Biden Iran envoy
boasted of depriving civilians of food,
in sadistic sanctions manual
By Max Blumenthal
Richard
Nephew has taken personal credit
for depriving Iranians of food
and driving up their
unemployment rates, celebrating
the economic destruction he
caused as “a tremendous
success.” Under Biden, he will
help direct policy on Iran.
March 09, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - The Joseph
Biden administration has named
Richard Nephew as its deputy Iran
envoy. As the former principal deputy
coordinator of sanctions policy for
Barack Obama’s State Department, Nephew
took personal credit for depriving
Iranians of food, sabotaging their
automobile industry, and driving up
unemployment rates.
Nephew has described the destruction
of Iran’s economy as “a tremendous
success,” and lamented during a visit to
Russia that food was still plentiful in
the country’s capital despite mounting
US sanctions.
Nephew’s appointment to a senior
diplomatic post suggests that rather
than immediately returning to the JCPOA
nuclear deal, the Biden administration
will finesse sanctions illegally imposed
by Trump to pressure Iran into an
onerous, reworked agreement that Tehran
is unlikely to join.
After coordinating Obama’s sanctions
regime against Iran, Nephew left the
administration for a position at the
energy industry-funded Center on Global
Energy Policy at Columbia
University. There, he published a book
outlining in blunt terms how he honed
the craft of economic warfare and
applied it against Iran.
Entitled “The Art of Sanctions: A
View From The Field,” the book’s cover
image features two Caucasian hands
drawing a rope for a noose, presumably
to strangle some insufficiently pliant
Global South government. Its contents
read like a list of criminal
confessions, detailing in chillingly
clinical terms how the sanctions Nephew
conceived from inside an air-conditioned
office in Washington immiserated average
Iranians.
With his candor, Nephew has shattered
the official US rhetoric about “targeted
sanctions” that exclusively punish “bad
actors” and their business cronies while
leaving civilian populations unharmed.
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The application of pain to a
country’s civilian population is central
to Nephew’s sanctions strategy. As he
explains in “The Art of Sanctions,” for
the unilateral coercive measures to
succeed, they must impose significant
pain to a state’s most vulnerable
sectors, shatter the state’s political
and social resolve, and ultimately force
the state to cry uncle in the face of
Washington’s demands.
Nephew detailed how, as JCPOA
negotiations got underway in January
2012, he led a process to reduce Iran’s
oil revenue and starve its economy.
After the Obama administration
successfully pushed for a wholesale
reduction in oil exports and other
unilateral coercive measures, Iran’s
economy went from a period of growth to
a sudden and staggering contraction,
while the value of its currency tumbled.
Nephew pronounced the economic
assault he engineered to be “a
tremendous success.”
Nephew also patted himself on the the
back for tripling the price of chicken
“during important Iranian holiday
periods,” thereby “contribut[ing] to
more popular frustration in one bank
shot than years of financial
restrictions.”
Next, he boasted of more sanctions
targeting civilians to prevent Iranians
from obtaining the assistance they
needed to repair their cars. “Iran’s
manufacturing jobs and export revenue
were the targets of this sanction,”
Nephew wrote.
There were some goods that Nephew
wanted Iran to import, however. In hopes
of fomenting social unrest, he said
Washington “expanded the ability of US
and foreign companies to sell Iranians
technology used for personal
communications” so they could “learn
more about the dire straits of their
country’s economy…”
During a December 6, 2017
panel discussion about his book at
Columbia University’s Center on Global
Energy Policy, Nephew detailed with a
chilling smile how he not only sabotaged
Iran’s automotive industry, but targeted
“things like unemployment, to try to
drive that up and make things a little
more sticky.”
In response to online criticism,
Nephew has claimed that “the main
target” of the sanctions regime he
designed was “the oligarchs.” But his
book on “The Art of Sanctions” tells
another story.
Nephew fondly recalls how he
structured sanctions to sabotage Iranian
economic reforms that would have
improved the purchasing power of average
people. The Obama administration
destroyed the economic prospects of
Iran’s working-class majority while
ensuring that “only the wealthy or those
in positions of power could take
advantage of Iran’s continued
connectedness,” he wrote. As “stories
began to emerge from Iran of intensified
income inequality and inflation,” Nephew
pronounced another success.
As he made clear, the rising
inequality “was a choice” that
Washington “made on the basis of helping
to drive up the pressure on the Iranian
economy from internal sources.” Nephew
went on to claim credit for October 2012
protests brought on by the devaluation
of Iran’s currency.
In a fairly stunning admission,
Nephew admits at one point that despite
providing Iran with supposed
humanitarian exceptions on US sanctions,
the economic war he helped design caused
a catastrophic shortage of medicine and
medical devices, largely because average
Iranians could not afford them.
Despite acknowledging the heavy toll
of human suffering brought on by the
sanctions he personally conceived,
suggesting they could have prompted high
numbers of excess deaths, Nephew appears
to be devoid of contrition.
During a December 2016 trip to
Moscow, he complained that despite the
sanctions imposed on Russia by the US,
food was still widely available at local
restaurants – “hardly a level of pain”
that was necessary to bring the Kremlin
to heel.
He
called to “develop a strategy to
carefully, methodically, and efficiently
increase pain on those areas [of the
Russian economy] that are
vulnerabilities and avoid those that are
not.”
So who is Richard Nephew? Does he
lurk in the shadow world of intelligence
intrigues and spook wars, keeping a low
profile while he waits to strike the
enemy? Or is he a fire-breathing
hardliner bellowing threats against
America’s adversaries from Beltway think
tank panels? The reality is much more
banal.
When he is not snatching chicken from
Iranian kids during their winter
holiday, Nephew is spending quality time
with his own, amusing them with his
tattered dad rock t-shirts and flashing
arms adorned with tribal tattoos.
Meanwhile, in Iran, where a leading
daily recently portrayed Nephew as Keanu
Reeves in the horror film The Devil’s
Advocate, his elevation to a senior
diplomatic role is viewed as a sign of
more pain to come.
Max Blumenthal is an
award-winning journalist and the author of several
books, including best-selling Republican Gomorrah, Goliath,
The Fifty One Day War,
and The Management of Savagery.
He has produced print articles for an array of
publications, many video reports, and several
documentaries, including Killing
Gaza. Blumenthal
founded The Grayzone in 2015 to shine a journalistic
light on America’s state of perpetual war and its
dangerous domestic repercussions.
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