The
Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP), a spin-off the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee, is an influential beltway think tank whose
members have advocated a host of hawkish, "pro-Israel" policies over the years.
It is considered a core member of the "Israel lobby," a constellation of policy
shops and advocacy groups devoted to pushing an Israel-centric U.S. agenda in
the Middle East. Many of WINEP's current and former scholars have been closely
associated with neoconservatism, and the organization has generally been
supportive of the "war on terror" policies pushed by representatives of groups
like the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) and the Foundation for Defense of
Democrcy.
========================
The
Washington Institute for Near East Policy (WINEP)
April 10,
2014
Iran Seeks to Untangle UN Sanctions
by
Steven Ditto
The Islamic Republic has added to its nuclear
negotiating team a law professor who has extensive experience making Iran's case
in international disputes.
On April 9, Iran and the P5+1 (Britain, China,
France, Russia, and the United States, plus Germany) concluded the latest
two-day round of talks on a nuclear deal, setting the next round for May 13.
Earlier in the week, on April 7, Iranian media reported the appointment of Dr.
Jamshid Momtaz as head of a "legal advisory group" to the Iranian negotiating
team.
A French-educated expert on sanctions, disarmament, and UN procedure,
Momtaz has represented the Iranian government in some of its highest-profile
international legal proceedings, including in claims against the U.S. government
at the Hague-based International Court of Justice (ICJ). Momtaz's familiarity
with the United Nations, his extensive practice in Europe, and his proven
history of leveraging complex legal arguments to advance Iran's international
interests indicate that in these latest rounds of P5+1 talks Tehran is likely
looking for unconventional ways to "address" and "bring a satisfactory
conclusion to" the UN Security Council resolutions against it, as called for in
the Joint Plan of Action (JPOA) agreed to in Geneva last
November.
Enter Momtaz
On paper, Momtaz appears
to be the consummate professional. He has authored more than thirty books and
academic articles; his father and grandfather both served in the pre-1979
Iranian foreign service; and he was raised in Turkey and Egypt, and educated in
Paris. In 2005, Momtaz was appointed chair of the UN International Law
Commission -- an elected body on which he had served since 2000 and that is
subordinate to the General Assembly -- and charged with deliberating on and
codifying complex cases of international law.
Most recently, he has been a professor at the University of Tehran, and he
is a thirty-year advisor to Iran's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Momtaz litigated
Iranian claims at the ICJ concerning the territorial dispute over Abu Musa
island; the 1988 accidental downing of Iran Air flight 655; and reparations from
the Iran-Iraq War, including the U.S. use of force against Iranian oil
platforms.
Perhaps most interestingly, Momtaz served as a legal advisor
to current foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in the 1990s, when the latter
submitted an oral statement concerning the Iranian government's legal opinion on
the "Legality of the Threat or Use of Nuclear Weapons," a case being heard by
the ICJ at the UN General Assembly's request.
In the sterile discipline
of international law, Momtaz's publications and proceedings on this issue, as
with other issues, are quite dry. However, he appears to have been more open in
a 1998 speech to Iranian legal experts. Reflecting on the ICJ's nuclear weapons
ruling, Momtaz accentuated the "principle of proportionality" in international
law and noted: "In certain cases, when an enemy attacks another country or
government, or when a government invades another country, the use of nuclear
weapons may be permissible, because the goal in using the nuclear weapons is to
push back the invader and a military goal is of utmost importance."
Although cloaked in legal reasoning, Momtaz's statement held that the use
of nuclear weapons is not unconditionally prohibited under international law --
a position at odds with Zarif's public testimony and the Iranian government's
line. Momtaz put forward more legal reasoning in his speech, noting that the
"argument of suffering" -- used in international law to prohibit weaponry that
causes harm to either civilians or soldiers -- in fact does not apply in cases
of war. "We must consider the military results of nuclear weapons," he claimed.
In short, Momtaz conceded that nuclear weapons could lawfully be used for
tactical purposes, when aimed at military rather than civilian targets. This
argument -- made primarily by nuclear weapons states, including the United
States -- had been rejected by Zarif himself in testimony disavowing nuclear
weapons "irrespective of type and size."
In the same speech, Momtaz went
beyond these legalisms, intimating that in Iranian decisionmaking the interests
of the republic trump international law. He characterized Iran's ratification of
the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC) and decision to work within the "UN
system" as a choice between "bad and worse," primarily motivated by the high
price Iran would have paid for staying outside the treaty. "I am of the opinion
that had we not joined the CWC, we would have had to tolerate the extreme
reactions of the international community and the UN Security Council," he
argued. "It would have been better for us to accept the oversight and control
systems of these conventions, because it was a more institutional system and,
ultimately, would consequently have more assurances for us." This passage
suggests the commonality of practical power politics in the Islamic Republic,
rather than moral and legal opposition to weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
even by exceptional individuals such as Momtaz who have spent their careers
upholding the primacy of international law.
Iranian Negotiators:
UN Security Council Resolutions "Illegal"
The roots of the
current round of P5+1 negotiations go back to September 2005, when the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Board of Governors voted -- with a
majority twenty-seven out of thirty-five countries -- to refer Iran's nuclear
file to the Security Council, based on Article 12, Subsection C, of the IAEA
statute concerning noncompliance. Earlier that year, nuclear negotiator Hassan
Rouhani had warned that Iran would oppose such a measure and also consider it
contrary to international law. "So far as international law is concerned, there
is no way to refer Iran's nuclear dossier to the Security Council," Rouhani
exhorted in March 2005. "If they want to send the dossier to the Security
Council, they would be doing something totally illegal, purely political, and
irrational."
According to Iranian legal experts' interpretation, the IAEA
statute only allows UN referrals in clear cases of nuclear diversion, or when a
signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty is accused of "fault or
negligence." The Iranians argued, in their defense, that longstanding questions
about contamination of nuclear equipment by high-enriched uranium, as well as
secret procurement networks for P1 and P2 centrifuges, had been satisfactorily
resolved by the IAEA, making the Security Council referral illegitimate under
international law.
In November 2013, following the adoption of the JPOA,
Zarif echoed Rouhani's earlier sentiments and characterized the Security Council
sanctions as "illegal, unreasonable, and cruel." He noted further that "we have
always said that referring Iran's dossier to the Security Council was illegal."
Seeking to implicate the United States, he noted it was "a political move masked
under a legal basis."
Assuming Momtaz and the newly appointed legal
advisory team share these longstanding claims about the Security Council
resolutions' illegitimacy, questions will naturally arise regarding the team's
approach to satisfying the JPOA's requirement for Iran to, "among other things,
[address] the UN Security Council resolutions, with a view toward bringing to a
satisfactory conclusion the UN Security Council's consideration of this
matter."
Challenges for U.S. Policymakers
Given
this context, the P5+1 faces two broad challenges as it seeks to secure Iranian
compliance with Security Council demands.
The first is whether the
Iranians -- as they seek the "return" of their nuclear file from the Security
Council's agenda back to the IAEA's purview -- will premise their engagement on
the illegitimacy of the Security Council resolutions. As expressed by one
Iranian academic who has written extensively on nuclear negotiations, seeking to
engage Western concerns would "practically be tantamount to recognizing the
resolutions as an international phenomenon" and "entering into the issue of the
resolutions will not be very different from recognizing their legitimacy." And
if the Iranians do seek compromise on premises they consider illegitimate, their
sense of "respect" and "dignity" could be violated in the process.
Momtaz's record of tenacious advocacy for Iran's legal stances suggests he
would insist that
any final agreement not endorse
the Security Council's authority to take positions to which Iran
has objected. These challenges in recognizing the Security Council resolutions
passed against Iran are compounded by statements by prominent Iranian
parliamentarians, including National Security and Foreign Policy Committee
chairman Alaeddin Boroujerdi, asserting that resolving the resolutions is a
prerequisite for the Iranian parliament's ratification of the IAEA's Additional
Protocol. "
As long as Iran's nuclear dossier is on
the UN Security Council agenda, discussing the implementation of the additional
protocol is not possible," Boroujerdi has said.
The
second is the contentious issue of addressing
nonnuclear items of the Security Council, U.S., and European Union
sanctions, including missile technology and human rights.
Security Council Resolution 1929, for instance, passed in 2010, places limits on
Iran's development of ballistic missile systems. Although U.S. officials seem to
be holding a tough line on including such elements in the P5+1 proceedings,
Iranian nuclear negotiator Abbas Araqchi has been clear: "Our mandate as the
negotiating team only concerns the nuclear issue."
The optimistic view
about Momtaz's appointment to the negotiating team is that the Iranians are
beefing up their expertise for a final nuclear agreement on the horizon. The
pessimistic view is that Iran could be reinforcing a tough stand focused on
legalisms and international legal arguments. The truth likely lies somewhere in
between.
============
Steven
Ditto is an independent Middle East researcher and author of the Washington
Institute studies Reading Rouhani: The Promise and Peril of Iran's New President
and Red Tape, Iron Nerve: The Iranian Quest for U.S. Education.
https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/view/25936