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US sanctions may have limited effect on Iran's economy

Sanctions won't deter Iran's conventional weapons programme or halt its activities in the Middle East, analysts say
US sanctions coming into effect on 5 November will hit Iran’s oil and gas sector, among other areas (Reuters)

As the United States prepares to re-impose sanctions on Iran's oil and banking sectors early next week, experts and analysts say the economic measures may have only a modest effect on Tehran's economy and likely won't alter the country's activities in the Middle East.

"Iran has been sanctioned for more than 40 years. It is not something new," said Seyed Hossein Mousavian, a former Iranian diplomat and Middle East policy specialist at Princeton University who specialises in the effects of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), the 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and world powers.

"Iran is the most experienced country in the world [at] handling sanctions. I don't believe any other country in this region has the experience, capacity or scale to resist against sanctions," Mousavian told MEE.

The US sanctions, set to come into effect on 5 November, will hit Iran's petroleum sales and transport activities, among other areas.

That includes the country's shipping and port operations, as well as banking transactions carried out by the National Iranian Oil Company and the Central Bank of Iran.

Some US sanctions were already reimposed on Iran in August, shortly after Washington pulled out of the 2015 nuclear deal in May.

That first round of renewed sanctions reduced Iran's oil exports by a third from when US sanctions were lifted in 2015 as per the JCPOA agreement, said Kenneth Katzman, a senior Iran analyst at Congressional Research Service, which conducts research for the US Congress.

The sanctions have a range of desired effects, from limiting Iran's conventional weapons programme to "outright regime change," Katzman told MEE.

"The ultimate goal ... is that Iran's economy will be collapsed so severely that Iran's political structure collapses," he said.

"The minimum goal of the sanctions is to diminish the Iranian economy so that Iran can't develop strategic weapons or buy expensive conventional weapons or have the same level of economic output - and perhaps that might cause Iran to come back to the bargaining table on the nuclear issue," Katzman said.

Unlikely to deter weapons industry, regional activities

Still, Mousavian told MEE the sanctions would do nothing to deter Iran's conventional weapons industry.

"The Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s pushed Iran to go for self-sufficiency on the production of conventional weapons. Today, Iran is the most powerful country in the region for producing conventional arms – from tanks to airplanes to jet fighters, missiles, everything," he said.

I don't believe any other country in this region has the experience, capacity or scale to resist against sanctions

-Hossein Mousavian, scholar at Princeton University and Iranian diplomat

Mousavian said Iran "would have a hard economic time" as a result of the sanctions and may take a small hit, given the current relatively high price of oil on the global market, at about $63 per barrel.

Still, he said he expected Iranian leaders to portray the situation as a "big win" because they hope to wean the country's economy off oil.

"It is a very important objective of Iran's political security to manage an economy minus oil," Mousavian told MEE.

It also appears unlikely that the sanctions will stop Iran’s involvement in other parts of the region, which has been one of the US's stated goals for reimposing the harsh economic measures.

Iran funds, trains and supports a range of groups in the Middle East, including Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon, the rebel Houthi movement in Yemen, Shia militias in Iraq and forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s government, Katzman said.

While international sanctions "really started to bite in 2012 and 2013," that didn't stop Iranian involvement with any of these groups, he told MEE.

"There's no observable linkage between sanctions and Iran's economic performance and its regional operations," he said.

"Iran has been at the same level of regional activity as it was before these sanctions started."

Iranian leaders unbothered

On Friday, the US granted waivers to eight Iranian oil importers, including Iraq, Turkey, India, China, South Korea and Japan.

Several of these countries depend partially on Iranian oil, including Turkey, which imports a quarter of its 830,000 barrels per day from its Iranian neighbour, Bloomberg reported.

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Katzman told MEE that the law on US sanctions doesn't force nations to immediately cut all imports from Iran.

"Countries only have to significantly reduce their purchases from Iran every six months. They're not technically under the law to go to zero immediately," he said.

Meanwhile, only a few days ahead of the renewed US sanctions, Iranian leaders have said they aren't worried by what is to come.

"America will not be able to carry out any measure against our great and brave nation ... We have the knowledge and the capability to manage the country's economic affairs," Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesman, Bahram Qasemi, told state television.

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition

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