Articles, Publications

US and Iran security cooperation could help save Iraq

While the highest US officials, including Obama, call the rise of terrorist groups in Syria and Iraq a threat to US national security, this deep mutual security concern can form the pillar of cooperation between Iran and the United States. Together, they face terrorists who not only have claimed territory but also obtained hundreds of millions of dollars in cash from the central bank of Mosul.

Tehran and Washington’s common interests on managing the current crisis in Iraq include:

  1. Preventing an all-out sectarian war.
  2. Opposing the collapse of the post-Saddam Hussein political system in Iraq.
  3. Securing the safe passage of oil from the Persian Gulf region.
  4. Preventing the breakup of the state system in the Middle East.
  5. Avoiding further US military involvement in the Persian Gulf.
  6. Keeping oil resources out of the hands of terrorists.
  7. Preserving the territorial integrity of Iraq.
  8. Forming a more inclusive government to avoid sectarian violence and shape unity against terrorists and insurgents.

Read More

“US and Iran security cooperation could help save Iraq,” Hossein Mousavian, Al Monitor, July 10, 2014.

مقاله ها

همکاری امنیتی ایران و آمریکا می تواند عراق را نجات دهد

سوریه و عراق در شرف فرو رفتن در هرج و مرج کامل و تبدیل به یک سومالی دیگرند که هر گوشه آنان را جنگ سالاری به دست بگیرد و پناهگاهی امن برای گروه های تندرو و تروریست گردند. ترس عمده، همانطور که پرزیدنت اوباما در ٢٢ ژوئن ابراز داشت، این است که این گروه ها که اینک زمین هائی را در عراق و سوریه به تصرف خود درآورده اند، در صورت عدم مقابله، بر قدرتشان افزوده شود. منطق حکم می کند که در صورت تحقق چنین وضعیتی همانطور که این تهدید از سوریه به عراق سرایت کرد کشورهای دیگر را نیز در بر بگیرد و تمامی منطقه را بی ثبات کند.

ادامه مطلب

همکاری امنیتی ایران و آمریکا می تواند عراق را نجات دهد  – حسین موسویان – المانیتور – پنجشنبه ۱۹ تبر ۱۳۹۳

Essays, Publications

After The Iran Nuclear Deal

Overcoming a decade of failed nuclear negotiations, Iran and the P5+1 (the five permanent members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany) signed an interim nuclear deal, the Joint Plan of Action (JPA), in Geneva on November 24, 2013. The agreement put into motion talks to reach a mutually agreed long-term comprehensive solution that would ensure Iran’s nuclear program would be exclusively peaceful. In a broader sense, the outcome of the nuclear negotiations with Iran will have a profound impact on nuclear non-proliferation. It could be a significant step toward a Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone and a Weapons of Mass Destruction-Free Zone in the Middle East.

According to the interim agreement, Tehran “reaffirms that under no circumstances will Iran ever seek or develop any nuclear weapons.” The comprehensive solution will build on interim steps and aims to resolve the decades-long nuclear dispute between Iran and world powers. It also paves the way for Iran “to fully enjoy its right to nuclear energy for peaceful purposes under the relevant articles of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) in conformity with its obligations therein.” To ensure the peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear program, the comprehensive agreement seeks to define a mutually agreed enrichment program with stringent transparency and verification mechanisms in place. The implementation of the agreement will be based on a mutually reciprocal, step-by-step process, to result ultimately in the comprehensive lifting of all unilateral, multilateral and UN Security Council sanctions related to Iran’s nuclear program.

If diplomacy fails and the interim deal reached in November 2013 does not produce a permanent solution, it will ultimately lead to heightened tensions, a possible all-out war, and force Iran to withdraw from the NPT. Now that against all odds, the United States and European Union have made a deal with Iran, skeptics and opponents have started mobilizing again—in both Tehran as well as in many other capitals, including Washington. In Iran, internal opposition to the deal is driven by concerns related to the hostile policies followed during Obama’s first term and by Israel’s continued challenge of Iran’s right to enrich its nuclear stockpile for energy use. In the United States, internal opposition to the deal and concern about Iranian behavior have been reinforced by two of its closest allies, Israel and Saudi Arabia. The deep uneasiness in those countries is tangible and immediate, for both see Iran as a mortal enemy, bent on Israel’s destruction and regional hegemony.

Finalizing a deal will require compromise by all parties. One of the key challenges will be the likely American insistence that Tehran make concessions far beyond the NPT requirements. Such demands to curb Iran’s nuclear program include dismantling a significant portion of existing centrifuges and low-enriched uranium stockpiles; closure of Fordo, Iran’s second enrichment site near the city of Qom; dismantling of the Arak heavy water research reactor; and intrusive inspections and monitoring that go beyond the NPT and the Additional Protocol. As an NPT member state, Iran would not accept targeted discrimination.

Read More

“After The Iran Nuclear Deal,” Cairo Review, Hossein Mousavian. Published by the Cairo Review of Global Affairs, July 6 2014.

انتشارات, مقاله ها

پس از مذاکرات هسته ای ایران

ایران وگروه ۱+۵ (پنج عضو دائم شورای امنیت سازمان ملل و آلمان) پس از عبور از یک دهه مذاکرات هسته ای بی نتیجه، سرانجام در ۲۴ نوامبر ۲۰۱۳ موفق شدند در ژنو به یک توافقنامه موقت هسته ای دست پیدا کردند. امضای این توافقنامه، اقدام عملی در راستای اجرایی کردن مذاکرات برای رسیدن به یک راه حل جامع بلند مدت بود تا در نهایت نسبت به صلح آمیز بودن برنامه هسته ای ایران اطمینان حاصل شود.

در مقیاس بزرگ تر، نتیجه مذاکرات هسته ای با ایران تاثیر مهمی بر فضای عدم اشاعه دارد. این خود می تواند قدمی مهم به سمت ایجاد یک منطقه عاری از سلاح های هسته ای و کشتار جمعی در خاورمیانه باشد.

ادامه مطلب

پس از مذاکرات هسته ای ایران – حسین موسویان – شرق الاوسط – یکشنبه ۱۵ تیر ۱۳۹۳