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consider exploring diplomatic engagement with Iran. Finally , the paper presents policy initiatives for the implementation of a joint U.S.-Iran
strategy in Afghanistan that, if successful, could lead to an improved U.S.-Iran strategic relationship. Nonetheless, Afghanistan should not be
used as a pawn in the resolution of the conflict between the United States and Iran.
ENGAGEMENT ON AFGHANISTAN
[T]he nations of the world expect an end to policies based on warmongering, invasion, bully ing, trickery , the humiliation of other
countries by the imposition of biased and unfair requirements, and a diplomatic approach that has bred hatred for Americas
leaders and undermined respect for its people. They want to see actions based on justice, respect for the rights of human beings
and nations, friendship and non-intervention in the affairs of others. They want the American government to keep its
interventions within its own country s borders .... The great civilization-building and justice-seeking nation of Iran would
welcome major, fair and real changes, in policies and actions, especially in this region. 12
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
For many y ears, Iran has defined itself in part by its opposition to my country , and there is in fact a tumultuous history between
us. In the middle of the Cold War, the United States play ed a role in the overthrow of a democratically elected Iranian
government. Since the Islamic Revolution, Iran has play ed a role in acts of hostage-taking and violence against U.S. troops and
civilians. This history is well known. Rather than remain trapped in the past, Ive made it clear to Irans leaders and people that
my country is prepared to move forward. The question now is not what Iran is against, but rather what future it wants to
build. 13
President Barack Obama
Prior to September 11, 2001, U.S. State Department officials were meeting with Iranian diplomats as part of the UN six-plus-two talks, which
sought regional cooperation on policy issues concerning Afghanistan. 14 Karl Inderfurth, the U.S. representative to these talks from 1997 to
2001, explains that on September 21, 1998, UN Secretary -General Kofi Annan convened for the first time a six-plus-two meeting at the
ministerial level. 15While U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright attended, Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi did not. Albright and
Kharrazi would later meet in September 2000 during a sixplus-two meeting. In general, these meetings were professional but not
harmonious 16 because Washington and Tehran disagreed over Irans provision of support to the Northern Alliance, the main anti-Taliban
resistance group. The United States was reluctant to become tangled in the Afghan war. 17
After the 9/11 attacks, the situation changed. According to Kenneth Pollack, a former CIA intelligence analy st on the Middle East, while
members of the sixplus-two group, such as Russia and Pakistan, opposed a U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, Iran supported the plan. Officials from
the United States and Iran began meeting outside the six-plus-two forum to develop a plan to topple the Taliban. These meetings became known
as the Geneva Contact Group, and although the Germans, Italians and the United Nations provided some political cover for these discussions,
the groups focus was U.S.-Iran cooperation on Afghanistan. 18 Iran not provided reliable intelligence regarding the Taliban, it arrested and
deported hundredsof Al-Qaeda and Taliban fighters who had crossed into the country for sanctuary . 19
Pollack adds that the Iranian government also provided search and rescue for downed U.S. aircrew members. Iran permitted the offloading of
humanitarian supplies at its port of Chah Bahar for transport into Afghanistan, and offered access to airfields near the Afghan border for use by
U.S. transport aircraft. Iran also supported the initial discussions between the United States and the Northern Alliance, which enabled
subsequent military success against the Taliban. 20After the fall of the Taliban regime in late 2001, Iran play ed a critical role in international
efforts to establish a new Afghan government and pledged and honored commitments toward Afghanistans reconstruction. Through
interaction with Iranian diplomats in thisforum, U.S. officials succeeded in curbing the anti-U.S. activities of Irans security and intelligence
services inside Afghanistan. 21 Whether motivated by national interest or international goodwill, Tehrans participation in the Geneva Contact
Group demonstrates a pragmatic foreign-policy approach indicating that U.S. engagement with Iran on common areas of interest in
Afghanistan is achievable, despite disagreements on unrelated issues.
James Dobbins, the U.S. representative to the Bonn Conference in 2001, and Hillary Mann, a political advisor of the U.S. mission to the United
Nations from 2000 to 2001 and later director for Iran and Afghanistan at the National Security Council from 2001 to 2003, participated in
the post-9/11 talks with Iran and claimed that their Iranian counterparts sought to expand the discussion agenda bey ond Afghanistan. 22
Dobbins, who was present at the reopening of the U.S. embassy in Afghanistan, reported that he had numerous contacts with the Iranians
between 2001 and 2002, but none in Kabul. 23 After almost two y ears of meetings between U.S. and Iranian diplomats, in March 2003 Zalmay
Khalilzad, then a National Security Council senior director for the Near East and South Asia, and Ry an Crocker, then-deputy assistant
secretary of state dealing with Iraq, Iran and the Persian Gulf, met with the Iranian deputy foreign minister, Mohammad Javad-Zarif in
Geneva to discuss Afghanistan. 24 When Crocker was deploy ed to Iraq in early 2003, his diplomatic engagement with Iran regarding
Afghanistan ceased, even when he met with his Iranian counterpart to discuss Iraq in May 2007; when Khalilzad continued involvement, he
was primarily focused on Iraq. 25
According to Michael Singh, former senior director for Middle East affairs in President Bushs National Security Council, the Bush
administration engaged Iran in more dialogue than any other since the Islamic Revolution. 26 However, the political honey moon between
Washington and Tehran was short-lived. 27 On January 3, 2002, Israeli forces intercepted a ship, the Karine A, in the Red Sea carry ing weapons
that had been manufactured in Iran. Israel alleged that the weapons were bound for the Palestinian security services. 28 This event, along with
a 2002 story from an Iranian dissident group, The National Council of Resistance of Iran, about the Iranian nuclear project, contributed to the
inclusion of Iran in the Axis of Evil in President Bushs State of the Union address later that month. 29 Twenty -eight day s later, Iran released
from house arrest Gulbuddin Hekmaty ar, a wanted Afghan warlord with a $25 million bounty on his head. 30 He was allowed to exit Iran and
enter Afghanistan to reconstitute part of the insurgency against the Afghan government and coalition forces: His group claimed responsibility
[in 2009] for an attack that claimed the lives of three American servicemen in northern Afghanistan. 31 As the U.S.-Iran relationship
deteriorated again, Iranian ties to Hekmaty ars Hezb-i-Islami and the Taliban presumably grew. Nonetheless, the Iranians decided to return to
talks with the United States in Geneva. 32
According to Mann, the Bush administration ended the bilateral dialogue with Iran in 2003 because Iraq consumed U.S. foreign-policy
attention. 33 Her assessment is supported by statements from U.S. diplomats involved in Afghanistan-related issues during that period.
According to Crocker, right from the start, we were imposing our own constructs on a region we had barely started to reengage. 34 Robert
Finn, U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan between 2002 and 2003, did not participate in any meetings with Iranian officials in Kabul other than
those held under the auspices of the United Nations. 35 In public statements during his time as U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan from November
2003 to June 2005 and afterward, Zalmay Khalilzad also gave no indication of any continued bilateral discussions with Iranian diplomats in
Afghanistan. 36 His successor as U.S. ambassador in Kabul, Ronald E. Neumann, explains that between July 2005 and April 2007:
[He] was authorized to meet with the Iranian ambassador, but discussions were to be limited to matters related to Afghanistan,
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not overall U.S.-Iranian relations or other subjects. The instructions dated from before my arrival, but I cannot comment on
earlier meetings. I did meet [with Iranian diplomats in Kabul]. Later, I was verbally instructed by Washington to cease such
meetings. The decision to stop holding meetings was a part of Washingtons broader policy to press Iran in all channels on the
nuclear issue. On two or three occasions I recommended verbally to then Secretary of State Rice that I be authorized to resume
the discussions about Afghanistan with Iran, but the policy of suspension remained in force as of the time of my departure in
April 2007. The discussions were businesslike. I believe they might have been productive, but they were suspended before I could
judge. There were no discussions with Iranian officials other than at my level. 37
Tehran believed their diplomats pursued bilateral dialogue with Washington at all times. The Bush administrations isolation policy toward
Iran was perceived by Iran not as an attempt to change Iranian behavior but rather as an effort to change the regime. In response to this
isolation policy and rumors that the United States was rebuilding the Shindand airfield in Herat Province as a launching pad for an attack
against Iran, aid to the Taliban was increased by Tehran. 38 These conspiracy fears were heightened inadvertently by the subsequent U.S.
ambassador to Afghanistan from April 2007 until 2009, William Wood, who complained to members of the Afghan Parliament regarding
Irans policy toward Afghanistan: There is no question that elements of [the] insurgency have received weapons from Iran . Whether that is
meant to assist Afghanistan or influence Afghanistan, I leave that to y ou. 39 Tehran perceived the Bush administrations abandonment of talks
with Iran as talking at Iran, thus threatening Iran with military action.
ENGAGEMENT STRATEGIES
This isnt an issue of talk to Iranians, dont talk to Iranians . It is a question of what price the Iranians are try ing to extract for
engagement. Are they try ing to extract a grand bargain in which Iran is acknowledged as a regional power without having
given up the very policies that are destabilizing the region?40
Condoleezza Rice, Former U.S. Secretary of State
Arguments against engagement with Iran in Afghanistan fall into two main categories. First, there are the proponents of a grand bargain or
an all-or-nothing engagement, who believe that an approach focused on limited goals will not succeed. They claim that an effective
engagement strategy must address the full spectrum of Iranian concerns in relations with the United States. Some members in this camp also
argue that U.S. national interests can tolerate a nuclear-armed Iran if engagement efforts fail to curb its nuclear ambitions. Second, there are
those who oppose any engagement policy unless Iran complies with all U.S. demands regarding nuclear development and support to non-state
actors, whom the United States and its regional allies perceive as violent. Some advocates of this containment approach argue that, since
Iran will never concede to U.S. demands, engagement is impossible. Some containment advocates consider a constructive dialogue infeasible
based on claims that Iran is a messianic state that display s irrational foreign-policy behavior. Other containment proponents are even
prepared to use military force to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran.
All or Nothing
Tehran is capable of securing its interests in Afghanistan and Iraq without the U.S., and feels no need to be helpful unless
Washington is willing to reciprocate at the strategic level. 41
Trita Parsi, President, NationalIranian American Council.
The first argument against the proposed U.S. engagement plan with Iran contends that cooperation on limited goals in Afghanistan may be
unsuccessful unless this effort is part of a comprehensive approach that addresses the full spectrum of Iranian strategic concerns. Trita Parsi
and Ray Takey h, both proponents of engagement, encourage Washington to recognize the broad context of Tehrans perspective. 42 According to
Parsi, small confidence building measures with Iran may not work without a clarification of long-term strategic objectives. 43 Takey h
advocates U.S. cooperation with Iran in Afghanistan as part of a broader engagement strategy . He finds that the United States should be
prepared for Iran to insist on comprehensive talks and not settle for single-issue cooperation. 44
Proponents of wide-ranging engagement differ on the use of military action against the Iranian government. According to Martin Indy k,
former U.S. ambassador to Israel, the United States tolerates nukes in the hands of Russia, China, North Korea and even Pakistan. 45 He
acknowledges that a nuclear-armed Iran poses a grave threat to U.S. interests, but he asserts that tolerating a nuclear-armed Iran is a better
option than military action to stop it. Indy k advocates moves short of war, including augmenting Israels nuclear-deterrent capability ,
apply ing tougher economic sanctions, and reengaging in diplomacy with Russia and China to isolate a nuclear-armed Iran. 46 During the Bush
administration, a form of sanctions enforcement known as Proliferation-Security Initiatives was launched against Iran, but it has failed to
deter and has served only to delay proliferation. Previous diplomatic engagement with Iran from Russia and China also failed to deter Iran from
nuclear proliferation. Furthermore, Russia may also limit the deterioration of the Iranian government, in order to prevent U.S. inroads into
Iran, while China may not move against Iran because of its increasing reliance on Iranian oil and gas. Russia and China have major
investments in Iran, and thus are unlikely to act against the Islamic Republic unless the United States sweetens the deal.
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therefore incapable of pragmatic foreign-policy negotiations. 52 Based on this perspective, the United States cannot allow the Islamic Republic to
acquire nuclear weapons. 53
Containment advocates assert that any U.S. approach must seek Irans full compliance with American demands regarding Iranian acquisition
of nuclear technology and support to violent non-state actors. Until Iran agrees to both these points, containment advocates oppose any
engagement and prescribe continued isolation through economic sanctions, international political pressure, and the use of military force as a
preemptive measure. 54 Brief reviews of these policy options demonstrate why engagement with Iran is still the preferred approach to U.S.-Iran
relations, and why Afghanistan presents an opportunity for U.S.-Iran cooperation.
Hard-line options include a range of military actions that are inadvisable for various geostrategic reasons. Although airstrikes or other limited
attacks against Iranian targets are possible, such attacks may weaken international support for U.S. pressure on Iran, galvanize the hard-line
elements in Irans government and society , and destroy the opportunity for any constructive dialogue with the Iranian government. Karim
Sadjadpour points out that bombing Irans nuclear facilities is not a one-off. 55 Even if airstrikes destroy part of Irans nuclear production
capacity , he explains that this would be only a temporary setback, providing Iran with greater incentive to harden its facilities and continue
its nuclear pursuits.
An invasion and occupation of Iran for the purposes of regime change or other objectives pose a military challenge even greater than the
invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. Iran is approximately four times the size of Iraq with over three times as many inhabitants half of the
Middle Easts population. 56 While Irans military would be no match for invading U.S forces, it consists of over 500,000 active-duty troops and
possesses a variety of land, sea and air capabilities. 57 These forces, along with the mountainous terrain in northern and western Iran, would
pose operational challenges. Furthermore, U.S. forces and the public are not prepared to wage or sustain a war with Iran, much less deal with
the challenges of post-combat stabilization.
While maintaining the status quo is feasible and does not require an investment of U.S. political or financial resources, the existing
containment strategy may not achieve effects desired by Washington. Sanctions have not produced a breakthrough in 30 y ears and continue
to hinder U.S.-Iran relations. 58 While economic sanctions and demands for nuclear-development transparency should be retained, there must
be an accompany ing diplomatic effort. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates has noted, Perhaps if there is enough economic pressure placed on
Iran, diplomacy can provide them an open door through which they can walk. 59 However, there is no necessity to link U.S. pressure through
sanctions on the nuclear front to U.S.-Iran cooperation in Afghanistan.
Engagement Is Necessary
Just as these problems cannot be solved without the Afghan people, they cannot be solved without the help of Afghanistans
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neighbors. Trafficking in narcotics, the spread of violent extremism, economic stagnation, water management, electrification
and irrigation are regional challenges that will require regional solutions. 67
Hillary Clinton, U.S. Secretary of State
A successful U.S. strategy requires recognition of Irans regional role in fostering Afghan stability , as well as U.S.-Iran cooperation. The
uncertainty concerns how to engage Iran and what preconditions to demand, if any . Direct diplomatic engagement on the specific issue of
Afghanistan is recommended. 68 Barring major transgressions of international law by Iran, this approach should not be tied to unresolved U.S.Iran issues external to Afghanistan. Existing U.S. sanctions should not be terminated, but rather de-linked from the Afghan effort. The United
States should stipulate that the Islamic Republic halt the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps or other elements in the government from
supply ing lethal support to the Taliban or other groups in Afghanistan. Progress toward these policy shifts can be used as a confidence-building
metric by the United States.
Any legitimate strategy for stability in Afghanistan must include a regional approach that capitalizes on the constructive contributions of
neighboring states and the international community . Afghanistans neighbors are stakeholders in its reconstruction, and Iran is a key play er
in this process. Halting Irans involvement in Afghanistan is neither constructive nor possible. Parsi considers that, whether the United States
likes it or not, By virtue of its history , geography , population, religion and energy resources, [Iran] has alway s been and will alway s be a
regional power. 69 Furthermore, Iran is a major play er in the reconstruction of Afghanistan. Maloney and Takey h argue that any model of
engagement with Iran must acknowledge Iran as a regional power. 70 Past efforts to ignore or deny this role have only encouraged Tehran to
exert its regional influence through less legitimate means. Iran has called for a regional solution in Afghanistan. Irans foreign minister said in
a recent interview with the Iranian semi-official Fars News Agency , Irans goal in the region is to help peace, stability and calm which, [are]
necessary for the regions progress. 71 Iranian officials have also indicated that Tehran is prepared to cooperate with the United States to ensure
Afghanistans reconstruction and to assist in the fight against violent extremists. 72
Acknowledging Tehrans concerns, the U.S. plan for engagement should ensure that any cooperative agreements with Iran are couched within
a regional approach toward stability in Afghanistan. Barnett Rubin and Ahmed Rashid have called for this ty pe of U.S. major diplomatic
initiative to secure a long-term commitment from regional stakeholders such as Pakistan, India, Iran and others. 73 As part of this effort,
they encourage the United States to open direct dialogue with Iran regarding common concerns in Afghanistan. 74
There are indications that the U.S. foreign-policy establishment has acknowledged Irans role in Afghanistan and is taking steps to encourage
Tehrans constructive participation. The U.S. Government Interagency Policy Groups White Paper on U.S. Policy toward Afghanistan and
Pakistan recommends a wide-ranging diplomatic strategy that involves regional engagement. 75 General David Petraeus, commander of
the U.S. Central Command, and Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, U.S. special representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, who are responsible
for military and diplomatic efforts in the region, have both emphasized that the long-term solution for Afghanistan must incorporate all
neighboring countries, including Iran. 76 On March 5, 2009, in a gesture of diplomatic outreach, Secretary of State Clinton invited Tehran to
send representatives to a UN conference on Afghanistan at The Hague held on March 31, 2009. She stated that a regional solution should be
found for the Afghanistan crisis. 77 Iran accepted the invitation and then engaged in spoiler tactics by sending Deputy Foreign Minister Mehdi
Akhundzadeh, even though other countries were represented by their foreign ministry principals. During the conference, Holbrooke and
Akhundzadeh had an informal exchange. Although the interaction was downplay ed as non-substantive by Washington, the encounter signaled
a step toward constructive dialogue. 78
Maloney and Takey h assert that over the past three decades the United States has employ ed various strategies toward Iran, incorporating
elements of regime change, containment and engagement. They find that only engagement offers a serious prospect of decisively altering the
enduring antagonism between Tehran and Washington and enhancing the context for promoting and protecting American interests in the
region. 79 Cooperation with Iran offers an alternative U.S. foreign-policy approach aimed at achieving long-term U.S. interests in Afghanistan
and presents an opportunity for advancing U.S.-Iran relations.
Improved relations between Washington and Tehran in Afghanistan provide the United States with alternative logistical overland access to
Afghanistan through non-Pakistani territories, and this increases U.S. political leverage in dealing with Islamabad. According to Rubin and
Rashid, U.S.-Iran cooperation would show that the U.S. need not depend solely on Pakistan for access to Afghanistan. 80 U.S. logistical access
through Iran would reduce reliance on routes originating in Pakistan. Transport routes through the Afghan-Pakistan border region account for
84 percent of materiel going to U.S. forces in Afghanistan. 81 The risk of insurgent attacks in this region constitutes a strategic limitation for the
U.S. effort. The United States should not abandon its relationship with Pakistan, but access through Iran provides needed flexibility while
reducing Washingtons sole reliance on Pakistan.
Engagement Is Achievable
. . . [T]he door is open for Iran to participate in international efforts to stabilize Afghanistan. 82
Richard Holbrooke, U.S. Special Rep. for Afghanistan and Pakistan
Development of a regional strategy for Afghan stability presents a potential opportunity for U.S.-Iran cooperation that capitalizes on a shared
commitment to Afghanistan and other common interests. Mohsen Milani finds that the convergence between Tehrans interests and
Washingtons interests in Afghanistan remains substantial, and he cites drug trafficking, the defeat of al-Qaeda, and reconstruction common
priorities. 83 Sadjadpour references stability and capacity -building, economic reconstruction, counternarcotics, support of the Afghan
government, and opposition to the Taliban as areas of joint concern. 84 Barnett Rubin and Sara Batmanglich encourage a U.S.-Iran dialogue to
discuss common goals related to counternarcotics, economic cooperation and border security . 85 Although to vary ing degrees, Maloney , Takey h
and Rubin all acknowledge opportunities for progress on mutual U.S.-Iran priorities in Afghanistan. 86
Iran has demonstrated its commitment to Afghan stability and development. According to Milani, since 2001 Iran has been a reliable donor of
reconstruction aid to Afghanistan. At the International Pledging Conference for Afghanistan in 2002, Iran committed $560 million, making it
the largest single donor. In 2006, Iran pledged an additional $100 million and announced the delivery of the last installment of its 2002
donation. 87 Approximately 4 percent of Irans exports comprise trade with Afghanistan, about 11 percent of Afghanistans imports. 88 In
addition to strategic interests in the development of Afghanistan, Iran has security concerns relating to narcotics, refugees and violent
extremists. Iran has approximately two million heroin users, with an estimated 1,000 pounds of opium crossing into Iran from Afghanistan
each month. 89 During the last two decades more than 3,000 policemen and soldiers have been killed in Irans war against drugs, along with an
estimated 10,000 traffickers. 90 During March 2009, Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan conducted a joint counternarcotics operation under UN
leadership. 91 In March 2009, there were reports that NATO and Iranian officials were holding secret talks on Afghanistan. 92
Along with other NATO and coalition partners in Afghanistan, the United States should consider overt cooperation with Iran to sy nchronize the
regional counter-narcotics effort. Iran has security concerns regarding terrorism and the re-emergence of an extremist Sunni state in
Afghanistan reminiscent of that of the Taliban. 93 In 1998, Iran mobilized 200,000 troops on the border with Afghanistan following the Taliban
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massacre of 11 Iranian officials working at the Iranian consulate in Mazare-Sharif. 94 Iran has no interest in a Taliban rise to power, although
some elements in the Islamic Republic have been accused of supporting the Taliban. Iran continues counterterror activities among Sunni
groups in the Sistan and Baluchistan province in southeastern Iran along the border with Afghanistan and Pakistan. 95
Irans support for U.S. actions in Afghanistan following the 9/11 attacks demonstrates Iranian willingness to work with the United States when
collaboration serves Irans strategic interests. However, as a state actor in the international environment, Irans motivations, decision-making
processes, and strategic objectives are not alway s transparent. Through various means over the past three decades, Iran has sought to advance
its model of Shia Islamic government in the Middle East to counter Arab, Israeli, and Western influences in the region. 96 This effort has
involved support to terrorist and insurgent movements, the pursuit of nuclear-weapons technology , and rhetoric from Irans leaders calling for
the destruction of Israel. 97
Despite its reputation as a state motivated by a revolutionary Shia-influenced ideology , the Islamic Republic has had a history of pragmatic
foreign-policy decision making. 98 Rouhollah K. Ramazani concludes that, throughout Irans history circumstances have forced Iranian
foreign-policy makers to interpret their religious ideology pragmatically in order to advance state interest. 99 Vali Nasr and Ray Takey h argue
that Iran is not . . . a messianic power determined to overturn the regional order in the name of Islamic militancy ; it is an unexceptionally
opportunistic state seeking to assert predominance in its immediate neighborhood. 100 Milani asserts that Tehrans foreign policy has its own
strategic logic and is formulated not by mad mullahs but by calculating ay atollahs based on the Iranian states threat perception. 101 Based
on these judgments, U.S. policy should consider Iran a pragmatic state and test this assessment through cooperation with Tehran on common
interests in Afghanistan. Cooperation between the United States and Iran in Afghanistan is not complicated by divergent positions on Arab,
Sunni, Israeli and other regional issues that have challenged U.S.-Iran relations in the Middle East. Maloney and Takey h find that the central
premise of U.S. engagement with Iran in the Middle East should be a willingness to coexist with Irans influence while seeking to restrain its
excesses. 102 While coexistence with Iranian influence might not be achievable in the Middle East, it may be attainable in Afghanistan, where
common interests exist and where Iran-friendly communities among the Hazara or other Shia, as well as the Dari speakers of Afghanistan may
benefit from cooperation between the United States and Iran.
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CONCLUSION
The arguments against engaging Iran fall into two main categories. First, there are those who support engagement but argue that an approach
focused on limited goals, such as cooperation in Afghanistan, will not succeed. They claim that an effective engagement strategy must address
the full spectrum of Irans concerns in its relationship with the United States. Some members of this all or nothing camp calling for a grand
bargain argue that the United States can live with a nuclear-armed Iran, if engagement efforts fail to contain Tehrans nuclear ambitions.
Second, there are the containment advocates who oppose any engagement policy unless Iran complies with all U.S. demands regarding nuclear
development and support to violent non-state actors. Supporters of this viewpoint submit that Iran will never concede to U.S. demands, making
a comprehensive engagement strategy infeasible. Others in this camp believe that a constructive dialogue is not possible because Iran is a
messianic state that display s irrational foreign-policy behavior. Most of those who oppose engagement efforts are prepared to use military force
to prevent a nuclear-armed Iran.
Despite these arguments, U.S. cooperation with Iran in Afghanistan is necessary and achievable. As part of a comprehensive policy toward the
region, the United States should consider a strategy of diplomatic engagement with Iran aimed at achieving cooperation on shared security and
stability interests in Afghanistan, but not at the risk of presenting Afghanistan as a sacrificial offering to broker the relationship. This
collaboration should be de-linked from Irans conduct on other issues; existing economic sanctions and pressure on Irans nuclear development
activities should be maintained. Since Afghanistan is not tied to Middle Eastern politics, it provides an opportunity for U.S.-Iran cooperation in
an area not influenced by other disagreements such as the Israeli-Palestinian Peace process. Counternarcotics could provide the first agenda
item for the group, and the only precondition should be the cessation of Irans lethal support to the Taliban and other militant groups in
Afghanistan. Iran continues to be a major play er in Central/South Asia, and any viable U.S. plan for Afghan stability and reconstruction must
consist of an inclusive regional approach that includes Tehran. Cooperation with Iran may give the U.S. strategic depth in its logistics as well as
leverage with Pakistan by providing an alternative supply route into Afghanistan via Iran. The United States and Iran share overlapping
strategic goals and multiple common interests in Afghanistan. Iran has demonstrated a willingness to subordinate its ideological objectives in
exchange for pragmatic strategic benefits that involve joint counternarcotics initiatives, halting provisions to the Taliban, providing safe
overland access through Chah Bahar, and continuing economic investment and trade as well as humanitarian efforts. At worst, engagement
improves the probability for long-term stability in Afghanistan. At best, engagement improves more than the outlook for Afghanistan by
opening the door to a broader reconciliation between the United States and Iran.
1 Barack Obama, Videotaped Remarks by the President in Celebration of Nowruz, The White House, Office of the Press Secretary , March 20,
the Press Secretary , Remarks by President Obama in Hradcany Square, Prague, Czech Republic, April 5, 2009,
http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Remarks-By - President-Barack-Obama-In-Prague-As-Delivered/ (accessed June 1, 2009).
4 Ahmadinejads Letter to Bush, The Washington Post, May 9, 2006,
www.cia.gov/library /publications/the-world-factbook/geos/af.html (accessed May 7, 2009); Central Intelligence Agency , Iran, The 2008
World Factbook, updated April 23, 2009, https://www.cia.gov/library / publications/the-world-factbook/geos/af.html (accessed May 7,
2009); Said to Resume Deportation of Afghan Refugees, Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, January 15, 2009,
www.rferl.org/content/Iran_Said_to_Resume_ Deportation_of_Afghan_Refugees (accessed June 1, 2009).
6 Robert Baer, The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower (Crown, 2008), p. 131.
7 Jason Motlagh, Irans Spending Spree in Afghanistan, Time Magazine, May 20, 2009, http://www.
time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1900013,00.html (accessed June 1, 2009); David Rohde, Iran Is Seeking More Influence in
Afghanistan, The New York Times, December 27, 2006, http://www.ny times. com/2006/12/27/world/asia/27afghan.ready .html?
pagewanted=1&_r=1 (accessed June 18, 2009); John Ward Anderson, Arms Seized in Afghanistan Sent From Iran, NATO Say s, The
Washington Post, September 21, 2007, p.A12, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dy n/content/article/2007/09/20/AR2007092001236.
html (accessed June 2, 2009); Pirouz Mojtahedzadeh and Kaveh L. Afrasiabi, A New Season in Iran Relations, The Boston Globe, March 29,
2009, http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/ articles/2009/03/29/a_new_season_in_iran_relations/ (accessed April
3, 2009).
8 Baer, The Devil We Know, p.131.
9 Quoted in Barbara Slavin, A Broken Engagement, The National Interest, November-December 2007.
Afghanistan Sent From Iran, NATO Say s, p.A12; Mojtahedzadeh and Afrasiabi, A New Season in Iran Relations.
12 Translation of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejads Letter to Barack Obama, The Wash ington Post, November 6, 2008,
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Russia.
15 Karl F. Inderfurth, Assistant Secretary for South Asian Affairs, Testimony before the Subcommittee for Near Eastern and South Asian
Affairs, of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Remarks on Afghanistan, Washington, D.C., October 8, 1998,
http://www.mtholy oke.edu/acad/intrel/inderfur.htm (accessed June 2, 2009).
16 Kenneth Pollack, The Persian Puzzle: The Conflict between Iran and America (Random House, 2005), p. 345.
17 Ibid, p. 346.
18 Ibid.
19 Fly nt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett, Have We Already Lost Iran? The New York Times, May 23, 2009.
Clawson, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy , Policy Focus 93, May 2009, p.24,
http://www.washingtoninstitute.org/pubPDFs/Policy Focus93.pdf (accessed July 1, 2009).
27 Pollack, Persian Puzzle, pp. 346-48.
28 Ibid, pp. 350-51.
29 Ibid, pp. 350-58.
30 Shahin Eghraghi, Hekmaty ar: The Wild Card in Afghanistan, Asia Times, January 7, 2004,
Federal News Service, June 7, 2005; Ambassador Khalilzad Delivers Remarks on the Elections in Afghanistan, released by the State
Department, Washington D.C., October 19, 2004; Remarks by Zalmay Khalilzad, U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, to Johns Hopkins
University School of Advanced International Studies, Washington, D.C., October 27, 2004.
37 Ronald E. Neumann, Email to the authors, May 11, 2009.
38 Andrew North, All Quiet on Afghanistans Western Front, BBC News, March 23, 2005,
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4371413.stm (accessed May 10, 2009); Ramtanu Maitra, U.S. Scatters Bases to Control Eurasia,
Asia Times, March 30, 2005, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/central_asia/gc30ag01.html (accessed May 2, 2009).
39 U.S. Ambassador Questions Iranian Interests in Afghanistan, Agence France-Presse, January 30, 2008.
40 Glenn Kessler, At Confirmation Hearing, Clinton Talks of Engagement with Iran.
41 Parsi, On Iran, Begin with the End in Mind.
42 Ibid; Ray Takey h, What Iran Wants, The Washington Post, December 29, 2008. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
AffairsNational Discussion and Debate Series, March 25, 2009, http:// millercenter.org/ public/debates/iran (accessed April 12, 2009).
46 Ibid. For examples, see David Palkki and Lawrence Rubin, Dealing with the Damage: How to Manage a Nuclear Iran, in Debating 21st
Century Nuclear Issues? Edited by Owen C.W. Price and Jenifer Mackby . July 2007, pp. 59-71, http://csis.org/files/media/csis/pubs/07-0914_priceponi.pdf (accessed June 1, 2009).
47 Toby Harnden, We Must Attack Iran Before It Gets the Bomb, Daily Telegraph (U.K.), May 16, 2007.
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48 John Bolton, Iran Clenches Its Fist, The Wall Street Journal, March 2, 2009, http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123595269921905155.html
AffairsNational Discussion and Debate Series, March 25, 2009; Joshua Muravchik, Resolution: America Cannot Tolerate a Nuclear Iran and
Must Go to Any Lengths to Prevent It, Miller Center of Public AffairsNational Discussion and Debate Series, March 25, 2009, http://
millercenter. org/public/debates/iran (accessed April 12, 2009).
51 Bernard Lewis, Does Iran Have Something in Store, The Wall Street Journal, August 8, 2006, http:// www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?
AffairsNational Discussion and Debate Series, March 25, 2009, http:// millercenter.org/public/debates/iran (accessed April 12, 2009).
56 Central Intelligence Agency , Iran, World Factbook, 2008, https://www.cia.gov/library / publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ir.html
Congress, updated January 30, 2008), p.15; Anthony Cordesman and Martin Kleiber, Irans Military Forces and Warfighting Capabilities: The
Threat in the Northern Gulf(Praeger Security International, 2007), p.73.
58 Suzanne Maloney and Ray Takey h, Pathway to Coexistence: A New U.S. Policy Toward Iran, in Restoring the Balance in the Middle East: A
Middle East Strategy for the Next President, eds. Richard Haass and Martin Indy k (Brookings Institution Press, 2008), p.64. The authors claim
that containment is obsolete because Iran is no longer an expansionist power.
59 Eli Lake, Seeking Leverage, U.S. Puts Pressure on Iran, The Washington Times, March 31, 2009.
Service, Library of Congress, updated January 30, 2008, pp.3-5. Media reports indicate that Ambassador Crocker held at least five such
meetings with his Iranian counterpart.
65 Ibid.
66 Mir Sadat, U.S. Foreign Policy toward Sy ria: Balancing Ideology and National Interests, Middle East Policy, vol. 16, No. 2 (Summer 2009),
p. 95.
67 Kessler, At Confirmation Hearing, Clinton Talks of Engagement with Iran.
68 Engagement is a tactic and not a strategy , therefore any U.S. plan to engage Iran regarding Afghanistan on common interests in
Afghanistan must be nested in the broader U.S. strategies for both Afghanistan and Iran.
69 Trita Parsi, On Iran, Begin with the End in Mind, The Chicago Tribune, February 22, 2009.
Signals Over Possible Cooperation with U.S. in Afghanistan, Open Source Center, February 24, 2009,
https://www.opensource.gov/portal/server.pt/gateway (accessed February 27, 2009).
77 Dahl and Hosseinian, Iran to Attend Afghan Meet.
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4-5.
85 Barnett Rubin and Sara Batmanglich, U.S. Animosity towards Iran Thwarts Policy in Afghanistan, Campaign Against Sanctions and
Destination-Part-1.aspx (accessed May 15, 2009); CIA World Factbook on Afghanistan, https://www.cia.gov/library /publications/the-worldfactbook/geos/af.html (accessed May 15, 2009).
89 David Montero, Afghan Refugee Crisis Brewing, The Christian Science Monitor, May 17, 2007; Iran Offers to Train Afghan Police in Drug
Fight, Reuters (U.K.), April 13, 2009, http://uk.reuters.com/article/ usTopNews/idUKTRE53C2V220090413 (accessed May 15, 2009).
90 David Borden, Irans Brutal War on Drugs, AlterNet, July 11, 2001,
www.ny times.com/2008/12/30/world/africa/30iht-30iran.18990391.html?_r=1 (accessed June 24, 2009); Reuters, Iran: Official Blames
U.S. for Bombing at Mosque, The New York Times, May 29, 2009, http:// www.ny times.com/2009/05/30/world/middleeast/30briefsbrfIran.html (accessed June 24, 2009).
96 In 1980, Ay atollah Khomeini announced as quoted in Pollack, Persian Puzzle, p. 183: We shall export our revolution to the whole world.
Until the cry There is no God but God resounds over the whole world, there will be struggle.
97 Ahmadinejad has been credited with calling for Israel to be wiped off the map; see Iran leaders comments attacked, BBC News, October
27 2005, http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east /4378948.stm (accessed February 19, 2009). However, there are claims asserting that
this translation is inaccurate; see Ethan Bronner, Just How Far Did They Go, Those Words Against Israel? The New York Times, June 11,
2006, http://www.ny times.com/2006/06/11/weekinreview/11bronner.html?partner=rssny t&emc=rss (accessed February 19, 2009).
98 Gawdat Bahgat, Iran and the United States: The Emerging Security Paradigm in the Middle East, Parameters (Summer 2007), pp. 5-18;
David Menashri, Irans Regional Policy : Between Radicalism and Pragmatism, Journal of International Affairs, Vol. 60, No. 2 Spring/Summer
2007, pp. 153-67; Vali Nasr and Ray Takey h, The Costs of Containing Iran, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 87, No. 1, January /February 2008, pp. 8595; Rouhollah K. Ramazani, Ideology and Pragmatism in Irans Foreign Policy , The Middle East Journal, Vol. 58, No. 4, Autumn 2004, pp.
549-59; Maloney and Takey h, Pathway to Coexistence, pp. 59-91.
99 Ramazani, Ideology and Pragmatism in Irans Foreign Policy , p. 59.
100 Nasr and Takey h, The Costs of Containing Iran, pp. 92-93.
101 Milani, Tehrans Take, p. 46.
102 Maloney and Takey h, Pathway to Coexistence, p. 67.
103 Obama, Videotaped Remarks by the President in Celebration of Nowruz.
104 James Dobbins, To Talk With Iran, Stop Not Talking, The Washington Post, March 3, 2009, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
http://www.mepc.org/journal/middle-east-policy-archives/us-iran-engagement-through-afghanistan?print
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109 Paul Richter, Iran has Interest in a Stable Afghanistan, Clinton Say s, Los Angeles Times, March 31, 2009.
York Times, June 14, 2007 http://www.ny times.com/2007/06/14/world/ middleeast/14gates.html (accessed May 20, 2009); Robin Wright,
Iranian Arms Destined for Taliban Seized in Afghanistan, Officials Say , The Washington Post, September 16, 2007.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ wp-dy n/content/article/2007/09/15/AR2007091500803.html (accessed May 20, 2009).
111 Michael R. Gordon, U.S. Say s Iranian Arms Seized in Afghanistan, The New York Times, April 18, 2007.
Intelligence, Office of the Director of National Intelligence, February 12, 2009, 11.
http://www.dni.gov/testimonies/20090310_testimony .pdf (accessed March 1, 2009). 113 Rubin and Rashid, Great Game, p.43.
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