Will US sanctions spark turmoil in Iran?
TEHRAN: If the US was hoping renewed sanctions on Iran would cause immediate economic turmoil and mass anti-government protests, it may be disappointed, though real pain could still be on the horizon.
US President Donald Trump described the embargoes that returned on Tuesday as “the most biting sanctions ever imposed”.
That was already an exaggeration since they only re-imposed measures that were in place before the 2015 nuclear deal which he abandoned in May.
His national security adviser, John Bolton, said Iran’s leaders were already “on very shaky ground” after days of protests across the country against high prices and the lack of political reform.
But while there is plenty of despair in Iran over the state of the economy, and fear for the future, the return of sanctions were marked by relative calm.
A large-scale security deployment and mobile internet blackouts certainly played a role, and getting a clear picture of the situation outside Tehran is almost impossible due to heavy reporting restrictions.
But the chatter on social media indicated at least a lull in the protests, while analysts said the idea that economic pain could lead to a full-blown revolution was far-fetched.
“Western observers are often quick to erroneously assume that localised demonstrations... are wholesale rejections of the Islamic republic,” said Henry Rome of the Eurasia Group in a briefing note. “Despite a rise in public protests, the regime does not yet face an existential threat. The security forces are brutal, efficient, and loyal.”
Good news
Moreover, there was actually some good economic news this week for once, with the rial gaining more than 20 per cent since Sunday in response to new foreign exchange policies announced by the government.
That points to the fact that Iran’s problems are driven at least as much by internal dynamics as US pressure.
Trump’s aggressive rhetoric certainly helped fuel the run on the rial, which has lost half its value since April.
But it also resulted from Iran’s disastrous decision that month to fix the value of the rial and shut down currency traders, triggering a boom in the black market — moves that have finally been reversed.
“The government was late in its decision-making, but it is the right move,” said Mohammad Reza Najafi Manesh, head of the business commission of the Tehran chamber of commerce.
He said sanctions were secondary to dealing with Iran’s internal problems, and his chamber was in meetings with the government on Wednesday pushing for additional support such as subsidised imports of raw materials.
“It’s not our first time dealing with sanctions. We know how to search for solutions, and we will do our best to meet our needs locally,” said Najafi Manesh.