By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
A Detente Option For Iran
On April 1, Israeli
warplanes attacked a building in Damascus that is part of the Iranian embassy there,
killing seven senior figures in the Iranian military. Tehran has yet to
respond. But when it does, the scale and nature of its actions will help answer
a basic question at the heart of many debates about the current situation in
the Middle East: Has U.S. deterrence worked against Iran?
Washington has had
difficulties with Iran since the Islamic Republic was founded in 1979, and
since then, the US has struggled to find a successful strategy for dealing with
it. Even though the U.S. economy is more than 16 times as large as Iran’s and
its military budget more than 100 times as large, Iran has consistency blocked
U.S. efforts to create a stable regional order. Although it is hard to think of
any measure in which Tehran is even vaguely competitive with Washington, all
U.S. efforts to sideline Iran have failed for most of the last four decades.
This presents a puzzle. The disparities between the two sides are so great that
it could be supposed that deterring Iran’s malign behavior would be a
straightforward question of properly calibrating U.S. policy and resolve. This
was the logic behind the Trump administration’s “maximum pressure” campaign
from 2018–21, and it has also informed Washington’s course in the Middle East
following Hamas’s 7 October attack on Israel. But
that assumption is mistaken.
The problem is not
with deterrence. Rather, it is that Washington has been trying to do too much
with Tehran, with too limited a set of tools, over too long a period. Although
prioritizing U.S. objectives and adopting a more flexible set of responses will
not fix the Middle East, it will certainly improve it. Iran may remain a
challenge for U.S. policymakers—but it will at least become a more predictable
one.
For the last 45
years, the US has tried to deter and compel Iran. But this is the wrong
approach. Deterrence theory is not suited to dealing with the sorts of
challenges that Tehran presents today. Deterrence was developed during the Cold
War, when—from the successful testing of a Soviet atomic bomb in 1949 to the
end of the Soviet Union in 1991—U.S. strategists were rightly preoccupied with
preventing a global catastrophe. To that end, they labored mightily to persuade
the Soviet Union to not abandon the status quo by using nuclear weapons. At
heart, Washington’s strategy was a bet that if nuclear war broke out, the
conflict would impose massive, unbearable costs on both sides. The hope was
that the U.S. nuclear arsenal on land and sea and in the air, combined with a
show of resolve, would ensure Soviet inaction. Costly as it was, neither side
would then pay the much higher costs of all-out war. “compliance,” meanwhile,
is the effort to persuade an adversary to stop or reverse an action it has
already begun. Compliance is much harder than deterrence, as it requires
an adversary to stop doing something already in motion, and it requires the
compeller to follow through on their specific threats. It is estimated that
compliance works only about a third of the time, often because the other side
refuses to capitulate.
Neither deterrence
or compliance theory has solved the problem of what to do with
Iran. From the Islamic Republic’s founding, the US has had to decide whether to
take Iran’s revolutionary rhetoric literally—and given both its tone and Iran’s
support for violent nonstate actors throughout the region, it has often seemed
foolish not to. Successive U.S. presidents have accordingly regarded Iran’s
efforts to project strength as threatening, and Tehran, in turn, has perceived
Washington’s responses as equally so. Each pushed the other toward developing
greater capabilities, which each responded to by increasing its military
strength in the region. Covert action also increased. Not surprisingly, the US
became preoccupied with the threats coming from Iran, and Iran became
preoccupied with the threats coming from the US.
Iran responded to
these challenges by developing a flexible, robust, and dynamic set of tools
designed to blunt the effects of U.S. pressure. Conscious that it could not win
a conventional war with the US, Iran invested in developing its paramilitary
organizations and creating, training, and supplying nonstate actors throughout
the region. Iran has also built a significant overseas
intelligence presence capable of sabotaging local infrastructure and
supporting regional opposition movements. Tehran has invested in highly capable
missile and drone programs, and its spies have waged cyberwarfare on
neighboring countries’ systems. Iran’s nuclear efforts are another weapon in
its arsenal, and Tehran accelerates, decelerates, and even occasionally
abandons its program in response to changing conditions. These responses are
all inherently flexible. Iran is constantly probing which actions elicit which
reactions, and it uses ever more creative tactics to do so. In particular,
Tehran seeks to make its actions “attributable but deniable,” in the words of a
former CIA operations veteran, and accordingly sows just enough confusion to
forestall an immediate response from targeted states or their Western allies.
But Iran also relies on the diversity and dispersion of its tools to make its
adversaries reluctant to respond directly.
Iran’s neighbors are
all within range of its missiles. Initially, that engendered indifference to
Tehran’s nuclear program. Indeed, more than a decade ago, Kuwait’s foreign
minister privately waved off his country’s concern at the prospect of an
Iranian nuclear weapon, asking, “If they already have a gun to your head, what
does it matter if they point a cannon at your back?” Iran’s neighbors continue
to doubt that they can pressure Tehran to behave better. In August 2022, Kuwait
and the United Arab Emirates restored diplomatic relations with Iran; they were
followed by Saudi Arabia nine months later. Kuwaiti and Emirati officials said
privately that they did so because they thought diplomatic ties would create
more predictability in their relations with Iran, not because they thought good
relations with Iran were possible.
Slow Down!
When seeking to deter
Iranian threats, the task for the US and its allies could not be more different
from the task they faced deterring the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Then,
the goal was simply to persuade the Soviets to not act in a specific way. The
Iranians, by contrast, are acting in an evolving set of ways, both directly and
indirectly. Compelling them to stop all their malign actions, in multiple
locations, using multiple instruments, is a game of whack-a-mole. The challenge
is made even more difficult by Washington’s tendency to project its own
assumptions on Iran and assume it understands the Iranian mindset. Events have
proved this belief dangerously wrong. U.S. policymakers, for example, have long
worked on the assumption that Iran does not want to be sanctioned. Yet many of
the most powerful figures in the country and their families—including former
Petroleum Minister Rostam Ghasemi and former National Security Adviser Ali
Shamkhani—have been accused of being deeply involved with smuggling networks.
The profitability of their activities lies precisely in the perpetuation of
sanctions. The luxurious villas and sports cars of Lavasan, a city just 30
minutes northeast of Tehran, are a tribute to how well some powerful Iranians
are doing under the American sanctions regime. Nor is it correct to assume that
Iran fears a limited military confrontation. Iran was indifferent to military
casualties in its war with Iraq in the 1980s, continually sending waves of
ill-trained troops into battle to draw Iraqi fire and detonate land mines.
Although many Iranian leaders came to decide that the tactic was wasteful,
Tehran has nonetheless remained willing to risk its soldiers’ lives, even when
the country’s strategic interests are not directly at stake. Most recently,
Iran has lost hundreds if not thousands of soldiers in Syria, despite their
purportedly serving in an advisory role.
The US is also part
of the problem. The complexity and variety of Iranian actions that Washington
finds offensive makes it difficult to develop a political consensus in the US
to reduce pressures on Iran. As U.S. rhetoric on Iran seems to become only more
confrontational, Tehran’s conviction hardens that U.S. hostility is either
constant or increasing—and thus inevitable. The Iranian leadership has, as a
consequence, decided that its only option is to invest more heavily in what one
Iranian scholar called “Iran’s instruments of deterrence,” seeking to persuade
Washington that the costs of direct conflict would be too high to contemplate.
The two principal means of doing so are Iran’s missile program and its network
of allied militias, the so-called axis of resistance that spans Iraq, Lebanon, Yemen, and the Palestinian territories. The
sophistication and utility of Tehran’s arsenal were demonstrated in a series of
strikes on Saudi oil facilities in September 2019. Meanwhile, the reach of its proxies has become evident in the aftermath of
Hamas’s October 7 attacks, as Houthi assaults
on Red Sea shipping squeeze global trade, Hezbollah threatens Israel’s northern
border, and proxy groups in Iraq and Syria attack U.S. troops deployed to
prevent the return of the Islamic State (or ISIS).
Although the US has
refrained from direct strikes on Iran, some in Congress, including two U.S.
Senators, Tom Cotton, Republican of Arkansas, and Lindsay Graham, Republican of
South Carolina, argue that any strategy that does not involve military attacks
on Iranian soil is doomed to fail. “The only thing the Iranian regime
understands is force,” Graham recently declared. “Until they pay a price with
their infrastructure and their personnel, the attacks on U.S. troops will
continue.” The solution is to “hit Iran now,” he added. “Hit them hard.” This
would, at a minimum, risk a broad regional war in which Iran would unleash the
full force of its “instruments of deterrence,” seriously threatening U.S.
allies and tens of thousands of U.S. troops in the region. It could also
require the US to fight yet another sustained military operation in the Middle
East at a time when Washington’s attention is increasingly on the Asia-Pacific.
Past administrations have been careful not to cross this line. Even the Trump
administration’s January 2020 assassination of the head of Iran’s Quds Force, Qasem Soleimani, took place on Iraqi soil—not in
Iran. Although this may have been a consequence of logistics or intelligence,
it also shows Washington’s reluctance to operate on Iranian territory.
No War, But No Peace
Washington’s strategy
has had one notable success: it has clearly succeeded in deterring Iran from
escalation. Iranian proxies have ended their efforts to target U.S. facilities
since a drone linked to pro-Iranian forces killed three U.S. soldiers in
northern Jordan on January 28. After the attack, U.S. warplanes struck the
facilities of Iranian-backed groups in Iraq and Syria, killing some 45 people.
Washington’s capability and willingness to decisively destroy a wide range of
targets persuaded the Iranians to end their attacks on U.S. outposts, at least
for now. However, the US has not succeeded in compelling Iran to roll back the
use of its asymmetric tools.
This general failure can
be attributed to the disparities between the US and Iran. The US is a wealthy
global power with assets and interests everywhere. It has a keen interest in
sustaining global order, which not coincidentally leaves Washington in a
commanding global position. The Iranian government, by contrast, has grown
accustomed to deprivation and the lack of development, and it has relatively
little overseas that it is determined to preserve. Its interest is in
subverting the global order, which it does with two things in mind: the
knowledge that the U.S. interest in sustaining that order will make the US act
conservatively and within the boundaries of international law, and that Iranian
protests against the global order will win sympathy from governments and
billions of people who object to it. That is why, since taking office in August
2021, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi has abandoned rapprochement with the US and
focused instead on attacking the global status quo. To that end, Iran has
forged closer ties with China and Russia, which have their interests in
diminishing U.S. hegemony and are happy to quietly abet Iran’s efforts. Time is
on Tehran’s side. Iran has learned to adapt to U.S. efforts to isolate it, and
its current leadership is strengthened and enriched by most U.S. sanctions.
Small Wins Are Still Wins
Washington can manage
the problem of Iran by using a three-pronged approach. First, the US should
rigorously prioritize its objectives with Iran. Although Washington should not
be willing to accept all manner of Iranian misbehavior, Tehran should nonetheless
have a clear understanding of what is most important to Washington. Too long a
list invites Iranian picking and choosing, and the US should be the one picking
and choosing. Direct attacks on U.S. personnel should remain off-limits, as
should the development of nuclear weapons. But the US should not seek to be the
chief opponent of Iran’s myriad illegal international activities, including
smuggling and hostilities against neighboring states. Washington should,
instead, work to help build the capabilities of friendly states in the region
to respond to Iran.
Second, the US should
be less predictable in its responses to Iranian actions. Because Tehran
constantly probes U.S. responses, it knows where Washington’s redlines have
been drawn and, therefore, precisely where it must stop. A more flexible U.S.
approach would help persuade the Iranians that low-level activities can have
higher-than-expected costs; this, in turn, would diminish Iranian
experimentation and cause the Iranians to use more restraint. The United States
needs to develop more ways to threaten Iranian government assets, especially
military and intelligence targets. U.S. options should include limited military
action and cyberattacks.
Third, the US needs
to recognize that its hand is strengthened when Tehran believes that there is
some prospect for greater accommodation with Washington. When Iran’s leaders
believe that there is no action they can take to blunt U.S. hostility, it encourages
them to misbehave. Furthermore, if punishment is inevitable, then an increase
in Iranian hostile activities carries no marginal risk. If Tehran believes that
Washington is potentially willing to accommodate it, then it will be
incentivized to reduce tensions. The goal should be something closer to détente
than rapprochement. The more Tehran believes its conflict with Washington is
existential, the more committed it will be to its tools of deterrence. And the
more realistically the US looks at Iran, the more modest it must be about its
ability to foster the collapse of Iran’s government, let alone ensure that one
more favorable to U.S. interests emerges. Iran’s government may fall under its
weight, and that may benefit U.S. interests. However regime change in Iran
should not be a U.S. government objective. U.S. and British support for the
overthrow of Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddeq’s government in 1953 is
still remembered in Iran as a moment of national humiliation. Even bringing
down an unpopular regime is unlikely to make the US many friends.
Weaker powers such as
Iran have an advantage overpowers many times their size. Because they have a
limited number of adversaries and everything to lose, they are often more
highly motivated than their powerful opponents. Yet because they are weaker,
they rarely win. An overall win for the US, which has global interests and
myriad other priorities, is also unlikely—meaning that a string of small
victories on the most important issues is the right target. Further restricting
Iran’s actions and introducing more predictability in the Middle East would be
a great improvement. Iran has learned to play the current game well, and it
understands its advantages. Although the US cannot erase all the conditions
that favor Iran, it can work to level the battlefield with Iran, advance the
security of U.S. partners and allies, and diminish the possibility of a
U.S.-Iranian conflict that inflames the entire Middle East.
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