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Emanuele Ottolenghi

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Emanuele Ottolenghi,

Emanuele Ottolenghi

Analysis

Signed: new lease of life for Mid East's No 1 war machine

January 21, 2016 16:17
John Kerry
3 min read

It was not last summer's rollercoaster, when Iran and six world powers clinched a deal to end the decade-long impasse over Tehran's nuclear programme. But the announcement, last weekend, that Iran had fulfilled its obligations under the deal, paving the way for the lifting of international sanctions, was not without its drama.

Diplomats announced the release of five US citizens held hostage by Tehran, in exchange for a US presidential pardon for seven convicted felons, held in US prisons for aiding Iran evade sanctions. The breakthrough coincided with the deal's implementation and boosted the Obama administration's claim that diplomacy with Iran had worked.

Despite Iran's seizure of 10 American sailors in the Gulf a few days earlier, it appears that the deal's happy ending has come to fruition.

The agreement's cheerleaders claim that diplomacy has strengthened the hand of the more moderate factions inside Iran; established a direct channel between the US and Iran which facilitated the solving of crises unrelated to the nuclear standoff; and has thus made it possible for other regional challenges to be more constructively and effectively addressed.