1 / 9

The Impact of Sanctions on Iran

The Impact of Sanctions on Iran. By Vinayak Ganeshan and Matt Nguyen Research Staff. “We only want a nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. And to wipe Israel off the map”. Iran’s Government. Theocratic Government Guardian Council Grand Ayatollah Khamenei Personal Army:

axl
Download Presentation

The Impact of Sanctions on Iran

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Impact of Sanctions on Iran By Vinayak Ganeshan and Matt Nguyen Research Staff “We only want a nuclear energy for peaceful purposes. And to wipe Israel off the map”

  2. Iran’s Government Theocratic Government Guardian Council Grand Ayatollah Khamenei Personal Army: Iranian Revolutionary Guardian Corps Ordered Harsh Crackdowns against Arab Spring Protestors Civilian Government Elected Branches Executive Branch • President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad • Confrontational Foreign Policy • Deferential to Guardian Council • Accusations of election tampering • Promised to build up Iran’s military capacity to rival Western nations

  3. Iran’s Nuclear Ambitions • Began in the 1950s with the US supporting Iran’s Atoms for Peace Program prior to the overthrow of the Shah • In the last decade, clear evidence existed that Iran was buying technology for centrifuges from Russia • In 2011, it was reported that Iran had developed enough uranium at 20% enrichment to start the process of creating a nuclear weapon • Iran has several nuclear facilities across the country (Qom, Natanz, Fordow, Arak, etc.) Many of these facilities have not been inspected by the IAEA • Violation of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty

  4. But Why Does It Matter? • An Iran with a nuclear weapon could create a nuclear arms race in the Middle East and the rest of the world • Israel, Pakistan, and India are already neighboring powers with nuclear weapons • It would also heighten tensions between US-supported Israel and its Arab neighbors: • Ahmadinejad denies the Holocaust and has publically called for the destruction of Israel • Iran is a strong supporter of the current Syrian regime led by Bashir Al-Assad

  5. Diplomatic Efforts • After the removal of Khatami, Iran has been dominated by hardliners unwilling to negotiate or reform • Iran has toed the line in many talks with the West, but ultimately has never come to an agreement (the talks are seen as method to waste time and continue nuclear production) • IAEA requests have been largely ignored • Security Council threats have also received little response • U.S. missile defense systems in Turkey and Israel

  6. Solution: International Sanctions “suck it”

  7. Types of Sanctions • Banking Industry – Financial Transactions • Basic Consumer Goods • Petroleum – Oil Exports • Weapons • Raw Materials for Manufacturing • Technology

  8. IMPACT • On average, imports 24% more costly • Inflation, value of the Rialfallen 40% against the Dollar (32,000 rials to 1 dollar) • Partially due to misuse of expansionary fiscal and monetary policy meant to counter the international sanctions • Oil exports down 40%, Iran’s primary export • Prior increases in price of crude oil had given Iran $28 billion in addition revenue that had helped them mitigate the impact of international sanctions • Iran in Recession • High Unemployment • Shrinking Economy • Political Unrest as a result of bad economy • Arab Spring Movement

  9. Criticism of Sanctions • Hurt Iranian civilians more than the Iranian Regime • Ineffective: Republicans and Israeli Prime Minister • Seen as a weak exercise of Western power compared to military action • “4 years closer to an atomic bomb” • Satisfies the international community while Iran continues their clandestine nuclear weapon development

More Related