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Iranian Nuclear Talks

A big challenge for the Iranian nuclear negotiations is finding a technical resolution to what is really a political conflict.

published by
Charlie Rose
 on November 24, 2014

Source: Charlie Rose

Speaking on Charlie Rose about the Iranian nuclear talks, Carnegie’s Karim Sadjadpour said that a big challenge is finding a technical resolution to what is really a political conflict. Both Washington and Tehran recognize that no one wants to go back to the status quo ante, to escalation, he said.

For the Iranian government, and in particular for the Supreme Leader Khamenei, not doing a nuclear deal is a big economic risk, but there’s a potentially larger political risk in agreeing to a nuclear deal, Sadjadpour argued, because Khamenei has prioritized hostilities with the United States for 25 years. The real challenge for the United States is that the policies which are used to counter Iran’s nuclear aspirations, political and economic isolation, in many ways entrench these very hardline forces in Iran, he added. “We have to think more creatively about how we get on the right side of the Iranian people’s aspiration as well, not just against the nuclear aspiration of the Iranian government.”

This interview was originally aired on Charlie Rose.

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.