Abstract:
In trying to solve Iran's alleged development of Weapons of Mass Destruction
(WMD), the "EU-3"- France, Germany, and England- accompanied by the efforts of
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),l initially adopted persuasive
diplomacy that was later on transformed to coercive diplomacy. The complexity of
Iran's nuclear issue fmds its roots not only in Iran's on-off cooperation, but also in the
very nature of the EU-Iran and US-Iran relationships coupled with the US's
aggressive agenda and lack of clear strategy.
For years, the international community has been suspicious of the aspirations
of the Iranian Republic to have its own nuclear technology, but no one really knew the
sophistication of the program. Indeed, the peak of the Iranian nuclear capabilities
issue regained strength in August 2002, when the National Council of Resistance of
Iran, (an exiled front group for the Mujahidin el- Khalel') publicly presented
evidence of two undeclared facilities at Natanz and Arak. Since then, the European
Union represented by the "EU-3" and the IAEA have been actively involved in
negotiations and talks with Iran in order to persuade the latter to collaborate and act in
a more transparent manner. At a later stage of the conflict, Russia and China, who
have major economic interests in Iran and hold the veto power in the UNSC, opted as
well for an engagement policy vis-a-vis Tehran. However, unlike the latter parties
who engaged Iran in an attempt to solve the nuclear case, the US adopted a radical,
coercive approach from the beginning. Even thought several agreements have been signed between Iran and the
European troika, the ink on paper failed to concretize, paved the way for mistrust, and
reinforced the game of throwing the ball into the other's court. Indeed, Iran's
recurrent attempts to save its head from the UNSC fell short on February 4, 2006.
With a coercive diplomacy that has so far faltered coupled with a costly war option
that could comprise dangerous consequences, the international community is in a race
against time. Indeed, in their attempt to resolve the so called "Persian Puzzle", the
world powers must consider more creative and realistic options that would satisty
Iran's needs as well as international concerns.
Thus, rather than being an alternative to war and a means to resolve conflicts
peacefully, is diplomacy experiencing a change in its role in the age of terrorism and
global threat? Will diplomacy's function diminish in favor of forceful means in order
to satisty the priorities of our time or is it still a paramount instrument of containing
dangerous spillovers?