Washington
Speeds Up Collision Course With Europe Over Iran
By Finian
Cunningham
October 24,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- The Trump administration is accelerating on a
collision course with its European allies over the
Iran nuclear deal. Washington is essentially
demanding the EU joins in backdoor sanctions against
Iran – or face financial penalties. In short:
browbeating, arm-twisting, and bribery.
In a sign
of the times, the Europeans are resisting American
pressure. With huge investments already lined up
between EU countries and Iran, the Trump
administration is being viewed with contempt for
daring to bully European economic interests.
In a
classic backfire, Washington’s browbeating of
European allies is pushing them to reorient their
strategic interests toward China, Russia and a
multilateral global order in which US power
diminishes even further.
Earlier this week, US Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson gave an extraordinarily
explicit warning to
Europe over Iran. At a news conference in the Saudi
capital, Riyadh, Tillerson said European companies
are “at great risk” if they invest in Iran
owing to the Trump administration possibly
re-imposing sanctions on Tehran in the coming
months.
Trump’s
dangling of sanctions follows his
“decertification” earlier this month of the
international nuclear accord signed with Iran and
five other world powers: Russia, China, Britain,
France, and Germany. Known formally as the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the July 2015
deal promised to lift trade sanctions on Iran in
exchange for the latter’s restriction on its nuclear
energy program to prevent any weaponization.
Washington’s repudiation of the JCPOA is not shared
by the Europeans, Russia nor China. The UN nuclear
watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency,
has also confirmed that Iran is in full compliance
with the terms of the accord. EU leaders and
diplomats have adamantly said they have no intention
of abandoning the agreement or renegotiating it.
China and Russia likewise concur.
From the
early days of Trump’s presidency, he has been
griping about the Iran deal, calling it the
“worst ever.” He and others in Washington claim
Iran is using sanctions relief to finance support
for Syrian ally Bashar Assad, Lebanon’s Hezbollah
movement and clandestine terror operations in the
Middle East. Washington’s claims are invariably
vague and unsubstantiated. Tehran has dismissed
Trump’s accusations as ignorant.
Evidently,
the Europeans do not have the same pejorative view
of Iran as a “global sponsor of terrorism”
as the Americans. Neither does China or Russia. Even
before Trump decertified the JCPOA – a move which
could trigger a full-blown cancellation after a
Congressional review requested by the president –
there was already talk about Washington and Europe
clashing. “Europe and the USA on collision
course,” ran a headline in Deutsche Welle in
August.
Now,
after Tillerson’s pointed warning to the Europeans
to “stay out of Iran,” the US is ramping up
the clash. Bloomberg
headlined last
week: “Trump’s Iran policy is a headache for EU
business.” The report noted, however, that:
“America’s U-turn on nuclear accord
won’t spike existing [European investment] deals.”
Since
the signing of the JCPOA two years ago, European
investment and trade with Iran have burgeoned. For
example, French oil major Total earlier this year
finalized a 20-year
oil and gas project worth around €5 billion, along
with a Chinese firm.
That
followed the announcement of multi-million euro
investment plans by car manufacturers Renault and
PSA (Peugeot and Citroen) to expand factories in
Iran. This month, only days after Trump announced he
was decertifying the JCPOA, a Norwegian-led
consortium
signed a €3 billion
project with Iran to build solar panels for the
international market. “Norway is fully committed
to the JCPOA,” said the Norwegian ambassador to
Iran.
Germany and France have both seen exports to Iran
rapidly multiply. The German chamber of commerce
expects total
bilateral commerce to double in the next two years.
Next month, the EU’s foreign policy chief Federica
Mogherini is to travel to Washington where she will
reiterate the
bloc’s resolute support for the nuclear accord. Last
week, Mogherini made the case that Europe must now
take global leadership. She didn’t mention Trump by
name, but it was clear she was rebuking Washington’s
isolationist policy.
Germany’s Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel has also
berated Washington’s bullying tactics over Iran.
Gabriel
said Trump was
inevitably pushing Europe toward consolidating
economic interests with China and Russia.
Following Tillerson’s lecturing to the EU earlier
this week about not investing in Iran, the New York
Times
reported:
“European diplomats have said they
would defend their companies against such sanctions,
potentially setting up an epic battle between close
allies and two of the largest commercial markets on
the planet.”
This is the
ineluctable thing. The Europeans have already
committed enormous amounts of capital to developing
trade and industry with Iran – a country that ranks
in the global top five for oil and gas reserves.
With a population of 80 million and a high standard
of education, Iran promises to be a lucrative growth
area. Even under decades of US-led sanctions, the
country scored impressive achievements in
development, innovation, and engineering.:
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Unlike the
Europeans, the US has negligible commercial ties
with Iran. It is therefore easy for Washington to
threaten sanctions against that country. Washington
has little to lose. Not so the Europeans. For the
Trump administration to say that investments are “at
risk” is therefore seen as an outrageous
infringement on Europe’s future economic plans.
As
France’s Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire
told American
officials ahead of Trump’s expected knock-back to
the Iran deal: “The US must not appoint itself
as a global policeman." The irony is that
Washington’s overweening attitude toward its
European “allies” is likely to hasten the
global dynamic it most fears. That is the decline of
American economic power and the rise of a multipolar
global order.
Former US President Jimmy Carter
acknowledged the
shift when referring to North Korea this week and
the need for diplomacy. He said the US was “no
longer dominant” and that
“Russia was coming back, and China and India were
coming forward.”
The
once-mighty American dollar is increasingly
challenged in its status as the world’s top reserve
currency. China is moving to a gold-backed yuan
payments system for its imports and exports. Russia
is
stockpiling gold
reserves, in another move which is seen as Moscow
making preparations for a break with the
US-dominated financial order.
Washington
still retains tremendous control over international
banking and finance. It has veto power at the
International Monetary Fund, and it dominates the
SWIFT banking system for payments.
Nevertheless, nothing remains forever. China and
Russia are making strides toward economic life
without the dollar. The Europeans already have a
reserve currency with the euro. If push comes to
shove, the EU could conduct its business with Iran
and let the Americans go hang. With China and Russia
already forging ahead on a new multipolar global
order, the Europeans might soon realize that their
best interests are served from breaking away from
Washington’s shadow.
It is
increasingly apparent especially under Trump that
American interests are colliding with those of
European “allies.” In the end, it comes
down to the exigency of self-interest. Europe is
finding it simply can’t afford America’s stupid
arrogance. Washington’s hectoring of allies is
digging its own grave as a global power.
Finian
Cunningham has written extensively on international
affairs, with articles published in several
languages. He is a Master’s graduate in Agricultural
Chemistry and worked as a scientific editor for the
Royal Society of Chemistry, Cambridge, England,
before pursuing a career in newspaper journalism. He
is also a musician and songwriter. For nearly 20
years, he worked as an editor and writer in major
news media organisations, including The Mirror,
Irish Times and Independent.
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