乐鱼体育

Past Event

An Assessment of Rouhani鈥檚 Visit to New York: Real Diplomacy or Failed Expectations?

Two Iran experts assessed Iranian President Hassan Rouhani鈥檚 recent visit to the United Nations General Assembly and its implications for improving relations between the United States and Iran.

On October 2, the Middle East Program at the Woodrow 乐鱼 体育 held a meeting, 鈥淎n Assessment of Rouhani鈥檚 Visit to New York: Real Diplomacy or Failed Expectations?鈥 with Robin Wright, 乐鱼 体育-USIP Distinguished Scholar, and Meir Javedanfar, Iranian-Israeli Middle East analyst and Iranian Politics Lecturer at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya. Michael Van Dusen, Executive Vice President and COO of the Woodrow 乐鱼 体育 moderated the event.

Wright offered several bottom lines based on two meetings she attended with President Rouhani and one with Foreign Minister Zarif in New York during the UN General Assembly.

First, for the first time in 34 years, the United States and Iran are both committed 鈥 at the same time 鈥 to finding a speedy resolution to the dispute over Iran鈥檚 nuclear program. It marks the first of many stages in a process that has taken longer than repairing relations with China after its revolution or Vietnam after the war.

Second, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backs the effort, reflected in his speech calling for 鈥渉eroic flexibility,鈥 but he remains skeptical about long-term U.S. intentions partly because of past efforts in the 1980s and again in 2003.

Third, the outline of a deal is taking shape. It includes tough international inspections, limiting the number of centrifuges, and a cap on the stockpile of enriched uranium, answering all questions about past operations. However, Iran will not give up the right to enrichment or closing the Fordo enrichment site, and it wants all sanctions lifted that have been imposed related to the nuclear file since 2008. The goal is to wrap everything up in a year, although the Iranians were surprised and pleased that Secretary of State Kerry suggested a shorter time-frame.

Both sides hope that the October 15-16 nuclear talks in Geneva will produce a framework for a final deal, with agreement on the first steps by both sides. But the reality is that both sides are hoping for most of the deal to be set by next spring, after which patience may begin wearing thin.

Fourth, the reasons for action now reflect a confluence of factors, including sanctions and a mismanaged economy, demographics with some 70 percent of the population born after the revolution, the aging revolutionary leadership, and the outcome of elections, among others.

Fifth, the hardest part may not be selling a deal to each other, but for President Obama and President Rouhani to convince their own legislatures to accept the terms. Both Congress and the Majles have hardliners opposed to almost any deal that will produce agreement between Washington and Tehran.

Sixth, President Rouhani repeatedly addressed some of the issues that most inflamed international reaction against Iran during his predecessor鈥檚 eight years in power, most notably the issue of the Holocaust. Rouhani talked in several public venues about the 鈥渕assacre鈥 of Jews by the Nazis, quoting the Koran that the killing of one innocent is equivalent of killing the entire human race.

Seventh, Rouhani may prove to be the most powerful Iranian president because he is not viewed as a rival to the supreme leader (like former President Rafsanjani) and he does not represent just one sliver of the spectrum (like President Ahmadinejad among hardliners and President Khatami among reformers). He also won an overwhelming mandate in an election in which 73 percent of the electorate turned out, and he won in a six-way election in which the next highest vote count was a mere 16 percent compared to his more than 50 percent. 

Javedanfar was generally optimistic about the future of U.S.-Iranian relations. He believed, however, that Rouhani鈥檚 electoral victory was a price that Iran鈥檚 鈥渄eep state鈥濃攚hich he defined as Supreme Leader Khamenei, his office, and the Revolutionary Guards鈥攑aid in order to stay in power during Iran鈥檚 economic turmoil. The primary reason, though, for Javedanfar鈥檚 optimism was the transfer of Iran鈥檚 nuclear file from the Supreme National Security Council to the Foreign Ministry, which had stronger ties to Iran鈥檚 鈥渄eep state.鈥 This, he believed, was a better indication of change than Rouhani鈥檚 election because typically the Supreme Leader favors negotiations and reformist rhetoric when the economic situation is dire. He explained that the Supreme Leader supports reformist political leaders until Iran鈥檚 economy improves, and then he returns to his conservative roots. Iran also has the imperative to reverse as much of its negative relations as possible as the conflict between Sunnis and Shi鈥檃s escalates in the region鈥攖he biggest source of turmoil today in the Middle East, according to Javedanfar. As for the prospect of amicable relations between Iran and the United States, he noted that a full peace between the two countries was unlikely because it would remove the 鈥渓ast piece of the DNA鈥 of the 1979 Revolution from contemporary Iran. Despite these issues, both experts agree that there is hope for nuclear negotiations between the United States and Iran.

Hosted By

Middle East Program

乐鱼 体育鈥檚 Middle East Program serves as a crucial resource for the policymaking community and beyond, providing analyses and research that helps inform US foreign policymaking, stimulates public debate, and expands knowledge about issues in the wider Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.   Read more

Middle East Program