Rejection of the Iran deal would hurt America
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Nature hates a void. It's a rule that U.S. President Donald Trump 
might learn the hard way if he reneges on the international nuclear deal with 
Iran.
Trump has until Oct. 15 to decide whether to recertify the Iran deal. Struck in 
2015 between Iran and the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, Russia and China after 
years of negotiation, the deal gave Iran relief from sanctions in exchange for 
the curtailment of the country's nuclear program. Not only would killing the 
deal hurt America economically and leave a void for other countries to exploit, 
but it wouldn't do anything to dispel the notion that American foreign policy 
has been hijacked by Iran's foes -- most notably Israel and Saudi Arabia, which 
spend a great deal of money on lobbying U.S. officials and buying U.S. weapons.
The schizophrenia on Iran demonstrated by U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis 
suggests that some members of the Trump administration were at least temporarily 
brainwashed by the warmongering neoconservative reactionaries in Washington.
In February, Mattis called Iran "the single biggest state sponsor of terrorism 
in the world." It's one of the first lines that someone learns when sliding into 
the Washington swamp, in much the same way that someone taking up the guitar 
learns "Stairway to Heaven."
Yet as Trump faces an obligatory decision on a deal he has long denounced as an 
abomination, Mattis is making an 11th-hour attempt to remedy the folie à deux 
that he and Trump have been exhibiting on the world stage.
"Absent indications to the contrary, (the Iran deal) is something that the 
president should consider staying with," Mattis told members of the Senate Armed 
Services Committee last week.
If you ask an "insider" what sort of terrorism Iran has supported lately, you'll 
hear about Middle Eastern activity that has nothing to do with American national 
security and is typically just an extension of historical squabbling between 
Iran and its biggest regional foes, Saudi Arabia and Israel. Meanwhile, we 
rarely hear about the role that Iran's opponents have played (in tandem with the 
U.S.) in sponsoring the world's biggest global-terrorism brand, the Islamic 
State. Nor do we hear much about how Iran has worked with Russia to eradicate 
this global menace.
Understandably, the U.S. wants to keep selling weapons to the Israelis and 
Saudis to keep defense contractors happy, but spewing anti-Iranian rhetoric on 
behalf of those customers is producing diminishing returns.
Actions count more than mere words, and Russia has pulled the rug out from under 
the U.S. in the Middle East, emerging as the primary powerbroker in the region 
by making an earnest attempt to eradicate Islamic State terrorism. Economic 
spoils have followed. Russian President Vladimir Putin has worked hard to bring 
Saudi Arabia into Moscow's sphere of influence, and in the wake of King Salman's 
first visit to Russia, the Saudis have struck a deal to purchase $2 billion 
worth of Russian S-400 missile defense systems.
Sanctions against Iran won't stop it from doing business with the rest of the 
world. Sanctions merely prevent the U.S. and European countries from collecting 
billions of dollars in job-creating revenues. An Iranian representative in 
search of military drones at this year's Paris Air Show summed it up well as he 
handed out business cards: "Sanctions are not a problem for us!"
Here in France, the rhetoric coming from the Trump administration is producing 
frustration. Two years after the Iran deal, American and European multinationals 
have been making billions of dollars in sales deals to the Iranian market, 
knowing that the U.S. could soon reinstate sanctions. Big-ticket items such as 
commercial jets can't be made and shipped overnight, so orders proceed under 
constant threat of a deal-killing. There's exasperation here over the fact that 
globalization has integrated American parts into the French and European supply 
chains to such an extent that a single component can subject a European 
multinational to U.S. sanctions. This mounting frustration threatens to isolate 
the U.S. when such cooperative ventures are structured in the future. There's 
nothing preventing Europe from turning East rather than West.
With billions of dollars' worth of commerce on the line -- not to mention the 
opportunity to build lasting peace through mutually beneficial economic 
cooperation -- Trump needs a better reason to derail the Iran agreement than 
simply to parrot the neoconservative swamp monsters and their agenda-peddling 
lobbyists.
COPYRIGHT 2017 RACHEL MARSDEN