputed authority and public adoration Khomeini had. Like Khomeini,
Khamene’i has tended to intervenesintervene primarily
to resolve factional
disputes, or to quiet popular criticism, but has taken more day-to-day role
since 2009 uprising.
Has sided with more decisively with hardline
opponents of Ahmadinejad since mid-2011.
Has taken consistently hard-line stances on foreign policy and particularly
toward Israel, but reputedlyoften calling it a cancerous
tumor that needs to be excised from the region. Reputedly issued religious proclamation (2003) against
Iran acquiring
a nuclear weapon. Has, and has publicly called doing so a “sin,” but has consistently opposed bowing to any
U.S. pressure, including on nuclear issues, but greatly fears direct military
U.S. pressure
on the nuclear issue. Yet, he is widely believed to fear direct military confrontation with United States. In the past, has tended to support the
on Iranian soil.
Generally does not meet with Western officials and is suspicious of relations with the West as opening Iran to undue
Western cultural influence and spying. Opposes opening comprehensive direct talks with the United States, but has
made public reference to letters to him from President Obama asking for renewed U.S.-Iran relations. On economic
issues, he has tended to support the business community (bazaaris), and opposed state control of the
economy,
making him attentive to the effects of international sanctions on
Iran’s economy.
His office is run by Mohammad Mohammadi Gopayegani,
with significant input from Khamene’i’s second son, Mojtaba,
who is said
to be acquiring increasing influence. Also advised by Keyhan editor
Hossein Shariatmadari and former
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati.
Has made public reference to letters to him from President Obama asking
for renewed U.S.-Iran relations.
Expediency Council Chair Ali Akbar
Hashemi-Rafsanjani
Now, who reportedly may run for President in 2013 with Khamene’i’s backing.
Source: CRS.
Council of Guardians and Expediency Council
The Supreme Leader appoints half of the 12-member Council of Guardians;2 and the head of
Iran’s judiciary (currently Ayatollah Sadeq Larijani). Headed by Ayatollah Ahmad Jannati, the
conservative-controlled Council of Guardians reviews legislation to ensure it conforms to Islamic
law, and it screens election candidates and certifies election results. The Supreme Leader appoints
members of the 42-member “Expediency Council,” set up in 1988 to resolve legislative
disagreements between the Majles and the Council of Guardians. The Expediency Council’s
powers were expanded in 2006 to include oversight of the executive branch (cabinet)
performance. Its members serve five-year terms; its chairman, Ali Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani,
was re-appointed in February 2007 and again in March 2012. The March 2012 reappointment
defied predictions of many experts that he would be removed because of perceived disloyalty to
2
The Council of Guardians consists of six Islamic jurists and six secular lawyers. The six Islamic jurists are appointed
by the Supreme Leader. The six lawyers on the Council are selected by the judiciary but confirmed by the Majles.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
the Supreme Leader, and was widely interpreted as a Khamene’i effort to keep Rafsanjani from
supporting reformist leaders. Earlier, Rafsanjani was removed in March 2011 as head of the
Assembly of Experts (see below). The Expediency Council’s executive officer is former
Revolutionary Guard commander-in-chief Mohsen Reza’i.
Table 2. Major Factions, Personalities, and Interest Groups
Conservatives
Supreme Leader Ali Khamene’i
See box above.
Expediency Council Chair Ali
Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani
Now largely in eclipse, he was long a key strategist and advocate of “grand
bargain” to resolve all outstanding issues with United States. Was Majles
speaker during 1981-1989 and president 1989-1997. One of Iran’s richest
men,
family owns large share of Iran’s total pistachio production. A midranking mid-ranking
cleric, was seriously weakened in March 2011 by ouster as
Assembly of Experts
chairman, an outcome attributed to his tacit support
of Green challenge to
Ahmadinejad reelection. Rift with Supreme Leader
erupted when Rafsanjani funded much of Musavi’s election campaign and
and criticized crackdown on Green protests. His website was blocked by
regime hardliners in January 2012. But, Khamene’i reappointed him
Expediency Expediency
Council chair in March 2012 in order to keep Rafsanjani in
regime orbit.
Daughter Faizah participated in several 2009 protests, was detained briefly
in in
February 2011 for protesting, and was sentenced in early 2012 for
opposition opposition
activities. Five Rafsanjani family members arrested in June 2009
(and another
briefly detained in March 2010), and there was a May 2010
threat to arrest his
son, Mehdi, if he returns from exile in Britain.
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
Declared reelected on June 12, 2009, but results still not accepted by
most Green Movement adherents. Increasingly at
Ahmadinejad
See box. At odds with Supreme
Leader since April 2011—leading to increasing agitation by his
conservative opponents to try to have him removed, including by tagging
him with corruption. Split centers around Leader since April 2011 centering around
Ahmadinejad effort to promote
non-clerical allies in key posts, including former
chief of staff and relative
by marriage Esfandiar Rahim Mashai.
Majles Speaker Ali Larijani
Majles Speaker since 2008 after overwhelming election for Majles seat
from Qom in March 2008 elections, and easily reelected in March 2012
elections. Likely to run again for president in 2013. Former state
state broadcasting head (1994-2004) and minister of culture and Islamic
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guidance (1993), was head of Supreme National Security Council and chief
nuclear negotiator from August 2005 until October 2007 resignation, and
sought to avoid U.N. Security Council isolation. Is politically close to
Khamene’i and a leading antagonist of Ahmadinejad. Brother of judiciary
head.
Another brother, Mohammad Javad, was deputy foreign minister
(1980s.)
) and
now heads a government human rights body.
Tehran Mayor Mohammad Baqer
Baqer Qalibaf
Former Revolutionary Guard Air Force commander and police chief, but a
moderate-conservative ally of Larijani and critic of Ahmadinejad.
Encourages Encourages
comparisons of himself to Reza Shah, invoking an era of
stability and strong
leadership. Lost in 2005 presidential elections, but
supporters won nine9 out of 15
seats on Tehran city council in December
2006 elections, propelling him to current post as
become mayor of Tehran. Has
won some popular won support for Tehran’s cleanliness and
relative order.
Recruited moderate-conservatives for March 2008 Majles
election. May
run again in 2013.
Senior Shiite Clerics
The most senior clerics, most of whom are in Qom, including several
Grand Grand
Ayatollahs, are generally “quietist”—they believe that the senior
clergy should
refrain from direct involvement in politics. These include
Grand Ayatollah
Nasser Makarem Shirazi, Grand Ayatollah (former
judiciary chief) Abdol Karim
Musavi-Ardabili, and Grand Ayatollah Yusuf
Sanei, all of whom have criticized
regime crackdown against
oppositionists. Others believe in political
involvement, including Ayatollah
Mohammad Taqi Mesbah Yazdi. He is founder
of the hardline Haqqani
school, and has been considered spiritual mentor of
Ahmadinejad,
although he headsheaded a bloc of hardliners not necessarily supportive of the
president in the March 2, 2012, Majles elections. Yazdi, an assertive
defender of
the powers of the Supreme Leader and a proponent of an
“Islamic state”
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rather than the current “Islamic republic,” fared poorly in
December 2006
elections for Assembly of Experts. Another hardline
cleric is Ayatollah Kazem
Haeri, mentor of Iraqi cleric Moqtada Al Sadr.
Judiciary Chief/Ayatollah Sadeq
Larijani
Named judiciary head in late August 2009, replacing Ayatollah Mahmoud
Shahrudi, who had headed the Judiciary since 1999Judiciary head since August 2009. Brother of Ali Larijani;
both are close to the
Supreme Leader and opponents of Ahmadinejad.
Both also Both support hard line against Green Movement
dissidents.
Militant ClericsClergy Association
Longtime organization of hardline clerics headed by Ayatollah Mohammad
Mahdavi-Kani, who became chair of the Assembly of Experts on March 9,
2011.
Did not back Ahmadinejad for reelection in 2009 vote and led a
bloc opposing
Ahmadinejad in the March 2, 2012, Majles elections.
Bazaar Merchants (“Bazaaris”)
The urban bazaar merchants fear jeopardizing the economy by
participating in
political opposition activity; have conducted only a few
strikes or other organized action since the 1979 revolution. In July 2010,
many Tehran bazaaris—and bazaaris in several other major cities—closed
their shops for two weeks to protest a 70% tax increase, ultimately
compelling the government to reduce the increase to 15%. Some
interpreted the strikes as an indication that the bazaaris may be shifting
against the regime, which they see as causing the international community
to sanction Iran’s economy and bringing economic damage. The bazaaris
are also
organized action since the 1979 revolution. The bazaaris are not a monolithic
group; each city’s bazaars are organized by
industry (e.g., carpets, gold, jewelry,
clothing) and bazaari positions tend
to be reached by consensus among elders
representing each industry
represented at the bazaar.
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Opposition/”Green Movement” (Rah-e-Sabz)
All of the blocs and personalities below can be considered, to varying degrees, as part of the Green Movement.
However, overall leadership of the movement and decision-making on protest activities is unclear, with several
components competing for preeminence. Some Green supporters have left for Europe, Asia, or the United States.
Titular Green Movement
Leaders:
Mir Hossein Musavi/
Mohammad Khatemi/Mehdi
Karrubi
Khatemi—reformist president during 1997-2005 and declared he would
run run
again for president in June 2009 elections, but withdrew when allied
reformist reformist
Mir Hossein Musavi entered the race in late March 2009.
Khatemi elected May . Khatemi was elected president in May
1997, with 69% of the vote; reelected June 2001
with 77%. Rode wave of
sentiment for easing social and political
restrictions among students, intellectuals, youths, and women. These
groups later became restrictions, but these groups became
disillusioned with Khatemi’s failure, as president, to stand up to
hardliners on reform issues. Now heads International Center for Dialogue
Among Civilizations. Visited United States in September 2006 to speak at
Harvard and the Washington National Cathedral on “dialogue of
civilizations.”
reform issues. Has hewed to staunch anti-Israel line of most Iranian
officials,
but perceived as open to accepting a Palestinian-Israeli
compromise. Perceived
as open to a political compromise that stops short
of replacement of the regime.
regime, and voted in March 2, 2012, election, ignoring reformist boycott of that
election. Now heads International Center for Dialogue Among Civilizations.
Visited United States in September 2006 to speak at Harvard and the
Washington National Cathedral on “dialogue of civilizations.”
Titular leader of the Green movement, Musavi is a non-cleric. About 68.
An An
architect by training, and a disciple of Ayatollah Khomeini, he served as
foreign foreign
minister (1980), then prime minister (1981-1989), at which time
he successfully
managed the state rationing program during the privations
of the Iran-Iraq War
but often feuded with Khamene’i, who was then
president. At that time, he was
an advocate of state control of the
economy. His post was abolished in the
1989 revision of the constitution.
Musavi later adopted views similar to Khatemi on political and social
freedoms freedoms
and on reducing Iran’s international isolation, but supports
strong state
intervention in the economy to benefit workers, lower
classes. Appeared at
some 2009 protests, sometimes intercepted or
constrained by regime security
agents. However, not necessarily
respected by harder line opposition leaders
who criticize his statements
indicating reconciliation with the regime is
possible. He and wife
(prominent activist Zahra Rahnevard) repeatedly
harassed by regime
during 2009 protests. He and Mehdi Karrubi, below, placed
under strict
house arrest after Green demonstrations resumed on February 14,
2011.
With Karrubi, supported reformist boycott of March 2, 2012, Majles
elections.
A founder of the leftwing Association of Combatant Clerics (different
organization but with similar name from that above), Mehdi Karrubi was
Speaker of the Majles during, 1989-1992 and 2000-2004. Formed a
separate separate
pro-reform “National Trust” faction after losing 2005 election.
Ran again in
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2009, but received few votes and subsequently emerged,
along with Musavi, as
a leader of the Green Movement. Was physically
blocked by regime from
attending Green demonstrations during 2010 and,
with Musavi, was put under
house arrest as of February 14, 2011. Taken
away to complete isolation
(except for regime agents) at a two room
office on July 16, 2011. Reportedly
was allowed some access to his family
in December 2011.
Student Opposition
Leaders/Confederation of Iranian
Students/ Leaders/
Office of Consolidation of
Unity (Daftar Tahkim-e-Vahdat)
Congressional Research ServiceeVahdat)/ Confederation of
Iranian Students
Groups composed of well-educated, Westernized urban youth are the
backbone of the Green Movement. Many are women. Student leaders
currentlyThey are attempting, with mixed success,
to gain support of older
generation, labor, clerics, village-dwellers, and other
segments. Many in
the Office of Consolidation of Unity, the student group that
led the 1999
riots but which has since become controlled by regime loyalists, believes
believes that major reform of the current regime might be acceptable. Along with
many other student/youth opposition groups, one offshoot of the Office,
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the Confederation of Iranian Students (CIS), believes in outright
replacement of the regime; it is populated by staunchly pro-American,
pro-free market activists who support an embargo on Iranian oil
purchases. CIS has a growing Washington, DC, presence led by Amir
An
offshoot of the Office - the Confederation of Iranian Students (CIS) - believes
in regime replacement and consists of pro-American, pro-free market activists.
Overall CIS leader, Arzhang Davoodi, convicted in August 2012 of “war against
God” which carries life sentence. CIS’ Washington, D.C. presence is led by
Amir Abbas Fakhravar, who was jailed for five years for participating in July
1999 student riots, although it has members worldwide. Makes extensive
use of female activists and visited Israel in January 2012 to meet with
Israeli Knesset members and experts. Overall leader, Arzhang Davoodi,
serving long prison sentence. CIS has organized several broad opposition
conferences in Washington, DC.
.
Islamic Iran Participation Front
(IIPF)
The most prominent and best organized pro-reform grouping, but has lost
political ground to Green Movement groups advocating outright
overthrow of
the regime. Its leaders include Khatemi’s brother,
Mohammad Reza Khatemi (a
deputy speaker in the 2000-2004 Majles) and
Mohsen Mirdamadi. Backed
Musavi in June 2009 election; several IIPF
leaders, including Mirdamadi, detained
and prosecuted in postelection
dispute. The party was outlawed by the regime
in September 2010.
Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution
Revolution Organization (MIR)
Composed mainly of left-leaning Iranian figures who support state control
of of
the economy, but want greater political pluralism and relaxation of
rules on
social behavior. A major constituency of the reformist camp. Its
leader is
former Heavy Industries Minister Behzad Nabavi, who supported
Musavi in
2009 election and has been incarcerated for most of the time
since June 2009.
The organization was outlawed by the regime
simultaneously with the outlawing of the IIPF, above
outlawing of the IIPF, above.
Combatant Clerics Association
Very similar name to organization above, but politically very different. Formed
in 1988, it is run by reformist, not hardline, clerics and officials. Leading figures
include Mohammad Khatemi, former Interior Minister Ali Akbar MohtashemiPur, and former Prosecutor General Ali Asgar Musavi-Koiniha.
Labor Unions
Organized labor has suffered from official repression for many years.
Organized Organized
labor is not a core constituency of the Green Movement, but
laborers viewed
as increasingly sympathetic to political change. Some
labor protests took place
in Tehran on “May Day” 2010, and selected
small strikes (truckers, some
factories) during 2010 led some experts to
believe that labor might be
gravitating toward Green Movement.
However, younger Green Movement
activists are suspicious of labor as a
leftwing bastion. Others say union
members fear income disruption if they
openly defy the regime. A bus drivers ’
union leader, Mansur Osanloo, has
been in jail since July 2007.
Other Prominent Dissidents
Other leading dissidents, some in Iran, others in exile, have been
challenging challenging
the regime since well before the Green Movement formed and
are now
significant opposition figures. Journalist Akbar Ganji conducted
hunger strikes
to protest regime oppression; he was released on schedule
on March 18, 2006,
after sentencing in 2001 to six years in prison for
alleging high-level
involvement in 1999 murders of Iranian dissident
intellectuals. Abdol Karim
Soroush, now exiled, has challenged the
doctrine of clerical rule. Former
Revolutionary Guard organizer Mohsen
Sazegara is based in the United States,
but his role in the IRGC likely
discredits him in the eyes of younger dissidents who want regime
regime replacement. Other significant dissidents include former Culture Minister
Minister Ataollah Mohajerani, Mohsen Kadivar, and Fatemah Haghighatgoo. Some
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Some well known dissidents who remained in Iran and were arrested in 2010
include filmmaker Jafar Panahi and journalist Abdolreza Tajik. In
November November
2008, before the 2009 unrest, famed Iranian blogger Hossein
Derakshan was
jailed; he has received a 20 is serving a 20-year prison sentence. On the
other hand, 80-year-old
Iran Freedom Movement leader Ibrahim Yazdi
was released from prison in
April 2011 after resigning as the Freedom
Movement’s leader.
One major longtime dissident and human rights activist is Nobel Peace
Prize Prize
laureate (2003) and Iran human rights activist lawyer Shirin Abadi.
She has
often represented clients persecuted or prosecuted by the regime
but she left
Iran for Europe, fearing arrest in connection with the 2009
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postelection postelection
dispute. In December 2009, the regime confiscated her
Nobel Prize. In April
2012, she publicly opposed U.S. and allied sanctions
against Iran. In January
2011, a colleague, Nasrin Sotoudeh, was sentenced
to 11 years in prison.
Elected Institutions: The Presidency, the Majles (Parliament),
the Assembly of Experts, and Recent Elections
Elections in Iran have always lacked some credibility for international observers because
hardliners are able to use their control over key election administration bodies such as the Interior
Ministry and the Council of Guardians to limit the number and ideological diversity of
candidates. The Council of Guardians has the power to approve or deny candidates based on its
application of constitutional requirements about a candidate’s knowledge of Islam and loyalty to
the Islamic system of government.
Another criticism of the political process in Iran is the relative absence of political parties;
establishing a party requires the permission of the Interior Ministry under Article 10 of Iran’s
constitution. The standards to obtain approval are high: to date, numerous parties have filed for
permission since the regime was founded, but only those considered loyal to the regime have
been granted (or allowed to retain) license to operate. Some of those authorized include
Ahmadinejad’s “Alliance of Builders of Islamic Iran” party and the “Executives of Construction”
party. Some have been licensed and then banned, such as the two reformist parties, Islamic Iran
Participation Front and the Organization of Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution, which were
formally outlawed in September 2010.
The Presidency
The main directly elected institution is the presidency. The presidency, which is clearly subordinate to the
Supreme Leader, although most. Most presidents during the Islamic republic have sought, generally
unsuccessfully, moreto expand presidential authority relative to that of the Supreme Leader. Still, the
presidency is a
coveted position which provides vast opportunities for the holder of the post to
empower his
political base and to affect day-to-day policy, particularly on economic issues. The president
president appoints and supervises the work of the cabinet, but the Supreme Leader is believed to have
have significant input into security-related cabinet appointments, including ministers of defense,
interior, and intelligence (Ministry of Information and Security, MOIS). Prior to 1989, Iran had
both an elected president as well as a prime minister selected by the elected Majles (parliament).
However, the officials who held these posts during 1981-89 (Ali Khamene’i, who is now
Supreme Leader, and Mir Hossein Musavi, who is now the main opposition leader, respectively)
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were in constant institutional conflict and the constitution was revised in 1989 to eliminate the
post of prime minister.
As the top governing official, the presidency is also responsible for oversight bodies, including
the Anticorruption Headquarters and the General Inspection Organization. The presidency
develops the budgets of cabinet departments and imposes and collects taxes on corporations and
other bodies. However, implementation of all these functions is said to be uneven, and
presidential authority is often undermined by key clerics and allies of the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC) and other powerful institutions. Religious foundations, called “bonyads,”
for example are tax exempt and their import-export operations often unregulated. All government
officials are required to submit annual financial statements to state auditors, but there is no
confirmation that such procedures are followed. Through profits earned from its affiliate
companies, the IRGC is widely known to spend funds, outside its approved government budget,
on arms, technology, support to pro-Iranian movements, and other functions. Such expenditures
are conducted with almost no official oversight.
In a speech on October 16, 2011, Supreme Leader Khamene’i raised the possibility of eliminating
the post of president and restoring the post of prime In a speech on October 16, 2011, Supreme Leader Khamene’i raised the possibility of his
directing another alteration to eliminate the post of president and restore the post of prime
minister. The comments were viewed in the
context of a rift between him and President
Ahmadinejad, discussed below. Khamene’i indicated
the change would not be difficult to
orchestrate, orchestrate—although it would require a change to the
constitution - suggesting this change could conceivably be accomplished before the next scheduled
presidential election in 2013.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses In late July 2012, a parliamentary committee was established to
assess the possibility of such a change, setting up the possibility that the post of president might
be eliminated before the 2013 election, thereby cancelling that national vote.
The Majles
Iran’s Majles, or parliament, consists of 290 seats, all elected. However, there are reserved seats
(one each) for members of Iran’s religious minorities, including Jews and Christians. There is no
“quota” for the number of women to be elected, but women regularly run and win election,
although not in proportion to their percentage of the population. Majles elections occur one year
prior to the presidential elections; the elections for the ninth Majles were held on March 2, 2012,
and the dynamics and outcome of the upcoming contest are discussed below.
Cabinet appointments are subject to confirmation by the Majles (parliament), which also drafts
and acts on legislation. The unicameral Majles in Iran is highly factionalized but, as an institution,
it is far from the “rubber stamp” that characterizes many elected national assemblies in the region,
but it generally has lost institutional disputes to the president. Among its main duties is to
consider and enact a proposed national budget; that review typically takes place each February
and March in advance of the Persian New Year (Nowruz) on March 21.
The Assembly of Experts
Another elected institution, mentioned above, is the Assembly of Experts. It is akin to an electoral
college: it is empowered to choose a new Supreme Leader upon the death of the incumbent, and it
oversees the work of the Supreme Leader and. The Assembly can replace him if necessary, although
invoking that impeachment power would, in most circumstances, be highly controversial. It is
. It is also the body
empowered to amend the constitution. The Assembly has 86 seats, elected to an
eight-year term,
with elections conducted on a provincial basis. It generally meets two times a
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year, for a few days
each. The fourth election for the Assembly was held on December 15, 2006;
after that election,
Rafsanjani, still a major figure having served two terms as president (1989-199719891997), was named
deputy leader of the Assembly. After the death of the leader of the Assembly
(Ayatollah
Meshkini), Rafsanjani was selected its head in September 2007. However, as part of
the broader
power struggles within the regime that have raged since the post-2009 election
uprising,
Rafsanjani was not reelected as Assembly of Experts chair in March 2011. He was
replaced by
aging and infirm compromise candidate Ayatollah Mohammad Reza Mahdavi-Kani.
See Figure 1
for a chart of the Iranian regime.
Recent Elections: First Ahmadinejad Election in 2005
After suffering several presidential election defeats at the hands of President Mohammad
Khatemi and the reformists in the 1997 and 2001 presidential elections, hardliners successfully
moved to regain the sway they held when Khomeini was alive. Conservatives won a majority
(155 out of the 290 Majles seats) in the February 20, 2004, Majles elections (which are always
held one year prior to each presidential election), in large part because of the Council of
Guardians’ disqualification of 3,600 reformist candidates, including 87 Majles incumbents. The
George W. Bush Administration and the Senate (S.Res. 304, adopted by unanimous consent on
February 12, 2004) criticized the elections as unfair because of the disqualifications.
As the reformist faction suffered setbacks, the Council of Guardians narrowed the field of
candidates for the June 2005 presidential elections to 8 out of the 1,014 persons who filed.
Rafsanjani3 was considered the favorite against several opponents more hardline than he is—three
3
Rafsanjani was constitutionally permitted to run because a third term would not have been consecutive with his
previous two terms. In the 2001 presidential election, the Council permitted 10 out of the 814 registered candidates.
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had ties to the Revolutionary Guard: Ali Larijani; Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf; and Tehran mayor
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. In the June 17, 2005, first round, turnout was about 63% (29.4 million
votes out of 46.7 million eligible voters). With 21% and 19.5%, respectively, Rafsanjani and
Ahmadinejad, who did unexpectedly well because of tacit backing from Khamene’i and the Basij
militia arm of the Revolutionary Guard, moved to a , moved to a
runoff. Reformist candidates (Mehdi Karrubi
and Mostafa Moin) fared worse than expected.
Ahmadinejad won in the June 24 runoff, receiving
61.8% to Rafsanjani’s 35.7%. He first took
office on August 6, 2005.
During his first term, splits widened between Ahmadinejad and other conservative members of
his “Principalist” (usulgaran) faction. That rift was evident in the March 2008 Majles elections in
which his base of support fractured and some conservatives ran as an anti-Ahmadinejad bloc.
These splits foreshadowed the broader rift with the Supreme Leaders, discussed below.
Ahmadinejad (Disputed) Reelection on June 12, 2009: Protests Erupt and
Second Term is Riven by Schisms
With splits in Ahmadinejad’s base, prospects for reformists to unseat Ahmadinejad through the
established election process seemed to brighten. In February 2009, when Khatemi indicated a
willingness to run, but he ultimately yielded to and endorsed a fellow reformist, Mir Hossein
Musavi. Musavi was viewed as somewhat less divisive (and therefore more acceptable to the
Supreme Leader) than Khatemi because of Musavi’s service as prime minister during the 19801988 Iran-Iraq War.
3
Rafsanjani was constitutionally permitted to run because a third term would not have been consecutive with his
previous two terms. In the 2001 presidential election, the Council permitted 10 out of the 814 registered candidates.
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A total of about 500 candidates for the June 12, 2009, presidential elections registered their names
during May 5-10, 2009. The Council of Guardians decided on four final candidates on May 20:
Ahmadinejad, Musavi, Mehdi Karrubi, and former Commander-in-Chief of the Revolutionary
Guard Mohsen Reza’i. The Interior Ministry, which runs the election, also instituted an
unprecedented series of one-on-one debates, which including Ahmadinejad’s acrimonious
accusations of corruption against Rafsanjani and against Musavi’s wife. If no candidate received
more than 50% of the vote on June 12, there would have been a runoff one week later.
The challengers and their backgrounds and platforms were as follows.
•
Mir Hosein Musavi. The main reformist candidate. See Table 12.
•
Mehdi Karrubi. See Table 12.
•
Mohsen Reza’i. As noted, commander in chief of the Revolutionary Guard
through the Iran-Iraq War. About 58 years old, he was considered an antiAhmadinejad conservative. Reza’i dropped out just prior to the 2005 presidential
election. He alleged fraud in the 2009 election but later dropped his challenge.
The outcome of the election was always difficult to foresee; polling was inconsistent. Musavi
supporters using social media such as Facebook and Twitter organized large rallies in Tehran, but
pro-Ahmadinejad rallies were large as well. During the campaign, Khamene’i professed
neutrality, but he and Musavi were often at odds during the Iran-Iraq War, when Khamene’i was
president and Musavi was prime minister. Turnout was high at about 85%; 39.1 million valid (and
invalid) votes were cast. The Interior Ministry announced two hours after the polls closed that
Ahmadinejad had won, although in the past results have been announced the day after. The totals
were announced on Saturday, June 13, 2009, as follows.
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•
Ahmadinejad: 24.5 million votes—62.6%
•
Musavi: 13.2 million votes—33.75%
•
Reza’i: 678,000 votes—1.73%
•
Invalid: 409,000 votes—1%
•
Karrubi: 333,600 votes—0.85%
Almost immediately after the results of the election were announced on June 13, 2009, Musavi
supporters began protesting the results as he, Karrubi, and Reza’i asserted outright fraud and
called for a new election. They cited, citing: the infeasibility of counting 40 million votes so quickly; the
quickly and the barring of candidate observers at many polling stations; regime shut down of Internet and text
services; and repression of postelection protests. Khamene’i declared the
results a “divine
assessment,” appearing to certify the results even though formal procedures
require a three-day
complaint period. Some outside analysts said the results tracked pre-election
polls, which showed
strong support for Ahmadinejad in rural areas and among the urban poor.4
“Green Movement” Protest Movement Forms
Continuing to use Facebook and Twitter, and fueled by outrage over regime use of force as
depicted on YouTube, the demonstrations built throughout June 13-19, 2009, largely in Tehran but
4
A paper published by Chatham House and the University of St. Andrews strongly questions how Ahmadinejad’s vote
could have been as large as reported by official results, in light of past voting patterns throughout Iran. “Preliminary
Analysis of the Voting Figures in Iran’s 2009 Presidential Election.” http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk.
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also in other cities. Security forces used varying amounts of force to control them, causing 27
protester deaths (official tally) during that period, with figures from opposition groups running
over 100. The protesters’ hopes of having Khamene’i annul the election were dashed by his major
Friday prayer sermon on June 19 in which he refuted allegations of vast fraud and threatened a
crackdown on further protests. Protesters defied Khamene’i the following day but faced a
crackdown that killed at least 10 protesters. On June 29, 2009, the Council of Guardians tried to
address the complaints by performing a televised recount of 10% of the votes of Tehran’s districts
and some provincial ballots and, finding no irregularities, certified the results. As 2009
progressed, the opposition congealed into the “Green Movement of Hope and Change,” which
later moved well beyond the election issue into a challenge to the regime, as discussed below.
Ahmadinejad’s Second Term: Divisions Within the Regime Increase
As the Green Movement gathered strength in 2009, splits within the regime widened, although
most of the core regime leaders tried to remain outwardly unified. Since 2010, as unrest faded
from the streets, Ahmadinejad has sought to promote the interests of his loyalists and promote
what his critics say is a nationalist version of Islam that limits the authority of Iran’s clerics. This
caused anti-Ahmadinejad hardliners to rally around the Supreme Leader Khamene’i—who
himself is believed suspicious of Ahmadinejad’s allies’ ambitions and ideology—to try to weaken
Ahmadinejad. Ahmadinejad is perceived as promoting the political fortunes of his former chiefof
Ahmadinejad’s perceived favorite has been his former chief-of-staff, Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, to whom he is related through their children’s marriage.
Ahmadinejad is undoubtedly aware that many in the regime want to see antagonists of his, such
4
A paper published by Chatham House and the University of St. Andrews strongly questions how Ahmadinejad’s vote
could have been as large as reported by official results, in light of past voting patterns throughout Iran. “Preliminary
Analysis of the Voting Figures in Iran’s 2009 Presidential Election.” http://www.chathamhouse.org.uk.
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as Ali Larijani or Mohammad Baqr Qalibaf, who are viewed as more moderate, as the next
whom he is related through their children’s marriage This caused anti-Ahmadinejad hardliners to
rally around the Supreme Leader Khamene’i—who himself is believed suspicious of
Ahmadinejad’s allies’ ambitions and ideology—to try to weaken Ahmadinejad. Many in the
regime want to see antagonists of his, particularly moderate-conservatives such as Ali Larijani or
Mohammad Baqr Qalibaf, as the next president in 2013.
The infighting evolved into a rift between Ahmadinejad and Khamene’i, breaking out into the
open in April 2011 when Ahmadinejad dismissed the intelligence minister Heydar Moslehi and
attempted to replace him with a Mashai loyalist. The Supreme Leader reinstated Moslehi, and
Ahmadinejad protested by refusing to attend cabinet meetings from April 24 to May 4, 2011.
Most of the political establishment, including the Revolutionary Guard and Majles, rallied around
the Supreme Leader, forcing Ahmadinejad to
accept Moslehi’s reinstatement and later leading to
the charging of 25 Mashai loyalists with
witchcraft or sorcery. The Majles voted on May 25,
2011, to investigate Ahmadinejad for bribery
in the 2009 election and on June 1, it voted 165-1 to
declare illegal Ahmadinejad’s mid-May 2011
sacking of the oil minister and two other ministers.
Perhaps seeking to prevent the Revolutionary Guard from acting more forcefully against him,
Ahmadinejad appointed Guard official Rostam Ghasemi (commander of its engineering arm,
Khatem ol-Anbiya) as oil minister on July 27, 2011. He was confirmed on August 3, 2011, and
simultaneously took over leadership ofbecame Iran’s representative to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
(OPEC) because Iran holds the rotating leadership seat
Countries (OPEC). Ghasemi is under U.S. financial sanctions
and EU financial and travel
sanctions, although an agreement between OPEC and Austria allows
him to attend the group’s
meetings in Vienna.
In September 2011, the split continued with allegations that a $2.6 billion embezzlement scheme
involving fraudulent letters of credit were facilitated by Mashai—an implied link of the scam to
Ahmadinejad himself. On November 22, 2011, security forces loyal to the (pro-Khamene’i)
judiciary briefly detained the head of official state news agency, the Islamic Republic News
Agency (IRNA), Ali Akbar Javanfekr, who is considered an Ahmadinejad ally. The arrest was
ostensibly for a newspaper he runs publication of an article questioning enforcement of the dress
restrictions on women. On February 7, 2012, the rift escalated further when the Majles, still
mostly populated by those loyal to the Supreme Leader, voted to summon Ahmadinejad for
formal questioning—the first time this has happened since the Islamic revolution. He made the
appearance on March 14, 2012, after the March 2 Majles elections, but the session reportedly was
less contentious than some Iranian experts expected. On July 30, 2012, four people were
sentenced to death in the alleged embezzlement scheme, the first sentences of a total of 39
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persons convicted in the case—the death sentences were considered a further rebuke to
Ahmadinejad.
There are no indications that the political disputes among senior level figures are specifically a
response to economic issues or international sanctions. Well before international sanctions were
expanded in 2010, many middle class Iranians accused Ahmadinejad forof favoring the lower
classes classes
economically by raising some wages and lowering interest rates for poorer borrowers,
cancelling cancelling
some debts of farmers, and increasing some social welfare payments. Poorer Iranians
see see
Ahmadinejad as attentive to their economic plight.
Some believe that key regime constituencies may even benefit from economic sanctions. Major
economic sectors and markets are controlled by the quasi-statal “foundations” (bonyads), run by
religious foundations (bonyads),
mentioned above, run by powerful former officials, and there are special trading privileges for
them and the bazaar
merchants, a key constituency for some conservatives. The same
privileges—and more—
reportedly apply to businesses run by the Revolutionary Guard, as
discussed below, leading to
criticism that the Guard is using its political influence to win business
contracts. Additional
analysis of these issues are discussed in substantial depth analysis is in CRS Report RS20871, Iran
Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
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March 2, 2012, Majles Elections Weaken Ahmadinejad Further Amid Reformist
BoycottMarginalize Ahmadinejad
The 2012 Majles elections arrivedwere held in the context of the schisms among the regime leaders, and
between discussed above, and between
the regime and reformist factions seeking major change. The elections were held in the
context of public nervousness over the degree to which international sanctions are harming Iran’s
currency and Iranians’ daily lives.
Reflecting reduced faith in the fairness
of the elections, during the candidate registration period,
December 24-December 30, 2011, 5,400
Iranians put their names forward to compete. That is
33% less - 33% fewer than those who filed candidacies four
years ago. Only 10% arewere women. The leading
reformist factions have announced that they are boycottingboycotted the elections,
perceiving that the
Council of Guardians was likely to limit voter choice to only hardline
candidates. Perhaps
justifying those fears, the Interior Ministry, the first body to screen
candidates, disqualified 17%
of the candidates as of January 24. The Council of Guardians, the
ultimate arbiter, reinstated some
of those candidates and issued the final candidate list of 3,400
(for the 290 seats) on February 21,
2012. Amid reported worries that the Green Movement might
become active during the campaign
season, the regime tried unsuccessfully to recruit some
reformists into the contest.
After the final candidate list was established, the regime turned to exhortations of nationalist
obligations to try to encourage a large turnout—an outcome that the regime wanted to portray as a
sign of its popularity. The reformist boycott left pro and anti-AhmadinejadantiAhmadinejad hardline factions to
compete against each other, with the winning faction likely to hold an advantage going into the
2013 presidential context. Ahmadinejad and his allies
reportedly concentrated their efforts on
rural areas where Ahmadinejad is relatively popular. The two
two pro-Khamene’i blocs that competed against his
bloc—one centered around Ayatollah
Mesbah-Yazdi (the Front of Stability of the Islamic
Revolution) and another centered around
Assembly of Experts chair Mahdavi-Kani (United Front
of Conservatives, and included likely
2013 presidential candidates Qalibaf and Ali Larijani)—
concentrated their efforts mainly in urban
and suburban areas. These two blocs are considered
loyal primarily to Khamene’i.
The regime announced a turnout of about 65%, which it asserted was a retort to international
pressure and a sign of regime popularity. Most analysts say that Khamene’i loyalists won a clear
majority and control about 75% of the seats in the 9th Majles. However, a reported 40% of the
winners were independents, making their ultimate allegiances unclear. In the May 4, 2012, second
round runoff for 65 seats not determined on March 2, supporters of the Supreme Leader won an
overwhelming 41, with pro-Ahmadinejad candidates winning only 13, and independents taking
11. Some predicted that a former Speaker, Gholam Haddad Adel, would return to the Speaker role
Khamene’i loyalists won a clear majority in it—and in a
May 4, 2012, runoff for seats not determined—and control about 75% of the seats in the ninth
Majles. Gholam Haddad Adel was nominated to return to the speaker role; his prominence is in
part because of his relationship to Khamene’i. His daughter is married to Khamene’i’s son,
Mojtaba,
who is one of his top aides. However, Larijani remains Speaker.
With the elections completed, many experts say the Supreme Leaders has consolidated his
reflecting its confidence in Larijani, the Majles
voted to retain Larijani as speaker in late May 2012.
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Next Presidential Election
Following the Majles elections, many experts concluded that the Supreme Leader had
consolidated his authority and rendered Ahmadinejad virtually irrelevant in his final year in office. The outcome
has also significantly reduced the chances that Ahmadinejad’s ally Masha’i, discussed above, will
run for president in 2013. As noted above, the Supreme Leader has sparked a debate over the
possibility of abolishing the presidency entirely and the Majles elections outcome would ensure
that such an effort would succeed, if the Supreme Leader decides to pursue it.
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office. Assuming that the post of president is retained in the short term and that the election is
held as scheduled in May or June 2013, it is likely that the major candidates will all be supporters
of the Supreme Leader. It is likely that Ahmadinejad’s ally Masha’i, discussed above, will not
run—or be allowed to run—in the election.
The widely mentioned candidates have been Ali Larijani and Mohammad Baqr Qalibaf, both
well-known Khamene’i supporters and discussed in the table above. Of those two, Larijani has
been considered favored. In August 2012, the Supreme Leader’s foreign policy advisor, former
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, expressed interest in running. He is somewhat more
moderate on most policies than either Larijani or Qalibaf, but Velayati has a long and close
association with Khamene’i and would likely have his backing if he runs. Some speculate that
Velayati would be able to garner Khamene’i’s backing for a nuclear compromise with the
international community were he to become president.
A question under debate is whether any reformist figure might run. Some experts believe that the
regime seeks additional legitimacy and will try to induce a reformist, such as former Interior
Minister Abdollah Nuri, to run. A reformist is unlikely to win the election because many
reformists are certain to boycott the vote. Others believe that the Supreme Leader and his
supporters want only pliable allies to run and do not want to risk another uprising if a reformist
leader runs and is declared the loser.
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Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
First non-cleric to be president of the Islamic republic since the assassination of then-president Mohammad Ali Rajai
in August 1981. About 58, he asserts he is a “man of the people,” the son of a blacksmith who lives in modest
circumstances, who would promote the interests of the poor and return government to the original principles of the
Islamic revolution. Has burnished that image as president through regular visits to poor areas and through subsidies
directed at the lower classes. His official biography says he served with the “special forces” of the Revolutionary
Guard, and he served subsequently (late 1980s) as a deputy provincial governor. Although he is a member of the
Builders of Islamic Iran party, he more closely identifies with a Principalist“Principalist” faction composed of former Guard and
Basij (volunteer popular forces) leaders and other hardliners. U.S. intelligence reportedly determined he was not one
of the holders of the 52 American hostages during November 1979-January 1981. Other accounts say Ahmadinejad
believes his mission is to prepare for the return of the 12th Imam—Imam Mahdi—whose return from occultation
would, according to Twelver Shiite doctrine, be accompanied by the establishment of Islam as the global religion.
Earned clerical criticism in May 2008 for again invoking intervention by Imam Mahdi in present day state affairs.
Following limited recount, declared winner of June 12, 2009, election. Well earlier, had been a controversial figure for
inflammatory statements. He attracted significant world criticism for an October 26, 2005, Tehran conference
entitled “A World Without Zionism” by stating that “Israel should be wiped off the map.” In an October 2006
address, Ahmadinejad said, “I have a connection with God.” He insisted on holding a December 2006 conference in
Tehran questioning the Holocaust, a theme he has returned to several times since, including at a September 2007
speech at Columbia University. A U.N. Security Council statement and Senate and House resolutions (H.Res. 523 and
S.Res. 292), passed by their respective chambers, condemned the statement. On June 21, 2007, the House passed
H.Con.Res. 21, calling on the U.N. Security Council to charge Ahmadinejad with violating the 1948 Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide; the Convention includes “direct and public incitement” of
genocide as a punishable offense. On March 6, 2010, Ahmadinejad called the September 11, 2001, attacks on the
United States a “big lie” used to justify intervention in Afghanistan. Was apparent target of an unsuccessful grenade
attack on his motorcade in the city of Hamedan on August 4, 2010. As noted, has been embroiled insteadily lost influence as a result of
a power struggle
with the Supreme Leader since early 2011.
The Opposition
The popular uprising of 2009 constituted the most significant unrest faced by the regime since its
inception in 1979. Many experts on Iran believe that the still seething opposition remains a key
concern of the regime, particularly in the context of successful uprisings in the Arab world in
2011-122012. Still, the regime’s willingness to use force and masswidescale arrests, and the lack of clear
leadership of the protest movement, clouds the opposition’s prospects to mount a sustained return
to the streets. Not all the opposition operates under the Green Movement banner; some opposition
groups in exile or in Iran operate separately, and may be actingothers act to further ethnic or other interests
rather than establish democracy in Iran.
The Green Movement and Its Uprising
The Green Movement, the genesis of which was the post-presidential election protests as
discussed above, constitutes a significant popular opposition. It includes various social groups,
although it is centered around educated, urban youth, intellectuals, and former regime officials.
Perhaps accounting for its failure to challenge the regime over the past two years, it has not to
date incorporated many traditionally conservative groups such as older Iranians and Iranians who
live in rural areas. It furthermore is divided between those who believe the regime can be
reformed and moderated, and those who believe it must be replaced outright by a more secular, or
at least less Islamic, system of government.
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The year 2009 was clearly “the high water mark” of the Green Movement to date. After the initial
post-election daily protests, Green Movement members organized protests around major holidays
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and called openly for the downfall of the regime, rather than its reform. Some of the protests in
late 2009 nearly overwhelmed regime security forces. Large protests were held on the July 9
anniversary of the suppression of the 1999 student riots; the August 5, 2009, official inauguration
of inauguration of
Ahmadinejad; September 18, 2009 (“Jerusalem Day”); November 4, 2009, (30th anniversary of
the takeover of the U.S. embassy in Tehran); and the Ashura Shiite holy day (December 27, 2009).
The The
latter protest, conducted the seventh day after the death of major regime critic Ayatollah
Hossein Hossein
Ali Montazeri, was marked by the seizure and burning of some police vehicles, and the
refusal by
some police to beat protesters; it spread to smaller cities and some clerics participated.
Quiescence in 2010-122012 Despite Arab Spring
The momentum of the Green Movement in late 2009 led some experts to predict the downfall of
the regime, but the movement’s outward activity declined after its demonstration planned for the
February 11, 2010, anniversary of the founding of the Islamic Republic (in 1979) was suppressed.
With weeks to prepare, the regime limited opposition communication and made several hundred
preemptive arrests, as well as executing some oppositionists in January 2010. Minor protests were
held on March 16, 2010, a Zoroastrian holiday (Fire Festival), and there were scattered protests in
major cities on May 1, 2010 (May Day). Musavi and Karrubi called for a huge demonstration on
the June 12, 2010, anniversary of the election, leading to some movement by parliament
hardliners to have them arrested. Sensingbut, sensing regime preparations for repression, the
two publicly
“called off” the protest in order to avoid harm to protesters.
A major question was whether the opposition uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, which toppled
leaders there in January and February 2011, would reinvigorate the Green Movement, which has
used similar social media techniques and has similar grievances. The regime, seeking to parry
such parallels, praised the Tunisian and Egyptian events as inspired by Iran’s 1979 revolution,
while Green Movement leaders compared those uprisings to their uprising in 2009. The question
was answered when Musavi and Musavi and
Karrubi called for protests on February 14, 2011, and there were
numerous clashes with tear-gas-wieldinggaswielding riot police in Tehran and other cities. In but, in advance of that
demonstration, Karrubi and
Musavi were placed under house arrest. Further weekly protests, which
reportedly drew large
numbers of protesters, were held onfrom February 20 and weekly from March 1
, 2011 until Nowruz (March 21, 2011). HoweverBut, no
major demonstrations materialized at the 2011
second anniversary of the June 12, 2009, disputed election.
Despite these setbacks, observers in Iran say the Green Movement remains highly active
underground and is likely to reemerge. It conducted significant protests on the February 14, 2012,
anniversary of the February 14, 2011, protests. This protest came despite the January 2012 regime
arrests of numerous journalists and bloggers. However, no additional protests erupted in the runup to the March 2, 2012, Majles elections, in part because the Green Movement leaders boycotted
the vote and their supporters did not have candidates to champion.
Exiled Opposition Groups: Supporters of the Son of the Late Shah of Iran
Some Iranian outside Iran, including in the United States, want to replace the regime with a
constitutional monarchy led by Reza Pahlavi, the U.S.-based son of the late former Shah and a
U.S.-trained combat pilot. The Shah’s son, who is about 55 years old, has delivered statements
condemning the regime for the post-2009 election crackdown and he has called for international
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governments to withdraw their representation from Tehran. He has some support particularly in
the older generation in Iran, but he may be trying to broaden his following by capitalizing on the
opposition’s growing popularity with Iranian youth.
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As of March 2011, he has been increasingly cooperating with—and possibly attempting to coopt—younger Green Movement figures. In a meeting with the author in June 2011, Pahlavi
indicated that an internationally provided “strike fund” would help Iranian labor rise up against
the regime by protecting their incomes from regime retaliation. He also advocates establishing a
large scale opposition radio station, funded presumably by wealthy Persian Gulf states. He is
supported by Iranian exile-run stations in California.5 A younger brother, Ali Reza Pahlavi,
committed suicide in January 2011.
Exiled Opposition Groups: People’s Mojahedin
Some groups have been committed to the replacement of the regime virtually since its inception,
and have used, or are still using, violence to achieve their objectives. Their current linkages to the Green
Movement Movement
are tenuous, if presentexisting at all, and some indications suggest these movements want to
dominate dominate
any coalition that might topple the regime.
One of the best-known exiled opposition groups is the People’s Mojahedin Organization of Iran
(PMOI).6 Secular and left-leaning, it was formed in the 1960s to try to overthrow the Shah of Iran
and has been characterized by U.S. reports as attempting to blend several ideologies, including
Marxism, feminism, and Islamism, although the organization denies that it ever advocated
Marxism. It allied with pro-Khomeini forces during the Islamic revolution and, according to past
State State
Department reports, supported the November 1979 takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran,
although the group claims that it is the regime that alleged this support in order to discredit the
group with the West. The group was driven into exile when it rose up against the Khomeini
regime in September 1981. Even though it is an opponent of Tehran, since the late 1980s the State
Department has refused contact with the PMOI and its umbrella organization, the National
Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI).
The Question of “De-Listing” the PMOI
The State Department designated the PMOI as a foreign terrorist organization (FTO) in October
19977 and the NCR was named as an alias of the PMOI in the October 1999 re-designation. In
August 14, 2003, the State Department designated the NCR offices in the United States an alias of
the PMOI, and NCR and the Justice Department closed down those offices.
The PMOI’s FTO designation has been widely debated for many years. The State Department’s
annual reports on international terrorism, including the report for 20102011 issued August 18, 2011July 31, 2012,
asserts that the organization—and not just a radical element of the organization as the group
asserts—was responsible for the alleged killing of seven American military personnel and
contract advisers to the former Shah during 1973-1976—including the deputy chief of the U.S.
Military Mission in Tehran. The report also repeats allegations that the group was responsible for
bombings at U.S. government facilities in Tehran in 1972 as a protest of the visit to Iran of thenPresident Richard Nixon, and bombings of U.S. corporate offices in Iran to protest the visit of
5
Kampeas, Ron. “Iran’s Crown Prince Plots Nonviolent Insurrection from Suburban Washington.” Associated Press,
August 26, 2002.
6
Other names by which this group is known is the Mojahedin-e-Khalq Organization (MEK or MKO) and the National
Council of Resistance (NCR).
7
The designation was made under the authority of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (P.L.
104-132).
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contract advisers to the former Shah in 1975-1976. The report also repeats allegations of the
previous year’s report that the group is responsible for bombings at U.S. government facilities in
Tehran in 1972 as a protest of the visit to Iran of then-President Richard Nixon. The State
Department report also list as terrorist acts numerous attacks by the group against regime
officials, facilities in Iran and abroad, and security officers, all prior to 2001. However, the report
Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Secretary of State Kissinger. The State Department report lists as terrorist acts numerous attacks
by the group against regime targets, including major 1981 bombings that killed high ranking
officials, and attacks on government facilities in Iran and abroad, and attacks on security officials
in Iran. However, the report does not list any attacks by the group that purposely targets
civilians—a key distinction that leads
several experts to argue that the group should not be
considered “terrorist.” The State Department
And, the report does not state that the group has, as of mid-2001, fulfilled
pledges to end all use of
violence inside Iran and that there. There are no reports that it has resumedthe group has—or is
planning to - resume those activities. The group’s
alliance with Saddam Hussein’s regime in the
1980s and 1990s has contributed to the U.S.
criticism of the organization.
In challenging its FTO decision, the PMOI also asserts that, by retaining the group on the FTO
list, the United States is unfairly preventing the PMOI from participating in the opposition
movement. The regime accuses the group of involvement in the post-June 2009 presidential
election violence, and some of those tried for mohareb since February 2010 are members of the
organization, according to statements by human rights groups such as Amnesty International.
It also points to recent legal successes in Europe as evidence that it should no longer be
considered an FTO. On January 27, 2009, the European Union (EU) removed the group from its
terrorist group list; the group had been so designated by the EU in 2002. In May 2008, a British
appeals court determined that the group should no longer be considered a terrorist organization on
the grounds that the British government did not provide “any reliable evidence” that the PMOI
would “resort to terrorist activities in the future.” Currently, the governments that still list the
group as a “terrorist organization,” include the United States, Canada, and Australia. In June
2003, France arrested about 170 opposition activists, including Maryam Rajavi (wife of PMOI
founder Masoud Rajavi, whose whereabouts are unknown), the “President-elect” of the NCRI.
She was released and remains based in France, and is frequently received by European
parliamentarians and other politicians in Europe. On May 12, 2011, France dropped charges
against Mrs. Rajavi and 23 other PMOI activists who remained under investigation, saying there
was no evidence the PMOI conducted or backed violence against civilians, but only against
regime personnel. Such action, in the view of the judges, constituted resistance, not terrorism.
As to the current state of consideration of the FTO listing, in July 2008, the PMOI petitioned to
the State Department that its designation be revoked on the grounds that it renounced any use of
terrorism in 2001. The State Department reaffirmed the listing in January 2009 and after a
January 2010 review. On July 16, 2010, the Court of Appeals required the State Department to
review the listing, ruling that the group had not been given proper opportunity to rebut allegations
against it. At a May 5, 2011, House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing, State Department
Coordinator for Counterterrorism Daniel Benjamin said a decision would be made by the end of
2011,8 although that deadline passed. Some sign of success in the group’s campaign came on
On February 29, 2012, when Secretary Clinton, at a House Foreign Affairs Committee
hearing, stated
that a “key factor” in the de-listing decision will be the group’s compliance with
an agreement
that its members leave Camp Ashraf, discussed below. That suggests that the Department has
department has determined that the group qualifies for removal on the technical issues of
involvement in
terrorism. However, the group continued to press in court for a decision to require the Department
8
House Foreign Affairs Committee, Subcommittee on Europe and Eurasia. Overview of Security Issues in Europe and
Eurasia. May 5, 2011.
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to issue a de-listing decision, and the State Department has contested the court actions by saying a
de-listing decision requires careful review of a wide range of classified and other information. A
Court of Appeals hearing was held on May 8, 2012, on the issue. Subsequently, press reports
quoted unnamed Administration officials as saying the State Department is moving to remove the
group from the list, most likely 60 days after the last Camp Ashraf residents relocate (see below).
Some advocate that the United States not only remove the group from the FTO list but also enter
an alliance with the group.
In an effort to obtain a favorable de-listing decision, during 2010 and 2011 supporters of the
organization have reportedly paid several former U.S. officials for panel appearances in which
they supported de-listing the group. H.Res. 60, introduced January 26, 2011, “urges” the
Secretary of
the department to de-list it, and, in early June 2012, the Appeals Court gave the State Department
until October 1, 2012, to decide on the FTO designation, although without prescribing how the
Department should decide. On July 6, 2012, two State Department officials reiterated that the
relocation from Ashraf (see below) is a key consideration in the FTO decision, and that the group
must complete the move, which had stalled (see below). Some press reports in August 2012 say
the Department is likely to decide to retain the FTO designation, even if the group completes its
relocation from Ashraf. Some advocate that the United States not only remove the group from the
FTO list but also enter an alliance with the group.
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In an effort to obtain a favorable de-listing decision, supporters of the organization have
reportedly been paying several former U.S. officials for panel appearances in which they
supported de-listing the group. H.Res. 60, introduced January 26, 2011, “urges” the Secretary of
State to remove the PMOI from the FTO list. It has nearly 100 co-sponsors.
Camp Ashraf Issue
The issue of group members in Iraq is increasingly pressing. U.S. forces attacked PMOI military
installations in Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom (March 2003) and negotiated a ceasefire with
PMOI military elements in Iraq, requiring the approximately 3,400 PMOI fighters to remain
confined to their Ashraf camp near the border with Iran. Its weaponry was placed in storage,
guarded first by U.S. and now by Iraqi personnel. Another 200 Ashraf residents took advantage of
an arrangement between Iran and the ICRC for them to return to Iran if they disavow further
PMOI activities; none is known to have been persecuted since returning.
In July 2004, the United States granted the Ashraf detainees “protected persons” status under the
4th Geneva Convention. However, that designation ended in June 2004 when Iraq formally
reassumed full sovereignty from a U.S.-led occupation authority. The U.S.-led, U.N. supported
security mandate in Iraq was replaced on January 1, 2009, by a bilateral U.S.-Iraq agreement that
limits U.S. flexibility in Iraq. The group long feared that Iraqi control of the camp would lead to
the expulsion of the group to Iran. The Iraqi government tried to calm those fears in January 2009
by saying that it would adhere to all international obligations not to do so, but that trust was
reduced on July 28, 2009, when Iraq used force to overcome resident resistance to setting up a
police post in the camp. Eleven residents of the camp were killed.
The PMOI’s fears for Ashraf residents heightened on July 1, 2010, when the Iraqi Security Forces
assumed full physical control over Ashraf and the U.S. military post near the camp closed,
although U.S. forces in Iraq continued to periodically visit the camp to monitor conditions and
mentor Iraqi forces there. On . On
April 2, 2011, with a U.S. military unit overseeing the rotation, the
Iraqi government changed the
Iraq Security Forces (ISF) brigade that guards Ashraf, triggering
PMOI warnings that the troops might move against Ashraf residents PMOI warnings. The U.S. unit
departed on
April 7, 2011 and clashes between the Iraqi force and camp residents took place on
April 8; U.N. High
Commissioner for Human Rights Navanethem Pillay largely confirmed PMOI
claims that 35
Ashraf residents were killed and that Iraqi forces were at fault. The State
Department issued a
statement attributing the deaths to the actions of Iraq and its military, although noting that the
U.S. government may not have had complete facts about what transpired.9.8
After the clash, Iraqi officials reiterated itstheir commitment to close Ashraf at the end of 2011
(following a full U.S. withdrawal from Iraq), but said such closing would be done in co-operation
9
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2011/04/160404.htm.
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with the United Nations and other international organizations. On May 16, 2011, the United
States offered to help relocate camp residents before Iraq closes it and, in early July 2011, then
U.S. U.S.
Ambassador to Iraq Jim Jeffrey called on the Ashraf residents to disband and seek refugee status
status elsewhere in Iraq as part of a solution. The U.N. High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
declared the
residents “asylum seekers” and offered to assess each resident in an effort to resettle
them them
elsewhere. The top U.N. envoy in Iraq, Martin Kobler, offered to mediate between the
Ashraf Ashraf
residents and the Iraqi government and called on the Iraqi government to postpone its end
of 2011 deadline to close the camp. On September 26, 2011, the EU named Belgian diplomat
Jean De Ruyt as an adviser to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on the Ashraf issue.
The issue clouded the final withdrawal from Iraq, completed on December 18, 2011. Ambassador
Daniel Fried,
deadline to close the camp. Ambassador Daniel Fried was appointed in November 2011 as the Obama Administration’s coordinator on the to
Ashraf issue, testified on December 7, 2011, before the Subcommittee on Oversight and
Investigations of the House Foreign Affairs Committee; he said that the United States was
pressing the Iraqi government for a humane, peaceful resolution of the Ashraf issue, while also
blaming the Ashraf leadership for refusing any relocation plan other than en masse relocation
outside Iraq as refugees. U.S. officials said that adequate food, fuel, and medical supplies were
reaching camp residents, although supporters of the group continued to challenge that assertion.10
In late December 2011, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki showed some flexibility by
announcing that residents would have until as late as April 2012 to relocate. On December 25,
2011,
Obama Administration’s coordinator on the to Ashraf issue.
8
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2011/04/160404.htm.
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In late December 2011, Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki extended the deadline for relocation
to late as April 2012, and the Iraqi government and the United Nations announced agreement to
relocate the residents
to former U.S. military base Camp Liberty, near Baghdad International
Airport. The PMOI, which
had demanded safeguards for their transfer, subsequently announced
acceptance of the deal and
the move to Camp Liberty (renamed Camp Hurriya). About 2,000
Ashraf residents havehad relocated
as of mid-May 2012, and about 1,200 remain at Ashraf. PMOI supporters say that Camp Liberty
conditions are poor and insufficient for the 3,200 eventual residents—the accommodations
consist of trailers left over from the U.S. military’s use of the base. The PMOI supporters report a
shortage of water and electricity, and claim that residents are suffering from a ban by the Iraqi
government on the use of pesticides there. The Iraqi government is also reportedly forbidding
remaining residents from selling their properties still at Ashrafremained at Ashraf, at which
time the PMOI stopped further relocations claiming that conditions at Camp Liberty can’t
accommodate more residents, and issuing other complaints. In mid-June, and again at the July 6,
2012, briefing by Fried and Coordinator for Counterterorrism Daniel Benjamin (mentioned
above), the State Department reiterated that the Secretary of State has linked the PMOI’s
cooperation with the relocation to a decision to take the PMOI from the FTO list, and implied it
would not come off the FTO list unless it completes the move. In mid-August 2012, the PMOI
sought to appear cooperative by resuming the relocation process with another convoy of 400
persons moving to Camp Liberty, leaving 800 still at Ashraf. Other U.S. officials say the group
may be calculating that the group can retain its foothold in Ashraf without jeopardizing its
removal from the FTO list.
The U.N. High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR) is conducting refugee status determinations
for all the residents after they relocate. As of May 10,late August 2012, a few hundred have been
interviewed. Two have left Camp Liberty through their links to European countries, not through
the resettlement process. UNHCR us conducting refugee status determinations for all the
residents after they relocate. As noted above, the Secretary of State has linked the PMOI’s
cooperation with the relocation to a decision to take the PMOI from the FTO list.
In the aftermath of the April 8, 2011, clashes, H.Res. 231 was introduced, calling on the
President to undertake “all necessary and appropriate steps” to ensure the safety and protection of
the Ashraf residents. Another bill, H.Res. 332, introduced June 24, 2011, called for a
congressional investigation of the incident.
10
Author conversations with supporters of the PMOI in Washington, DC, February-April, 2011.
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Armed Groups: Pro-Monarchy Radicals
One issue that has arisen in 2010 is that a pro-monarchist armed group in Iran, called Tondar
(Thunder)/Kingdom Assembly of Iran is accused of conducting attacks inside Iran. One attack, a
bombing of a mosque in Shiraz that took place in April 2008, killed 14 Iranian worshippers,
including some children. There are some allegations that Iranians living in California are
directing the group’s activities in Iran.
Ethnic or Religiously- Based Armed Groups
Some armed groups are operating in Iran’s border areas, and are generally composed of ethnic or
religious minorities. These groups are not known to be cooperating with the mostly Persian
members of the Green Movement. One such group is Jundullah, composed of Sunni Muslims
primarily from the Baluchistan region bordering Pakistan. The region is inhabited by members of
the Baluch minority and is far less developed than other parts of Iran. On the grounds that
Jundullah has attacked civilians in the course of violent attacks in Iran, it was formally placed on
the U.S. of Foreign Terrorist Organizations on November 4, 2010. Some saw the designation as
an overture toward the Iranian government, while others saw it as a sign that the United States
does not support ethnic or sectarian opposition groups that use violence, but only groups that are
committed to peaceful protest.
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As noted in the State Department terrorism report for 2010, released August 18, 2011, since mid2006, it has conducted several successful attacks on Iranian security and civilian officials. One of
its most widely noted terrorist attacks was a May 2009 bombing of a mosque in Zahedan, which it
claimed constituted revenge for the poor treatment of Sunnis in Iran. On October 18, 2009, it
claimed responsibility for killing five Revolutionary Guard commanders during a meeting they
were holding with local groups in Sistan va Baluchistan Province. The regime claimed a major
victory against the group in late February 2010 by announcing the capture of Jundullah’s top
leader, Abdolmalek Rigi. The regime executed him in June 2010, and the group retaliated in July
2010 with another major bombing in Zahedan, which killed 28 persons, including some
Revolutionary Guards. Secretary of State Clinton publicly condemned this bombing. The group is
believed responsible for a December 15, 2010, bombing at a mosque in Chahbahar, also in the
Baluchistan region, that killed 38 persons.
An armed Kurdish group operating out of Iraq is the Free Life Party, known by its acronym
PJAK. Its leader is believed to be Abdul Rahman Hajji Ahmadi, born in 1941, who is a citizen of
Germany and lives in that country. Many PJAK members are said to be women, who support the
organization’s dedication to women’s rights. PJAK was designated by the Treasury Department in
early February 2009 as a terrorism supporting entity under Executive Order 13224, although the
designation statement indicated the decision was based mainly on PJAK’s association with the
Turkish Kurdish opposition group Kongra Gel, also known as the PKK. The five Kurds executed
by Iran’s regime in May 2010 were alleged members of PJAK.
In June 2010, Iran conducted some shelling of reputed PJAK bases inside Iraq, reportedly killing
some Kurdish civilians. It repeated that activity in July 2011. On September 26, 2011, Turkey’s
Prime Minister Erdogan said that Iran and Turkey are planning joint operations against the Iraqbased hideouts of these Kurdish opposition groups.
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Some reports in March 2012 said that PJAK
may have reached a ceasefire agreement with the Iranian regime.
Another militant group, the Ahwazi Arabs, operates in the largely Arab-inhabited areas of
southwest Iran, bordering Iraq. Its activity level appears to have been scant over the past few
years.
Iranian-American Interest Groups
Of the over onemore than 1 million Iranian- Americans of differing ideologies, a vast majority want to see a
change of regime in Tehran. As many as half of all Iranian-Americans are based in the Los
Angeles area, and
a change of regime in Tehran. By all accounts, a large number support the Green Movement,
although many Iranian Americans are not politically active and focus on their businesses and
personal issues. As many as half of all Iranian Americans are based in the Los Angeles area, and
they run at least two dozen small-scale radio or television stations that
broadcast into Iran. A growing number of them are supporting or affiliated with the Green
Movement. Many Many
of them protest Ahmadinejad’s visits to the United Nations General Assembly
every September,
and many others sport green bracelets showing support for the Green
Movement.
National Iranian-American Council, Public Affairs Alliance of
Iranian- Iranian
Americans (PAAIA) and Others
Some U.S.-based organizations, such as The National Iranian -American Council (NIAC) and the
Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian- Americans (PAAIA), are not necessarily seeking change within
Iran. The stated mission of NIAC, composed largely of Iranian Americans, is to promote
discussion of U.S. policy. The group advocates engagement with Iran, supports easing some U.S.
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sanctions against Iran, opposes removing the People’s Mojahedin (see below) from the U.S. list
of terrorist organizations, and has warned that some U.S. experts are seeking to convince the
Administration to take military action against Iran. These positions have led some experts and
commentators to criticize NIAC as sympathetic to or even supportive of Iran’s regime. On the
allege, although without providing supporting evidence, that it is a front for the
Iranian regime. On the other hand, NIAC has criticized the regime’s human rights abuses.
PAAIA’s mission is to discuss issues affecting Iranian Americans, such as discrimination caused
by public perceptions of association with terrorism or radical Islam. Some observers believe it has
been less active in 2011-122012 than it was in the two previous years, perhaps because of desertions
by some who wanted PAAIA to take a strongstronger stand against the regime in Tehran.
Another U.S.-based group, the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, appears
supportive of the Green Movement. Believed close to Karrubi and Musavi, it is headed by Hadi
Ghaemi. Former CNN anchor Rudi Bahktiar, a relative of the Shah’s last prime minister,
Shahpour Bakhtiar, has been part of the group. She is an adviser at the Voice of America’s widely
criticized Persian Persian
News Network (PNN), discussed further below.
Other Human Rights Practices
International criticism of Iran’s human rights practices predates and transcends the crackdown
against the Green Movement. Table 23, which discusses the regime’s record on a number of
human rights issues, is based largely on the latest State Department human rights report (for
2010: April 8, 2011)11 and 2011:
May 24, 2012)9 and the State Department International Religious Freedom report (for JulyDecember 2010: September 13, 2011). These reports cite Iran for a wide range of serious abuses,
11
Text is at http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/hrrpt/2010/nea/154461.htm.
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including unjust executions (312 for 2010, according to the State Department human rights
report),
abuses—aside from its suppression of political opponents—including unjust executions,
politically motivated abductions by security forces, torture, arbitrary arrest and detention,
and arrests of women’s rights activists. On February 17, 2011, the Senate adopted S.Res. 73
(unanimous consent) “express[ing] strong support for the people of Iran in their peaceful calls for
a representative and responsive democratic government that respects [human] rights.” and
arrests of women’s rights activists.
Criticism of Iran’s Record in U.N. Bodies
The post-election crackdown on the Green Movement was a focus of the U.N. four-year review of
Iran’s human rights record that took place in mid-February 2010 in Geneva. Despite the criticism,
on April 29, 2010, Iran acceded to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women, after earlier
dropping its attempt to win a seat on the higher-profile U.N. General Assembly Human Rights
Council. Still, on June 10, 2010, Iran was formally questioned by the U.N. Human Rights Council
about its record. On November 19, 2010, by a vote of 74-48, with 59 countries abstaining, the
General Assembly’s “Third Committee” expressed “deep concern” about Iran’s forms of
punishments and other abuses.
Iran has an official body, the High Council for Human Rights, headed by former Foreign Minister
Mohammad Javad Larijani (brother of the Majles speaker and the judiciary head). However, as
noted in the State Department human rights report, the Council largely acts to defend the
government’s actions against dissidents to outside bodies and the Iranian public, and does not act
as an oversight body urging that Iran meet international standards of human rights practices.
9
Text is at http://www.state.gov/j/drl/rls/hrrpt/humanrightsreport/index.htm?dynamic_load_id=186425#wrapper.
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Special U.N. Rapporteur Reestablished
On February 28, 2011, in remarks at the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva, Secretary
Clinton said the United States is working with Sweden and other countries to reconstitute a
Special Rapporteur to report on Iranian human rights abuses. Such a mission existed during the
from 1988-2002, but Iran tended to offer little, if any, cooperation with the various Rapporteurs
who investigated the issue during that time. On March 24, 2011, the U.N. Human Rights Council
voted, 22 to 7, to reestablish a Special Rapporteur for Iran’s human rights situation. On June 17,
2011, former Maldives Foreign Minister Ahmad Shaheed was appointed to this role, but he has
said Iran has
not, to date, indicated whether it would provideprovided him the requested cooperation such as permitting him to
conduct fact-finding visits to Iran. The Rapporteur issued his first report on September 23, 2011
(U.N. Document Number A/66/374: “The Situation of Human Rights in the Islamic Republic of
Iran”), and a subsequent report on March 6, 2012 (A/HRC/19/66). Both reports cite many of the
same abuses as do the State Department reports mentioned above.
On November 21, 2011, the U.N. General Assembly’s Third Committee, by a vote of 86-32, with
59 abstentions, approved a resolution asserting that Iran must cooperate with the efforts of the
Special Rapporteur to assess the human rights situation in Iran. The full Assembly approved the
resolution on December 19, 2011, by a vote of 89-30 with 64 abstentions.
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Table 2Table 3. Human Rights Practices: General Categories
Group/Issue
Regime Practice/Recent Developments
Ethnic and
Religious
Breakdown
Persians are about 51% of the population, and Azeris (a Turkic people) are about 24%. Kurds
are about 7%-15% of the population, and about 3% are Arab. Of religions, Shiite Muslims are about
about 90% of the Muslim population and Sunnis are about 10%. About 2% of the population is nonMuslim
non-Muslim, including Christians, Zoroastrians (an ancient religion in what is now Iran),
Jewish,
and Baha’i.
Media Freedoms
Even before the 2009 unrest, Iran’s Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance had an active
program of blocking pro-reform websites and blogs, and had closed hundreds of reformist
newspapers, although many have tended to reopen under new names. The State Department
human rights report discusses numerous journalists, bloggers, and editors that have been
arrested, along with the news organizations they worked for. The report discusses censorship
and monitoring of the Internet. In early 2012, Iran has announced it, as well as Iran’s efforts to
control and monitor Internet usage. Iran is setting up a national
network that would have a
virtual monopoly on Internet service for Iranians, and increase the
regime’s ability to monitor use.
Labor
Restrictions
Independent unions are technically legal but not allowed in practice. The sole authorized
national labor
organization is a state-controlled “Workers’ House” umbrella.
Women
Women can vote and run in parliamentary and municipal elections. Iranian women can drive,
and many, drive, and work outside
the home, including owning their own businesses. Nine women are in
the Majles. Regime enforceshas
enforced requirement that women be covered in public, generally with a
garment called a chador
chador, but enforcement has reportedly relaxed in 2011-2012. Women do not have inheritance
inheritance or divorce rights equal to that of men, and
their court testimony carries half the weight of a male. In March 2007, the regime arrested 31
women activists who were protesting the arrest in 2006 of several other women’s rights
activists; all but 3 of the 31 were released by March 9. In May 2006, the Majles passed a bill
calling for increased public awareness of Islamic dress; the bill did not contain a requirement
that members of Iran’s minority groups wear badges or distinctive clothing
weight of a male’s.
Religious
Freedom
Each year since 1999, the State Department religious freedom report has named Iran as a
“Country of Particular Concern” under the International Religious Freedom Act (IRFA). No
sanctions have been added under IRFA, on the grounds that Iran is already subject to
extensive U.S. sanctions. Continued deterioration in religious freedom noted in the
International Religious Freedom report for the second half of 2010, which stated that
“Government rhetoric and actions created a threatening atmosphere for nearly all non-Shia
religious groups, most notably for Bahais, as well as Sufi Muslims, evangelical Christians, Jews,
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Group/Issue
Regime Practice/Recent Developments
and Shia groups that do not share the government's official religious views.”
In late September 2011, a Protestant pastor who was born a Muslim, Youcef Nadarkhani, was
sentenced to death for refusing to recant his Christian faith. White House, State Department,
and many human rights groups have called for an overturning of the sentence, which was
reaffirmed in late February 2012 and could be carried out at any timebut has not been carried out to date. On February 29, the
2012,
the House debated but postponed action on H.Res. 556 demanding he be released.
Baha’is
Iran is repeatedly cited for virtually unrelenting repression of the Baha’i community, which
Iran’s Shiite Muslim clergy views as a heretical sect, which numbers about 300,000-350,000.
At least 30 Baha’is remain imprisoned. Several were sentenced to death in February 2010.
Seven Baha’i leaders were sentenced to 20 years in August 2010; their sentences were
reduced in September 2010 to 10 years but the full sentence was restored on appeal. In the
1990s, several Baha’is were executed for apostasy (Bahman Samandari in 1992; Musa Talibi in
1996; and Ruhollah Ruhani in 1998). Another, Dhabihullah Mahrami, was in custody since
1995 and died of unknown causes in prison in December 2005. Virtually every year,
congressional resolutions have condemned Iran’s treatment of the Baha’is.
Jews
Along with Christians, a “recognized minority,” with one seat in the Majles, the 30,000member Jewish community (the largest in the Middle East aside from Israel) enjoys somewhat
more freedoms than Jewish communities in several other Muslim states. However, in practice
the freedom of Iranian Jews to practice their religion is limited, and Iranian Jews remain
reluctant to speak out for fear of reprisals. During 1993-1998, Iran executed five Jews
allegedly spying for Israel. In June 1999, Iran arrested 13 Jews (mostly teachers, shopkeepers,
and butchers) from the Shiraz area that it said were part of an “espionage ring” for Israel.
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Group/Issue
Regime Practice/Recent Developments
After an April-June
After a 2000 trial, 10 of the Jews and 2 Muslim accomplices were convicted (July
1, 2000), receiving and given
sentences ranging from 4 to 13 years. An appeals panel reduced the
sentences, and all were
released by April 2003. On November 17, 2008, Iran hanged
businessman Ali Ashtari (a
Muslim), who was arrested in 2006, for allegedly providing
information on Iran’s nuclear program to Israel.
Kurds/Other
Sunni Muslims
The cited reports note other discrimination against Sufis and Sunni Muslims, although abuses
against Sunnis could reflect that minority ethnicities, including Kurds, are mostly Sunnis. No
reserved seats for Sunnis in the Majles but several are usually elected in their own right. Five
Kurdish oppositionists executed in May 2010 and more in January 2011.
Human
Trafficking
The June 27, 2011 (latest), State Department “Trafficking in Persons” report continued to
place Iran in Tier 3 (worst level) for failing to take significant action to prevent trafficking in
persons. Among many different examples of activity in the report, Iranian women and girls are
trafficked for sexual exploitation to other countries, sometimes with the active involvement
of Iranian
program to Israel.
Azeris
Azeris are one-quarter of the population and are mostly well integrated into government and
society, but many Azeris complain of ethnic and linguistic discrimination. Each year, there are
arrests of Azeri students and cultural activists who press for their right to celebrate their
culture and history. The government generally accuses these activists of promoting revolution
or separatism.
Kurds
There are about 5 million-11 million Kurds in Iran. The Kurdish language is not banned, but
schools do not teach it and Kurdish political organizations, activists, and media outlets are
routinely scrutinized, harassed, and closed down for supporting greater Kurdish autonomy.
Several Kurdish oppositionists have been executed since 2010.
Arabs
Ethnic Arabs are prominent in southwestern Iran, particularly Khuzestan Province. The 2
million to 4 million Arabs in Iran encounter oppression and discrimination, including torture
and a prohibition on speaking or studying Arabic.
Human
Trafficking
The June 19, 2012 (latest), State Department “Trafficking in Persons” report, for the seventh
consecutive year, places Iran in Tier 3 (worst level) for failing to take significant action to
prevent trafficking in persons. Iranian women, boys, and girls are trafficked for sexual
exploitation in Iran as well to Pakistan, the Persian Gulf, and Europe, possibly with the
involvement of religious leaders and immigration officials.
Executions Policy
Human rights groups say executions have increased sharply since the dispute over the June
2009 election. The State Department human rights report says there were 312 executions in
2010, and 135 during January 1-May 11, 2011. Iran executed six persons under the age of 18
in 2008, the only country to do so. Asfor 2011 said there were between
275 and 700 executions during 2011—disparate figures cited by various human rights
organizations. The numbers included several persons for crimes committed when they were
minors. Iran is a party to the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights and the
Convention on the Rights of the Child, Iran is obligated to cease them.
In a trend that sparked alarm from U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay,
during January 2011, Iran reportedly executed 66 persons, including some for alleged
participation in anti-regime activitiesand is obligated to cease the executions of minors.
Stonings
In 2002, the head of Iran’s judiciary issued a ban on stoning. However, Iranian officials later
called that directive “advisory” and could be ignored by individual judges. On December 2,
2008, Iran confirmed the stoning deaths of two men in Mashhad who were convicted of
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Group/Issue
Regime Practice/Recent Developments
adultery. A sentence of stoning against a 45-year-old woman (Sakineh Ashtiani) convicted of
adultery and assisting in the murder of her husband was set aside for further review in July
2010. An Iranian parliamentarian said on January 17, 2011, the stoning sentence was dropped
but she would serve 10 years in prison.
Azeris
Azeris are one-quarter of the population, but they complain of ethnic and linguistic
discrimination. In 2008, there were several arrests of Azeri students and cultural activists who
were pressing for their right to celebrate their culture and history.
Arrests of Dual
Nationals and
Foreign
Nationals/Robert
Levinson/ the
American Hikers
An Iranian American journalist, Roxanna Saberi, was arrested in January 2009 allegedly
because her press credentials had expired; was charged on April 9, 2009, with espionage for
possessing an Iranian military document. Sentenced to eight years in jail, she was released on
appeal on May 12, 2009, and left Iran. Another dual national, Esha Momeni, arrested in
October 2008, is unable to leave Iran.
U.S. national, former FBI agent Robert Levinson, remains missing after a visit in 2005 to Kish
Island. In December 2011, his family released a one-year old taped statement by him and
appealed for help in obtaining his release, although Iran said it does not know where he is.
Hikers. Three American hikers were arrested in August 2009 after crossing into Iran, possibly
mistakenly, from a hike in northern Iraq. On September 15, 2010, after Sara Shourd reported
possible health issues, she was released on $500,000 bail, and her departure was brokered by
Oman. Her fiancé, Shane Bauer, and Josh Fattal, remained incarcerated. On September 21,
2011, on the eve of Ahmadinejad’s address to the U.N. General Assembly, the two were
released on $500,000 bail each, a sum reportedly paid by Oman.
Sources: Most recent State Department reports on human rights (April 8, 2011)May 24, 2012, trafficking in persons (June 27,
201119,
2012), and on religious freedom (September 13, 2011). http://www.state.gov; U.N. Special Rapporteur report
dated September 23, 2011 (U.N. document no. A/66/374).
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Iran’s Strategic Capabilities and Weapons of Mass
Destruction Programs
The Obama Administration views Iran as one of the key national security challenges facing the
United States. This assessment, made clear repeatedly by senior U.S. officials and reiterated in a
expressed in a
January 2012 U.S. national defense guidance issued in January 2012, is based largely on suspicions about Iran’s
nuclear nuclear
and missile programs and its perceived intent and ability to counter U.S. objectives in the region.
A nuclear
armed Iran, in the view of U.S. and Persian Gulf state officials, would be more
assertive than it now is in trying to
influence the foreign and energy policies of the Persian Gulf
states and in supporting countries
and movements that oppose U.S. interests and allies. Iran
would likely conclude that the United
States would hesitate to take military action against—or
undertake any action to try to change the
regime of—a nuclear armed Iran. A nuclear-armed Iran
would also likely cause a scramble among
other countries in the region to try to acquire a countervailing nuclear
capability—stimulating a nuclear
arms race in one of the world’s most volatile regions. Israel
views an Iranian nuclear weapon as a threat to its existence.
Others see Iran’s foreign policy as moreprimarily defensive. Some believe Iran’s core national security
goals are to protect itself from foreign, primarily U.S., interference or attack; to prevent any
efforts to cut off its ability to export oil; and to exert regional influence that Iran believes is
commensurate with its size and concept of nationhood.
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Conventional Military/Revolutionary Guard/Qods Force
Iran’s armed forces are extensive but they are widely considered relatively combat ineffective in a
head-on confrontation against a well-trained, sophisticated military such as that of the United
States or even a major regional power such as Turkey. Iran is believed to largely lack the
logistical ability to deploy ground forces much beyond its borders. On September 28, 2011, the
commander of Iran’s regular navy, Rear Admiral Habibollah Sayyari, said it would send naval
ships off the U.S. Atlantic coast, although Iran’s ability to implement that deployment effectively
enough to cause any U.S. concern was immediately questioned by most experts as well as White
House spokesperson Jay Carney. The Iranian armed forces are sufficiently effective to deter or
fend off any threats, should they emerge, from Iran’s weaker neighbors such as post-war Iraq,
Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Afghanistan.
A more immediate consideration isHowever, a 2012 Defense
Department report, required by P.L. 111-84, reported growing lethality and survivability of Iran’s
ballistic and cruise missiles, suggesting the Defense Department assesses a higher level of
conventional threat from Iran as compared to a similar DOD report in 2010.10 The 2012
assessment raises the question of whether Iran possesses the capability to close the strategic
Strait Strait
of Hormuz, where about one-third of all seaborne traded oil flows—an issue that has gained
greater urgency in 2012 astraded oil flows. This question gained greater
urgency in December 2011 and January 2012 when several Iranian leaders and commanders
talked openly of trying to do so if sanctions were imposed on Iran’s ability to export oil.
Scenarios for such Iranian action are discussed later in the section on military optionsas a
retaliation for international sanctions against Iran’s oil exports. The Iranian armed forces are
sufficiently effective to deter or fend off any threats, should they emerge, from Iran’s weaker
neighbors such as post-war Iraq, Turkmenistan, Azerbaijan, and Afghanistan.
Organizationally, Iran’s armed forces are divided to perform functions appropriate to their roles in
Iran. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC, known in Persian as the Sepah-e-Pasdaran
Enghelab Islami)1211 controls the Basij (Mobilization of the Oppressed) volunteer militia that
enforces adherence to Islamic customs and has has
been the main instrument to repress the
postelectionGreen Movement protests in Iran. The IRGC and the regular military (Artesh) report to a joint
12
For a more extensive discussion of the IRGC, see Katzman, Kenneth. “The Warriors of Islam: Iran’s Revolutionary
Guard,” Westview Press, 1993.
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military (Artesh) report to a joint headquarters, headed by Dr. Hassan Firuzabadi. The Artesh has
no role in internal security and is
deployed mainly at bases outside major cities.
The IRGC Navy and regular Navy (Islamic
Republic of Iran Navy, IRIN) are distinct forces; the
IRIN has responsibility for the Gulf of
Oman, whereas the IRGC Navy has responsibility for the
closer-in Persian Gulf and Strait of
Hormuz. The regular Air Force controls most of Iran’s combat
aircraft, whereas the IRGC Air
Force has come to focus primarily on developing Iran’s ballistic
missile capabilities.
Iran’s armed forces have few formal relationships with foreign militaries, but Iran and India have
a “strategic dialogue” and some Iranian naval officers reportedly have undergone some training in
India. Most of Iran’s other military-to-military relationships, such as with Russia, Ukraine,
Belarus, North Korea, and a few others, generally center on Iranian arms purchases or upgrades,
although such activity is now banned by U.N. Resolution 1929 of June 2010. This assessment
was presented in the Defense Department’s mandated Unclassified Report on Military Power of
Iran released in April 2010.13
Table 3. Iran’s Conventional Military Arsenal
Military PersonnelIn early September
2012, Iran and North Korea signed a new agreement to cooperate on science and technology,
raising concerns about potential additional North Korean support to Iran’s nuclear program.
10
Department of Defense. Annual Report on Military Power of Iran. April 2012. For the 2010 report, see
http://media.washingtontimes.com/media/docs/2010/Apr/20/Iran_Military_Report.pdf. The reports are required by
§1245 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2010 (P.L. 111-84).
11
For a more extensive discussion of the IRGC, see Katzman, Kenneth. “The Warriors of Islam: Iran’s Revolutionary
Guard,” Westview Press, 1993.
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Table 4. Iran’s Conventional Military Arsenal
Military Personnel: 460,000+. Regular ground force is about 220,000, Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) ground
force is about 130,000. Remainder are regular and IRGC navy (18,000 and 20,000 personnel respectively) and Air
Forces (52,000 regular Air Force personnel and 5,000 Guard Air Force personnel. ) About 12,000 air defense.
Security Forces: About 40,000-60,000 law enforcement forces on duty, with another 600,000 Basij
security/paramilitary forces available for combat or internal security missions.
Tanks: 1,800+ Includes 480 Russian-made T-72
Ships: 100+ (IRGC and regular Navy) Includes 4 Corvette; 18 IRGC-controlled Chinese-made patrol boats, several
hundred small boats.) Also has 3 Kilo subs (reg. Navy controlled)
Ship-launched cruise missiles. Iran is able to arm its patrol boats with Chinese-made C-802 cruise missiles. Iran
also has Chinese-supplied Seerseekers and C-802’s emplaced along Iran’s coast.
Midget Subs.. 2012 DOD report says Iran may have acquired
additional ships and submarines over the past two years, but does not stipulate a supplier, if any.
Midget Subs: Iran has been long said to possess several small subs, possibly purchased assembled or in kit form from
North Korea. Iran claimed on November 29, 2007, to have produced a new small sub equipped with sonar-evading
technology, and it claimed to deploy four Iranian-made “Ghadir class” subs to the Red Sea in June 2011.
Surface-to-Air Missiles (SAMs): 150+ I-Hawk plus possibly some Stinger
Combat Aircraft: 330+ Includes 25 MiG-29 and 30 Su-24. Still dependent on U.S. F-4’s, F-5’s and F-14 bought during
during Shah’s era.
Anti-aircraft missile systems.Missile Systems: Russia delivered to Iran (January 2007) 30 anti-aircraft missile systems (Tor M1),
worth over $1 billion. In September 2006, Ukraine agreed to sell Iran the Kolchuga radar system that can improve
Iran’s detection of combat aircraft. In December 2007, Russia agreed to sell the highly capable S-300 (also known as
SA-20 “Gargoyle”) air defense system, which would greatly enhance Iran’s air defense capability. The value of the deal
is estimated at $800 million. The system is a ground-to-air missile whose sale to Iran would, according to most
experts, not technically violate the provisions of U.N. Resolution 1929, because the system is not covered in the
“U.N. Registry on Conventional Arms. However, on September 22, 2010, Russian President Medvedev signed a
decree banning the supply of the system to Iran, asserting that its provision to Iran is banned by Resolution 1929. In
November, Iran claimed to have deployed its own version (Mersad) of the Russian S-200 air defense system and said
in September 2012 that it has completed 30% of a missile defense network similar to the S-300. In . In
August 2011, Iran
sued Russia at the International CounrtCourt of Justice for non-delivery of the system.
Defense Budget.: About 3% of GDP
Sources: IISS Military Balance—Section on Middle East and North Africa, and various press reports; April 2010
and April 2012 DOD reports on military power of Iran,” cited earlier.
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DOD report on “Military Power of Iran,” cited earlier.
13
For text, see http://media.washingtontimes.com/media/docs/2010/Apr/20/Iran_Military_Report.pdf. The report is
required by §1245 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2010 (P.L. 111-84).
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Table 45. The Revolutionary Guard
The IRGC is generally loyal to Iran’s hardliners politically and is clearly more politically influential than is Iran’s regular
military, which is numerically larger, but was held over from the Shah’s era. IRGC influence has grown sharply as the
regime has relied on it to suppress dissent to the point where Secretary of State Clinton sees it as wielding
preponderant influence. As described in a 2009 Rand Corporation study,“ Founded by a decree from Ayatollah
Khomeini shortly after the victory of the 1978-1979 Islamic Revolution, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps
(IRGC) has evolved well beyond its original foundations as an ideological guard for the nascent revolutionary regime.
Today the IRGC functions as an expansive socio-political-economic conglomerate whose influence extends into
virtually every corner of Iranian political life and society. Bound together by the shared experience of war and the
socialization of military service, the Pasdaran have articulated a populist, authoritarian, and assertive vision for the
Islamic Republic of Iran that they maintain is a more faithful reflection of the revolution’s early ideals. The IRGC’s
presence is particularly powerful in Iran’s highly factionalized political system, in which [many senior figures] hail from
the ranks of the IRGC. Outside the political realm, the IRGC oversees a robust apparatus of media resources,
training activities, education programs designed to bolster loyalty to the regime, prepare the citizenry for homeland
defense, and burnish its own institutional credibility vis-à-vis other factional actors.”
Through its Qods (Jerusalem) Force, the IRGC has a foreign policy role in exerting influence throughout the region
by supporting pro-Iranian movements, as discussed further below. The Qods Force numbers approximately 10,00015,000 personnel who provide advice, support, and arrange weapons deliveries to pro-Iranian factions in Lebanon,
Iraq, Persian Gulf states, Gaza/West Bank, Afghanistan, and Central Asia. It also operates a worldwide intelligence
network to give Iran possible terrorist option and to assist in procurement of WMD-related technology. The Qods
Force commander, Brigadier General Qassem Soleimani, is said to have his own independent channel to Supreme
Leader Khamene’i, bypassing the IRGC and Joint Staff command structure. The Qods Force commander during 19881995 was Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi, confirmed as defense minister on September 3, 2009. He led the Qods
Force when it allegedly assisted two bombings of Israeli and Jewish targets in Buenos Aires (he is wanted by Interpol
for a role in the 1994 bombing there); recruited Saudi Hezbollah activists later accused of the June 1996 Khobar
Towers bombing; and assassinated Iranian dissident leaders in Europe in the early 1990s.
IRGC leadership developments are significant because of the political influence of the IRGC. On September 2, 2007,
Khamene’i named Mohammad Ali Jafari as commander in chief of the Guard; Jafari is considered a hardliner against
political dissent and increasingly at odds with Ahmadinejad in the context of the Ahmadinejad-Khamene’i power
struggle. The Basij reports to the IRGC commander in chief; its leader is Brigadier General Mohammad Reza Naqdi. It
operates from thousands of positions in Iran’s institutions. Command reshuffles in July 2008 integrated the Basij more
closely with provincially based IRGC units and increased the Basij role in internal security. In November 2009, the
regime gave the IRGC’s intelligence units greater authority, perhaps surpassing those of the Ministry of Intelligence, in
monitoring dissent. The IRGC Navy has responsibility to patrol the Strait of Hormuz and the regular Navy has
responsibility for the broader Arabian Sea and Gulf of Oman (deeper waters further off the coast).
As noted, the IRGC is also increasingly involved in Iran’s economy, acting through a network of contracting
businesses it has set up, most notably Ghorb (also called Khatem ol-Anbiya, Persian for “Seal of the Prophet”). Active
duty IRGC senior commanders reportedly serve on Ghorb’s board of directors and its commander, Rostam
Ghasemi, became oil minister in August 2011. In September 2009, the Guard bought a 50% stake in Iran
Telecommunication Company at a cost of $7.8 billion. In the past five years, Guard affiliated firms have won 750 oil
and gas and construction contracts, and the Guard has its own civilian port facilities. However, questions arose about
the IRGC firms’ capabilities in July 2010 when Ghorb pulled out of a contract to develop part of the large South Pars
gas field, citing the impact of expanded U.S. and international sanctions (which might have caused foreign partner
firms to refuse to cooperate with Ghorb).
On October 21, 2007, the Treasury Department designated several IRGC companies as proliferation entities under
Executive Order 13382. Also that day, the IRGC as a whole, the Ministry of Defense, several IRGC commanders, and
several Iranian banks were sanctioned under that same executive order. Simultaneously, the Qods Force was named
as a terrorism supporting entity under Executive Order 13224. These orders freeze the U.S.-based assets and
prevent U.S. transactions with the named entities, but these entities are believed to have virtually no U.S.-based
assets. On June 9, 2011, the IRGC and Basij were named as human rights abusers under Executive Order 13553, with
the same penalties as the above Executive Orders.
Sources: Frederic Wehrey et al. “The Rise of the Pasdaran.” Rand Corporation. 2009. Katzman, Kenneth. “The
Warriors of Islam: Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.” Westview Press, 1993; Dept. of the Treasury.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Nuclear Program and Related International Diplomacy
International attention to Iran’s nuclear program intensified in late 2002, when Iran confirmed
PMOI allegations that Iran was building two facilities that could potentially be used to produce
fissile material useful for a nuclear weapon: a uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and a heavy
water production plant at Arak,1412 considered ideal for the production of plutonium.
The United States and its partners state that they accept Iran’s right to pursue peaceful uses of
nuclear energy, but that Iran must verifiably demonstrate that its nuclear program is for only those
purposes. Iran has been producing low-enriched uranium (3.5% - -5%, suitable only for electricity
production) since 2002, and more recently has been enriching to 20% (which Iran says is being
used to produce medical isotopes), as discussed below. To construct an actual nuclear weapon,
Iran would have to
produce highly enriched uranium (90%+) and master the complicated
capability to trigger a
nuclear detonation.
Iran’s Nuclear Intentions and the November 8, 2011, IAEA Report15Intentions13
U.S. officials have stated on several occasions in 2012 that the U.S.United States believes Iran has
not, to date,
made a decision to construct a nuclear weapon. However, International Atomic
Energy Agency
(IAEA) reports indicate that Iran has not satisfactorily addressed IAEA
information that Iran
might have a nuclear weapons program.1614 Several pre-2011 IAEA reports
describe Iranian
documents that show a possible involvement of Iran’s military in the program.
This issue
garnered heightened attention after the IAEA released its November 8, 2011, report
that contained
an extensive annex laying out the IAEA’s information on Iran’s apparent efforts to
acquire the
knowledge required to weaponize highly enriched uranium, and on some possible
facilities Iran
had constructed that could be used for that effort. The annex discussed the IAEA’s
sources,
purported foreign scientific assistance to the experimentation, and Iran’s management structure
structure for a weapons program. Based on the November 8 report, on November 18, 2011, the IAEA
Board of
Governors adopted a resolution expressing “deep and increasing concern” about Iran’s
nuclear nuclear
program. The vote was 32 in favor, 2 against (Cuba, Ecuador), and 1 abstention
(Indonesia).
After repeatedly refusing to discuss the IAEA information, in January 2012 Iran agreed to host an
IAEA team to discuss the allegations during January 29-31, 2012. That visit, as well as a
subsequent IAEA visit during February 20-21, 2012, did not satisfy the IAEA on the question of
Iran’s nuclear weapons research. In particular, Iran did not allow the IAEA team, in either trip, to
visit the Parchin military base where the IAEA suspects some research on nuclear explosive
technology may have taken place. The site was inspected twice in 2005. On March 6, 2012, Iran
said it would allow at least one new IAEA visit to Parchin, but that visit has not taken place, to
date. In April 2012, the Institute for Science and International Security reported that Iran may
have tested a nuclear trigger at Parchin some time in the past.
14IAEA Director Yukiya
Amano, following an unexpected visit to Iran on May 21, 2012, announced an agreement in
principle under which Iran would allow inspections of Parchin and clear up outstanding questions
about its suspected nuclear weapons design work. However, amid IAEA accusations that Iran
may have cleaned up parts of the Parchin facility, no pact was finalized and IAEA-Iran talks to
make the agreement final broke down in late August 2012.
12
In November 2006, the IAEA, at U.S. urging, declined to provide technical assistance to the Arak facility on the
grounds that it was likely for proliferation purposes.
1513
Text of the report is at http://isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/IAEA_Iran_8Nov2011.pdf.
1614
http://www.isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/Iran_report-nov23.pdf; http://lewis.armscontrolwonk.com/
files/2011/02/gov2011-7.pdf.
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Iran’s Position and Counter-Arguments
Iranian leaders continue to deny they are trying to achieve a nuclear weapons capability. They
accuse the IAEA of basing its findings on forged or erroneous information, and asserted that the
November 8, 2011, report demonstrated and that
that IAEA information demonstrates little more than that some of its scientists may have
experimented with nuclear weapons calculations on their computers. They assert that Iran’s
nuclear program is mainly for medical uses and electricity generation, given finite oil and gas
resources,
and that enrichment is its “right” as a party to the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty.1715 They
cite studies, including an analysis by the National Academy of Sciences, that Iran
might have
negligible exports of oil by 2015.1816 U.S. officials have said that Iran’s gas resources
make nuclear
energy unnecessary.
Iran professes that WMD is inconsistent with its ideology. In 2003, the Supreme Leader
Khamene’i issued a formal pronouncement (fatwas) that nuclear weapons are un-Islamic. On
February 22, 2012, he expanded on that concept in a speech saying that the production of and use
of a nuclear weapon is prohibited as a “great sin,” and that stockpiling such weapons is “futile,
expensive, and harmful.”1917 He repeated this formulation in an August 30, 2012 speech to the NonAligned summit meeting in Tehran.
Iran’s assertions of a purely peaceful program have been met with widespread skepticism, not
only because of the activities discussed above but also because Iran’s governing factions appear
to perceive a nuclear weapons capability as a means of ending Iran’s perceived historic
vulnerability to invasion and domination by great powers, and as a symbol of Iran as a major
nation. Others believe a nuclear weapon represents the instrument with which Iran intends to
intimidate its neighbors and dominate the Persian Gulf region. Still others believe regime leaders
see a nuclear weapon as insurance that domestic or international opponents will end perceived
attempts to displace the regime. There are also fears Iran might transfer WMD to extremist
groups or countries.
Some Iranian strategists appear to agree with U.S. assertions that a nuclear weapon will not
deliver Iran absolute security, but will instead make Iran less secure. According to this view,
moving toward a nuclear weapons capability will bring Iran further sanctions, military
containment, U.S. attempted interference in Iran, and efforts by neighbors to develop
countervailing capabilities. Some Green Movement leaders, such as Musavi, have positions on
the nuclear issue
similar to those of regime leaders, but severalmany Green Movement factions see the
nuclear program as
an impediment to eventual reintegration with the West.
Nuclear Weapons Time Frame Estimates
If Iran were to pursue a nuclear weapon, estimates differ as to when Iran might achieve that
capability. Secretary of Defense Panetta said on January 29, 2012, that Iran could produce a
nuclear weapon within about one year of a decision to do so, and a delivery vehicle for that weapon
one-
weapon one to two years after that. Because most of the information presented in the November 8, 2011,
17These statements take into account technical difficulties,
15
For Iran’s arguments about its program, see Iranian paid advertisement “An Unnecessary Crisis—Setting the Record
Straight About Iran’s Nuclear Program,” in the New York Times, November 18, 2005. P. A11.
1816
Stern, Roger. “The Iranian Petroleum Crisis and United States National Security,” Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. December 26, 2006.
1917
“Leader Says West Knows Iran Not Seeking ‘Nuclear Weapons.’” Vision of the Islamic Republic of Iran Network,
February 22, 2012.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
IAEA report was apparently known to the United States and its partners, the report did not
necessarily alter U.S. assessments.
These statements take into account technical difficulties, possibly caused by Western activities
and international sanctions, as well as reported covert
action (discussed further below), that might
have delayed a nuclear-armed Iran. National Security
Adviser Donilon stated in his Brookings
Institution speech on November 22, 2011, that sanctions
and other difficulties “have succeeded in
slowing [Iran’s] nuclear program.” Among these
difficulties is the effect of a deliberate computer
virus (Stuxnet) in September-October 2010 that
appeared to target Iranian nuclear facility
computers by altering their spin rate, causing Iran to take about 1,000 centrifuges out of service,20
although the May 24, 2011, IAEA report indicates Iran had largely overcome these effects.
Status of Enrichment
Sparking further concerns among several governments is the steady progress of Iran’s enrichment
program. The November 8, 2011, IAEA reports reiterated previous IAEA findings that Iran has
enriched enough uranium that experts say could produce four nuclear weapons (if enriched to
90%) as enrichment continues. Most of Iran’s enrichment thus far has been primarily to less than
3.5%-5%, which is a level that would permit only civilian uses. However, according to the IAEA
report of February 24, 2012,21 it has enriched about 240 pounds to the 20% level, which is
necessary for medical use but which could relatively easily be enriched further to highly enriched
uranium. Enrichment to 20% is taking place at the heavily fortified Fordow site that Iran admitted
in September 2009 (after discovery by Western intelligence) that it had developed. The IAEA
report added that Iran has had minimal success with its newer generation centrifuges (IR-2M and
IR-4) at the Fordow and the main Natanz enrichment site. In late August 2011, the head of Iran’s
atomic energy agency said Iran would produce more 20% enriched uranium than it needs for the
medical reactor, causing further concern among experts about Iran’s intentions. On January 1,
2012, Iran claimed to have produced its first nuclear fuel rod for its Tehran research reactor computers by altering their spin rate,18 although IAEA
reports since 2011 indicate that Iran overcame these effects.
Status of Enrichment
Sparking further concerns among several governments is the steady progress of Iran’s enrichment
program, and the August 30, 2012 IAEA report indicates that enrichment has continued. Thus far,
according to that report, Iran has a stockpile of enough low-enriched (3.5%—5% uranium
(15,100 lbs+) to produce as many as five nuclear weapons, if it were to enrich that stockpile to
weapons grade. It has a stockpile of about 417 lbs of 20% enriched uranium—up about 60% from
the amounts reported in the previously quarterly IAEA report—but still not enough to produce a
nuclear weapon if it were using only that stockpile.19 According to the August 30, 2012 IAEA
report, some of the 20% enriched uranium has been used to fabricate fuel rods that could not be
used to produce weapons-grade uranium.
Some of the enrichment to 20% is taking place at the heavily fortified Fordow site that Iran
admitted in September 2009 (after discovery by Western intelligence) that it had developed. The
August 30, 2012 IAEA report said Iran had added about 1,000 centrifuges at that site, although
they are not yet operational. The IAEA report added that Iran has had difficulty with its newer
generation centrifuges (IR-2M and IR-4) at Fordow and at the main Natanz enrichment site. In
late August 2011, the head of Iran’s atomic energy agency said Iran would produce more 20%
enriched uranium than it needs for the medical reactor, causing further concern among experts
about Iran’s intentions.
The IAEA reports maintain that there is no evidence that Iran has diverted any nuclear material
(for a nuclear weapons program). The February 25, 2011, IAEA report has annexes listing Iran’s
declared nuclear sites as well as a summary of all the NPT obligations Iran is not meeting.2220
Bushehr Reactor
U.S. officials have generally been less concerned with Russia’s work, under a January 1995
contract, on an $800 million nuclear power plant at Bushehr. Russia insisted that Iran sign an
agreement under which Russia would reprocess the plant’s spent nuclear material; that agreement
was signed on February 28, 2005. The plant was expected to become operational in 2007, but
Russia appeared to delay opening it to pressure Iran on the broader nuclear issue. The plant was
inaugurated on August 21, 2010, and fueling was completed by October 25, 2010. It began
limited operations on May 8, 2011, and was linked to Iran’s power grid in September 2011. As
part of this work, Russia trained 1,500 Iranian nuclear engineers.
20It was
18
For information on Stuxnet and its origins and effects, see Broad William, John Markoff and David Sanger. “Israeli
Test on Worm Called Crucial in Iran Nuclear Delay.” New York Times, January 15, 2011.
21
http://www.isisnucleariran.org/assets/pdf/IAEA_Iran_Report_24February2012.pdf.
2219
http://isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/Iran_report_--_August_30_2012.pdf
20
IAEA report of February 25, 2011. http://lewis.armscontrolwonk.com/files/2011/02/gov2011-7.pdf.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
The International Response and Policiesreported by Iran as fully operational as of September 3, 2012. As part of this work, Russia trained
1,500 Iranian nuclear engineers.
International Efforts to Address Iran’s Nuclear Program
The international response to Iran’s nuclear program has evolved into a growing global consensus
to apply substantial pressure on Iran—coupled with incentives and diplomacy—to limit its
program. The U.S. and international position, particularly that of the Persian Gulf states, is that an
Iranian nuclear weapon would reinforce Iran’s efforts to intimidate the region and would
stimulate a nuclear weapons race in a volatile region. Israel views an Iranian nuclear weapon as a
threat to its existencediplomacy and selected incentives—to limit
its program.
Diplomatic Efforts in 2003 and 2004/Paris Agreement
In 2003, France, Britain, and Germany (the “EU-3”) opened a separate diplomatic track to curb
Iran’s program. On October 21, 2003, Iran pledged, in return for peaceful nuclear technology, to
(1) fully disclose its past nuclear activities, (2) sign and ratify the “Additional Protocol” to the
NPT (allowing for enhanced inspections), and (3) suspend uranium enrichment activities. Iran
signed the Additional Protocol on December 18, 2003, although the Majles has not ratified it. Iran
discontinued abiding by the Protocol after the IAEA reports of November 10, 2003, and February
24, 2004, stated that Iran had violated its NPT reporting obligations over an 18-year period.
In the face of the U.S. threat to push for Security Council action, the EU-3 and Iran reached a
more specific November 14, 2004, “Paris Agreement,” committing Iran to suspend uranium
enrichment (which it did as of November 22, 2004) in exchange for renewed trade talks and other
aid.2321 The Bush Administration did not openly support the track until March 11, 2005, when it
announced it would drop U.S. objections to Iran applying to join the World Trade Organization (it
applied in May 2005) and to selling civilian aircraft parts to Iran. The Bush Administration did
not participate directly in the talks.
Reference to the Security Council
The Paris Agreement broke down just after Ahmadinejad’s election; Iran rejected as insufficient
an EU-3 offer to assist Iran with peaceful uses of nuclear energy and provide limited security
guarantees in exchange for Iran’s (1) permanently ending uranium enrichment; (2) dismantling
the Arak heavy-water reactor;2422 (3) no-notice nuclear inspections; and (4) a pledge not to leave
the NPT (it has a legal exit clause). On August 8, 2005, Iran broke the IAEA seals and began
uranium “conversion” (one step before enrichment) at its Esfahan facility. On September 24,
2005, the IAEA Board declared Iran in non-compliance with the NPT and decided to refer the
issue to the Security Council,2523 but no time frame was set for the referral. After Iran resumed
enrichment activities, on February 4, 2006, the IAEA board voted 27-326324 to refer the case to the
23
21
For text of the agreement, see http://www.iaea.org/NewsCenter/Focus/IaeaIran/eu_iran14112004.shtml. EU-3-Iran
negotiations on a permanent nuclear pact began on December 13, 2004, and related talks on a trade and cooperation
accord (TCA) began in January 2005.
2422
In November 2006, the IAEA, at U.S. urging, declined to provide technical assistance to the Arak facility.
2523
Voting in favor: United States, Australia, Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Argentina, Belgium, Ghana, Ecuador,
Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Sweden, Slovakia, Japan, Peru, Singapore, South Korea, India. Against:
Venezuela. Abstaining: Pakistan, Algeria, Yemen, Brazil, China, Mexico, Nigeria, Russia, South Africa, Sri Lanka,
Tunisia, and Vietnam.
2624
Voting no: Cuba, Syria, Venezuela. Abstaining: Algeria, Belarus, Indonesia, Libya, South Africa.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Security Council. On March 29, 2006, the Council agreed on a presidency “statement” setting a
30-day time limit (April 28, 2006) for ceasing enrichment.2725
Establishment of “P5+1” Contact Group/ Incentive Package
Taking a multilateral approach, the George W. Bush Administration offered on May 31, 2006, to
join the nuclear talks with Iran if Iran first suspends its uranium enrichment. Such talks would
center on a package of incentives and possible sanctions—formally agreed on June 1, 2006—by a
newly formed group of nations, the so-called “Permanent Five Plus 1” (P5+1: United States,
Russia, China, France, Britain, and Germany). EU representative Javier Solana formally
presented the P5+1 offer to Iran on June 6, 2006. The incentive package is Annex I to Resolution
1747, and the offer remains on the table as of 2012, according to U.S. and EU diplomats.
Sanctions threatened26—such as a ban on technology and arms sales to Iran, have mostly been
imposed subsequently, as discussed in CRS Report RS20871 Iran Sanctions:
Incentives:
•
Negotiations on an EU-Iran trade agreements and acceptance of Iran into the
World Trade Organization.
•
Easing of U.S. sanctions to permit sales to Iran of commercial aircraft/parts.
•
Sale to Iran of a light-water nuclear reactor and guarantees of nuclear fuel
(including a five-year buffer stock of fuel), and possible sales of light-water
research reactors for medicine and agriculture applications.
•
An “energy partnership” between Iran and the EU, including help for Iran to
modernize its oil and gas sector and to build export pipelines.
•
Support for a regional security forum for the Persian Gulf, and support for the
objective of a WMD free zone for the Middle East.
•
The possibility of eventually allowing Iran to resume uranium enrichment if it
complies with all outstanding IAEA requirements.
Sanctions:28
•
Denial of visas for Iranians involved in Iran’s nuclear program and for highranking Iranian officials.
•
A freeze of assets of Iranian officials and institutions; a freeze of Iran’s assets
abroad; and a ban on some financial transactions.
•
A ban on sales of advanced technology and of arms to Iran; and a ban on sales to
Iran of gasoline and other refined oil products.
•
An end to support for Iran’s application to the WTO.
27
See http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/290/88/PDF/N0629088.pdf?OpenElement.
One source purports to have obtained the contents of the package from ABC News: http://www.basicint.org/pubs/
Notes/BN060609.htm.
28
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
First Set of U.N. Security Council Resolutions Adopted
Iran did not immediately respond to the offer. In response, the U.N. Security Council began its
efforts, still ongoing, to impose sanctions on Iran in an effort to shift Iran’s calculations toward
compromise.
•
Resolution 1696. On July 31, 2006, the Security Council voted 14-1 (Qatar
voting no) for U.N. Security Council Resolution 1696, giving Iran until August
31, 2006, to fulfill the long-standing IAEA nuclear demands (enrichment
suspension, etc.). Purportedly in deference to Russia and China, it was passed
under Article 40 of the U.N. Charter, which makes compliance mandatory, but
not under Article 41, which refers to economic sanctions, or Article 42, which
25
See http://daccessdds.un.org/doc/UNDOC/GEN/N06/290/88/PDF/N0629088.pdf?OpenElement.
One source purports to have obtained the contents of the package from ABC News: http://www.basicint.org/pubs/
Notes/BN060609.htm.
26
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
would authorize military action. It called on U.N. member states not to sell Iran
WMD-useful technology. On August 22, 2006, Iran responded by offering vague
proposals of engagement with the West.
•
Resolution 1737. After Iran refused a proposal to temporarily suspend
enrichment, the Security Council adopted U.N. Security Council Resolution 1737
unanimously on December 23, 2006, under Chapter 7, Article 41 of the U.N.
Charter. It prohibits sale to Iran—or financing of such sale—of technology that
could contribute to Iran’s uranium enrichment or heavy-water reprocessing
activities. It also required U.N. member states to freeze the financial assets of 10
named Iranian nuclear and missile firms and 12 persons related to those
programs. In deference to Russia, the Resolution did not apply toexempted the Bushehr
reactor.
•
Resolution 1747. Resolution 1737 demanded enrichment suspension by February
21, 2007. With no Iranian compliance, on March 24, 2007, after only three weeks
of P5+1 negotiations, Resolution 1747 was adopted unanimously, which
demanded Iran suspend enrichment by May 24, 2007, and:
•
added 10 military/WMD-related entities, 3 Revolutionary Guard entities, 7
Revolutionary Guard commanders, 8 other persons, and Bank Sepah.;
•
banned arms transfers by Iran, a provision targeted at Iran’s alleged arms
supplies to Lebanese Hezbollah and to Shiite militias in Iraq.;
•
required all countries to report to the United Nations when sanctioned Iranian
persons travel to their territories.; and
•
called for (but did not require) countries to avoid selling arms or dual use
items to Iran and for countries and international financial institutions to avoid
any new lending or grants to Iran. The Resolution specifically exempted
loans for humanitarian purposes, thereby not applying to World Bank loans.
Iran did not comply with Resolution 1747, but, in August 2007, it agreed to sign with the IAEA
an agreement to clear up outstanding questions on past nuclear activities by the end of 2007.
•
Resolution 1803 and Additional Incentives for Iran. After several months of
negotiations, Resolution 1803 was adopted by a vote of 14-0 (Indonesia
abstaining) on March 3, 2008. It:
•
banned virtually all sales of dual use items to Iran, citing equipment listed as
dual use in various proliferation conventions and documents;
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
•
authorized, but did not require, inspections of shipments by Iran Air Cargo
and Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Line, if such shipments are suspected
of containing banned WMD-related goods;
•
imposed a firm travel ban on five Iranians named in Annex II to the
Resolution and requires reports on travel by 13 other named individuals;
•
added 12 entities to those sanctioned under Resolution 1737; and
•
stated the willingness of the P5+1 to consider additional incentives to resolve
the Iranian nuclear issue through negotiation “beyond those of June 2006.”
The Bush Administration agreed to expand the June 2006 incentive package at a meeting in
London on May 2, 2008, offering to add political cooperationpolitical and enhanced energy cooperation
for with Iran. EU envoy
Solana presented the package (which included a signature by Secretary of
State Rice) on June 14,
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
2008, but Iran was non-committal. (The text of the enhanced incentive
offer to Iran is contained
in an Annex to Resolution 1929.) Iran did not accept the enhanced
package of incentives as a
basis of further discussion but, in July 2008, Iran indicated it might be
ready to first accept a six
week “freeze for freeze:” the P5+1 would freeze further sanctions
efforts and Iran would freeze
any expansion of uranium enrichment (though not suspend
outright). To try to take advantage of
this opening, the Bush Administration sent Under Secretary
of State for Political Affairs William
Burns to join Solana and the other P5+1 representatives at a
meeting in Geneva on July 19, 2008.
Iran did not accept the “freeze for freeze” by an extended
deadline of August 2, 2008.
•
Resolution 1835. The August 2008 crisis between Russia and Georgia contributed
to Russia’s opposing new U.N. sanctions on Iran. In an effort to demonstrate to
Iran continued unity, the Council adopted Resolution 1835 (September 27, 2008),
demanding compliance with previous resolutions but not adding new sanctions.
The P5+1 met again in October and in November of 2008, but no consensus on additional
sanctions was reached.
The International Response Under the Obama Administration
After President Obama was inaugurated, the P5+1 met in Germany (February 4, 2009), reportedly
focusing on the new Administration’s approach on Iran. The other members of the P5+1 sought to
incorporate the Administration’s commitment to direct U.S. engagement with Iran into the U.N.
sanctions and negotiating framework. The meeting recommitted to the “two track” strategy of
incentives and sanctions.29 At another P5+1 meeting in London on27 On April 8, 2009, then Under
Secretary Burns told the
other members of the group that, henceforth,P5+1 that a U.S. diplomat would
attend all of the group’s meetings with
Iran. The P5+1 did not materially alter its approach
because of the unrest in Iran that erupted after
that election, and a July 9, 2009, G-8 summit
statement, which included Russian concurrence,
mentioned late September 2009 (G-20 summit
on September 24) as a time by which the P5+1
would expect Iran to offer constructive proposals,
lest the P5+1 consider imposing “crippling sanctions” on
Iran. On September 9, 2009, Iran
distributed its long-anticipated proposals to settle the nuclear issue to P5+1 representatives in Iran
29
Dempsey, Judy. “U.S. Urged to Talk With Iran.” International Herald Tribune, February 5, 2009.
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representatives in Iran (the Swiss ambassador represented the United States).3028 The P5+1
considered the proposals vague
but still a sufficient basis to meet with Iran in Geneva on October 1, 2009.
October 1, 2009, Agreement on Reprocessing Iran’s Enriched Uranium
In light of September 25, 2009, revelations about the previously unreported Iranian nuclear site,
little progress was expected at the meetingOctober 1, 2009 meeting in Geneva. However, the seven-hour
session, in which U.S.
Under Secretary of State William Burns, representing the United States,
also met privately with
Iranian negotiator Sayed Jallili, resulted in tentative agreements to (1)
meet again later in
October; (2) allow the IAEA to inspect the newly revealed Iranian facility near
Qom; and (3)
allow Russia and France, subject to technical talks to begin by mid-October, to
reprocess 2,600
pounds (about 75% of Iran’s low-enriched uranium) for medical use. (The Qom
facility was
inspected during October 25-29, 2009, as agreed.)
The technical talks were held October 19-21, 2009, at IAEA headquarters in Vienna, Austria, and
chaired on the U.S. side by Deputy Energy Secretary Daniel Poneman. A draft agreement was
27
Dempsey, Judy. “U.S. Urged to Talk With Iran.” International Herald Tribune, February 5, 2009.
“Cooperation for Peace, Justice, and Progress.” Text of Iranian proposals: http://enduringamerica.com/2009/09/11/
irans-nukes-full-text-of-irans-proposal-to-51-powers/.
28
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
approved by the P5+1 countries and the IAEA. Despite Ahmadinejad’s comments in early
February 2010 that he “did not have a problem” with the arrangement, political opposition from
hardliners inside Iran—purportedly including the Supreme Leader himself—caused Iran to refuse
to finalize the agreement. Instead, Iran floated counter-proposals to ship its enriched uranium to
France and Russia in increments, to ship the uranium to Turkey, or to reprocess the uranium in
Iran itself. All of Iran’s counter-proposals were deemed insufficiently specific or responsive. Iran
also rebuffed a specific U.S. proposal in January 2010 to allow it to buy on the open market
isotopes for its medical reactor, although this proposal appears active as of mid-2012.
May 2010 Iran-Brazil-Turkey Uranium Exchange Deal (“Tehran Declaration”)
As international discussions of new sanctions accelerated in April 2010, Brazil and Turkey
negotiated with Iran to revive the October 1, 2009, arrangement. On May 17, 2010, with the
president of Brazil and prime minister of Turkey in Tehran, the three signed an arrangement for
Iran to send 2,600 pounds of uranium to Turkey, which would be exchanged for medically useful
reprocessed uranium along the lines discussed in October 2009.3129 As required by the agreement,
Iran forwarded to the IAEA a formal letter accepting the agreement terms. Even though some
assert that the Obama Administration quietly supported the Brazil-Turkey initiative, the Obama
Administration did not accept the Tehran Declaration, asserting, primarily, that the arrangement
did not address Iran’s enrichment to the 20% level.
Resolution 1929 and EU Follow-Up
On May 18, 2010, one day after the signing of the Tehran Declaration, Secretary of State Clinton
announced that the P5+1 had reached agreement on a new sanctions resolution. The resolution
was designed to attract support from Russia and China, which believe sanctions might threaten
their own interests in Iran, while also giving U.S. allies authority to take substantial new measures
against Iran. China was reportedly reassured that the UAE and Saudi Arabia would compensate
30
“Cooperation for Peace, Justice, and Progress.” Text of Iranian proposals: http://enduringamerica.com/2009/09/11/
irans-nukes-full-text-of-irans-proposal-to-51-powers/.
31
Text of the pact is at http://www.cfr.org/publication/22140/.
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for Iran’s oil exports to China if Iran retaliated for China’s support for new sanctions.32
SimultaneouslySimultaneous with Russian agreement on the draft, several Russian entities,
including the main
state arms export agency Rosoboronexport, were removed from U.S. lists of
sanctioned entities.
(See CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions for a table of entities under
sanction.)
The main points of the draft, which was adopted on June 9, 2010 (Resolution 1929), by a vote of
12-2 (Turkey and Brazil) with one abstention (Lebanon) are the following.33:30
•
It added 15 Iranian firms affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard firms, and 22
other Iranian entities, to the list of U.N.-sanctioned entities. Some of the IRGC
firms are alternate names for the Khatem ol-Anbiya (Seal of the Prophet)
engineering firm under IRGC control.
•
It made mandatory a ban on travel for Iranian persons named in it and in which a
non-binding travel restriction was instituted in previous resolutions.
•
It gave countries the authorization to inspect any shipments—and to dispose of
their cargo—if the shipments are suspected to carry contraband items. However,
29
Text of the pact is at http://www.cfr.org/publication/22140/.
Text of the resolution is at http://www.isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/
Draft_resolution_on_Iran_annexes.pdf.
30
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inspections on the high seas are subject to concurrence by the country that owns
that ship.
•
It prohibited countries from allowing Iran to invest in uranium mining and related
nuclear technologies, or in nuclear-capable ballistic missile technology.
•
It banned sales to Iran of most categories of heavy arms and requests restraint in
sales of light arms, but did not bar sales of missiles not on the “U.N. Registry of
Conventional Arms” (meaning that the delivery of the S-300 system, discussed
above, would not be legally banned).
•
It required countries to insist that their companies refrain from doing business
with Iran if such business could further Iran’s WMD programs.
•
It requested, but does not mandate, that countries prohibit Iranian banks to open
in their countries, or for their banks to open in Iran, if doing so could contribute
to Iran’s WMD activities.
•
It authorized the establishment of an eight person “panel of experts,” with a
mandate to assist the U.N. Sanctions Committee in implementing the Resolution
and previous Resolutions, and to suggest ways of more effective implementation.
The Panel’s coordinator is French; current membership includes the P-5 countries
plus Japan, Germany, and Nigeria. To date, the panel’s June 2010 report has not
been officially published by the Sanctions Committee but has been carried by
various websites.
2011-122012 Diplomatic Developments
President Obama and other senior officials noted that the intent of Resolution 1929 was to bring
Iran back to negotiations, and an annex presented a modified offer of incentives for Iran to rejoin
32
Mackenzie, Kate. “Oil At the Heart of Latest Iranian Sanctions Efforts.” Financial Times, March 8, 2010.
Text of the resolution is at http://www.isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/
Draft_resolution_on_Iran_annexes.pdf.
33
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
the international community. After the passage of the Resolutionthe international community. After its passage, EU foreign policy chief
Catherine Ashton issued a
letter to Iran inviting it to attend new talks. After several months of
discussions over venue,
agenda, talks were held during December 6-7, 2010, with the P5+1, in
Geneva. By all accounts, the meeting Geneva, but by all
accounts made little progress on core issues. The United States and
Iran did not, as they did in the
October 2009 talks, hold direct bilateral talks during the two days
of meetings. Iran reportedly focused on a purported “double standard” that allow Israel to go
unpunished for its reputed nuclear weapons arsenal. of meetings. Still, there was
agreement to hold additional
Iran-P5+1 talks in Istanbul which some thought might lead Iran to
show more flexibility because
of Turkey’s stated willingness to take Iran’s viewpoints into account.
The Istanbul (January 21-22, 2011), talks, by all accounts, made no progress because Iran
demanded lifting of international sanctions as a precondition to substantive discussions. No date
for new talks was then announced. A P5+1 statement of March 9, 2011, affirmed the lack of
progress at Istanbul, but also said “the door remains open.”3431 Indications that talks might revive
followed Iran-Russia talks during August 15-16, 2011, when Iran praised as a “basis to start
negotiations” Russia’s proposals for a stepwise exchange of the lifting of international sanctions
for Iran’s giving up some nuclear activities. A State Department spokeswoman, Victoria Nuland,
confirmed that U.S. diplomats had worked with Russian counterparts to develop the proposal.
The prospect for new talks appeared to recede after the release of the November 8, 2011, IAEA
report, which cast doubt on Iran’s assertions of its purely peaceful nuclear program, and National
Security Adviser Donilon made clear in a speech on November 22, 2011, at the Brookings
Institution that the United States remains focused on pressuring Iran through sanctions. In late
. In late
31
http://vienna.usmission.gov/110309p51.html.
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November 2011, in response to a move by the United States, Britain, and Canada to shut Iran out
of the international banking system, a mob supported by the Basij militia ransacked the British
Embassy in Tehran on November 29, 2011. This led to the closure of the Iranian and British
embassies in London and Tehran, respectively, and caused the EU to impose on January 23, 2012,
an embargo on purchases of Iranian oil, to be fully in effect by July 1, 2012. Iran perceived such a
move (along with an amendment to the FY2012 National Defense Authorization Act ([P.L. 11281)] sanctioning banks that do business with Iran’s Central Bank) as a potential vital threat to its
survival. Iran threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz if new sanctions are imposed and to
immediately cut off oil sales to at least some EU states before they can arrange alternative
suppliers. Iran did not implement either threatsThese sanctions have caused Iran’s vital oil exports to fall from 2.5 million barrels per
day in 2011 to about 1.2 million barrels per day in September 2012. The effect of sanctions on
Iran’s economy, political system, and nuclear decision making is analyzed in CRS Report
RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
As sanctions started to harm Iran’s economy severely, Iran—alongside itsalong with threats to the Strait of
Hormuz—began to publicly proposedpropose a new round of nuclear talks and it invited the IAEA to
discuss Iran’s past nuclear explosive device work, as discussed above. A 200- word. A letter of
acceptance was sent
by chief negotiator Jalilli to EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton on
February 15, 2012. The
United States and its partners announced on March 6, 2012, that they
accept new talks. As an example of the economic pressure sanctions have imposed on Iran, its
Iran’s oil production has dropped substantially, due to a reduction in buys from customers, from
about 4 million barrels per day in 2011 to about 3 million barrels per day as of May 2012. The
effect of sanctions on Iran’s economy, political system, and nuclear decisionmaking is analyzed in
CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
34
http://vienna.usmission.gov/110309p51.html.
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April 13-14 Istanbul Talks and Prospects for May 23 Baghdad accept new talks.
April 13-14 Istanbul Talks
Talks were tentatively set for April 13-14, 2012, in Istanbul. In early April when Iran balked at the
venue—attributing distrust to Turkey’s support for strong action against Iran’s ally, Bashar alAssad of Syria—instead suggesting Iraq or China as a location. Iran relented and agreed to the
dates and the venue.
Pressured by sanctions, Iran went into the talks suggesting it might accept P5+1 demands to halt
20% enrichment. The talks were held and, by all accounts, including a statement by EU foreign
policy chief Ashton, did not focus on substantive details. However, Iran agreed to enter a
negotiating process on its nuclear program—a pledge considered sufficient to announce a followup round in Iraq on May 23-24, 2012, to be held in Baghdad—a venue intended to accommodate
Iran’s earlier proposal. Since thenIn preparation for the Baghdad talks, technical teams from the Iranian and P5+1 have been working
on substantive proposals in advance of that round, and an IAEA team has had meeting in Iran in
mid-May.
The following outlines what both sides, by numerous accounts, appear prepared to offer. The
positions of both sides appear based on the principal of “reciprocity”—a term used by Secretary
Clinton, EU foreign policy chief Ashton, and others—referring to a stepwise easing of sanctions
in exchange for verifiable Iranian compliance. These officials have also stated the talks with Iran
should represent a “sustained” negotiating process, suggesting that there might not be an
agreement in Baghdad on all issues, and that an agreement might require several more rounds of
talks.
Iranian officials indicate they might be willing to accept:
•
A halt to all enrichment to the 20% level and a removal from Iran of the existing
stockpile of 20% enriched uranium.
•
Limitations in the activities and very close monitoring of the Fordow facility,
although not a closing of the facility as U.S. officials indicated they seek.
•
A comprehensive verification regime to ensure that Iran fulfills any commitments
made.
•
A full explanation of Iran’s reputed efforts to design a nuclear explosive device,
including inspections of Parchin and other facilities.
The international community appears prepared to offer the following:
•
Iran would be allowed, at least in the interim, to enrich uranium in Iran, although
only to the 3.5% - 5% level. This represents a dropping or de-emphasis of the
demands of U.N. resolutions that Iran suspend all uranium enrichment.
•
Iran will be guaranteed a supply of medical isotopes that it says it needs
•
The EU oil embargo might be deferred or lifted entirely. Such a move would be
coupled with a U.S. effort to avoid sanctioning foreign banks that pay Iran’s
Central Bank for oil (provision of P.L. 112-81).
The international community remains optimistic about achieving an agreement. Foreign Minister
Ali Akbar Salehi has said publicly that Iran might agree to halt 20% enrichment in exchange for
guaranteed external supplies of the needed medical isotopes—an apparent acceptance of an
earlier U.S. idea. Senior clerics, such as Guardian Council chair Ayatollah Jannati, has appeared
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to prepare the Iranian public for compromise by emphasizing that the prospective agreement
preserves Iran’s right to enrich uranium, as Iran claims is allowed by the NPT. However,
tempering the optimism is the view among many experts that the Supreme Leader remains
suspicions of U.S. and international intent and might, in the end, not accept an agreement.
Israel has called on the United States and its partners not to allow talks to drag on for many
months before moving toward stronger sanctions or even military action. It is likely that, should
the new round of talks fail, Israeli will likely resume open discussion of unilateral Israeli military
action against Iran’s nuclear facilities.
Table 5
P5+1 sides worked on substantive proposals.
May 23-24 Baghdad Talks
There was a sense of optimism going into the Baghdad talks, because Iranian leadership
statements appeared to prepare the Iranian public for compromise by emphasizing that a
prospective agreement preserves Iran’s right to enrich uranium under the NPT. Tempering the
optimism was the view among many experts that the Supreme Leader remains suspicions of U.S.
and international intent and might, in the end, not accept an agreement. The following outlines
what both sides, by numerous accounts, offered in Baghdad. The positions of both sides appear
based on the principle of “reciprocity”—a term used by Secretary Clinton, EU foreign policy
chief Ashton, and others—referring to a stepwise easing of sanctions in exchange for verifiable
Iranian compliance.
The P5+1 reportedly proposed in Baghdad:
•
That Iran halt enrichment to the 20% level and allow removal from Iran of the
existing stockpile of 20% enriched uranium.
•
That Iran eventually close the Fordow facility.
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•
That Iran accept a comprehensive verification regime to ensure that Iran fulfills
any commitments made.
•
That Iran clear up reputed past efforts to design a nuclear explosive device,
including allowing inspections of Parchin and other facilities.
As “reciprocity” for Iran accepting such steps, the P5+1:
•
Apparently would allow, at least in the interim, Iran to enrich uranium, although
only to the 3.5%-5% level. This represents a dropping or de-emphasis of the
demands of U.N. resolutions that Iran suspend all uranium enrichment.
•
Offered Iran a guaranteed a supply of medical isotopes that it says it needs, and
technical assistance to ensure the safety of its civilian nuclear facilities.
•
Offered Iran spare parts for its civilian passenger aircraft.
Baghdad Outcome? The P5+1 did not offer to defer or lift entirely the EU oil embargo that goes
into full effect July 1, leading to criticism in the Iranian media that the P5+1 offer was
“unbalanced.” This issue reportedly threatened the talks, but U.S. and other officials told
journalists that the talks were substantive. According to EU foreign policy representative Ashton’s
statement at the conclusion of the talks, “it is clear that we both want to make progress, and that
there is some common ground. However, significant differences remain. Nonetheless, we do
agree on the need for further discussion to expand that common ground.” According to the
statement, Iran declared its readiness to address the 20% enrichment issue and presented a five
part counter-proposal that focused on the nuclear issue but also raised the issue of U.S. and
European involvement in Syria. The substantive discussions, even in the form of differences,
provided enough progress to yield agreement that further Iran-P5+1 talks would be held June 1819, 2012, in Moscow. The Ashton statement said that there would be “intensive contacts with
[P5+1] counterparts to prepare” for the Moscow round. This intent to conduct intensive contacts
appeared to represent a step that many experts said would signal a relatively positive outcome.
June 18-19 Moscow Talks and Follow-Up
Expectations were relatively low going into the Moscow talks, in that the P5+1 refused Iran’s
proposal to have technical talks immediately before the negotiations. However, Iran and EU chief
negotiator Ashton reached agreement on an agenda for the talks, and Iran dropped threats to call
the talks off. By all accounts, the talks were highly substantive, and Iran engaged specifically on
the P5+1 demands, discussed above, to “stop, shut, and ship” (stop enriching to 20%, shut
Fordow, and ship out the existing 20% enriched stockpile).
However, no breakthrough was achieved, and the parties were able to agree to hold lower level
technical talks on July 3, 2012, in Istanbul. According to the Ashton statement concluding the
meeting, the technical talks will further clarify the P5+1 proposal, increase P5+1 understanding of
Iran’s response, and study other issues raised in the talks. Subsequently, there will be contact
between the deputies to Ashton and to Iranian chief negotiator Jalilli, followed by Ashton-Jalilli
contact to discuss a possible further round of high level talks. This roadmap has been followed to
date, with technical talks on July 3 and then talks between Ms. Ashton’s deputy, Helga Schmid,
and Seyyed Jallili’s deputy, Ali Baqeri, on July 24, 2012. Ms. Ashton and Seyyed Jallili spoke by
telephone on August 2, 2012, agreeing to assess their positions during the Ramadan and European
holiday periods and to subsequently speak by telephone at the end of August 2012. That latter
conversation reportedly has been delayed and no new P5+1 talks are scheduled.
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Some experts remain skeptical that any new high level talks, if held, will yield a breakthrough.
Others believe the negotiations should be viewed over a long time period, to allow for only
minor, incremental progress at each set of talks. Others argue that Iran will not agree to the P5+1
demands unless and until the P5+1 offers to lift the EU embargo on purchases of Iranian oil,
which took full effect on July 1, 2012. This was not offered by the P5+1 in Moscow.
Israel has called on the United States and its partners to declare the 2012 rounds of talks a failure
and to focus on other options, including stronger sanctions and military action. As of September
2012, Israel has resumed open discussion of unilateral Israeli military action against Iran’s
nuclear facilities. The Obama Administration position is that a unilateral Israeli military action at
this time is unwise and President Obama stated in late August 2012 that there is still “time and
space” for diplomacy with Iran on the nuclear issue. More information on the Administration
position and policies on Iran is discussed later in this paper.
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Table 6. Summary of Provisions of U.N. Resolutions on Iran Nuclear Program
(1737, 1747, 1803, and 1929)
Requires Iran to suspend uranium enrichment.
Prohibits transfer to Iran of nuclear, missile, and dual use items, except for use in light-water reactors.
Prohibits Iran from exporting arms or WMD-useful technology.
Prohibits Iran from investing abroad in uranium mining, related nuclear technologies or nuclear capable ballistic missile
technology.
Freezes the assets of over 80 named Iranian persons and entities, including Bank Sepah, and several corporate
affiliates of the Revolutionary Guard.
Requires that countries ban the travel of over 40 named Iranians.
Mandates that countries not export major combat systems to Iran.
Calls for “vigilance” (a nonbinding call to cut off business) with respect to all Iranian banks, particularly Bank Melli and
Bank Saderat.
Calls for vigilance (voluntary restraint) with respect to providing international lending to Iran and providing trade
credits and other financing and financial interactions.
Calls on countries to inspect cargoes carried by Iran Air Cargo and Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines—or by any
ships in national or international waters—if there are indications they carry cargo banned for carriage to Iran.
Searches in international waters would require concurrence of the country where the ship is registered.
A Sanctions Committee, composed of the fifteen members of the Security Council, monitors implementation of all
Iran sanctions and collects and disseminates information on Iranian violations and other entities involved in banned
activities. A seven member “panel of experts” is empowered to make report on sanctions violations and make
recommendations for improved enforcement.
Chemical Weapons, Biological Weapons, and Missiles
Official U.S. reports and testimony state that Iran maintains the capability to produce chemical
warfare (CW) agents and “probably” has the capability to produce some biological warfare agents
for offensive purposes, if it made the decision to do so.3532 This raises questions about Iran’s
compliance with its obligations under the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC), which Iran
signed on January 13, 1993, and ratified on June 8, 1997.
35
Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Analysis. “Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of
Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to
31 December 2010. March 2011.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses It also continues to develop ballistic
missile assets that could strike regional adversaries.
Ballistic Missiles/Warheads
The Administration view is that Iran’s growing inventory of ballistic missiles and its acquisition
of indigenous production of anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) provide capabilities to enhance its
power projection. Tehran views its conventionally armed missiles as an integral part of its
strategy to deter—and if necessary retaliate against—forces in the region, including U.S. forces.
However, Iran’s technical capabilities are a matter of some debate among experts, and Iran
appears to have focused on missiles capable of hitting regional targets rather than those of
intercontinental range. Still, there are concerns that Iran might seek to develop warheads that
could carry a nuclear payload, and the November 8, 2011, IAEA report discusses a “Project 111”
conducted during 2002-2003 that could have had that intent. Secretary of Defense Panetta said in
January 2012 that Iran might be able to develop a nuclear-armed missile about a year or two after
developing a nuclear explosive device.36 Table 6 contains some details on Iran’s missile
programs.37 A U.N. experts panel reported in May 2011 that might be getting ballistic missile
technology from North Korea, in violation of U.S. sanctions against Iran (discussed above).32
Deputy Director of National Intelligence for Analysis. “Unclassified Report to Congress on the Acquisition of
Technology Relating to Weapons of Mass Destruction and Advanced Conventional Munitions, Covering 1 January to
31 December 2010. March 2011.
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The April 2012 Defense Department report, cited earlier, says that Iran is stedily expanding its
missile and rocket inventories, and has “boosted the lethality and effectiveness of existing
systems with accuracy improvements and new submunition payloads. This reports appears to
credit Iran’s missile technology to a greater degree than past official reports. However, the report
does not alter the longstanding U.S. estimate that Iran would likely not be able to fully develop a
missile of intercontinental range until 2015. Secretary of Defense Panetta said in January 2012
that Iran might be able to develop a nuclear-armed missile about a year or two after developing a
nuclear explosive device.33 The U.N. experts panel created by Resolution 1929 reported in May
2011 that might be getting ballistic missile technology from North Korea, in violation of U.S.
sanctions against Iran. Table 7 contains some details on Iran’s missile programs.34
On November 12, 2011, an unexplained explosion at a ballistic missile base 25 miles from Tehran
killed 17 IRGC missile force officers, including commander Hassan Tehrani Moghaddam. He
reportedly was instrumental in developing Iran’s missile force and his death might set back the
program. Iran said the explosion was accidental, caused during a movement of munitions at the
base. However, the death of Moqhaddam in the blast raised suspicions that it was caused by
sabotage, possibly by an outside power or possibly by a domestic opposition group. The base was
almost completely destroyed, according to commercial satellite photos posted on various
websites. Iran may have tried to restore its image as a success in missile development by test
firing anti-ship missiles during its naval exercises from December 23, 2011, to January 2, 2012.
Missile Defense Concepts Against Iran
In August 2008, the George W. Bush Administration reached agreements with Poland and the
Czech Republic to establish a missile defense system to counter Iranian ballistic missiles. These
agreements were reached over Russia’s opposition, which was based on the belief that the missile
defense system would be used to neutralize Russian capabilities. However, reportedly based on
assessments of Iran’s focus on missiles of regional range, on September 17, 2009, the Obama
Administration reoriented this missile defense program to focus, at least initially, on ship-based
systems, possibly later returning to the idea of Poland- and Czech-based systems. Some saw this
as an effort to win Russia’s support for additional sanctions on Iran, although President
Medvedev expressed continued Russian disagreement with the plan during an Asia Pacific
summit meeting in Hawaii in mid-November 2011.
As far as implementation, in February 2010, Romania’s top defense policy body approved a U.S.
plan to base missile interceptors there. At the November 19-20, 2010, NATO meeting in Lisbon,
NATO adopted the concept of a missile defense system but the summit did not specifically name
Iran as a threat the system is intended to address.
36
33
http://thehill.com/blogs/defcon-hill/policy-and-strategy/207275-panetta-iran-could-have-nuclear-weapons-deliveryvehicles-in-2-3-years.
3734
Annual Threat Assessment of the Intelligence for the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Dennis C. Blair,
Director of National Intelligence, February 2, 2010.
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Table 67. Iran’s Ballistic Missile Arsenal
Shahab-3
(“Meteor”)
800-mile range. The missile is operational, and Defense Department report of April 2012,
indicates Tehran has improved its lethality and effectiveness, tempering previous assessments
by experts that the missile is not completely reliable.
Shahab-3 “Variant”
/Sijil/AshouraDefense Department report of April 2010, cited earlier, has the missile as
“deployed.” Still, several of its tests (July 1998, July 2000, and September 2000) reportedly were
unsuccessful or partially successful, and U.S. experts say the missile is not completely reliable. Iran
tested several of the missiles on September 28, 2009, in advance of the October 1 meeting with
the P5+1.
Shahab-3
“Variant” /Sijil
1,200-1,500-mile range. The April 2010 Defense Department report hashad the liquid fueled
Shahab-3
“variant” as “possibly deployed,” and the April 2102 report indicates the solid fuel
version (Sijil or Ashoura) is increasing in range, lethality, and accuracy.” The solid fuel version, called the Sijil, is considered “not”
deployed by the Defense Department. The Sijil is alternately called the “Ashoura.” These missiles
potentially put large portions of the Near East and Southeastern Europe in range, including
U.S.
bases in Turkey. A U.N. experts panel reported in May 2011 that Iran tested the missile in
in October 2010 although the launch was “reported by a [U.N.] Member state,” and not announced
announced publicly. In concert with the beginning of 10-day “Great Prophet Six “military
exercises, on June
28, 2011, Iran unveiled underground missile silos and undertook some
missile tests.
BM-25
1,500-mile range. On April 27, 2006, Israel’s military intelligence chief said that Iran had
received a
shipment of North Korean-supplied BM-25 missiles. Missile said to be capable of
carrying nuclear
warheads. The Washington Times appeared to corroborate this reporting in a
July 6, 2006, story,
which asserted that the North Korean-supplied missile is based on a
Soviet-era “SS-N-6” missile.
Press accounts in December 2010 indicate that Iran may have
received components but not the
entire BM-25 missile from North Korea.
ICBM
U.S. officials believe Iran might be capable of developing an intercontinental ballistic missile
(3,000
mile range) by 2015, a time frame reiterated by the April 2010 DOD report.
Other
Missiles
On September 6, 2002, Iran said it successfully tested a 200 mile range “Fateh 110” missile (solid
propellant), and Iran said in late September 2002 that it had begun production. Iran also possesses
2012 DOD report.
Short Range
Ballistic Missiles
and Cruise
Missiles
Iran is fielding increasingly capable, short range ballistic missiles, according to DOD 2012
report, such as ability to home in on and target ships while in flight. One version could be a
short range ballistic missile named the Qiam, tested in August 2010. Iran has long worked on
a 200 mile range “Fateh 110” missile (solid propellant), which it again tested in August 2012.
Iran also possesses a few hundred short-range ballistic missiles, including the Shahab-1 (Scud-bScudb), the Shahab-2 (ScudCScud-C), and the Tondar-69 (CSS-8). In January 2009, Iran claimed to have
tested a new air-to-air missile.
On March 7, 2010, Iran claimed it was now producing short-rangeshortrange cruise missiles that it claimed
are highly accurate and can destroy heavy targets. This could be the same as a short range ballistic
missile named the Qiam, tested in August 2010.
Space
Iran
also is able to arm its patrol boats with Chinese-made C-802 cruise missiles. Iran also has
Chinese-supplied Seerseekers and C-802’s emplaced along Iran’s coast.
Space Vehicle
In February 2008 Iran claimed to have launched a probe into space, suggesting its missile
technology might be improving to the point where an Iranian ICBM is realistic. Following an August
August 2008 failure, in early February 2009, Iran successfully launched a small, low-earth
satellite on a
Safir-2 rocket (range about 155 miles). The Pentagon said the launch was
“clearly a concern of
ours” because “there are dual-use capabilities here which could be
applied toward the
development of long-range missiles.” A larger space vehicle, Simorgh, was
displayed in February
2010. Iran claimed to have launched a satellite into orbit on June 16,
2011.
Warheads
Wall Street Journal report of September 14, 2005, said that U.S. intelligence believes Iran is working
working to adapt the Shahab-3 to deliver a nuclear warhead. Subsequent press reports say
that U.S.
intelligence captured an Iranian computer in mid-2004 showing plans to construct a nuclear
nuclear warhead for the Shahab.38 The IAEA is seeking additional information from Iran.
Foreign Policy and Support for Terrorist Groups
Iran’s foreign policy is a product of the ideology of Iran’s Islamic revolution, blended with longstanding national interests and the belief that the United States seeks ultimately to overturn Iran’s
38
Broad, William and David Sanger. “Relying On Computer, U.S. Seeks to Prove Iran’s Nuclear Aims.” New York
Times, November 13, 2005.
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35 The IAEA is seeking additional information from Iran.
35
Broad, William and David Sanger. “Relying On Computer, U.S. Seeks to Prove Iran’s Nuclear Aims.” New York
Times, November 13, 2005.
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Foreign Policy and Support for Terrorist Groups
Iran’s foreign policy is a product of the ideology of Iran’s Islamic revolution, blended with longstanding national interests and the belief that the United States seeks ultimately to overturn Iran’s
Islamic revolution. Iran’s leaders increasingly assert that Iran is a major regional power whose
interests must be taken into account. Others interpret Iran’s foreign policy objectives as beyond
defensive—as attempting to overturn the power structure in the Middle East that Iran believes
favors favors
the United States, Israel, and their “collaborators”: Sunni Muslim regimes such as Egypt,
Jordan,
and the Gulf monarchiesstates. Iran couches that policy as support for Shiite Muslim minorities
and factions that, in Iran’s view, represent an “oppressed” underclass in a region dominated by
Sunni Muslimsan “oppressed” underclass in a region
dominated by elites, while downplaying the underlying Iranian intent to empower fellow Shiites
against the Sunni Muslims that dominate the region.
Because of Iran’s objectives, some experts saw Iran as a potential strategic beneficiary of the
uprisings that have toppled the leaders of Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya, and which have threatened
the grip on power of the Sunni ruler of Bahrain. Some evidence of Iran as beneficiary could be
provided by reports of a willingness of the new leaders of Egypt to end decades of diplomatic
estrangement with Iran, and their decision to allow Iranian ships to transit the Suez Canal since
the fall of President Mubarak. President Mohammad Morsi of Egypt attended the Non-Aligned
Movement summit in Tehran during August 27-31, 2012. On the other hand, at the meeting,
Morsi strongly denounced Syria’s use of military action against its armed opposition, directly
countering Iran’s efforts at the meeting to increase international support for the Syrian
government. Some assert that the holding of that meeting in Tehran, attended by nine heads of
state and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon, as well as representatives of the nearly 200
countries in the NAM, illustrates that Iran is not isolated.
Others assert that, even before Arab uprisings, Iran had benefitted Others assert that, even before Arab uprisings, Iran had benefitted
from the installation of friendly
regimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the continuing political
strength of Hezbollah in Lebanon
and Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
On the other hand, Iran itself has become threatened by the unrest
in its key Middle Eastern ally,
Syria. Should that regime fall, Iran might lose its ability to
intervene in the Arab-Israeli dispute.
In addition, countries in the region, such as the UAE, increasingly are helping
the United States
enforce strict sanctions against Iran, and Iran finds itself potentially isolated in the region.
Support for International Terrorism
Iran’s foreign policy is broad and complex, and often involves support of groups that are
considered terrorist by the United States. The State Department report on international terrorism
for 2010 released August 18, 2011, again stated (as it has for more than a decade) that Iran
“remained the most active state sponsor of terrorism” in 2010, and it again attributed the terrorist
activity primarily to the Qods Force of the Revolutionary Guard. The current Defense Minister of
Iran is Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi, the former Qods Forces commander.
In the 1990s, Iran allegedly was involved in the assassination of several Iranian dissidents based
in Europe. In May 2010, France allowed the return to Iran of Vakili Rad, who had been convicted
in the 1991 stabbing of the Shah’s last prime minister, Shahpour Bakhtiar. Iran has not been
accused of dissident assassinations abroad in over a decade.
In 2011 and 2012, U.S. officials have emphasized what they see as a new dimension to the Iranian
threat—the potential for Iran to try to commit acts of terrorism in the United States itself. This
was discussed by DNI Clapper in testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on January
31, 2012, and represents a change from the previous U.S. view that the risk of U.S. retaliation
makes Iran’s leaders highly unlikely to authorize attacks inside the United States. The altered
assessment is based on an Iranian alleged plot, revealed on October 11, 2011, by the U.S. Justice
Department, to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador to the United States. According to the
allegation, an Iranian American, Mansour Arbabsiar, tried to hire, at the behest of named Qods
Force officers (Gholam Shakuri and his superior and a purported Arbabsiar relative, Abdul Reza
Shahlai), what he thought was a member of the Los Zetas organization of Mexican drug dealers,
to commit the attack. Administration officials said that senior Qods and Iranian civilian leaders
appeared to have at least some knowledge of the plot. Arbabsiar and four named Qods Force
officials were sanctioned under Executive Order 13224, and an Iranian airline, Mahan Air, was
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
sanctioned as well for allegedly helping the Qods Force move weapons and materiel around the
Middle East.
Table 7
the region.
A key Iranian policy objective is to undermine and be positioned to strategically threaten Israel.
Ahmadinejad’s various statements on Israel were discussed above, and Supreme Leader
Khamene’i has repeatedly called Israel a “cancerous tumor.” In December 2001, Rafsanjani, now
considered a moderate, said that it would take only one Iranian nuclear bomb to destroy Israel,
whereas a similar strike against Iran by Israel would have far less impact because Iran’s
population is large. Iran has hosted numerous conferences to which anti-peace process terrorist
organizations were invited (for example: April 24, 2001, and June 2-3, 2002). The formal position
of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, considered a bastion of moderates, is that Iran would not seek to
block an Israeli-Palestinian settlement but that the process is too weighted toward Israel to yield a
fair result. Iran supports Palestinian efforts to obtain U.N. recognition of statehood.
Support for International Terrorism
Iran’s foreign policy is broad and complex, and often involves support of groups that are
considered terrorist by the United States. The State Department report on international terrorism
for 2011, released July 31, stated that Iran “remained an active state sponsor of terrorism in
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2011,” but did not repeat previous years’ characterizations that it is “the most active state sponsor
of terrorism.” The report again cites the IRGC Qods Force as the primary instrument by which
the regime supports militant movements abroad and uses these movements to implement Iran’s
foreign policy. The current Defense Minister of Iran is Brigadier General Ahmad Vahidi, the
former Qods Forces commander.
In 2011 and 2012, U.S. officials have emphasized what they see as a new dimension to the Iranian
threat—the potential for Iran to try to commit acts of terrorism in the United States itself. This
was discussed by DNI Clapper in testimony before the Senate Intelligence Committee on January
31, 2012, and represents a change from the previous U.S. view that the risk of U.S. retaliation
makes Iran’s leaders highly unlikely to authorize attacks inside the United States. The altered
assessment is based on an Iranian alleged plot, revealed on October 11, 2011, by the U.S. Justice
Department, to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador to the United States.
A further trend in 2012 has been apparent Iranian-sponsored attempts to attack Israeli diplomats
and citizens, perhaps in retaliation for what Iran alleges has been Israeli assassinations of Iranian
nuclear scientists. India reportedly has concluded the Qods Force was responsible for wounding
the wife of an Israeli diplomat in an attack in Delhi in February 2012. Israel says Iran, working
through its Lebanon ally Hezbollah, was responsible for a July 19, 2012, terrorist bombing in
Bulgaria that killed five Israeli tourists. Other alleged Iranian plots against Israeli and other
targets have been reported in 2012 in Thailand, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Cyprus, and Kenya.
Earlier, Iranian terrorism also took the form of assassinating dissidents abroad. In the late 1980s
and early 1990s, Iran allegedly was responsible for the assassination of several Iranian dissidents
based in Europe, including Iranian Kurdish dissident leader Abdol Rahman Qasemlu, several
other Kurdish leaders (including those killed at the Mykonos café in Berlin in September 1992),
the brother of PMOI leader Masud Rajavi, and several figures close to the late Shah of Iran. In
May 2010, France allowed the return to Iran of Vakili Rad, who had been convicted in the 1991
stabbing of the Shah’s last prime minister, Shahpour Bakhtiar. Iran has not been accused of
dissident assassinations abroad in well over a decade.
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Table 8. Major Past Acts of Iran or Iran-Related Terrorism
Date
Incident/Event
Likely/Claimed Perpetrator
April 18, 1983
Truck bombing of U.S. Embassy in
Beirut, Lebanon. 63 dead, including 17
U.S. citizens.
Factions that eventually formed
Lebanese Hezbollah claimed
responsibility.
October 23, 1983
Truck bombing of U.S. Marine barracks
in Beirut. 241 Marines killed.
Same as above
December 12, 1983
Bombings of U.S. and French embassies
in Kuwait City. 5 fatalities.
Da’wa Party of Iraq—Iransupported Iraqi Shiite militant
group. 17 Da’wa activists charged
and imprisoned in Kuwait
September 20, 1984
Truck bombing of U.S. embassy annex in
Beirut. 23 killed.
Factions that eventually formed
Lebanese Hezbollah
May 25, 1985
Bombing of Amir of Kuwait’s motorcade
Da’wa Party of Iraq
June 14, 1985
Hijacking of TWA Flight 847. One
fatality, Navy diver Robert Stetham
Lebanese Hezbollah
April 5, 1988
Hijacking of Kuwait Air passenger plane.
Two killed.
Lebanese Hezbollah, seeking
release of 17 Da’wa prisoners in
Kuwait.
March 17, 1992
Bombing of Israeli Embassy in Buenos
Aires. 29 killed.
Lebanese Hezbollah, assisted by
Iranian intelligence/diplomats.
July 18, 1994
Bombing of Argentine-Jewish Mutual
Association (AMIA) building in Buenos
Aires.
Same as above
June 25, 1996
Bombing of Khobar Towers housing
complex near Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. 19
U.S. Air Force personnel killed.
Saudi Hezbollah, supported by
Iran. Some assessments point to
possible involvement of Al Qaeda
as well.
Source: CRS. Prepared with the assistance of Hussein Hassan, Knowledge Services Group.
Foreign Policy: Relations with the Persian Gulf States
The Persian Gulf monarchy states (Gulf Cooperation Council, GCC: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates) are concerned about Iranian strategic
influence. They have not openly supported U.S. conflict with Iran, fearing doing so might cause
Iran to retaliate against Gulf state targets, and they maintain relatively normal trade and other
interactions with Iran. However, several Gulf rulers have periodically asserted publicly that the
United States
should move decisively to end Iran’s nuclear program. The Gulf states are
cooperating with U.S. containment, and they are cooperating with U.S.
containment and missile defense strategies and with many aspects of U.S. and multilateral
sanctions against Iran—particularly by offering more oil to customers to substitute for their
purchases of Iranian oil and ending transactions with sanctioned Iranian banks. On May 14, 2012,
, as discussed later in this paper. In particular, those Gulf states with spare
oil production capacity are offering more oil to customers that are reducing purchases of Iranian
oil. On May 14, 2012, the GCC states met in Riyadh to discuss a Saudi plan for greater political and economic
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
and economic integration of the GCC states—a plan proposed in part to present a united front against Iran.
However, the plan was not adopted and deferred to further discussions. The Gulf states also
appear to be
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against Iran. The plan was deferred for further discussion. The Gulf states also appear to be
working toward the ouster of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in part to weaken
Iran Iran
strategically in the region.
•
Saudi Arabia. Iran and Saudi Arabia represent opposite poles of influence and
interests in the region. Saudi Arabia sees itself as leader of the Sunni Muslim
world and views Shiite Muslims, including those in eastern Saudi Arabia, as
heretical and disloyal. Saudi alarm over Iranian influence in the Gulf was a major
factor in the
military intervention by Saudi Arabia (joined by UAE) on behalf of
the Bahraini the Bahrain
government in March 2011. The Saudis repeatedly raise past issues,
including blame of Iran for disruptive and sometimes violent demonstrations at
criticize Iran for past actions,
including inspiring violent demonstrations at some of the annual Hajj pilgrimages
in Mecca in the 1980s and 1990s, and for supporting a
pro-Iranian movement in
the Kingdom, Saudi Hezbollah, that the Saudis hold
responsible for the June 25,
1996, Khobar Towers bombing listed in the table
above.39.36 Still, after restoring relations in December 1991
(after a four-year
break), Saudi-Iran ties progressed to high-level contacts during
Khatemi’s
presidency, including Khatemi visits in 1999 and 2002. Ahmadinejad
has visited
on several occasions, and Iran’s intelligence minister, Heydar
Moslehi, visited in
December 2011 ostensibly to reduce tensions. Yet, in January 2012 Iran warned
warned Saudi Arabia, in particular, not to sell additional oil to Iranian oil
customers who
are implementing the EU embargo on Iranian oil purchases. And Saudi leaders
Saudi
leaders have threatened to try to acquire a nuclear weapons capabilityweapon if Iran doesacquires one.
•
United Arab Emirates (UAE) concerns about Iran have not recovered from the
April 1992 Iranian expulsion of UAE security forces from the Persian Gulf island
of Abu Musa, which it and the UAE shared under a 1971 bilateral agreement. (In
1971, Iran, then ruled by the U.S.-backed Shah, seized two other islands, Greater
and Lesser Tunb, from the emirate of Ras al-Khaymah, as well as part of Abu
Musa from the emirate of Sharjah.) The UAE seeks to refer the dispute to the
International Court of Justice (ICJ), but Iran insists on resolving the issue
bilaterally. (ICJ referral requires concurrence from both parties to a dispute.) The
UAE formally protested Iran’s setting up of a maritime and ship registration
office on Abu Musa in July 2008. The emotion of the issue was inflamed again
issue reignited on April 11, 2012, when
Ahmadinejad visited Abu Musa, causing the UAE to
submit to Iran and to the
United Nations a formal letter of protest. UAE officials
say the visitOn May 2, 2012, when IRGC
Commander Mohammad Ali Jaafari, accompanied by several Majles deputies,
visited the island and discussed developing a tourism industry there. UAE
officials say the visits undid about one year of quiet diplomacy between the two countries
countries on the issue, which included the naming of negotiators by both sides.
The United
States supports UAE proposals but takes no formal position on
sovereignty.
•
Earlier, seeking to avoid antagonizing Iran, in May 2007 the UAE received
Ahmadinejad (the highest-level Iranian visit since the 1979 revolution) and
allowed him to lead an anti-U.S. rally of several hundred Iranian-origin residents
of Dubai at a stadium there. This large Iranian-origin resident community (about
39
36
Walsh, Elsa. “Annals of Politics: Louis Freeh’s Last Case.” The New Yorker, May 14, 2001. The June 21, 2001,
federal grand jury indictments of 14 suspects (13 Saudis and a Lebanese citizen) in the Khobar bombing indicate that
Iranian agents may have been involved, but no indictments of any Iranians were announced. In June 2002, Saudi
Arabia reportedly sentenced some of the eleven Saudi suspects held there. The 9/11 Commission final report asserts
that Al Qaeda might have had some as yet undetermined involvement in the Khobar Towers attacks.
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300,000) in Dubai may explain why Dubai takes a generally softer line on Iran
than does the federation capital, Abu Dhabi.
•
In cooperating with U.S. and international sanctions, the UAE has increased
scrutiny of exports to Iran and restricted Iranian banking activities in the UAE
since the passage of Resolution 1929 in June 2010, and it has frozen the assets of
Iranians subject to asset freezes under the U.N. resolutions. In February 2012, a
major bank in Dubai (Noor Islamic Bank) ended transactions with Iran; Iran was
using the bank to process hard currency oil payments. UAE officials say their
cooperation with sanctions enforcement has reduced trade with Iran by about
30% since 2010 (when the level was about $12 billion). The UAE is also close to
completing a new oil pipeline that will allow its oil exports to bypass the Strait of
Hormuz and lessen the vulnerability of UAE oil exports to disruption caused by
conflict there.
•
Qatar, like most of the other Gulf states, does not seek confrontation and seeks to
accommodate some of its interests, yet Qatar remains.
•
Qatar is wary that Iran might
eventually seek to encroach on its large North Field
(natural gas). It shares that
field with Iran (called South Pars on Iran’s side) and
Qatar earns large revenues
from natural gas exports from it. Qatar’s fears have
been heightened by
occasional Iranian statements, such as one in April 2004,
when Iran’s deputy oil
minister said that Qatar is probably producing more gas
than “her right share”
from the field and that Iran “will not allow” its wealth to be
used by others.
Possibly to try to ease such implied threats, Qatar invited
Ahmadinejad to the
December 2007 GCC summit there.
•
Bahrain is about 60% Shiite-inhabited, many of whom are of Persian origin, but
its government is dominated by the Sunni Muslim Al Khalifa family. In 1981 and
again in 1996, Bahrain publicly accused Iran of supporting Bahraini Shiite
dissidents in efforts to overthrow the ruling Al Khalifa family. These concerns
underlie the government response to the 2011-2012 uprising against the Al
Khalifa regime by mostly Shiite demonstrators. In November 2011, an
investigatory commission (Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry)
concluded there is no evidence to indicate Iran instigated the protests, although
U.S. officials say there is evidence Iran is working with Shiite hardline groups to
block anya political settlement there. Tensions have flared several times since July
2007 over Iranian attempts to question the legitimacy of a 1970 U.N.-run
referendum in which Bahrainis opted for independence from Iran.
•
Oman. Of the GCC states, the Sultanate of Oman is closest politically to Iran and
has refused to ostracize Iran ortended not to directly criticize Iranian policies. During the
Shah’s rule, Iran
sent troops to help the Sultan suppress rebellion in the Dhofar
region. Sultan
Qaboos made a state visit to Iran in August 2009, coinciding with
the second
inauguration of Ahmadinejad that coincided with substantial Iranian
unrest inside
Iran over his reelection. As noted, Oman supplied the aircraft to fly
Oman played a brokering role in obtaining the release
from Iran of U.S. hiker Sara Shourd out of Iran in September 2010, and her companions who
were released on September 21, 2011, one year later, suggesting it played a
brokering role in these releasesin
September 2011. Some press reports say local Omani officials
routinely turn a blind
eye to or even cooperate in the smuggling of western goods
to Iran.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
to Iran.
•
Kuwait had pursued ties to Iran as a counterweight to Saddam Hussein, who
invaded Kuwait in August 1990. Since Saddam’s overthrow in 2003, Kuwait has
become more distant from and critical of Iran and, in May 2010, Kuwait
confirmed that it had arrested some Kuwaiti civil servants and stateless residents
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for allegedly working on behalf of the Qods Force in an alleged plot to blow up
Kuwaiti energy facilities.4037 In March 2011, a Kuwait court sentenced two
Iranians and a Kuwaiti to death in the alleged plot. In a related development that
month, Kuwait expelled three Iranian diplomats, and Iran expelled three Kuwaiti
diplomats in response. Iranian official visits to Kuwait in May 2011 defused the
issue, to some extent, but the suspicions flared again in November 2011 when
Iran arrested two persons its says are Kuwaiti spies. About 25% of Kuwaitis are
Shiite Muslims, and Iran supported Shiite radical groups in Kuwait in the 1980s
as a means to try to pressure Kuwait not to support the Iraqi war effort in the
Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988). Some of those acts are listed in the table above.
Yemen
Yemeni leaders have long claimed that Iran was trying to destabilize Yemen—making such
claims perhaps in order to secure more financial and military aid from the Arab Gulf states. More
recently there have been independent indications of a growing Iranian role inside Yemen. In the
north, an unnamed U.S. official reportedly said that Iranian smugglers backed by the Quds Force
are using small boats to ship in AK-47s, rocket-propelled grenades and other arms to replace
older weapons used by the Houthi rebels.38 On July 19, 2012, Yemen’s President accused Iran of
spying on Yemen and threatened unspecified retaliation if Iran continued to do so. The overlay of
the conflict in Yemen is an uprising against longtime President Ali Abdullah Saleh that began in
2011 and led to his departure from Yemen in January 2012.
Iranian Policy in Iraq39Iranian Policy in Iraq41
The U.S. military ousting of Saddam Hussein in 2003 appeared to benefitbenefitted Iran strategically by
removing a its
long time nemesis of Iranantagonist and bringing to power a government led by Shiite Islamists
who have long-standing with longstanding ties to Iran. The Iraqi government first formed in May 2006 is still led by
Prime Minister
Nuri al-Maliki, the head of a Shiite Islamist party called the Da’wa (Islamic Call)
Party. He has
made severalnumerous visits to Iran during his tenure—most recently in late April 2012—and
and is strongly backed by Iran in his political
disputes with Iraq’s Sunni-dominated factions. He and
allied Iraqi leaders are sympathetic to
some of Iran’s regional goals, such as keeping in power
Iran’s ally President Bashar al-Assad of
Syria, and of eliminating Iranian opposition groups from
Iran’s borders. (For more information, see CRS Report RS21968, Iraq: Politics, Governance, and
Human Rights, by Kenneth Katzman.)
U.S. officials stress that the United States did not leave a “vacuum” in Iraq for Iran to exploit—
the United States retains a large presence (about 50,000 military personnel, including those
deployed on ships) in the region and 16,000 U.S. civilian personnel continue to engage Iraq
extensively with diplomatic and military training and other programs. Still, in an October 23,
2011, interview with CNN, Ahmadinejad said Iran might begin training Iraqi Security Forces
after U.S. forces depart.
Aside from Iran’s ties to Maliki and governing institutions, Iran exercises influence in Iraq
through Shiite factions, particularly that of young Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr. Since returning
to Iraq in January 2011, Al Sadr strongly opposed any U.S. military presence in Iraq after the
mandated withdrawal date of December 31, 2011, and his threats to allow militias loyal to him to
rearm and to attack U.S. forces if U.S. forces remain in Iraq beyond 2011 were instrumental in
Iraq’s refusal to meet U.S. requirements for U.S. forces to remain in Iraq. There are concerns that
Sadrist and other pro-Iranian Shiite militias in Iraq can continue to target U.S. personnel still in
country, including those based at the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad and U.S. consulates in Basra and
Irbil. The consulate in Basra reportedly is shelled a few times a week. The State Department
terrorism report for 2010 said that Iran (particularly the Qods Force) continues to support
40
“Iran Spy Cell Dismantled in Kuwait.” Associated Press, May 6, 2010; “Iran Cell Planned Attacks in Kuwait,
Minister Says. Reuters, April 21, 2011.
41
This issue is covered in greater depth in CRS Report RS22323, Iran-Iraq Relations, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
materially (funds, weapons, training, and guidance) these groups, including such militias as the
Promised Day Brigade and Kata’ib Hezbollah (Hezbollah Brigades). Kata’ib Hezbollah, although
with a strength of only 400 persons, according to the State Department 2010 report on terrorism,
was designated an FTO in July 2009 Iran’s borders. Iraq reportedly has
allowed Iran to overfly Iraqi airspace with cargo flights to supply the Syrian military in its battle
against armed dissidents.40 Iraq also reportedly continues to conduct a full spectrum of trade with
Iran, sometimes allegedly running afoul of U.S. and international sanctions against Iran. On July
31, 2012, the United States sanctioned the Elaf Islamic Bank of Iraq for conducting sanctionable
banking transactions with Iran. (For more information, see CRS Report RS21968, Iraq: Politics,
Governance, and Human Rights, by Kenneth Katzman.)
37
“Iran Spy Cell Dismantled in Kuwait.” Associated Press, May 6, 2010; “Iran Cell Planned Attacks in Kuwait,
Minister Says. Reuters, April 21, 2011.
38
A rebellion in northern Yemen was begun by dissident Shiite cleric Hussein Badruddin Al Houthi, and the rebellion
is widely referred to as the Houthi rebellion. Eric Schmitt and Robert F. Worth, “With Arms for Yemen Rebels, Iran
Seeks Wider Mideast Role,” New York Times, March 15, 2012.
39
Background on this issue is covered in CRS Report RS22323, Iran-Iraq Relations, by Kenneth Katzman.
40
Michael Gordon. “Iran Supplying Syrian Military Via Iraqi Airspace.” New York Times, September 5, 2012.
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Aside from Iran’s ties to Maliki and governing institutions, Iran exercises influence in Iraq
through Shiite factions, particularly that of Shiite cleric Moqtada Al Sadr. Iran continues to
support Sadrist and other pro-Iranian Shiite militias in Iraq—such as the Promised Day Brigade,
As’aib Ahl Al Haq (League of the Righteous) and Kata’ib Hezbollah (Hezbollah Brigades)—
which pose a particular threat to the U.S. consulates in Basra. However, these and other Shiite
militias are reported to be less active since the U.S. departure in December 2011—a departure
that removed their rationale for remaining armed. Iran has reportedly been using its influence
with Sadr to dissuade him from directing his 40 followers in the Iraqi parliament to side with
factions seeking a vote of no-confidence against Maliki.
Another possible sign of Iranian intent to influence Iraq came in November 2011 when supporters
of an Iraq-born senior cleric, longtime resident in Iran, Ayatollah Mahmoud Shahrudi, began
opening representatives offices in the holy Iraqi city of Najaf. This is viewed as an Iranian effort
to position Shahrudi as a successor to the frail senior Iraqi cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
Iraqi Shiites reportedly are shunning Shahrudi, suggesting they do not want additional Iranian
religious influence in Najaf. Maliki met with Shahrudi during his April 2012 visit to Iran.
Supporting Palestinian Militant Groups
Iran’s support for Palestinian militant groups has long concerned U.S. administrations, as part of
an apparent effort by Tehran to obstruct an Israeli-Palestinian peace, which Iran believes would
strengthen the United States and Israel. Ahmadinejad’s various statements on Israel were
discussed above, and Supreme Leader Khamene’i has repeatedly called Israel a “cancerous
tumor.” He used a similar term (“disease”) in an August 18, 2010, speech. In December 2001,
Rafsanjani, now considered a moderate, said that it would take only one Iranian nuclear bomb to
destroy Israel, whereas a similar strike against Iran by Israel would have far less impact because
Iran’s population is large. Iran has hosted numerous conferences to which anti-peace process
terrorist organizations were invited (for example: April 24, 2001, and June 2-3, 2002). The formal
position of the Iranian Foreign Ministry, considered a bastion of moderates, is that Iran would not
seek to block an Israeli-Palestinian settlement but that the process is too weighted toward Israel to
yield a fair result. Iran supports Palestinian efforts to obtain U.N. recognition of statehood.
Iran and Hamas
The State Department report on terrorism for 2010 says that Hamas “receives the majority of its
funding, weapons, and training from Iran.” The report repeats previous year’s reports assertions
that Iran also provides funding, weapons, and training to Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), the Al
Aqsa Martyr’s Brigades, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command
(PFLP-GC). All are named as foreign terrorist organizations (FTO) by the State Department for
their use of violence to undermine the Arab-Israeli peace process. However, Hamas activists have
long downplayed the Iran relationship, asserting that Iran is mostly Shiite, while Hamas members
are Sunni Muslims.42
The relationship with Hamas led many experts to conclude that Iran’s regional policy was
strengthened by Hamas’s victory in the January 25, 2006, Palestinian legislative elections, and
even more so by Hamas’s June 2007 armed takeover of the Gaza Strip. Iran provided material
support to Hamas during the December 27, 2008-January 17, 2009, Israel-Hamas War in Gaza.
Then Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen said on January 27, 2009, that the United
States boarded but did not seize a ship carrying light arms to Hamas from Iran; the ship (the
Monchegorsk) later went to Cyprus. On March 11, 2009, a U.N. committee monitoring Iran’s
compliance with Resolution 1747, which bans Iranian arms exports, said Iran might have violated
42
CNN “Late Edition” interview with Hamas co-founder Mahmoud Zahar, January 29, 2006.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
that resolution with the alleged shipment. Hamas appeared to corroborate allegations of Iranian
weapons supplies when its exiled leader, Khaled Meshal, on February 1, 2009, publicly praised
Iran for helping Hamas achieve “victory” over Israel in the conflict.43 Iran joined in regional
criticism of Israel for its May 31, 2010, armed inspection of a Turkish ship, carrying humanitarian
goods, that attempted to evade Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. In March 2011, Israel intercepted
a ship, the Victoria, off its coast, and seized a “large quantity” of mortars and C-704 cruise
missiles that Israel said were bound for Hamas in Gaza.
Since mid-2011, the Iran-Hamas relationship appears to have deteriorated over their differing
views of the unrest in Syria. Hamas opposes the military-led crackdown against unrest by Syrian
President Bashar Al Assad, possibly out of sectarian sympathy with the mostly Sunni protesters in
Syria. Because it took this position, Hamas’ Syria-based leaders left that country in late 2011 and
relocated to Qatar and elsewhere. This position is at odds with Iranian policy and, perhaps as a
punishment, Iran reportedly suspended payments to Hamas as of July 2011. In an attempt to
signal that the two continue to have good relations, the prime minister of the Hamas authority in
Gaza, Ismail Haniya, visited Tehran on February 10, 2012. However, on March 6, 2012, Hamas
leaders stated they would not necessarily retaliate against Israel, on Iran’s behalf, if Israel
undertook unilateral military action against Iranian nuclear facilities.
Lebanese Hezbollah44
Iran has maintained a close relationship with Hezbollah since the group was formed in 1982, and
then officially unveiled in 1985 by Lebanese Shiite clerics of the pro-Iranian Lebanese Da’wa
Party. Iran has long seen Hezbollah as an instrument to exert regional influence. Iran’s political,
financial, and military aid to Hezbollah has helped it become a major force in Lebanon’s politics.
It remains politically close to Iran but is no longer seen as a reflexive “proxy” of Iran. Acts of
terrorism by the group and its antecedents are listed in the table above, and Hezbollah has largely
forsaken acts of international terrorism in The State Department report on terrorism for 2011
repeated previous year’s reports assertions that Iran provides funding, weapons, and training to
Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), the Al Aqsa Martyr’s Brigades, and the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine-General Command (PFLP-GC). All are named as foreign terrorist
organizations (FTO) by the State Department for their use of violence against Israel.
Iran and Hamas
Since mid-2011, the Iran-Hamas relationship, once considered a key to Iran’s influence in stoking
Israeli-Palestinian conflict, appears to have deteriorated over their differing views of the unrest in
Syria. Hamas opposes the military-led crackdown against unrest by Syrian President Bashar Al
Assad, possibly out of sectarian sympathy with the mostly Sunni protesters in Syria. Because it
took this position, Hamas’ Syria-based leaders left that country in late 2011. This position is at
odds with Iranian policy and, perhaps as a punishment, Iran reportedly suspended payments to
Hamas as of July 2011. In an attempt to signal that the two continue to have good relations, the
prime minister of the Hamas authority in Gaza, Ismail Haniya, visited Tehran on February 10,
2012. However, on March 6, 2012, Hamas leaders stated they would not necessarily retaliate
against Israel, on Iran’s behalf, if Israel undertook unilateral military action against Iranian
nuclear facilities. The Iran-Hamas rift appears to affirm the basic underlying vulnerability of the
relationship—Hamas activists have long downplayed the Iran relationship, asserting that Iran is
mostly Shiite, while Hamas members are Sunni Muslims.41 For well over a decade, the State
Department report on terrorism, including the report for 2011, has said that Hamas receives
funding, weapons, and training from Iran. However, the 2011 report contains information as of
the end of 2011 and may not fully reflect the apparent rift.
41
CNN “Late Edition” interview with Hamas co-founder Mahmoud Zahar, January 29, 2006.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
When the Iran-Hamas relationship was strong, Iran’s regional policy was strengthened by Hamas
successes, such as its victory in the January 25, 2006, Palestinian legislative elections, and even
more so by Hamas’s June 2007 armed takeover of the Gaza Strip. Iran provided material support
to Hamas during the December 27, 2008-January 17, 2009, Israel-Hamas War in Gaza. Then Joint
Chiefs Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen said on January 27, 2009, that the United States boarded
but did not seize a ship carrying light arms to Hamas from Iran; the ship (the Monchegorsk) later
went to Cyprus. On February 1, 2009, one of Hamas’ main leaders, Khaled Meshal, publicly
praised Iran for helping Hamas achieve “victory” over Israel in the conflict.42 Iran joined in
regional criticism of Israel for its May 31, 2010, armed inspection of a Turkish ship, carrying
humanitarian goods, that attempted to evade Israel’s naval blockade of Gaza. In March 2011,
Israel intercepted a ship, the Victoria, off its coast, and seized a “large quantity” of mortars and C704 cruise missiles that Israel said were bound for Hamas in Gaza. These shipments appeared to
violate Resolution 1747, which bans Iranian arms exports.
Lebanese Hezbollah43
Lebanese Hezbollah is Iran’s chief protégé movement in the region. That relationship began when
Lebanese Shiite clerics of the pro-Iranian Lebanese Da’wa Party began to organize in 1982 into
what later was unveiled in 1985 as Hezbollah. Iran’s political, financial, and military aid to
Hezbollah has helped it become a major force in Lebanon’s politics; it remains politically close to
Iran but is no longer seen as Tehran’s “proxy.” Acts of terrorism by the group and its antecedents
are listed in the table above, but Hezbollah has largely forsaken acts of international terrorism in
recent years, focusing instead on its role in Lebanon.
Hezbollah’s attacks on Israeli forces in southern Lebanon contributed to an Israeli withdrawal in
May 2000, but Hezbollah maintained military forces along the border. Although Iran likely did
not instigate Lebanese Hezbollah to provoke the July-August 2006 war with Israel, Iran has long
been its major arms supplier. Hezbollah fired Iranian-supplied rockets on Israel’s northern towns
during the fighting, including at the Israeli city of Haifa (30 miles from the border), and, more
intensively, at cities within 20 miles of the Lebanese border.4544 During that conflict, on July 14,
2006, Hezbollah hit an Israeli warship with a C-802 sea-skimming missile probably provided by
Iran. Iran also purportedly provided advice during the conflict; about 50 Revolutionary Guards
Qods Force personnel were in Lebanon (down from about 2,000 when Hezbollah was formed,
according to a Washington Post report of April 13, 2005) when the conflict began; that number
might have increased during the conflict to help Hezbollah operate the Iran-supplied weaponry.
Even though Hezbollah reduced its overt military presence in southern Lebanon in accordance
with the conflict-related U.N. Security Council Resolution 1701 (July 31, 2006), Hezbollah was
perceived as a victor in the war for holding out against Israel.
43Ahmadinejad advertised Iran’s continued strong commitment to Hezbollah during his October 1415, 2010, visit to Lebanon, the first by a president of the Islamic Republic, which included his
visiting villages near the border with Israel. Iran was perceived as a political beneficiary of
Hezbollah’s decision in January 2011 to withdraw from the Lebanese cabinet, which led to the
42
Hamas Leader Praises Iran’s Help in Gaza ‘Victory.’ CNN.com, February 1, 2009.
For detail on Hezbollah, see CRS Report R41446, Hezbollah: Background and Issues for Congress, by Casey L.
Addis and Christopher M. Blanchard.
4544
“Israel’s Peres Says Iran Arming Hizbollah.” Reuters, February 4, 2002.
4443
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Ahmadinejad advertised Iran’s continued strong commitment to Hezbollah during his October 1415, 2010, visit to Lebanon, the first by a president of the Islamic Republic, which included his
visiting villages near the border with Israel. Iran was perceived as a political beneficiary of
Hezbollah’s decision in January 2011 to withdraw from the Lebanese cabinet, which led to the
50
Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
fall of the Hariri government and the formation of a government by Hezbollah-selectee Najib
Makati, a Sunni Muslim. (Under a long-standing agreed political formula in Lebanon, the prime
minister is a Sunni Muslim.)
However, there has been more vocal criticism of Hezbollah within
and outside Lebanon because
it continues to support its other key patron, Syrian President Bashar
Al Assad, despite his violent crackdown against protesters in Syria.
crackdown against protesters in Syria. Because of the perceived vulnerability of Assad, and
Hezbollah’s linkage to his regime, Iran is reported to be trying to broaden its relationships in
Lebanon, particularly with the Christian community. In May 2012, Iran’s first vice president
visited Lebanon with a large delegation and numerous proposals to fund development projects in
areas inhabited by all of Lebanon’s different sects and confessions. One controversial project is to
provide $40 million for a dam to provide electricity to parts of Lebanon’s Christian heartland.
Lebanon’s cabinet is considering the offer.45
Recent Arming and Funding
Since the 2006 conflict, Iran has resupplied Hezbollah with at least 25,000 new rockets, and46
press reports in early 2010 said Hezbollah maintains a wide network of arms and missile caches
around Lebanon. Among the post-war deliveries were 500 Iranian-made “Zelzal” (Earthquake)
missiles with a range of 186 miles, enough to reach Tel Aviv from south Lebanon. In November
2009, Israel intercepted a ship that it asserted was carrying 500 tons of arms purportedly for
Hezbollah. Iran also made at least $150 million available for Hezbollah to distribute to Lebanese
citizens (mostly Shiite supporters of Hezbollah) whose homes were damaged in the Israeli
military campaign.47 Many experts believe Hezbollah might fire those rockets at Israel if Israel
were to strike Iran’s nuclear facilities.
As far as funding, the State Department terrorism report for 2008, released on April 30, 2009,
specified Iranian aid to Hezbollah as exceeding $200 million in 2008, and said that Iran trained
over 3,000 Hezbollah fighters in Iran during that year. The report for 2009 used similar figures for
Iranian aid and training for Hezbollah but over an unspecified time frame. The State Department
report for 2010, released August 18, 2011, said2011 repeated the 2010 report’s assertion that Iran “has provided hundreds of millions
of dollars
in support of Hezbollah and has trained thousands of Hezbollah fighters at camps in
Iran.” Some
experts believe Iranian support to Hezbollah declined in 2011 as international
sanctions have
taken a toll on Iran’s economy and supply of available hard currency.
Syria
Iran is one of Syria’s few strategic allies, and Iran fears that this alliance is likely to dissolve
outrightSyria is Iran’s closest Arab ally and Iran fears a strategic setback if the pro-democracy movement in rebellion in
Syria, which is at its core Sunni Muslim, succeeds in
changing Syria’s regime. Iran’s relationship
with Syria is key to Iran’s efforts to support
Hezbollah. Hezbollah because Syria is the transit point for the
Iranian weapons shipments to Hezbollah, and both
countries see. Both Iran and Syria have used Hezbollah as leverage
against Israel to achieve their regional and territorial aims.
To try to prevent this outcome, Iran has materially supported the Syrian regime. In March 2011,
Turkey intercepted and removed weapons from an Iranian cargo plane bound for Syria. Turkey
impounded another such shipment consisting of several truckloads in late April 2011. On April
14, 2011, U.S. officials, commenting on background, reportedly said that Iran is providing Syria
with equipment to suppress crowds and to monitor and block protester use of the Internet.48 U.S.
46
Rotella, Sebastian. “In Lebanon, Hezbollah Arms Stockpile Bigger, Deadlier.” Los Angeles Times, May 4, 2008.
Shadid, Anthony. “Armed With Iran’s Millions, Fighters Turn to Rebuilding.” Washington Post, August 16, 2006.
48
Adam Entous and Matthew Rosenberg. “U.S. Says Iran Helps Crackdown in Syria.” Wall Street Journal, April 14,
2011.
47
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
officials told journalists in May 2011 that Iran was sending Qods Force advisers to help Syria
crush the unrest; on May 4, 2011, the Treasury Department designated the Qods Force as an
entity subject to a U.S. assets freeze for human rights abuses in Syria (under Executive Order
13572). On May 18, 2011, the Treasury Department designated Mohsen Chizari, a Qods Force
officer, and Qods Force overall commander Qasem Soleimani under that order. Other Iranians
were sanctioned in late June under that order. In late August 2011, the European Union sanctioned
the Qods Force for assisting the Syrian crackdown. In January 2012, the armed opposition in
Syria captured several men who it said were members of the Qods Force, and showed them and
their identification cards on a video. The capture, if confirmed as presented, would represent the
first piece of public hard evidence that Iran has sent fighters to Syria to assist the regime there.
On May 17, 2012, press reports quoted a study by the “panel of experts” that is monitoring
Iranian compliance with the U.N. resolutions (see above) as saying that Iran has shipped
weaponry to Syria. Prior to the unrest in Syria, there was a widespread belief that the Iran-Syria
alliance would not be severed unless and until Syria and Israel reach a peace agreement that
results in the return of the Golan Heights to Syria.
Prior to the unrest in Syria, Iran had developed a defense relationship with the Assad regime. On
December 13, 2009, the Syrian and Iranian defense ministers signed a defense agreement to “face
common enemies and challenges.” In late June 2010, it was reported that Iran had sent Syria a
sophisticated air defense radar system that Syria could potentially use to thwart Israeli air
strikes.49 In March 2011, Iranian officials commented that they might contribute to improving
some Syrian port facilities or other installations. On some occasions, including the early 1990s,
Iran purportedly has acted as an intermediary with North Korea to supply Syria with various
forms of WMD and missile technology.
45
Neil MacFarquhar. “Iran is Seeking Lebanon Stake As Syria Totters.” New York Times, May 25, 2012.
Rotella, Sebastian. “In Lebanon, Hezbollah Arms Stockpile Bigger, Deadlier.” Los Angeles Times, May 4, 2008.
47
Shadid, Anthony. “Armed With Iran’s Millions, Fighters Turn to Rebuilding.” Washington Post, August 16, 2006.
46
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
To try to prevent Assad’s downfall, Iran has materially supported the Syrian regime. In March
2011, shortly after the uprising in Syria broke out, Turkey intercepted and removed weapons from
an Iranian cargo plane bound for Syria. Turkey impounded another such shipment consisting of
several truckloads in late April 2011. On April 14, 2011, U.S. officials, commenting on
background, reportedly said that Iran is providing Syria with equipment to suppress crowds and
to monitor and block protester use of the Internet.48
U.S. officials told journalists in May 2011 that Iran was sending Qods Force advisers to help
Syria crush the unrest. In January 2012, the armed opposition in Syria captured several men who
it said were members of the Qods Force, and showed them and their identification cards on a
video. In late May 2012, senior Qods Force officer General Esmail Ghaani publicly confirmed in
Iranian media that there are Qods Force personnel in Syria, saying they have helped stop attacks
on civilians carried out by Syrian armed rebels. The April 2012 Defense Department report on
Iran’s military power, released in July 2012, said that “Iran probably has provided military
trainers to advise Syrian security forces.” On August 28, 2012, an IRGC commander said Iran is
“involved in fighting every aspect of a war, a military one in Syria” and a cultural one as well.
In response to the Qods presence in Syria, on May 4, 2011, the Treasury Department designated
the Qods Force as an entity subject to a U.S. assets freeze for human rights abuses in Syria (under
Executive Order 13572). On May 18, 2011, the Treasury Department designated Mohsen Chizari,
a Qods Force officer, and Qods Force overall commander Qasem Soleimani under that order.
Other Iranians were sanctioned in late June under that order. In late August 2011, the European
Union sanctioned the Qods Force for assisting the Syrian crackdown. On May 17, 2012, press
reports quoted a study by the “panel of experts” that is monitoring Iranian compliance with the
U.N. resolutions (see above) as saying that Iran has shipped weaponry to Syria (and Afghanistan).
Prior to the unrest in Syria, there was a widespread belief that the Iran-Syria alliance would not be
severed unless Syria reached a peace agreement with Israel. Well before the Syria unrest, Iran has
developed a defense relationship with the Assad regime. On December 13, 2009, the Syrian and
Iranian defense ministers signed a defense agreement to “face common enemies and challenges.”
In late June 2010, it was reported that Iran had sent Syria a sophisticated air defense radar system
that Syria could potentially use to thwart Israeli air strikes.49 In March 2011, Iranian officials
commented that they might contribute to improving some Syrian port facilities or other
installations. On some occasions, including the early 1990s, Iran purportedly has acted as an
intermediary with North Korea to supply Syria with various forms of WMD and missile
technology. Iran reportedly has helped Syria expand its chemical weapons arsenal.50
At the same time, perhaps trying to hedge its position should President Bashar Al Assad fall, Iran
has tried to encourage President Assad to take steps to calm the unrest through reforms. Foreign
Minister Salehi said on August 28, 2011, that Syria should recognize its people’s “legitimate
demands.” In September 2011, Ahmadinejad called on Assad to cease using force against
demonstrators and open dialogue on reforms, and he and other Iranian leaders have expressed
similar themes since. In late January 2012, Iran said Syria should hold free elections, but that
doing so would take time to organize.
48
Adam Entous and Matthew Rosenberg. “U.S. Says Iran Helps Crackdown in Syria.” Wall Street Journal, April 14,
2011.
49
Levinson, Charles. “Iran Arms Syria With Radar.” Wall Street Journal, June 30, 2010.
50
James Ball. “Documents: Iran Helped Syria Expand Chemical Weaponry.” Washington Post, July 28, 2012.
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The Caucuses and Central Asia
Iran’s policy in the nearby Caucuses has thus far emphasized Iran’s rights to Caspian Sea
resources, particularly against Azerbaijan. That country’s population, like Iran’s, is mostly Shiite
Muslim, but its leadership is highly secular. Azerbaijan is ethnically Turkic, and Iran fears that
Azerbaijan nationalists might stoke separatism among Iran’s large Azeri Turkic population, which
demonstrated some unrest in 2006 and during the Green Movement uprising in Iran in 2009.
These factors could
explain why Iran has generally tilted toward Armenia, which is Christian, and
which is at odds
with Azerbaijan over territory and control of ethnic Armenians. In May 2012, Azerbaijan refused
entry to a senior aide to Khamene’i. Iran has often slowed or stopped Azerbaijani truck traffic that
must transit Iran in order to reach a non-continguous part of Azerbaijan (Nakichevan), which is
cut off from the rest of Azerbaijan by Armenia’s occupation of Nagorno-Karabakh.
In July 2001, Iranian warships and combat aircraft threatened a British Petroleum (BP) ship on
contract to Azerbaijan out of an area of the Caspian that Iran considers its own. The United States
called that action provocative, and has since been engaged in border security and defense
49
Levinson, Charles. “Iran Arms Syria With Radar.” Wall Street Journal, June 30, 2010.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
cooperation with Azerbaijan. The United States successfully backed construction of the BakuTblisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline, intended in part to provide alternatives to Iranian oil.
Israel also is apparently looking to Azerbaijan to counter Iran, announcing in February 2012 a
major sale of defense equipment. In mid-March 2012, Azerbaijan arrested 22 persons it said were
Iranian agents plotting attacks against Israeli and Western targets there.
Along with India and Pakistan, Iran has been given observer status at the Central Asian security
grouping called the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO—Russia, China, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan). In April 2008, Iran applied for full membership in the
organization, which opposes a long-term U.S. presence in Central Asia. However, illustrating the
degree to whichbut, not wanting to antagonize the United States has been able to isolate Iran, in June 2010 the SCO denied
Iran’s bid by barring admission to countries under U.N. Security Council sanctions. Ahmadinejad
attended the latest SCO meeting in Beijing on June 6-7, 2012, which he primarily used to press
his case with China and Russia for relief from international sanctions over its nuclear program.
South Asia: Afghanistan, Pakistan, and India50India51
Iran looks to its eastern neighbors in South Asia as allies and potential allies to help parry U.S.
and European pressure on Iran’s economy and its leaders.
Afghanistan
In Afghanistan, as in Iraq, Iran is viewed by U.S. officials as pursuing a multi-track strategy—
attempting to help develop Afghanistan and enhance its influence there, while also building
leverage against the United States by arming anti-U.S. militant groups. Iran’s main goal appears
to be to restore some of its traditional sway in eastern, central, and northern Afghanistan, where
Persian-speaking Afghans predominate. Many Afghans, even those of Pashtun ethnicity, speak
Dari, a dialect of Persian language. Reports in mid-2012 suggest that Iranian merchantsand
51
Substantially more detail on Iran’s activities in Afghanistan is contained in: CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan:
Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
traders are conducting financial or currency transactions in Afghanistan in an effort to acquire
U.S. dollars and blunt the effects of international sanctions against Iran.52
Iran has sought some influence by supporting the government of President Hamid Karzai, who is
a Sunni Muslim and a Pashtun. Karzai has said publicly, most recently in December 2011 (during
a visit by Defense Secretary Panetta) that he does not want proxy competition between the United
States and Iran in Afghanistan. Karzai regularly meets with Ahmadinejad bilaterally and in the
context of several regional summit series that include Pakistan and Central Asian states. The
latest such summit, between Iran, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, was held during February 17-18,
2012. Karzai admitted on October 26, 2010, that press reports were true that Iran has given
Afghanistan direct cash payments (about $2 million per year) to support its budget and to
possibly drive a wedge between Afghanistan and the United States. In addition, the two countries
are said to be cooperating effectively against narcotics trafficking from Afghanistan into Iran;
Iranian border forces take consistent heavy losses in operations to try to prevent this trafficking.
While dealing with Karzai, Iran also is positioning itself—in ways at odds with Afghan
government interests—to threaten U.S. forces. Reflecting concern about the U.S. military
presence in Afghanistan, Iran reportedly tried to derail the U.S.-Afghanistan Strategic Partnership
Agreement that was signed on May 1, 2012, and which provides for the possibility that the United
States will keep forces in Afghanistan beyond the planned transition to Afghan lead in 2014.
50
Substantially more detail on Iran’s activities in Afghanistan is contained in: CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan:
Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
However, the U.S.
officials say Iran tried to sway Afghan parliamentarians against the pact with bribes, but the
Afghan legislators accepted Iran’s payments but voted in favor of the pact anyway. However, the
agreement also prohibits the United States from using Afghanistan as a base from
which to launch
military action against other countries.
Iran is particularly concerned about the U.S. use of the air base at Shindand, in Herat Province,
which Iran believes could be used for surveillance of or strikes on Iran. The drone that went down
in Iran in December 2011 was believed to be based in Shindand. U.S. reports, including the State
The State Department terrorism
report for 2010, continue2011 continued to accuse the Qods Force of supplying various
munitions, including 107
mm rockets, to select Taliban and other militants in Afghanistan, and of
training Taliban fighters
in small unit tactics, small arms use, explosives, and indirect weapons
fire. In February 2011, British forces captured a shipment of 48 Iranian-made rockets in
Afghanistan’s western province of Nimruz, allegedly bound for Talibgan militants. The State
Department report for 2010 asserts Iran is arming factions in Qandahar, which is a Pashtuninhabited province in southern Afghanistan and demonstrates that Iran is not only assisting
militants near its borders. On the other hand, U.S. commanders have consistently maintained that
the Iranian assistance to Afghan militants is not fire. The report again
asserts that Iran has supplied militants in Qandahar, which is a Pashtun-inhabited province in
southern Afghanistan and demonstrates that Iran is not only assisting militants near its borders. In
February 2011, British forces captured a shipment of 48 Iranian-made rockets in Afghanistan’s
western province of Nimruz, allegedly bound for Taliban militants. On the other hand, U.S.
commanders have consistently maintained that the Iranian assistance to Afghan militants is not
decisive on the battlefield.
Iran’s materiel support for Taliban elements may also give it leverage in any Taliban-government
political settlement in Afghanistan; Iran reportedly invited some Taliban members to an “Islamic
Awakening” conference in Tehran in mid-September 2011. The invitation was reportedly part of
an attempt to broker a meeting between the Taliban representatives and Afghan government
representatives attending the conference—the chief Afghan representative was the then head of
the Afghanistan High Peace Council overseeing the reconciliation process, former President
Burhanuddin Rabbani who was assassinated in Kabul after returning from the conference. In July
2012, Iran reportedly allowed the Taliban to open an office in Zahedan, in eastern Iran—possibly
52
Matthew Rosenberg and Annie Lowry. “Iranian Currency Traders Find a Haven in Afghanistan” New York Times,
August 18, 2012.
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to better coordinate policy with the Taliban or possibly to facilitate and Iranian role in political
reconciliation in Afghanistan.53
In August 2010, the Treasury Department sanctioned two Iranian Qods Force officers allegedly
involved in supplying funds and materiel to Afghan militants. They were sanctioned under
Executive Order 13224 for supporting international terrorism.
Because Iran has multifaceted influence in Afghanistan, some U.S. officials reportedly are
arguing that the United States should develop a bilateral dialogue on Afghanistan, to be conducted
by their respective ambassadors in Kabul. Iran may have signaled a willingness for such
engagement when it attended the October 18, 2010, meeting in Rome of the 44-nation
“International Contact Group” on Afghanistan. The United States did not object to the Iranian
attendance at the meeting, which included a briefing by General David Petraeus (then top
U.S./NATO commander in Afghanistan). Iran was represented by its Foreign Ministry director of
Asian Affairs Mohammad Ali Qanezadeh. Iran also attended the a Contact Group meeting on
March 3, 2011, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia (at the headquarters of the Organization of Islamic
Conference). Iran did not attend the January 28, 2010, international meeting in Britain on
Afghanistan, but it did attend a follow-up meeting in Kabul on July 20, 2010. Iran attended the
regional meeting on Afghanistan in Istanbul on November 2, 2011, at which all regional countries
pledged to support Afghan stability and sovereignty. It also attended the major international Bonn
Conference on Afghanistan on December 5, 2011, and subsequent international conferences on
that issue (with the obvious exception of the May 20-21, 2012, NATO summit in Chicago).
Pakistan
Iran’s relations with Pakistan have been partly a function of events in Afghanistan, although
relations have worsened somewhat in late 2009 as Iran has accused Pakistan of supporting Sunni
Muslim rebels in Iran’s Baluchistan region. These Sunni guerrillas have conducted a number of
attacks on Iranian regime targets in 2009, as discussed above (Jundullah).
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Iran had a burgeoning
Iran engaged in substantial military cooperation with Pakistan in the early 1990s, and it was revealed
revealed in 2003 that the founder of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, A. Q. Khan, sold Iran nuclear
nuclear technology and designs.5154 However, Iran-Pakistan relations became strained in the 1990s when
when Pakistan was supporting the Taliban in Afghanistan, which committed alleged atrocities against
against Shiite Afghans (Hazara tribe), and which seized control of Persian-speaking areas of
western and northern Afghanistan.
Currently, Iran remains suspicious that Pakistan might want to again
implant Taliban and related
militants in power in Afghanistan, but Iran now sees Pakistan as one of its few regional friends.
That could also reflect Pakistan’s desire for more regional contacts as its-Pakistan relations have improved
since mid-2011 as Pakistan’s relations with the United
States have worsened since mid-2011. Iran and Pakistan
now have a broad bilateral agenda that
includes a potential major gas pipeline project. Iran has
completed the line on its side of the
border, and Pakistan is trying to accelerate work on its part of the line. However, as of March
2012, Pakistan reportedly has run into trouble arranging the more than $1 billion in financing
needed to complete the project.
the line. However, Pakistan reportedly has had trouble financing the project on its side of the
border, and U.S. officials say they consider it potential sanctionable under the Iran Sanctions Act.
53
Maria Abi-Habib. “Tehran Builds On Outreach to Taliban.” Wall Street Journal, August 1, 2012.
Lancaster, John and Kamran Khan.“Pakistanis Say Nuclear Scientists Aided Iran.” Washington Post, January 24,
2004. http://isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/IAEA_Iran_8Nov2011.pdf.
54
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India
India and Iran have sought to accommodate each others’ interests and avoid mutual conflict. Their
interests have tended to align on several issues, particularly Afghanistan, where both countries
support the minority factions based in the north and west. However, as international sanctions
India reportedly wants to expedite the
development of Iran’s Chabahar port, which would give India direct access to Afghanistan and
Central Asia without relying on transit routes through Pakistan.
As international sanctions have increased in 2011-2012, India appears to be wrestling with a
choice of preserving its ties to
Iran—which has provided it with needed oil for its growing
economy—or joining U.S. and
international attempts to isolate Iran. Since 2010In 2012, it has tended to sidesided with the United States by
limiting its relations with Iran and enforcing aspects of international and U.S.-led multilateral
sanctions against Iran
United States and the EU by cutting its purchases of Iranian oil. In May 2012, India announced it
would reduce oil purchases from Iran by
about 11% infor all of 2012. Perhaps to balance these
actions in support of sanctions, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh attended the Non-Aligned
Movement summit in Tehran in August 2012. This is discussed more extensively in CRS Report
RS20871, Iran Sanctions.
India’s participation in the trans-Pakistan gas pipeline discussed above appears unlikely, at least
initially, because of India-Pakistan mistrust but also over pricing and security issues. India and
Iran reportedly have discussed an alternative undersea pipeline that would bypass Pakistan. India
reportedly wants to expedite the development of Iran’s Chabahar port, which would give India
direct access to Afghanistan and Central Asia without relying on transit routes through Pakistan.
Of particular concern to some U.S. officials, particularly in the late 1990s, were India-Iran
military-to-military relationships and projects. The relationship included visits to India by some
Iranian naval personnel, although India said these exchanges involve junior personnel and focus
mainly on promoting interpersonal relations and not on India’s provision to Iran of military
expertise. The military relationship between the countries has withered over at least the past five
years. India and Iran, along with the United States, backed anti-Taliban factions in Afghanistan
during 1996-2001.
Al Qaeda
Iran is not a natural ally of Al Qaeda, largely because Al Qaeda is an orthodox Sunni Muslim
organization. However, some experts believe that hardliners in Iran still might want to use Al
Qaeda activists as leverage against the United States and its allies, despite the May 1, 2011, death
51
Lancaster, John and Kamran Khan.“Pakistanis Say Nuclear Scientists Aided Iran.” Washington Post, January 24,
2004. http://isis-online.org/uploads/isis-reports/documents/IAEA_Iran_8Nov2011.pdf.
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of Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden in a U.S. raid in Pakistan. The 9/11 Commission report
of Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden in a U.S. raid in Pakistan. Some allege that Iran is forging
links to Al Qaeda affiliates in Africa, such as Boko Haram in Nigeria and Al Shabab in Somalia,
for the purpose of extending its influence in Africa. However, it is unclear whether any Iranian
ties to these groups have been approved at the highest levels of the Iranian leadership.
The 9/11 Commission report said several of the September 11 hijackers and other plotters,
possibly with official help, might
have transited Iran, but the report did not assert that the Iranian
government cooperated with or
knew about the plot. A U.S. district court filing in May 2011 in
New York named Iranian officials
and ministries as materially supporting the Al Qaeda in the
September 11 attacks. The court
found, on December 15, 2011, in favor of the plaintiffs and later
ordered Iran, Al Qaeda, and the Taliban to pay $6 billion in damages to the relatives of the
September 11 attacks. Earlier, on November 28, 2011, a U.S.
district court issued a ruling linking
Iran (and Sudan) to the August 1998 Al Qaeda bombings of
the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania.
Tanzania.
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Even though bin Laden has been killed, Iran might see possibilities for tactical alliance with Al
Qaeda. Three major Al Qaeda figures believed to still be based mostly in Iran include spokesman
Sulayman Abu Ghaith, top operative Sayf Al Adl, and a bin Laden’s son, Saad.5255 All three have
been reported, at least on occasion, to have been allowed outside Iran to travel to Pakistan. (U.S.
officials blamed Saad bin Laden, Adl, and Abu Ghaith for the May 12, 2003, bombings in
Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, against four expatriate housing complexes, saying they have been able to
contact associates outside Iran.53))56 The Department of Treasury, on January 16, 2009, designated
four Al Qaeda operatives in Iran, including Saad bin Laden (and three lesser known figures) as
terrorist entities under Executive Order 13224. On July 28, 2011, under that same order, the
Treasury Department sanctioned six Al Qaeda members for allegedly moving funds to Al Qaeda
in Pakistan and Afghanistan via their bases in Iran, and under a specific agreement between Al
Qaeda and Iran. Another bin Laden ally, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, killed by U.S. forces in Iraq on
June 7, 2006, reportedly transited Iran into Iraq after the September 11 attacks and became an
insurgent leader there.
Iran has, to some extent, confirmed the presence of Al Qaeda militants in Iran. It asserted on July
23, 2003, that it had “in custody” senior Al Qaeda figures. On July 16, 2005, Iran’s intelligence
minister said that 200 Al Qaeda members are in Iranian jails.5457 U.S. officials have said since
January 2002 that Iran has not prosecuted or extradited any senior Al Qaeda operatives. In
December 2009, Iran’s foreign minister confirmed that a teenage daughter of Osama bin Laden
had sought refuge in the Saudi embassy in Tehran—the first official confirmation that members of
bin Laden’s family have been in Iran. She left Iran in March 2010. As many as 20 other family
members have been said to be living in a compound in Iran since the September 11, 2001, attacks,
and accusing Iran of refusing to allow them to leave for Saudi Arabia or other places. Some
family members have said the young bin Ladens have never been affiliated with Al Qaeda.
Latin America
A growing concern in Congress has been Iran’s developing relations with countries and leaders in
Latin America. Iran views some Latin American countries, particularly Cuba and Venezuela, as
sharing its distrust of the United States and as willing to help Iran circumvent some international
sanctions. Suggesting expanded Iranian interest in the Western Hemisphere, during 2006-2011,
Iran opened six embassies in countries in the region (Colombia, Nicaragua, Chile, Ecuador,
Uruguay, and Bolivia), and expanded embassies in Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and
Venezuela. In January 2012, Ahmadinejad undertook a visit to Latin America, including
52
Gertz, Bill. “Al Qaeda Terrorists Being Held by Iran.” Washington Times, July 24, 2003.
Gertz, Bill. “CIA Points to Continuing Iran Tie to Al Qaeda.” Washington Times, July 23, 2004.
54
“Tehran Pledges to Crack Down on Militants.” Associated Press, July 18, 2005.
53
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Venezuela, Ecuador, Cuba, and Nicaragua. By all accounts, few concrete economic agreements
were reached during the latestthat visit, which expands on a pattern in Iran-Latin America relations in
past patterns in which agreements tend to be
announced but subsequently not implemented. His advisers said in
mid-April 2012 that he will soon (no specified dates) visit Brazil and Perunot implemented. Ahmadinejad attended the U.N. Conference on Sustainable
Development in Brazil on June 21, 2012, which was bounded by his travel to Bolivia and
Venezuela.
On March 1, 2012, a House Foreign Affairs Committee Subcommittee on Terrorism,
Nonproliferation and Trade reported out H.R. 3783, the “Countering Iran in the Western
Hemisphere Act,” requiring the Administration to develop a strategy to counter Iran’s purportedly
55
Gertz, Bill. “Al Qaeda Terrorists Being Held by Iran.” Washington Times, July 24, 2003.
Gertz, Bill. “CIA Points to Continuing Iran Tie to Al Qaeda.” Washington Times, July 23, 2004.
57
“Tehran Pledges to Crack Down on Militants.” Associated Press, July 18, 2005.
56
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growing influence in Latin America. It was reported out by the full Committeecommittee on March 7, 2012.
Many outside experts, however, believe that most Latin American countries see little benefit to a
major expansion of ties to Iran and that assessments of Iran’s influence in the region may be
overstated by some think-tank experts. No Latin American leader or head of government attended
the NAM summit in Tehran in August 2012.
Venezuela and Cuba
Venezuela under President Hugo Chavez continues to be Iran’s main champion in the region. On
October 30, 2007, then-Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff said that Iran’s
relationship with Venezuela is an emerging threat because it represents a “marriage” of Iran’s
extremist ideology with “those who have anti-American views.” On January 27, 2009, then
Secretary of Defense Gates said Iran was expanding front companies and opening offices in
countries there. An April 2010 Defense Department report on Iran was the first U.S. government
In July 2012, President Obama
stated that Iran-Venezuela ties do not constitute a strategic threat to the United States. The April
2012 Defense Department report on Iran does not address this issue at all, although the 2010
version of the report was the first U.S. government publication to say that Qods Force personnel
are in Venezuela, where their presence has
“increased” in recent years, according to thethat report.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez has
visited Iran on several occasions, offering to engage in
joint oil and gas projects, and
Ahmadinejad has visited Venezuela on each of his fivesix trips to Latin
America as president,
including the January 8,June 2012, trip. However, contrary to the assertions of some
experts, a State
Department official testified before the House Foreign Affairs Committee on June
24, 2011, that
Iran’s embassy in Caracas has only about 14 diplomats and is not particularly
active in terms of
open diplomatic activity, casting doubt on reports that Iran has a large, active
presence in
Venezuela.
Among the major U.S. itIt was reported in May 2011 that the two may have signed an agreement in
October 2010 to
develop a joint missile base in Venezuela, but Venezuela has denied these reports
and the Obama
Administration has said there is no evidence to support the missile base assertion.
Venezuela Venezuela
reportedly has purchased some Iranian military equipment, such as rifles, as well as
$23 million
in military equipment upgrades and an explosives factory.5558
Many accounts say that most of the agreements between Iran and Venezuela are agreements in
principle that have not been implemented in reality. Among the arrangements implemented are
the establishment of direct air links through an obscure air service dedicated to this route,
although the route was suspended in 2010. A firm deal for Petroleos de Venezuela to supply Iran
with gasoline was signed in September 2009, apparently in a joint effort to circumvent the
reduction in worldwide sales of gasoline to Iran. In part because of this trade, the firm was
sanctioned under the Iran Sanctions Act in May 2011, as discussed in CRS Report RS20871, Iran
Sanctions. About 400 Iranian engineers have reportedly been sent to Venezuela to work on
infrastructure projects there.
55
Martin Arostegui. “Iran Tries to Gain Sway in Latin America.” Wall Street Journal, December 6, 2011.
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Cuba
Iran’s relations with Cuba are long-standing and Cuba has routinely been included in
Ahmadinejad’s several visits to Latin America. In the past, Cuba reportedly has helped Iran jam
the broadcasts of Iranian dissidents based in Los Angeles and elsewhere in the United States. Still,
58
Martin Arostegui. “Iran Tries to Gain Sway in Latin America.” Wall Street Journal, December 6, 2011.
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Cuba’s economy is widely considered too small to be able to materially reduce the effect of
international sanctions against Iran.
Other Ties in the Region
Iran also has built ties to Ecuador, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Brazil, although some press accounts
may exaggerate the extent and strategic significance of these relations. Iranian Defense Minister
Ahmad Vahidi visited Bolivia in May 2011, but President Evo Morales was then compelled to
apologize to Argentina for inviting him because of Vahidi’s alleged involvement in the 1994
Buenos Aires bombing listed in the table above. Vahidi was, at the time, the head of the Qods
Force. Iran reportedly has $1 billion in joint ventures with Bolivia. These ventures reportedly
were the subject of discussion during Ahmadinejad’s June 2012 visit, discussed above. Trade with
Trade with Ecuador expanded
from $6 million annually to $168 million from 2007- to 2008.
Iran’s embassy in Managua, Nicaragua, is said by close observers to be small, contrasting with
some reports on that issue, and Nicaragua has refused Iranian demands to repay $164 million in
debt it owes Iran for past crude oil deliveries. Nicaragua reportedly was upset that Ahmadinejad’s
January 2012 visit did not result in an Iranian pledge to forgive that debt. Iran also failed to
implement some promises to undertake joint ventures with Nicaragua, including a $350 million
deep water port there. Still, President Daniel Ortega hosted Ahmadinejad during his visit there in
January 2012.
Because of its large economy, Brazil, under previous President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva,
emerged as Iran’s most significant supporter, particularly because of Brazil’s engagement with
Iran to forge the “Tehran Declaration” on nuclear issues in June 2010. Iran also succeeded in
persuading Brazil to publicly oppose additional U.N. sanctions on Iran. However, the government
of President Dilma Roussef, whose term began January 1, 2011, has been less supportive of Iran
than was her predecessor. Ahmadinejad did not visit Brazil during his January 2012 visit to the
region, furthering the impression that Iran’s influence in South America is limited to mainly
smaller nations. However, the mid-April 2012 statement that Ahmadinejad would “soon” visit
Brazil appeared to be an effort by Tehran to show that its relations with Brazil isare not in decline.
Africa
To reduce Iran’s isolation, Ahmadinejad has reached tried to enlist the support of some African
leaders. Some observers believe that Iran’s outreach is focused on those African countries that
might be able to export natural uranium for Iran’s nuclear program to compensate for Iran’s
domestic deficiencies; such uranium producers include Zimbabwe, Senegal, Nigeria, and the
Democratic Republic of Congo. In April 2010, Ahmadinejad visited Uganda and Zimbabwe, even
though Zimbabwe’s leader, Robert Mugabe, has himself been heavily criticized by the
international community in recent years. Iran has also cultivated Senegal as an ally. Still, it is
believed that African support for Iran is unlikely to outweigh Iran’s growing estrangement from
Europe and its partial abandonment by Russia and China.
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other regions. Ten heads of state or government attended the NAM summit in Tehran
in August 2012, including Mugabe.
As an example of what the Administration called Iran’s exports of lethal aid to foment violence in
Africa, in October 2010, the Qods Force reportedly attempted to ship weapons to Gambia, via
Nigeria, but the shipment was intercepted in Nigeria. Several Iranian entities, and a Nigerian
shipping agent, were sanctioned by the United States in April 2012 for facilitating this incident.
The Nigerian shipping agent allegedly helped Qods Force personnel enter Nigeria. (For more
information, see CRS
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The Nigerian shipping agent allegedly helped Qods Force personnel enter Nigeria. U.N. panel of
experts report on Iranian arms sales embargo violations, discussed above, have cited Iranian
attempts to ship weapons to allies in the Middle East via Nigeria. (For more information, see CRS
Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.)
Some Members of Congress are concerned that Iran is supporting radical Islamist movements in
Africa. In the 111th Congress, H.Con.Res. 16 cited Hezbollah for engaging in raising funds in
Africa by trafficking in “conflict diamonds.” Iran also might have supplied Islamists in Somalia
Allegations of Iran’s support for Al Qaeda affiliates in Africa are discussed above in the
section on Al Qaeda. There have been allegations that Iran might have supplied Al Shabab in
Somalia with anti-aircraft and anti-tank weaponry, although the few press reports about such activity
activity suggests it is a minor component of Iranian policy, if at all. The possible transfer of weaponry to
Hamas via Sudan was discussed above. A U.N. panel of experts report on Iranian arms sales
embargo violations, discussed above, reportedly cites Iranian attempts to ship weapons to allies in
the Middle East via NigeriaIn the 111th Congress,
H.Con.Res. 16 cited Hezbollah for engaging in raising funds in Africa by trafficking in “conflict
diamonds.”
Iran also appears to have a residual relationship with the government of Sudan. Relations
reportedly were close in the early 1990s when Islamist leaders in Sudan were attempting to make
Sudan into a hub for international Islamist movements. The relationship apparently cooled in the
mid-1990s when international sanctions compelled Sudan to expel Osama bin Laden and to
downplay its Islamist links abroad. Still, Iran is said to supply the Sudan government with
weapons it is using on its various fronts, such as the one with South Sudan, and the Qods Force
reportedly continues to train the Popular Defense Force militia. Some observers say Iranian pilots
may be active in Sudan on behalf of the government there. President Omar Hassan Al Bashir
attended the NAM summit meeting in Tehran in August 2012.
U.S. Policy Approaches and Additional Options
The February 11, 1979, fall of the Shah of Iran, a key U.S. ally, opened a long and deep rift in
U.S.-Iranian relations. Although U.S. concerns about Iran and its nuclear program are longstanding, a growing Israeli threat to use military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities—with or
without U.S. backing—has made U.S. policy toward Iran an urgent issue. Many of the policy
options being implemented or still under consideration are the same options that have faced the
United States since 1979—and virtually noall U.S. policy option has been “taken offoptions remain “on the table.”
Background on Relations Since the 1979 Revolution
The Carter Administration sought a degree of engagement with the Islamic regime during 1979,
but it agreed to allow in the ex-Shah for medical treatment and engaged some moderate Iranian
officials of the new regime who were viewed by Khomeini loyalists as insufficiently
revolutionary. As a result, the U.S.-Iran estrangement began in earnest on November 4, 1979,
when radical pro-Khomeini “students in the line of the Imam (Khomeini)” seized the U.S.
Embassy in Tehran and held its diplomats hostage until minutes after President Reagan’s
inauguration on January 20, 1981. The United States broke relations with Iran on April 7, 1980
(two weeks prior to the failed U.S. military attempt to rescue the hostages during April 24-25,
1980), and the two countries had only limited official contact thereafter.56
The United States tilted toward Iraq in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War, including U.S. diplomatic
attempts to block conventional arms sales to Iran, providing battlefield intelligence to Iraq57 and,
during 1987-1988, direct skirmishes with Iranian naval elements in the course of U.S. efforts to
protect international oil shipments in the Gulf from Iranian mines and other attacks. In one battle
56
An exception was the abortive 1985-1986 clandestine arms supply relationship with Iran in exchange for some
American hostages held by Hezbollah in Lebanon (the so-called “Iran-Contra Affair”). Iran has an interest section in
Washington, DC, under the auspices of the Embassy of Pakistan; it is staffed by Iranian Americans. The U.S. interest
section in Tehran has no American personnel; it is under the Embassy of Switzerland.
57
Sciolino, Elaine. The Outlaw State: Saddam Hussein’s Quest for Power and the Gulf Crisis. New York: John Wiley
and Sons, 1991. p. 168.
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59
59
An exception was the abortive 1985-1986 clandestine arms supply relationship with Iran in exchange for some
American hostages held by Hezbollah in Lebanon (the so-called “Iran-Contra Affair”). Iran has an interest section in
Washington, DC, under the auspices of the Embassy of Pakistan; it is staffed by Iranian Americans. The U.S. interest
(continued...)
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The United States tilted toward Iraq in the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War, including U.S. diplomatic
attempts to block conventional arms sales to Iran, providing battlefield intelligence to Iraq60 and,
during 1987-1988, direct skirmishes with Iranian naval elements in the course of U.S. efforts to
protect international oil shipments in the Gulf from Iranian mines and other attacks. In one battle
on April 18, 1988 (“Operation Praying Mantis”), Iran lost one-quarter of its larger naval ships in a
one-day engagement with the U.S. Navy, including one frigate sunk and another badly damaged.
Iran strongly disputed the U.S. assertion that the July 3, 1988, U.S. shoot down of Iran Air Flight
655 by the U.S.S. Vincennes over the Persian Gulf (bound for Dubai, UAE) was an accident.
After the Iran-Iraq War ended, President George H. W. Bush laid the groundwork for a
rapprochement with Iran. In his January 1989 inaugural speech, saying that, in relations with Iran,
“goodwill begets goodwill,” implying better relations if Iran helped obtain the release of U.S.
hostages held by Hezbollah in Lebanon. Iran reportedly did assist in obtaining their releases,
which was completed in December 1991, but no thaw followed, possibly because Iran continued
to back groups opposed to the U.S.-sponsored Middle East peace process.
Upon taking office in 1993, the Clinton Administration moved to further isolate Iran as part of a
strategy of “dual containment” of Iran and Iraq. In 1995 and 1996, the Clinton Administration and
Congress added sanctions on Iran (a ban on U.S. trade and investment with Iran and the Iran
Sanctions Act that sanctions foreign investment in Iran’s energy sector) in response to growing
concerns about Iran’s weapons of mass destruction and its efforts to subvert the Arab-Israeli
peace process by supporting militants opposed to peace. The intent of many of these sanctions
were to persuade U.S. allies to restrict trade with Iran, and the Administration also expressed
substantial skepticism over the EU’s policy of “critical dialogue” with Iran. That dialogue
consisted of EU meetings with Iran that included criticisms of Iran’s human rights policies and its
support for militant movements in the Middle East.
The election of Khatemi in May 1997 precipitated a U.S. shift toward engagement; the Clinton
Administration offered Iran official dialogue, with no substantive preconditions. In January 1998,
Khatemi publicly agreed to “people-to-people” U.S.-Iran exchanges, but ruled out direct talks. In
a June 1998 speech, then-Secretary of State Albright called for mutual confidence building
measures that could lead to a “road map” for normalization. Encouraged by the reformist victory
in Iran’s March 2000 Majles elections, Secretary Albright, in a March 17, 2000, speech,
acknowledged past U.S. meddling in Iran, announcing an easing of the U.S. trade ban with Iran,
and promised to try to resolve outstanding claims disputes. In September 2000 U.N. “Millennium
Summit” meetings in New York, Albright and President Clinton sent a positive signal to Iran by
attending Khatemi’s speeches.
George W. Bush Administration Policy
With Iran’s nuclear program emerging as an issue as ofin 2002, the George W. Bush Administration
undertook multi-faceted efforts to limit Iran’s strategic capabilities through international
diplomacy and sanctions. Although Iran appeared to have no role in the September 11, 20112001,
attacks, President Bush appeared to define Iran as an enemy of the United States when he
(...continued)
section in Tehran has no American personnel; it is under the Embassy of Switzerland.
60
Sciolino, Elaine. The Outlaw State: Saddam Hussein’s Quest for Power and the Gulf Crisis. New York: John Wiley
and Sons, 1991. p. 168.
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included Iran as part of an “axis of evil” in his January 2002 State of the Union message (along
with Iraq and North Korea). President George W. Bush’s second inaugural address (January 20,
2005) and his State of the Union message of January 31, 2006, stated that the United States would
be a close ally of a free and democratic Iran, perhaps reflecting the views of those in the
Administration, such as Vice President Richard Cheney, who argued that policy should focus on
U.S. efforts to change Iran’s regime.58
58
Cooper, Helene and David Sanger. “Strategy on Iran Stirs New Debate at White House.” New York Times, June 16,
2007.
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61
Bush Administration statements that it considered Iran a great nation and respects its historyhistory62
reflected the views of those in the Bush Administration who believed diplomacy was the optimal
policy choice. Such themes were prominent in speeches by President George W. Bush such as at
the Merchant Marine Academy on June 19, 2006, and his September 18, 2006, speech to the U.N.
General Assembly. With Iran’s nuclear program still relatively small, Bush Administration
officialsin keeping the option of
diplomacy open—particularly in light of Iran’s potential to harm U.S. troops deployed in
Afghanistan and Iraq. The Administration engaged Iran on specific regional issues: for example, dialogue
it conducted a dialogue in Geneva with Iran on Iraq and
Afghanistan from late 2001 until May
2003, when the United States broke off the talks following
the May 12, 2003, terrorist bombing in Riyadh. At that time, the United States and Iran publicly
acknowledged that they were conducting direct talks in Geneva on those two issues,59 the first
Riyadh.63 This represented the first confirmed direct dialogue between the two countries since the
1979 revolution. The United States
aided victims of the December 2003 earthquake in Bam, Iran,
including a reported offer—
rebuffed by Iran—to send a high-level delegation to Iran, reportedly
including Senator Elizabeth
Dole and President George W. Bush’s sister, Dorothy. The Administration generally deferred to
European countries to try to negotiate a permanent suspension of Iran’s enrichment of uranium
enrichment; on only one occasion (July 19, 2008), did a U.S. official attend the P5+1 nuclear
negotiations with Iran. An amendment An amendment
by then Senator Biden to the FY2007 defense
authorization bill (P.L. 109-364) supported the
Administration joining nuclear talks with Iran.
“Grand Bargain Concept”
The George W. Bush Administration did not offer Iran an unconditional, direct U.S.-Iran bilateral
dialogue on all issues of U.S. concern. However, some say the Bush Administration “missed an
opportunity” for a “grand bargain” with Iran on its nuclear program and other issues of concern
by rebuffing a reported comprehensive overture from Iran just before the May 12, 2003, Riyadh
bombing. The Washington Post reported on February 14, 2007, (“2003 Memo Says Iranian
Leaders Backed Talks”) that the Swiss ambassador to Iran in 2003, Tim Guldimann, had informed
U.S. officials of a comprehensive Iranian proposal for talks with the United States.6064 However,
State Department officials and some European diplomats based in Tehran at that time question
whether that proposal represented an authoritative Iranian communication. Others argue that the
offer was unrealistic because an agreement would have required Iran to abandon key tenets of its
Islamic revolution.
Overview of Obama Administration Policy: StraddlingCombining
Engagement and Pressure Strategies
President Obama’s Administration took office asserting that there was an opportunity to
diplomatically dissuade Iran from expanding its nuclear program and possiblypotentially to build a new
framework for relations with Iran after the decades of estrangement and enmity. The
After taking
office, the Administration offered to integrate Iran into the world economy in return for Iranian
compromises on its nuclear program. Some officials, including Secretary of State Clinton and
then Secretary of Defense Gates expressed skepticism that engagement would yield changes in
Iran’s policies. Others, including Dennis Ross, a Middle East adviser to Secretary of State Clinton
later assigned a similar capacity in the White House from June 2009-November 2011, believed
59
60
61
Cooper, Helene and David Sanger. “Strategy on Iran Stirs New Debate at White House.” New York Times, June 16,
2007.
62
These were prominent themes in speeches by President Bush such as at the Merchant Marine Academy on June 19,
2006, and his September 18, 2006, speech to the U.N. General Assembly.
63
Wright, Robin. “U.S. In ‘Useful’ Talks With Iran.” Los Angeles Times, May 13, 2003.
64
http://www.armscontrol.org/pdf/2003_Spring_Iran_Proposal.pdf.
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compromises on its nuclear program. Some officials, including Secretary of State Clinton and
then Secretary of Defense Gates expressed skepticism that engagement would yield changes in
Iran’s policies. Others believed that the United States needed to present Iran with clear incentives
and punishments for continuing
uranium enrichment.
The first major public manifestation of President Obama’s approach to Iran policy came in his
message to the Iranian people on the occasion of Nowruz (Persian New Year), March 21, 2009.
He stated that the United States “is now committed to diplomacy that addresses the full range of
issues before us, and to pursuing constructive ties among the United States, Iran, and the
international community.” He also referred to Iran as “The Islamic Republic of Iran,” a
formulation that suggests acceptance of the Islamic revolution in Iran. In concert with that
approach, Obama Administration
officials did not indicate support for hardline options such as
military action or regime change,
although no option was explicitly “taken off the table.” Prior to
the June 12, 2009, election in
Iran, other steps included:
•
President Obama’s reported two letters in 2009 to Iran’s Supreme Leader
expressing the Administration’s philosophy in favor of engagement with Iran.
•
A major speech to the “Muslim World” in Cairo on June 4, 2009, in which
President Obama said the United States had played a role in the overthrow of
Mossadeq, and said that Iran had a right to peaceful nuclear power if it complies
with its responsibilities under the NPT.
•
An announcement on April 8, 2009, that U.S. officials would attend all P5+1
meetings with Iran.
•
Loosened restrictions on U.S. diplomats to meet their Iranian counterparts at
international meetings, and permission for U.S. embassies to invite Iranian
diplomats to the 2009 celebration of U.S. Independence Day. (The July 4, 2009,
invitations did not get issued because of the Iran unrest.)
2010-2012: Focus on Pressure
The crackdown on the 2009 election-related unrest by Iran and its refusal to agree to technical
terms of the October 1, 2009, nuclear agreement substantially reducedshifted the Administration’s focus
on engagement to pressuring
Iran economically and diplomatically. In a statement following the June 9, 2010, passage of
Resolution 1929, President
Obama described Iran as refusing to accept the path of engagement
and choosing instead to
preserve all elements of its nuclear program. During 2010-2012, the Since then, the
Administration has
emphasized pressuring Iran throughimposing and implementing additional sanctions, while still
offering dialogue and negotiations if
Iran is willing to bargain seriously on the core concerns
about its nuclear program. In attempting
At the same time, the Administration has downplayed the possibility of military action. In
attempting to dissuade Israel from striking Iran militarily, President Obama said during the March
4-6, 2012,
visit of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu—a visit that focused on differing
U.S. and
Israeli perceptions of the urgency of the Iranian nuclear issue—that sanctions are
beginning to
work and should be given more time. He made these points in his March 4, 2012,
speech before
the America-Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC). And, as noted, the
Administration has
accepted Iran’s professions of flexibility in agreeing to a negotiating process
that began in
Istanbul in mid-April 2012 and will continue in Baghdad on May 23, 2012. The sanctions
imposed in 2010-2012 are discussed in detail in CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions. Istanbul in mid-April 2012. With the process appearing to be largely stalled since
June 2012, the Administration has continued to impose additional sanctions beyond the EU oil
embargo and related U.S. sanctions that took full effect as of July 1, 2012. The President signed
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into law H.R. 1905 on August 10, 2012 (P.L.112-158), a bill that, among other provisions,
sanctions the transport of oil from Iran. However, amid Israeli statements in August and
September 2012 indicating that the talks with Iran have proved fruitless, the White House said on
August 21, 2012 that there is still “time and space…to resolve this diplomatically..But it is also
clear that the window that is open now to resolve this diplomatically will not remain open
indefinitely.”
In concert with the democratic uprisings in the Middle East that began in 2011, the
Administration also has expressed more direct criticism of Iran for its human rights abuses. As
noted above, President Obama’s March 20, 2011, Nowruz statement was significantly more
supportive of the pro-democracy movement in Iran than it was in prior years. The focus of his
March 20, 2012, Nowruz statement was on stating that the United States will seek to help Iranians
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circumvent government restrictions on the Internet and other media forms. These
pronouncements have been supported by imposition of sanctions on Iranian human rights abusers,
as discussed further below in the section on regime change.
U.S. and Other Military Action: “On The Table” as Iran’s Nuclear
Program Continues to Advance
The statements by President Obama before, during, and after the Netanyahu visit suggest that
there will likely be consideration of military options if the 2012 negotiating process breaks down.
For example, President Obama indicated in an interview published March 2, 2012 (The Atlantic)
Israel Threatens
a Unilateral Strike
While asserting that there is still time for diplomacy to succeed, President Obama has repeatedly
stated that military options are under consideration if the negotiating process breaks down. He
stated in a March 2, 2012 interview (The Atlantic) that the U.S. position that “all options are on
the table” means that there is a military component
to preventing a nuclear-armed Iran.6165 During
the Netanyahu visit to the United States, he also explicitly stated that
U.S. policy is to prevent a
nuclear-armed Iran, rather than to contain Iran after it presumably
becomes asa nuclear weapons state.
state. Secretary of Defense Panetta said on August 1, 2012, during a visit to Israel that “We [the
United States] will not allow to develop a nuclear weapon. Period.”
Yet, President Obama and other senior officials clearly viewhave always maintained that military action as a last resort. Senior
is a
last resort if sanctions and diplomacy fail. Senior U.S. officials have repeatedly stressed the
potential adverse consequences of military action, such as Iranian
retaliation that might expand
throughout the region or even beyond, a reduction of Iran’s regional
isolation, a strengthening of
Iran’s regime domestically, an escalation of world oil prices, and the
likelihood that military
action would only delay Iran’s eventual acquisition of a nuclear weapons
capability by about one
to two years. These points were enumerated by Secretary of Defense
Panetta in a speech to the Brookings Institution on December 2, 2011.62 Iran’s Supreme Leader
and other Iranian political and military figures have repeatedly warned that Iran will retaliate for
any military action taken against Iran. Most U.S. allies in Europe, not to mention Russia and
China, oppose military action. Perhaps in the belief that there needs to be more advanced
planning for military action, the FY2011 Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 111-383, signed January
7, 2011) contained a provision (§1243) requiring the Administration to develop a “National
Military Strategy to Counter Iran.”
Proponents of U.S. air and missile strikes against suspected nuclear sites argue that military
Brookings Institution on December 2, 2011.66 Most U.S. allies oppose military action.
Some argue that U.S. military action could set back Iran’s nuclear program substantially because
because there are only a limited number of key
targets, and these targets are known to U.S. planners and vulnerable, even those, such as targets, all of which are relatively vulnerable, including the
enrichment site at Fordow, that are hard or buried.63 that is hardened.67 On the other hand, reports about U.S.
confidence in
its ability to do substantial damage to any Iranian nuclear target could be intended
to signal to Israel that the United States can destroy Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, if needed and so
ordered.
Those who take an expansive view of the target set argue that the United States would need to
reduce Iran’s potential for retaliation by striking not only nuclear facilities but also Iran’s
conventional military, particularly its small ships and coastal missiles. Press reports in late
February 2012, citing reported Defense Department briefings of President Obama on military
61 to signal to
65
Jeffrey Goldberg. “Obama to Iran and Israel: ‘As President of the United States, I Don’t Bluff’” The Atlantic, March
2, 2012.
6266
http://2scottmontgomery.blogspot.com/2011/12/panetta-brookings-speech.html.
6367
Joby Warrick. “Iran: Underground Sites Vulnerable, Experts Say.” Washington Post, March 1, 2012. For an extended
discussion of U.S. air strike options on Iran, see Rogers, Paul. Iran: Consequences Of a War. Oxford Research Group,
February 2006.
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options on Iran, say that a U.S. strike could include IRGC and leadership targets. A U.S. ground
invasion to remove Iran’s regime has not, at any time, appeared to be under serious consideration
in part because of the likely resistance an invasion would meet in Iran.
Still others argue that there are military options that do not require actual combat. Some say that a
naval embargo or related embargo is possible and could pressure Iran into reconsidering its stand
on the nuclear issue. Others say that the imposition of a “no-fly zone” over Iran might also serve
that purpose. Still others say that the United Nations could set up a special inspection mission to
dismantle Iran’s WMD programs, although inserting such a mission is likely to be resisted by Iran
and could involve hostilities.
Other Scenarios of U.S.-Iran Conflict64
Deliberate U.S. military action to halt Iran’s nuclear program is not the only scenario that could
lead to U.S.-Iran hostilities. The possibility of other causes of conflict has drawn increased
attention in relation to Iran’s December 2011-January 2012 threats to close the Strait of Hormuz,
through which about one-third of traded oil flows, if sanctions are imposed on Iran’s exportation
of oil. This issue is discussed in substantial detail in CRS Report R42335, Iran’s Threat to the
Strait of Hormuz, coordinated by Kenneth Katzman and Neelesh Nerurkar
Even before the late 2011 U.S.-Iran tensions in the Gulf, Iran had tried repeatedly in recent years
to demonstrate its naval retaliatory capacity. In February 2007, Iran seized 15 British sailors that
Iran said were patrolling in Iran’s waters, although Britain says they were in Iraqi waters
performing coalition-related searches. They were held until April 5, 2007. On January 6, 2008,
the U.S. Navy reported a confrontation in which five IRGC Navy small boats approached three
U.S. Navy ships to the point where they manned battle stations. The IRGC boats veered off
before any shots were fired. In October 2008, Iran announced it is building several new naval
bases along the southern coast, including at Jask, indicating enhanced capability to threaten the
entry and exit to the Strait of Hormuz. In late November 2009, Iran seized and held for about one
week a British civilian sailing vessel and crew that Iran said had strayed into its waters.
In any conflict with Iran, no matter the cause, many experts view as increasingly significant the
potential for Iran to try to retaliate inside the United States through terrorism. Others believe that
Iran would try to retaliate against U.S. personnel abroad, such as embassies and facilities in
Europe or the Persian Gulf. Iran could also try to direct anti-U.S. militias in Iraq and Afghanistan
to attack U.S. personnel. There are no U.S. troops have left in Iraq, but there are still 16,000 U.S.
personnel at various diplomatic installations there.
Presidential Authorities and Legislation
A decision to take military action might raise the question of presidential authorities. In the 109th
Congress, H.Con.Res. 391, introduced on April 26, 2006, called on the President to not initiate
military action against Iran without first obtaining authorization from Congress. A similar bill,
H.Con.Res. 33, was introduced in the 110th Congress. An amendment to H.R. 1585, the National
Defense Authorization Act for FY2008, requiring authorization for force against Iran, was
64
See also, Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “The Last Resort: Consequences of Preventive Military Action
Against Iran,” by Patrick Clawson and Michael Eisenstadt. June 2008.
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defeated 136 to 288. A provision that sought to bar the Administration from taking military action
against Iran without congressional authorization was taken out of an early draft of an FY2007
supplemental appropriation (H.R. 1591) to fund additional costs for Iraq and Afghanistan combat
(vetoed on May 1, 2007). Other provisions, including requiring briefings to Congress about
military contingency planning related to Iran’s nuclear program, were in a House-passed FY2009
defense authorization bill (H.R. 64
Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Israel—which is threatenening unilateral action as discussed below—that the United States can
destroy Iran’s nuclear infrastructure, if needed and so ordered.
Iranian Retaliation and Alternative Scenarios of U.S.-Iran Conflict68
Consistent with U.S. assessments, Iran’s Supreme Leader and other Iranian political and military
figures have repeatedly warned that Iran will retaliate for any military action taken against Iran.
U.S. officials view as increasingly significant the potential for Iran to try to retaliate inside the
United States through terrorism. Some believe that Iran would try to retaliate against U.S.
personnel abroad, such as embassies and facilities in Europe or the Persian Gulf. Iran could also
try to direct anti-U.S. militias in Iraq and Afghanistan to attack U.S. personnel. There are no U.S.
troops left in Iraq, but there are about 13,000 U.S. personnel at diplomatic installations there.
Iran’s capability to retaliate appears to be increasing. The Defense Department April 2012 report
on Iranian military power indicates that Iran’s retaliatory ability is growing, as discussed above.
That ability has been enhanced through acquisition of additional ships and submarines,
increasingly accurate and lethal short range ballistic missiles, and new missile capabilities to retarget, while in flight, U.S. ships or related installations. Iran has also added naval bases along its
Gulf coast, according to the DoD report, enhancing its ability to threaten shipping in the Strait.
Earlier, Iran has demonstrated its willingness and ability to act militarily: in February 2007, Iran
seized 15 British sailors that Iran said were patrolling in Iran’s waters, although Britain says they
were in Iraqi waters performing coalition-related searches. They were held until April 5, 2007.
To reduce the effectiveness of Iranian retaliation, some argue that the United States would need to
strike not only nuclear facilities but all of the retaliatory capabilities discussed above. Earlier,
press reports in late February 2012, citing reported Defense Department briefings of President
Obama on military options on Iran, say that a U.S. strike could include IRGC and leadership
targets.
Still others argue that there are U.S. military options available that do not require actual combat.
Some say that a naval embargo or related embargo is possible and could pressure Iran into
reconsidering its stand on the nuclear issue. Others say that the imposition of a “no-fly zone” over
Iran might also serve that purpose. Still others say that the United Nations could set up a special
inspection mission to dismantle Iran’s WMD programs, although inserting such a mission is
likely to be resisted by Iran and could involve hostilities. A U.S. ground invasion to remove Iran’s
regime has not, at any time, appeared to be under serious consideration in part because of the
likely resistance an invasion would meet in Iran.
U.S.-Iran military conflict could result from events or actions other than a deliberate U.S.
decision to strike Iran. Such possibilities drew increased attention in relation to Iran’s repeated
threats to close the Strait of Hormuz if sanctions are imposed on Iran’s exportation of oil. Iran
reiterated that threat in late June 2012 on the eve of the entry into full force of the EU oil embargo
on Iran on July 1. This issue is discussed in substantial detail in CRS Report R42335, Iran’s
Threat to the Strait of Hormuz, coordinated by Kenneth Katzman.
68
See also, Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “The Last Resort: Consequences of Preventive Military Action
Against Iran,” by Patrick Clawson and Michael Eisenstadt. June 2008.
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U.S. Defensive Preparations, Containment, and the Gulf Security Dialogue
Some believe Iran will inevitably become a nuclear armed state, no matter what policies are put
into effect, and that containing a nuclear armed Iran is a viable option over the long term. Critics
see a reliance on containment as an abandonment of U.S. efforts to prevent Iran from becoming a
nuclear state. As noted above, during the visit of Netanyahu in early March 2012, President
Obama explicitly ruled out such a strategy. S.Res. 380 and H.Res. 568, introduced in the 112th
Congress, are sense of Congress resolutions that urge the President to “reaffirm the
unacceptability of an Iran with nuclear weapons capability and oppose any policy that would rely
on containment as an option in response to the Iranian nuclear threat.” H.Res. 568 passed the
House on May 17, 2012, by a vote of 401-11. Provisions of the National Defense Authorization
Act for FY2013 (H.R. 4310) would mandate additional Defense Department planning for
exercises and other actions, such as those involving the U.S. Fifth Fleet that is headquartered in
Bahrain, that would demonstrate U.S. resolve to Iran.
Even though Iran has not yet acquired a nuclear weapon, many elements of a containment
strategy have already been put in place by successive Administrations to try to prevent that
outcome, or to limit Iran’s regional influence in general. A key component of the strategy has
been to enhance the capabilities of U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf. Major initiatives to do so were
put in place during the Clinton Administration and further developed during the Bush
Administration. In mid-2006 the State Department, primarily the Bureau of Political-Military
Affairs (“Pol-Mil”), established the “Gulf Security Dialogue” (GSD). The Obama Administration
has continued the GSD effort. During a visit to the Middle East in March 2009, Secretary of State
Clinton said, after meeting with several Arab and Israeli leaders in the region, that “there is a
great deal of concern about Iran from this whole region.” Iran was also the focus of her trip to the
Gulf region (Qatar and Saudi Arabia) in February 2010, in which she again raised the issue of a
possible U.S. extension of a “security umbrella” or guarantee to regional states against Iran, as a
means of preventing Gulf accommodations to Iranian demands or attempting themselves to
acquire countervailing nuclear capabilities. The Middle East unrest that spread to the Gulf states
of Bahrain and Oman in 2011 caused the Administration to announce a broad arms sales review
of all Middle East arms sales. That at first appeared to place the GSD concept in some doubt,
although the continuing threat from Iran makes it unlikely that the United States will
fundamentally alter its close alliance with any of the GCC states. With the exception of those to
Bahrain, most major arms sales to the Gulf states appear to be continuing without interruption.
An cornerstone of the GSD has been to improve Gulf state missile defense capabilities, as well as
to improve border and maritime security equipment through sales of combat littoral ships, radar
systems, and communications gear. Several GSD-inspired sales include PAC-3 sales to UAE and
Kuwait, and Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs) to Saudi Arabia and UAE; and the very
advanced “THAAD” (Theater High Altitude Area Defense) to UAE. The THAAD sale,
previously notified to Congress, was finalized in early January 2012.69 The JDAM sale to that
country was notified in December 2011. During her visit to Saudi Arabia on March 30-31, 2012,
Secretary Clinton inaugurated a U.S.-GCC strategic dialogue that is to focus on reviving the
longstanding concept of a GCC-wide, integrated missile defense architecture. In early September
2012, it was reported that the United States would soon put in place an early-warning missile
69
For more information on this and other U.S. sales to the UAE, see CRS Report RS21852, The United Arab Emirates
(UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
defense radar in Qatar that, when combined with radars in Israel and Turkey, would provide a
wide range of coverage against Iran’s missile forces.70
Other Recent and Pending Deployments to Deter Iran and Reassure U.S. Allies
To enhance its strike capabilities and reassure its allies, including Israel, the United States has
announced augmented capabilities during June and July 2012. During that period it has moved a
second aircraft carrier into the Gulf region, added a ship (USS Ponce) in the Gulf that serves as a
platform for helicopters and Special Operations Forces, and added minesweeping capabilities
including underwater drones that can find and destroy mines. In late September 2012, the United
States and 25 nations will be holding minesweeping and other naval exercises in the Persian Gulf
to reinforce their ability to respond to any Iranian military action there.
Other Strategic Missile Defense Concepts Against Iran
As part of the effort to demonstrate to Iran that nuclear weapons have no utility, there has also
been planning to defend against an eventual long-range Iranian missile system. In August 2008,
the George W. Bush Administration reached agreements with Poland and the Czech Republic to
establish a missile defense system to counter Iranian ballistic missiles. These agreements were
reached over Russia’s opposition, which was based on the belief that the missile defense system
would be used to neutralize Russian capabilities. However, reportedly based on assessments of
Iran’s focus on missiles of regional range, on September 17, 2009, the Obama Administration
reoriented this missile defense program to focus, at least initially, on ship-based systems, and
systems based in other European countries, including Romania, possibly later returning to the
idea of Poland- and Czech-based systems. Some saw this as an effort to win Russia’s support for
additional sanctions on Iran, although Russia continues to disagree with the plan.
Presidential Authorities and Legislation on Military Action
Perhaps in the belief that there needs to be more advanced planning for U.S. military action, the
FY2011 Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 111-383, signed January 7, 2011) contained a provision
(§1243) requiring the Administration to develop a “National Military Strategy to Counter Iran.” A
provision (Section 307) of a FY2013 intelligence authorization bill (H.R. 5743) requires an
assessment of the consequences of a military strike on Iran.
A decision to take military action might raise the question of presidential authorities, but no
legislation has been passed by both chambers and signed into law limiting the President’s
authority to use military force against Iran. In the 109th Congress, H.Con.Res. 391, introduced on
April 26, 2006, called on the President to not initiate military action against Iran without first
obtaining authorization from Congress. A similar bill, H.Con.Res. 33, was introduced in the 110th
Congress. An amendment to H.R. 1585, the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2008,
requiring authorization for force against Iran, was defeated 136 to 288. A provision that sought to
bar the Administration from taking military action against Iran without congressional
authorization was taken out of an early draft of an FY2007 supplemental appropriation (H.R.
1591) to fund additional costs for Iraq and Afghanistan combat (vetoed on May 1, 2007). Other
70
David Sanger and Eric Schmitt. “To Calm Israel, U.S. Offers Ways to Restrain Iran.” New York Times, September
3, 2012.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
provisions, including requiring briefings to Congress about military contingency planning related
to Iran’s nuclear program, were in a House-passed FY2009 defense authorization bill (H.R.
5658).
Incidents at Sea Agreement?
In the 111th Congress, H.Con.Res. 94 called for the United States to negotiate an “Incidents at
Sea” agreement with Iran. Section 1240 of the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2011
(P.L. 111-383) calls for a DOD report, within one year of enactment, on the merits of such an
agreement with Iran and other Persian Gulf countries. A press report in September 2011 said that
some Defense Department officials are contemplating establishing formal communications
channels to Iranian naval officers to prevent misunderstandings and unintended conflict.6571 The
idea grew out of a series of incidents with Iranian vessels, some of the incidents involving British
warships, that nearly prompted confrontation with Iran.
An Israeli Strike?6672
Some Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, view a nuclear Iran as a
potential existential threat, and say they are determined to prevent a nuclear Iran, even if Israel
has to take unilateral action. Particularly followingImplicit in these Israeli statements is the view that Israeli leaders do
not completely trust that the United States will take military action to prevent Iran from becoming
a nuclear state. Following the November 2011 IAEA report and the start
of enrichment activities
at the hardened site at Fordow, Defense Minister Ehud Barak and other
Israeli leaders expressed
concern that Iran’s nuclear program might be entering a “zone of
immunity” beyond which Israel will have no military options.
With U.S. concern about a potential Israeli strike increasing, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman
Martin Dempsey said on February 19, 2012, in a CNN interview: “We think that it’s not prudent
at this point to decide to attack Iran…I’m confident that they understand our concerns, that a
strike at this time would be destabilizing and wouldn’t achieve their long-term objectives.”67 In
will have no military options.
In his U.S. visit during March 4-5, 2012, Prime Minister Netanyahu expressed the right of Israel to
to act in its self-defense. President Obama, in speeches to the America-Israel Public Affairs
Committee on March 4, 2012, and in statements before and after the Netanyahu visit,
acknowledged Israel’s “sovereign right” of self-defense.68 However, as noted earlier, he also
maintained that sanctions and diplomacy are beginning to bear fruit and should be given more
time to succeed. While the possibility of an Israeli strike on Iran is diminished while the
negotiating process goes on through mid-2012, Israel is likely to revive the issue if the talks break
down or produce little or no progress. Some believe the possibility of an Israeli strike has further
receded with the restructuring of Israel’s ruling coalition in May 2012 that includes Kadima
leader Shaul Mofaz, considered somewhat less convinced of the benefits of military action
against Iran.
6573 While the possibility of an Israeli strike
on Iran is widely viewed as low while the Iran-P5+1 negotiating process continues, Israeli leaders
reportedly have again stepped up internal discussion of this option as the prospects for success in
the P5+1—Iran talks has faded. Several high level U.S. visits to Israel in July 2012, including by
National Security Advisor Donilon, Secretary Clinton, and Secretary Panetta, were apparently
intended to ensure full U.S.-Israel coordination on policy toward Iran by assuring Israel that the
United States is fully committed to preventing a nuclear-armed Iran. And, U.S. deployments in
the Gulf, discussed above, as well as additional planned moves to implement sanctions, and
possible planned covert action, are intended to reassure Israel that the United States is dealing
adequately with the nuclear threat from Iran.74 Still, suggesting he remains wary, and in advance
of a late September 2012 U.S. visit, Prime Minister Netanyahu said early September 2012 that
Iran would not halt its nuclear program unless presented with a clear “red line” against doing so.
71
Jay Solomon and Julian Barnes. “U.S. Weighs A Direct Line to Tehran.” Wall Street Journal, September 19, 2011.
This option is analyzed in substantial depth in: CRS Report R42443, Israel: Possible Military Strike Against Iran’s
Nuclear Facilities, coordinated by Jim Zanotti.
67
Interview of Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey by Fareed Zakaria. CNN, February 19, 2012.
68
Jeffrey Goldberg. “Obama to Iran and Israel…” op. cit.
6673
Jeffrey Goldberg. “Obama to Iran and Israel…” op. cit.
74
Sanger and Schmitt, New York Times, September 3, 2012, op.cit.
72
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Although Israeli strategists say that a strike might be a viable option, several U.S. experts doubt
that Israel has the capability to make such action sufficiently effective to justify the risks. The
IAF is capable but far smaller than that of the United States, and could require overflight of
several countries not likely to support Israeli action, such as Iraq.
While the Israeli strike possibility has become acute, it is not new. In mid-June 2008, Israeli
officials confirmed reports that the Israel Air Force (IAF) had practiced a long-range strike such
as that which would be required for an attack on Iran’s nuclear sites. Debate recurred in
September 2010 following the publication of an article in The Atlantic by Jeffrey Goldberg
entitled “Point of No Return” that hinted at a possibly impending strike in early 2011.6975
Reported Covert Action
As international concern about Iran’s nuclear program has grown, there is increasing discussion
about a reported covert component to U.S. attempts to slow Iran’s nuclear program. These efforts
may be joined by Israel, which is also striving to prevent a nuclear armed Iran.70 An option is for
An option is
for the United States and partner countries to increase this activity, which is distinct from covert
action to support groups inside Iran looking to overthrow Iran’s regime.
Previously, during 2006-82008, it was reported that the United States and Israel conducted operations
operations that resulted in the sale to Iran of nuclear and other technology rigged to have a
destructive effect
on Iran’s programs. Another example includes the Stuxnet virus, discussed
above. The killings of
some Iranian scientists over the past few years remain unexplained and
could have been the result
of covert action. The latest Iranian scientist to be killed was Mostafa
Ahmadi Roshan, a chemical
engineer at the Natanz enrichment facility, who died when a bomb
placed under his car exploded
on January 10, 2012. Earlier, on December 5, 2011, a U.S. drone,
the RQ-170 Sentinel, went
down in Iran; it reportedly was based in Afghanistan and may have
been sent over Iran to monitor
Iran’s nuclear sites. Iran has refused a U.S. request to return the drone.
Containment and the Gulf Security Dialogue
Some see a containment policy as an abandonment of U.S. efforts to prevent Iran from becoming
a nuclear state. As noted above, during the visit of Netanyahu in early March 2012, President
Obama explicitly ruled out such a strategy. S.Res. 380 and H.Res. 568, introduced in the 112th
Congress, are sense of Congress resolutions that urge the President to “reaffirm the
unacceptability of an Iran with nuclear weapons capability and oppose any policy that would rely
on containment as an option in response to the Iranian nuclear threat.” H.Res. 568 passed the
House on May 17, 2012, by a vote of 401-11. Provisions of the National Defense Authorization
Act for FY2013 (H.R. 4310) would mandate additional Defense Department planning for
exercises and other actions, such as those involving the U.S. Fifth Fleet that is headquartered in
Bahrain, that would demonstrate U.S. resolve to Iran.
Many elements of a containment strategy have already been put in place by successive
Administrations, in part to limit Iran’s regional influence or to convince Iran of the seriousness of
69
See http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/09/the-point-of-no-return/8186/.
70
http://www.cbc.ca/news/world/story/2012/02/29/f-israel-iran.html.
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any U.S. military options. U.S.-Gulf state containment initiatives begun during the Clinton
Administration, a containment component of policy was further developed during the Bush
Administration. In mid-2006 the State Department, primarily the Bureau of Political-Military
Affairs (“Pol-Mil”), established the “Gulf Security Dialogue” (GSD). The Obama Administration
has continued the GSD effort. During a visit to the Middle East in March 2009, Secretary of State
Clinton said, after meeting with several Arab and Israeli leaders in the region, that “there is a
great deal of concern about Iran from this whole region.” Iran was also the focus of her trip to the
Gulf region (Qatar and Saudi Arabia) in February 2010, in which she again raised the issue of a
possible U.S. extension of a “security umbrella” or guarantee to regional states against Iran, as a
means of preventing Gulf accommodations to Iranian demands or attempting themselves to
acquire countervailing nuclear capabilities. The Middle East unrest that spread to the Gulf states
of Bahrain and Oman in 2011 caused the Administration to announce a broad arms sales review
of all Middle East arms sales. That at first appeared to place the GSD concept in some doubt,
although the continuing threat from Iran makes it unlikely that the United States will
fundamentally alter its close alliance with any of the GCC states. With the exception of those to
Bahrain, most major arms sales to the Gulf states appear to be continuing without interruption.
An cornerstone of the strategy—and resulting sales—has been to improve Gulf state missile
defense capabilities, as well as to improve border and maritime security equipment through sales
of combat littoral ships, radar systems, and communications gear. Several GSD-inspired sales
include PAC-3 sales to UAE and Kuwait, and Joint Direct Attack Munitions (JDAMs) to Saudi
Arabia and UAE; and the very advanced “THAAD” (Theater High Altitude Area Defense) to
UAE. The THAAD sale, previously notified to Congress, was finalized in early January 2012.71
The JDAM sale to that country was notified in December 2011. During her visit to Saudi Arabia
on March 30-31, 2012, Secretary Clinton inaugurated a U.S.-GCC strategic dialogue that is to
focus on reviving the longstanding concept of a GCC-wide, integrated missile defense
architecture Iran’s nuclear sites. Iran has refused a U.S. request to return the
drone.
Regime Change
Throughout its first year, the Obama Administration sought to allay Iran’s long-standing
suspicions that the main U.S. goal is to unseat the Islamic regime in Iran. Iran’s suspicions of U.S.
intentions are based on the widespread perception that the United States has hoped for and at
times sought to promote regime change in Iran since the 1979 Islamic revolution. The United
States provided some funding to anti-regime groups, mainly pro-monarchists, during the 1980s,7276
and the George W. Bush Administration expressed attraction to this option on several occasions.
The Obama Administration’s stated policy remains to alter Iran’s behavior, not change its regime.
The 2009 domestic unrest in Iran complicated policy for the Obama Administration because it
demonstrated that the regime in Iran might be vulnerable to overthrow. However, the
Administration, assessing that outcome as unlikely, sought to preserve the possibility of a nuclear
71
For more information on this and other U.S. sales to the UAE, see: CRS Report RS21852, The United Arab Emirates
(UAE): Issues for U.S. Policy, by Kenneth Katzman.
72
75
See http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/09/the-point-of-no-return/8186/.
76
CRS conversations with U.S. officials responsible for Iran policy. 1980-1990. After a period of suspension of such
assistance, in 1995, the Clinton Administration accepted a House-Senate conference agreement to include $18-$20
million in funding authority for covert operations against Iran in the FY1996 Intelligence Authorization Act (H.R.
1655, P.L. 104-93), according to a Washington Post report of December 22, 1995. The Clinton Administration
reportedly focused the covert aid on changing the regime’s behavior, rather than its overthrow.
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Iran: U.S. Concerns and Policy Responses
Administration, assessing that outcome as unlikely, sought to preserve the possibility of a nuclear
agreement with Iran while expressing support for human and political rights demanded by the
Green Movement. As 2009 progressed, the statements of President Obama and other U.S.
officials became progressively more critical of the regime. On December 28, 2009, President
Obama expressed forthright support for the opposition by saying, in regard to the unrest in Iran,
“Along with all free nations, the United States stands with those who seek their universal
rights.”7377 With the protests absent in Iran for nearly a year, Secretary of State Clinton reiterated
this position on September 19, 2010, but said the United States needs take care not to be so
overtly supportive as to make the Iranian opposition appear as “stooges” of the United States.
In 2011, the Administration reevaluated its stance slightly in the context of the broader Middle
East uprisings. Statements by Secretary Clinton and the National Security Council accused Iran of
hypocrisy for supporting demonstrations in Egypt while preventing similar free expression inside
Iran.7478 Many observers noted that President Obama’s 2011 Nowruz address (delivered March 20,
2011, the eve of Nowruz) was far more explicitly supportive of the Iranian opposition than in past
years, mentioning specific dissidents who have been jailed and saying to the “young people of
Iran ... I want you to know that I am with you.”7579 Since that statement, the Administration has, as
noted below, sanctioned Iranian officials for human rights abuses in Iran and for assisting Syria
with its crackdown against demonstrations. In his speech to the U.N. General Assembly on
September 21, 2011, President Obama said “In Iran, we’ve seen a government that refuses to
recognize the rights of its own people.” These statements and steps stop short of constituting a
policy of “regime change,” although Iran interprets any public support for the domestic
opposition as evidence of U.S. intent to overthrow the clerical government. As noted above, his
2012 Nowruz message (March 20, 2012) focused on U.S. efforts to help Iranians circumvent
government restrictions on the Internet and other media—a so-called “electronic curtain.”
Some in Congress appear to advocate more direct, public, and broad U.S. support for the overthrow
overthrow of the regime as a focus of U.S. policy. In the 111th Congress, one bill said that it
should be U.S.
policy to promote the overthrow of the regime (The Iran Democratic Transition
Act, S. 3008).
Pursuing a Middle Ground: Democracy Promotion and Internet
Freedom Efforts
In the absence of all-out U.S. pursuit of regime change, successive Administrations and Congress
have agreed on more modest steps to promote political evolution in Iran through “democracy
promotion” and sanctioning Iranian human rights abusers.
Sanctioning Iranian Human Rights Abusers and Abuses
As part of its efforts to isolate the regime on human rights grounds, on September 29, 2010,
President Obama, acting in accordance with Section 105 of P.L. 111-195 (CISADA), issued
Executive Order 13553, imposing sanctions on Iranian officials determined to have committed
human rights abuses since Iran’s 2009 election. Sanctions include a ban on visas to the United
7377
White House, Office of the Press Secretary. “Statement by the President on the Attempted Attack on Christmas Day
and Recent Violence in Iran.” December 28, 2009.
7478
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/02/27/statement-national-security-council-spokesman-tommyvietor-iran.
7579
White House. “Remarks of President Obama Marking Nowruz.” March 20, 2011.
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Executive Order 13553, imposing sanctions on Iranian officials determined to have committed
human rights abuses since Iran’s 2009 election. Sanctions include a ban on visas to the United
States and freeze on U.S.-based assets or trade with them. In an annex, eight Iranian officials
were named as violators and were subjected to the sanctions. Two more Iranian officials (Tehran
prosecutor Abbas Dowlatabadi and Basij commander Mohammad Reza Naqdi) were added to that
list on February 23, 2011, and, on June 9, 2011, the Administration added the IRGC (already
sanctioned as a proliferator), the Basij, the Law Enforcement Forces (LEF), and LEF Commander
Ismail Ahmadi Moghaddam to the list. On December 14, 2011, two more Iranians (head of the
Joint Staff Dr. Hassan Firuzabadi and deputy IRGC commander Abdullah Argahi) were named as
well. That brought the total to 13 Iranian persons and 3 entities designated to date. (The full list of
Iranian sanctioned is provided in Table 6 of CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions.)
On July 8, 2011, the Administration, in concert with a similar move by Britain, imposed
restrictions on more than 50 Iranian officials deemed to have played a role in repression. The
action was taken under authority in the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA). The
Administration did not name the Iranian officials covered by the ruling, on the grounds that the
INA requires that visa records are confidential.
In the 112th Congress, several bills have been introduced to increase sanctions on Iranian human
rights abusers. On May 4, 2011, the Iran Human Rights and Democracy Promotion Act of 2011
was introduced (S. 879/H.R. 1714)—it would make mandatory investigations of Iranian human
rights abusers; sanction the sale to Iran of equipment that could be used to suppress
demonstrations; reauthorize the Iran Freedom Support Act (see below); and create a “Special
Representative” position at the Department of State to focus on highlighting Iran’s human rights
abuses and coordinate U.S. and international responses. This legislation is intended, in part, to
build on several human rights-related provisions of CISADA. Elements of these bills are also
contained in broader Iran sanctions bills, H.R. 1905, S. 1048, and S. 2101. H.R. 1905 was passed
by the full House on December 14, 2011, by a vote of 410-11The full list of Iranian sanctioned under this and other
Executive Orders is provided in Table 6 of CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions.
In the 112th Congress, several bills have been introduced to increase sanctions on Iranian human
rights abusers. S. 879 and H.R. 1714 made mandatory investigations of Iranian human rights
abusers and sanction the sale to Iran of equipment that could be used to suppress demonstrations.
Elements of these several bills were incorporated into a broad Iran sanctions bill, H.R. 1905,
passed by both chambers on August 1, 2012 and signed on August 10 (P.L. 112-158). Its
provisions are discussed in greater detail in CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions.
Democracy Promotion Funding
Binding legislation to favor democracy promotion in Iran was enacted in the 109th Congress. The
Iran Freedom Support Act (P.L. 109-293), signed September 30, 2006, authorized funds (no
specific dollar amount) for Iran democracy promotion.7680 Iran asserts that funding democracy
promotion represents a violation of the 1981 “Algiers Accords” that settled the Iran hostage crisis
and provide for non-interference in each others’ internal affairs.
The George W. Bush Administration asserted that open funding of Iranian pro-democracy
activists (see below) as a stated effort to change regime behavior, not to overthrow the regime,
although some saw the Bush Administration’s efforts as a cover to achieve a regime change
objective. A few accounts, such as “Preparing the Battlefield” by Seymour Hersh in the New
Yorker (July 7 and 14, 2008) say that President George W. Bush authorized U.S. covert operations
to destabilize the regime,7781 involving assistance to some of the ethnic-based armed groups
discussed above. CRS has no way to confirm assertions in the Hersh article that up to $400
million was appropriated and/or used to aid the groups mentioned.
76
This legislation was a modification of H.R. 282, which passed the House on April 26, 2006, by a vote of 397-21, and
S. 333, which was introduced in the Senate.
77
Ross, Brian and Richard Esposito. Bush Authorizes New Covert Action Against Iran, http://blogs.abcnews.com/
theblotter/2007/05/bush_authorizes.html.
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The State Department, the implementer of U.S. democracy promotion programs for Iran, has used
funds in appropriations (see Table 89) to support pro-democracy programs run by at organizations
based in the United States and in Europe; the department refuses to name grantees for security
reasons. The funds shown below have been obligated through DRL and the Bureau of Near
Eastern Affairs in partnership with USAID. At least $60 billion of the funds have been allocated
to date. Some of the funds have been appropriated for cultural exchanges, public diplomacy, and
broadcasting to Iran. A further indication of the sensitivity of specifying the use of the funds is
that the Obama Administration requested funds for Near East regional democracy programs in its
FY2010, FY2011, FY2012, and FY2013 budget requests, but no specific requests for funds for
Iran were delineated.
80
This legislation was a modification of H.R. 282, which passed the House on April 26, 2006, by a vote of 397-21, and
S. 333, which was introduced in the Senate.
81
Ross, Brian and Richard Esposito. Bush Authorizes New Covert Action Against Iran, http://blogs.abcnews.com/
theblotter/2007/05/bush_authorizes.html.
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Many have consistently questioned the effectiveness of such funding. In the view of many
experts, U.S. funds would make the aid recipients less attractive to most Iranians. Even before the
post-2009 election crackdown, Iran was arresting civil society activists by alleging they are
accepting the U.S. democracy promotion funds, while others have refused to participate in U.S.funded programs, fearing arrest.7882 In May 2007—Iranian American scholar Haleh Esfandiari, of
the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington, DC, was imprisoned for several months, on the
grounds that the Wilson Center was part of this effort. The center has denied being part of the
democracy promotion effort in Iran.
Perhaps in response to some of these criticisms, the Obama Administration altered Iran
democracy promotion programs somewhat toward working directly with Iranians inside Iran who
are organized around such apolitical issues as health care, the environment, and science.7983 During
2009, less emphasis was placed on funding journalists and human rights activists in Iran, or on
sponsoring visits by Iranians to the United States.8084 One issue arose concerning the State
Department decision in late 2009 not to renew a contract to the Iran Human Rights
Documentation Center (IHRDC), based at Yale University, which was cataloguing human rights
abuses in Iran. Some outside experts believe that, particularly in the current context of a regime
crackdown against democracy activists, the contract should have been renewed. That criticism
went hand in hand with the view of some experts that the post-election unrest in Iran was
evidence that such democracy promotion programs were working and should be enhanced.
Promoting Internet Freedom in Iran
In line with legislation and new assessments of the best use of U.S. assistance, recent U.S. actions
have focused on preventing the Iranian government’s suppression of electronic communication.
Among legislation that was enacted is the “Voice (Victims of Iranian Censorship) Act” (Subtitle
D of the FY2010 Defense Authorization, P.L. 111-84), which contains provisions to potentially
penalize companies that are selling Iran technology equipment that it can use to suppress or
78
monitor the Internet usage of Iranians.85 In February 2010, the Administration eased licensing
requirements for Iranians to download free mass market U.S. software. And, the U.S. Office of
Foreign Assets Control has reportedly licensed a California firm (Censorship Research Center) to
export anti-filtering software to Iran.86 Under Secretary of State Sherman testified on October 14,
2011, that some of the democracy promotion funding has been to train Iranians in the use of
technologies that undermine regime Internet censorship efforts.
In March 2012, the Administration focused on this issue anew. In his March 20, 2012, Nowruz
message, President Obama stated that in recent weeks the regime had increased Internet
restrictions and that the Administration is taking new steps to promote Internet freedom in Iran.
82
Three other Iranian Americans were arrested and accused by the Intelligence Ministry of actions contrary to national
security in May 2007: U.S. funded broadcast (Radio Farda) journalist Parnaz Azima (who was not in jail but was not
allowed to leave Iran); Kian Tajbacksh of the Open Society Institute funded by George Soros; and businessman and
peace activist Ali Shakeri. Several congressional resolutions called on Iran to release Esfandiari (S.Res. 214 agreed to
by the Senate on May 24; H.Res. 430, passed by the House on June 5; and S.Res. 199). All were released by October
2007. Tajbacksh was rearrested in September 2009 and remains incarcerated.
7983
CRS conversation with U.S. officials of the “Iran Office” of the U.S. Consulate in Dubai. October 2009.
8084
Solomon, Jay. “U.S. Shifts Its Strategy Toward Iran’s Dissidents.” Wall Street Journal, June 11, 2010.
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monitor the Internet usage of Iranians.81 In February 2010, the Administration eased licensing
requirements for Iranians to download free mass market U.S. software. And, the U.S. Office of
Foreign Assets Control has reportedly licensed a California firm (Censorship Research Center) to
export anti-filtering software to Iran.82 Under Secretary of State Sherman testified on October 14,
2011, that some of the democracy promotion funding has been to train Iranians in the use of
technologies that undermine regime Internet censorship efforts.
In March 2012, the Administration focused on this issue anew. In his March 20, 2012, Nowruz
message, President Obama stated that in recent weeks the regime had increased Internet
restrictions and that the Administration is taking new steps to promote Internet freedom in Iran.
85
For more discussion of such legislation, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions.
86
Ibid.
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Acting in accordance with P.L. 111-195 (Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and
Divestment Act), which allows U.S. exports of technologies used to expand Internet freedom in
Iran, on March 20, 2012, the Administration announced that certain software that can be suedused to
circumvent regime restrictions on Internet use could be exported to Iran without a specific
license. The Administration announced examples such as software for personal communications,
data storage, Internet browsing, document reading, and related technologies. This appeared to be
a major new step in the Administration effort to break Iran’s “electronic curtain.”
On April 23, 2012, President Obama issued an Executive Order (13606) directly addressing the
issue. The
Order order blocks the U.S.-based property and essentially bars U.S. entry and bans any U.S.
trade with
persons and entities listed in an Annex and persons or entities subsequently determined
to be
operating any technology that allows the Iranian (or Syrian) government to disrupt, monitor, or
or track computer usage by citizens of those countries; or to have sold to Iran or Syria any
technology that enables those government to carry out such disruptions or monitoring. (For more
information, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.)
Broadcasting/Public Diplomacy Issues
Another part of the democracy promotion effort has been the development of new U.S.
broadcasting services to Iran. The broadcasting component of policy has been an extension of a
trend that began in the late 1990s. Radio Farda (“tomorrow,” in Farsi) began under Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), in partnership with the Voice of America (VOA), in October
19982002. The
service was established as a successor to a smaller Iran broadcasting effort begun with an initial
with an initial $4 million from the FY1998
Commerce/State/Justice appropriation (P.L. 105-119). (It was to be
called Radio Free Iran but
was never formally given that name by RFE/RL.) Radio Farda now
broadcasts 24 hours/day.
Radio Farda has 59 full time employees, and 15 freelancers. No U.S. assistance has been
provided to Iranian exile-run stations.8387
According to information provided to CRS by the BBG in February 2011, the costs of Radio
Farda are FY2010 (actual): :
$9.9 million; FY2011 (estimate): $11.84 million; FY2012 (request):
and FY2012: $11.77 million.
Persian News Network (PNN). The VOA established a Persian language service to Iran (VOA
Persian Service) in July 2003. In July 2007, it was renamed Persian News Network (PNN),
81
For more discussion of such legislation, see CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions.
Ibid.
83
The conference report on the FY2006 regular foreign aid appropriations, P.L. 109-102, stated the sense of Congress
that such support should be considered.
82
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encompassing radio (1 hour a day or original programming); television (7 hours a day of original
or acquired programming, rebroadcast throughout a 24-hour period); and Internet.
Even though PNN has expanded its offerings significantly, it has come under substantial criticism
from observers. Some say that PNN has lost much of its audience among young, educated, antiregime Iranians who are looking for signs of U.S. official support. The Inspector General report
cited above, as well as many observers maintain that decisions on who to put on PNN panel
discussion shows have been made by a small group of Iranian exiles who deliberately deny
appearances to certain Iranians with whom they disagree. Still others say that PNN frequently airs
the views of Iranian groups that are advocates of U.S. engagement of the regime or who
downplay regime transgressions. Some have criticized PNN for covering long-standing exiled
opposition groups, such as supporters of the son of the former Shah of Iran.84 Other critics say
88 Other critics say
87
The conference report on the FY2006 regular foreign aid appropriations, P.L. 109-102, stated the sense of Congress
that such support should be considered.
88
CRS conversations with Iranian members of the Green Movement. December 2009-August 2010.
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PNN offers little coverage of the Green Movement, even though, in the view of these critics, one
mission of the network is, or should be, to highlight the purported unpopularity of the regime.
Others say it has run pieces pointing out such U.S. social problems as homelessness and drug use,
while refusing to air pieces showcasing U.S. democracy and rule of law. Other observers say
there is wide-ranging nepotism at PNN, in which employees hire their relatives and deny
opportunities to employment applicants based on merit.
Several observers point Several observers point
to one particular PNN show as having particular effect on audiences
inside Iran. That show is
called “Parazit” (Persian for static); it is a weekly comedy show
modeled on a U.S. program on
Comedy Central network called “The Daily Show.” On Parazit,
the writers of the show, Kambiz
Hosseini and Saman Arbabi, mock President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad and other Iranian figures,
using political satire. Observers say that the show has
deteriorated in quality in 2012 after Mr.
Hosseini left the show or was ousted from it, and it was
taken off PNN in February 2012. A different show that satirizes Iranian leaders and
news from
Iran began in April 2012, and PNN said in August 2012 that Parazit is to be reconstituted.
To address the various criticisms, all of which were reflected in the Inspectors General report, the
Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG) formed a “PNN subcommittee,” headed by one of its
members,
Enders Wimbush. In an e-mail to the author on February 25, 2011, Wimbush provided
an update
on the progress of efforts to address the criticisms, saying “I wish I could say that PNN
is ‘fixed,’
but we still have some way to go.” He left the BBG in May 2012. In February 2011,
Ramin Asgard, a former State Department
officer, was hired as PNN director.8589 tasked with
redressing the PNN deficiencies. However, he
left in January 2012, reportedly out of frustration at
his inability to restructure PNN and make it
more effective as a voice for U.S. policy. PNN is now
run by VOA officials, at least temporarilyofficial Steve Redisch, at least temporarily. He is assisted, in part, by former CNN
anchor Rudi Bakhtiar, mentioned above, although she previously was briefly ousted by PNN
under unclear circumstances.
PNN has 92 full-time slots available, of which nearly all are filled. According to information
provided to CRS by the BBG board of governors in February 2011, the costs for PNN are:
FY2010 (actual): $23.78 million; FY2011 (estimate): $22.5 million; FY2012: $23.32 million.
84
85
CRS conversations with Iranian members of the Green Movement. December 2009-August 2010.
(estimate):
$23.32 million.
89
http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=54504. Confirmed to CRS on February 25, 2011, by a member of the BBG.
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Table 89. Iran Democracy Promotion Funding
FY2004
Foreign operations appropriation (P.L. 108-199) earmarked $1.5 million for “educational, humanitarian
and non-governmental organizations and individuals inside Iran to support the advancement of
democracy and human rights in Iran.” The State Department Bureau of Democracy and Labor (DRL)
gave $1 million to a unit of Yale University, and $500,000 to National Endowment for Democracy.
FY2005
$3 million from FY2005 foreign aid appropriation (P.L. 108-447) for democracy promotion. Priority
areas: political party development, media, labor rights, civil society promotion, and human rights.
FY2006
$11.15 for democracy promotion from regular FY2006 foreign aid appropriation (P.L. 109-102). $4.15
million administered by DRL and $7 million for the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs.
FY2006
supp.
Total of $66.1 million (of $75 million requested) from FY2006 supplemental (P.L. 109-234): $20 million
for democracy promotion; $5 million for public diplomacy directed at the Iranian population; $5
million for cultural exchanges; and $36.1 million for Voice of America-TV and “Radio Farda”
broadcasting. Broadcasting funds are provided through the Broadcasting Board of Governors.
FY2007
FY2007 continuing resolution provided $6.55 million for Iran (and Syria) to be administered through
DRL. $3.04 million was used for Iran. No funds were requested.
FY2008
$60 million (of $75 million requested) is contained in Consolidated Appropriation (H.R. 2764, P.L. 110161), of which, according to the conference report $21.6 million is ESF for pro-democracy programs,
including non-violent efforts to oppose Iran’s meddling in other countries. $7.9 million is from a
“Democracy Fund” for use by DRL. The Appropriation also fully funded additional $33.6 million
requested for Iran broadcasting: $20 million for VOA Persian service; and $8.1 million for Radio Farda;
and $5.5 million for exchanges with Iran.
FY2009
Request was for $65 million in ESF “to support the aspirations of the Iranian people for a democratic
and open society by promoting civil society, civic participation, media freedom, and freedom of
information.” H.R. 1105 (P.L. 111-8) provides $25 million for democracy promotion programs in the
region, including in Iran.
FY2010
$40 million requested and used for Near East Regional Democracy programming. Programs to
promote human rights, civil society, and public diplomacy in Iran constitute a significant use of these
region-wide funds.
FY2011
$40 million requested and will be used for Near East Regional Democracy programs. Programming for
Iran with these funds to be similar to FY2010
FY2012
$35 million for Near East Regional Democracy, and Iran-related use is to be similar to FY2010 and
FY2011.
FY2013
$30 million for Near East Regional Democracy, with Iran use similar to prior two fiscal years.
Sources: Information provided by State Department and reviewed by Department’s Iran Office,
February 1, 2010; FY2012 Congressional Budget Justification; author conversation with Department of State Iran
Office, April 21, 2011.
State Department Diplomatic and Public Diplomacy Efforts
Since 2006, the State Department has been increasing the presence of Persian-speaking U.S.
diplomats in U.S. diplomatic missions around Iran, in part to help identify and facilitate Iranian
participate in U.S. democracy-promotion programs. The Iran unit at the U.S. consulate in Dubai
has been enlarged significantly into a “regional presence” office, and “Iran-watcher” positions
have been added to U.S. diplomatic facilities in Baku, Azerbaijan; Istanbul, Turkey; Frankfurt,
Germany; London; and Ashkabad, Turkmenistan, all of which have large expatriate Iranian
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populations and/or proximity to Iran.8690 An enlarged (eight-person) “Office of Iran Affairs” has
86
Stockman, Farah. “‘Long Struggle’ With Iran Seen Ahead.” Boston Globe, March 9, 2006.
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been formed at the State Department, and it is reportedly engaged in contacts with U.S.-based
exile groups such as those discussed earlier.
The State Department also is trying to enhance its public diplomacy to reach out to the Iranian
population.
•
In May 2003, the State Department added a Persian-language website to its list of
foreign language websites, under the authority of the Bureau of International
Information Programs. The website, according to a statement issued by thenSecretary of State Colin Powell, is intended to be a source of information about
the United States and its policy toward Iran.
•
On February 14, 2011, the State Department announced that it had begun
Persian-language Twitter feeds in an effort to connect better with Internet users in
Iran.
•
In part to augment U.S. public diplomacy, the State Department announced in
April 2011 that a Persian-speaking U.S. diplomat, Alan Eyre, based at the U.S.
Consulate in Dubai, would make regular appearances on Iranian official media to
explain U.S. positions.
•
On October 27, 2011, Secretary Clinton announced the United States would set
up a “virtual Embassy” to Iran on the Internet, which would provide Iranians
with information on visas to the United States and exchange programs.
Option: Enhanced U.S. Interests Section
Some go further and say that the United States should staff the U.S. interests section in Tehran
with U.S. personnel, who would mostly process Iranian visas and help facilitate U.S.-Iran peopleto-people contacts (the interests section is currently under the auspices of the Swiss Embassy).
U.S. staffing was considered by the George W. Bush Administration in late 2008, but the decision
was left to the Obama Administration. The Obama Administration appeared inclined toward U.S.
staffing, but no decision was announced. Such a step was likely delayed or derailed outright by
the Iranian response to the post-election protests. However, some observers say that there are
State Department officials who see U.S. staffing as a way to broaden U.S. contacts with
representatives of the Green Movement and more accurately gauge its strength. Perhaps as a
temporary alternative, the State Department is attempting outreach to the Iranian people by
establishing, as of November 2011, an Internet-based “virtual embassy,” that explains the visa
application process and other items of interest to Iranians. However, press reports say Iran has
censored the site and rendered it at least partially inaccessible.
Additional Sanctions
Amid signs that sanctions are weakening Iran’s economy and possibly pressuring its leadership,
the Administration and its international partners continue to impose additional sanctions on Iran,
as noted throughout. However, impositions of major new sanctions is expected to be on hold until
the outcome of nuclear talks with Iran, begun in mid-April 2012, become clear. Iran has signaled
it might be willing to compromise on some aspects of its uranium enrichment program, but it is
demanding an easing of sanctions in return, and has threatened to end the talks if any new
sanctions are imposed.
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Among sanctions imposed in late 2011 and early 2012 were: U.S. sanctions against firms that sell
Iran energy equipment or petrochemical equipment (Executive Order 13590 of November 21,
2011); sanctions against foreign banks that do business with Iran’s Central Bank (Section 1245 of
P.L. 112-81); and an EU embargo of purchases of Iranian oil. In addition, the Society for
Worldwide International Financial Transfers (SWIFT) announced that it cut sanctioned Iranian
banks out of its electronic payments network as of March 17, 2012. Iran has demanded that the
negotiating process begun in Istanbul in mid-April 2012 produce an early rollback of the EU oil
embargo, but the EU has not pledged that step in advance of verified Iranian commitments on the
nuclear issue.
Still, there are numerous ideas and suggestions for additional economic and diplomatic sanctions
against Iran, should the negotiating process break down. Some are U.S. sanctions, some are U.S.
sanctions against foreign entities intended to compel them to exit the Iranian market, and others
are multilateral or international. These and other options, as well as existing sanctions, are
discussed in significant detail in CRS Report
Iran—particularly with nuclear talks failing to achieve a breakthrough after three rounds during
April—June 2012. Iran has demanded that the negotiating process produce an early rollback of
90
Stockman, Farah. “‘Long Struggle’ With Iran Seen Ahead.” Boston Globe, March 9, 2006.
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the EU oil embargo, but the EU has not pledged that step in advance of verified Iranian
commitments on the nuclear issue. The lack of clear progress in the talks caused a major Iran
sanctions bill, H.R. 1905, to advance. Different versions of the bill, each of which has multiple
provisions, were passed by both chambers and an agreed version—which has provisions not in
either prior version—was filed on July 30, 2012, and passed by both chambers on August 1, 2012.
It was signed on August 10 (P.L. 112-158). The primary new provision in the enacted version is to
sanction shipments of Iranian oil unless the country buying the Iranian oil has received an
exemption from sanctions for significantly reducing purchases of oil from Iran each 180 days.
Thus far, 20 countries—all of Iran’s main oil customers—have reduced their buys of Iranian oil
and received such an exemption. This provision is highly similar to an Executive Order 13622
issued on July 31, 2012. For information on H.R. 1905 and all U.S. sanctions against Iran, see
CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
Aside from the provisions of H.R. 1905, there are numerous ideas and suggestions for additional
economic and diplomatic sanctions against Iran, should the negotiating process break down
completely. Some are U.S. sanctions, some are U.S. sanctions against foreign entities intended to
compel them to exit the Iranian market, and others are multilateral or international. These and
other options, as well as existing sanctions, are discussed in significant detail in CRS Report
RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman:
•
Mandating Reductions in Diplomatic Exchanges with Iran or Prohibiting Travel
by Iranian Officials.
•
Banning Passenger Flights to and from Iran.
•
Limiting Lending to Iran by International Financial Institutions. Resolution 1747
calls for restraint on but does not outright ban international lending to Iran.
•
Banning Trade Financing or Official Insurance for Trade Financing. This was
not made mandatory by Resolution 1929, but several countries imposed this
sanction (as far as most trade financing) subsequently.
•
Banning Investment in Iran’s Energy Sector. Such a step is authorized, not
mandated, by Resolution 1929, and the Iran Sanctions Act allows for U.S.
sanctions against foreign investment in that sector. A growing number of
countries have used that authority to impose these sanctions on Iran.
•
Restricting Operations of and Insurance for Iranian Shipping. A call for restraint
is in Resolution 1929, but is not mandatory. The EU and other national measures
announced subsequently did include this sanction (IRISL) to operatetake effect as of
July 1.
•
Imposing a Worldwide Ban on Sales of Arms to Iran. Resolution 1929 imposes a
ban on sales of major weapons systems to Iran, but another option is to extend
that ban to all lethal equipment.
•
Imposing an International Ban on Purchases of Iranian Oil. As noted, the EU has
agreed to stop all purchases of Iranian oil as early as its January 30of July 1, 2012. Another
option is to
impose a worldwide ban on all purchases through a U.N. resolution.
However, doing so could drive up world oil prices, or to further pressure or incent nations
to end buys of oil from Iran.
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Table 910. Digest of Existing U.S. Sanctions Against Iran
Ban on U.S. Trade With and Investment in Iran. Executive Order 12959 (May 6, 1995) bans almost all U.S. trade with and
investment in Iran. Modifications in 1999 and 2000 allowed for exportation of U.S. food and medical equipment, and
importation from Iran of luxury goods (carpets, caviar, dried fruits, nuts), but P.L. 111-195 (Comprehensive Iran
Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act, CISADA) restored the complete ban on imports. The trade ban does
not apply to foreign subsidiaries of U.S. firms.
U.S. Sanctions Against Foreign Firms that Invest inDeal With Iran’s Energy Sector. The Iran Sanctions Act (P.L. 104-172, August 5,
1996, as amended, most recently by H.R. 1905/P.L. 111-195) authorizes the President to select threefive out of a menu of nine
twelve sanctions to impose against firms that the Administration has determined: have invested more than $20 million to
to develop Iran’s petroleum (oil and gas) sector, or; which sell Iran more than $1 million worth of gasoline or equipment
to import gasoline or refine oil into gasoline. A November 21, 2011, Executive Order (13590) extended sanctions to
firms that sell Iran any energy related equipment, including for its petrochemical sector; that sell energy $1 million or more worth of energy equipment to Iran;
that provide shipping services to transport oil from Iran; that engages in an energy joint venture with Iran outside
Iran; or that buy Iran’s sovereign debt.
Sanctions On Iran’s Central Bank. CISADA bans accounts with banks that do business with the Revolutionary Guard and
sanctioned entities and the Treasury Dept. in November 2011 declared Iran’s financial system an entity of primary
money laundering concern. Section 1245 P.L. 112-81 signed December 31, 2011, prevents new foreign banks that do
business with Iran’s Central Bank from opening U.S. accounts.
Terrorism List Designation Sanctions. Iran’s designation by the Secretary of State as a “state sponsor of terrorism”
(January 19, 1984—commonly referred to as the “terrorism list”) triggers several sanctions, including the following:
(1) a ban on the provision of U.S. foreign assistance to Iran under Section 620A of the Foreign Assistance Act; (2) a
ban on arms exports to Iran under Section 40 of the Arms Export Control Act (P.L. 95-92, as amended); (3) under
Section 6(j) of the Export Administration Act (P.L. 96-72, as amended), a significant restriction—amended by other
laws to a “presumption of denial”—on U.S. exports to Iran of items that could have military applications; (4) under
Section 327 of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (P.L. 104-132, April 24, 1996), a requirement that
U.S. representatives to international financial institutions vote against international loans to terrorism list states.
Sanctions Against Foreign Firms that Aid Iran’s Weapons of Mass Destruction Programs. The Iran-Syria-North Korea
Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 106-178, March 14, 2000, as amended) authorizes the Administration to impose sanctions
on foreign persons or firms determined to have provided assistance to Iran’s weapons of mass destruction (WMD)
programs. Sanctions include restrictions on U.S. trade with the sanctioned entity.
Sanctions Against Foreign Firms that Sell Advanced Arms to Iran. The Iran-Iraq Arms Nonproliferation Act (P.L. 102-484,
October 23, 1992, as amended) provides for U.S. sanctions against foreign firms that sell Iran “destabilizing numbers
and types of conventional weapons” or WMD technology.
Ban on Transactions With Foreign Entities Determined to Be Supporting International Terrorism. Executive Order 13324
(September 23, 2001) authorizes a ban on U.S. transactions with entities determined to be supporting international
terrorism. The Order was not specific to Iran, coming 12 days after the September 11, 2001, attacks, but several
Iranian entities have been designated.
Ban on Transactions With Foreign Entities that Support Proliferation. Executive Order 13382 (June 28, 2005) amended
previous executive orders to provide for a ban on U.S. transactions with entities determined to be supporting
international proliferation. As is the case for Executive Order 13324, mentioned above, Executive Order 13382 was
not specific to Iran. However, numerous Iranian entities, including the IRGC itself, have been designated.
Divestment. A Title in P.L. 111-195 authorizes and protects from lawsuits various investment managers who divest
from shares of firms that conduct sanctionable business with Iran.
Counter-Narcotics. In February 1987, Iran was first designated as a state that failed to cooperate with U.S. anti-drug
efforts or take adequate steps to control narcotics production or trafficking. The Clinton Administration, on
December 7, 1998, removed Iran from the U.S. list of major drug producing countries. This exempted Iran from the
annual certification process that kept drug-related U.S. sanctions in place on Iran.
U.S.-Iran Assets Disputes. Iranian leaders continue to assert that the United States is holding Iranian assets, and that this
is an impediment to improved relations. See CRS Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
Travel-Related Guidance. Use of U.S. passports for travel to Iran is permitted. Iranians entering the United States are
required to be fingerprinted, and Iran has imposed reciprocal requirements.
Source: CRS. For analysis and extended discussion of U.S. and international sanctions against Iran, see CRS
Report RS20871, Iran Sanctions, by Kenneth Katzman.
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Conclusion
Mistrust between the United States and Iran’s Islamic regime has run deep for more than three
decades and will be difficult to reverse. Some argue that, no matter who is in power in Tehran, the
United States and Iran have a common long-term interest in stability in the Persian Gulf and
South Asia regions. According to this view, major diplomatic overtures toward the regime might
not only help resolve the nuclear issue but yield fruit in producing a new, constructive U.S.-Iran
relationship.
Others argue that U.S. concerns stem first and foremost from the character of Iran’s regime, and
that no diplomatic breakthrough is possible until the regime changes. Those who take this view
see in the Green Movement the potential to replace the regime and to integrate Iran into a proU.S. strategic architecture in the region. Many argue that a wholesale replacement of the current
regime could produce major strategic benefits beyond potentially reducing the threat from Iran’s
nuclear program, including an end to Iran’s effort to obstruct a broad Arab-Israeli peace.
Others argue that many Iranians are united on major national security issues and that a new
regime would not necessarily align with the United States. Some believe that many Iranians fear
that alignment with the United States would produce a degree of U.S. control and infuse Iran with
Western culture that many Iranians find un-Islamic and objectionable.
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Table 1011. Selected Economic Indicators
Economic Growth
2.5 % (2011 est.); 3.2% (2010)
Per Capita Income
$12,200/yr purchasing power parity (2011)
GDP
$930 billion purchasing power parity (2011)
Proven Oil Reserves
135 billion barrels (highest after Russia and Canada)
Oil
Production/Exports
About 3.9 million barrels per day (mbd)/ 2.4 mbd exports.
Major Oil/Gas
Customers
EU—600,000 barrels per day (bpd), but embargo pending. China—550,000 barrels per
day (bpd); about 4% of China’s oil imports; Japan—350,000 bpd, about 12% of oil
imports; South Korea—230,000 bpd; India—200,000 bpd. Turkey—gas: 8.6 billion cubic
meters/yrRemaining customers: primarily China, India, South Korea, Japan, and Turkey. Turkey also
buys 8.6 billion cubic meters/yr of gas from Iran. Oil exports have fallen to just over 1
million barrels per day as of September 2012.
Major Export Markets
Mirrors major oil customers.
Major Imports
Germany ($5.6 billion); China ($5 billion); UAE ($4 billion); S. Korea ($2.9 billion); France
($2.6 billion); Italy ($2.5 billion); Russia ($1.7 billion); India ($1.6 billion); Brazil ($1.3
billion); Japan ($1.3 billion).
Major Non-Oil
Investments
Renault (France) and Mercedes (Germany)—automobile production in Karaj, Iran—
valued at $370 million; Renault (France), Peugeot (France) and Volkswagen (Germany)—
auto parts production; Turkey—Tehran airport, hotels; China—shipbuilding on Qeshm
Island, aluminum factory in Shirvan, cement plant in Hamadan; UAE financing Esfahan
Steel Company; India—steel plant, petrochemical plant; S. Korea—steel plant in Kerman
Province; S. Korea and Germany—$1.7 billion to expand Esfahan refinery.
Development
Assistance Received
2003 (latest available): $136 million grant aid. Biggest donors: Germany ($38 million);
Japan ($17 million); France ($9 million).
Inflation
22.5% (2011)
Unemployment Rate
15.3% (2011)
Sources: CIA, The World Factbook; various press; IMF; Iran Trade Planning Division; CRS conversations with
experts and foreign diplomats.
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Figure 1. Structure of the Iranian Government
Source: CRS.
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Figure 2. Map of Iran
Source: Map Resources, adapted by CRS (April 2005).
Author Contact Information
Kenneth Katzman
Specialist in Middle Eastern Affairs
kkatzman@crs.loc.gov, 7-7612
Congressional Research Service
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