Lifting of Iranian sanctions prompts senseless worries
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Iran effectively rejoined the international community a few days 
ago, as longstanding U.S. and European sanctions were lifted and the country was 
granted access to $32 billion of its previously frozen assets. It's the razing 
of the Berlin Wall all over again, as another country is opened up to the global 
market without any shots being fired.
But why isn't there nearly as much celebration over Iran's economic liberation 
as there was with the fall of the Soviet Union?
Russia even kept its nukes. In Iran's case, there's been much hand-wringing over 
the mere possibility it will develop nuclear weapons. Some argue that Russia 
isn't a rogue state but Iran is. I agree that Russia isn't a rogue state, but it 
was certainly portrayed as one during the Cold War era, which was rife with 
drills involving children hiding under their desks in the event of a Soviet 
nuclear attack. Could we consider the possibility that perhaps the 
hyperventilation and fear has been overplayed in both cases?
The difference in Western attitudes toward the Soviet glasnost and perestroika 
(that is, economic opening and restructuring) and today's Iran is that when the 
Soviet Union broke apart, there was a feeling that the communists had lost and 
the West had won. With Iran, there's a feeling that the Iranians are the 
winners, because apparently getting Uncle Sam's boot removed from your neck 
means that you've succeeded in screwing him over.
Why are some people so insecure as to always frame things in a binary win-lose 
paradigm? It's quite possible for Iran and the West to benefit equally from an 
economic detente.
Iran just participated in a prisoner exchange with the U.S., and last month it 
handed over its enriched uranium to Russia under terms of the nuclear deal with 
the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council plus Germany. The 
concept of face-saving is particularly important in Iranian culture. How much 
more could be asked of Iran right now?
U.S. presidential candidate and international businessman Donald Trump, who's 
made it clear that he thinks the Iran deal is horrible, has expressed discontent 
that one of the first economic overtures Iran made after the lifting of 
sanctions was to Europe's aerospace consortium, Airbus, for 114 new commercial 
aircraft. The loser in that deal would be American competitor Boeing, which had 
lobbied against the tightening of sanctions on Iran.
Look, you can't act harshly toward a country for years, then demand that it do 
business with you -- particularly in a free market. The whole idea of free trade 
is that you get to choose who you want to deal with. Business deals are like 
marriages: Once you're engaged in one, the actions of your partner will largely 
determine whether you're happy or miserable. And you definitely want to avoid 
getting hitched to a control freak who's going to tighten the screws the moment 
the honeymoon is over -- or grant a higher regulatory power (a mother-in-law, 
for instance) the authority to hold your relationship hostage.
Some people are already complaining that lifting sanctions and granting Iran 
access to previously frozen money will mean that it has more to spend on weapons 
and "exporting terrorism." But Iran doesn't throw its weight around anywhere 
except in the Middle East, which isn't exactly full of choirboys unequipped to 
fend for themselves.
Besides, the "exporting terrorism" fear hasn't stopped the sale of billions of 
dollars in U.S. and European military equipment to Saudi Arabia, a genuine 
exporter of terrorism. That country's support of the so-called "Syrian rebels" 
gave rise to the Islamic State terrorists, who are now being targeted most 
effectively by Russia, with critical assistance from ... Iran.
Misconceptions and double standards currently abound in the Iran situation, with 
hot takes by pundits and political candidates distorting the truth. I've even 
heard some say that U.S. President Barack Obama is "giving" the Iranians money, 
or that Iran will simply spend its newfound windfall on bombs or terrorists.
Maybe everyone should just give it a rest for awhile and focus on trying to make 
some money.
COPYRIGHT 2016 RACHEL MARSDEN