Recent developments surrounding the Iran nuclear crisis – including the Trump administration’s designation of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards as a terror organization, further U.S. sanctions placed on Iran and Europe’s inability so far to significantly circumvent them – have led to rising tensions between Iran and the United States.

The effects of the maximum pressure campaign are being felt acutely in Iran, and it is desperately trying to find a way to push back.

Iran has threatened to end some of its commitments according to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), and to exit the nuclear deal within 60 days if the U.S. and Europe do not cave to its demands to moderate sanctions. In addition, Iran is issuing military threats against U.S.interests, and threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz.

In response, the Trump administration has sent the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier strike group and a U.S. bomber task force to the Gulf. A new deployment of Patriot missiles to the Middle East has also been approved.

This is not the first time Iran has issued threats – whether to increase its uranium enrichment capabilities or to close the Strait of Hormuz – against both Europe and the U.S. since the JCPOA was concluded in 2015. It is the language Iran always uses to try to pressure and intimidate the other side – a sign of desperate posturing.

But the United States’ show of force is indication that it is taking an Iranian attack scenario seriously.

There has been a tendency of late in the media and among staunch Iran deal supporters to relate only to these most recent events, and to portray Iran as the victim of U.S. bullying. They claim that due to the latest sanctions, the Trump administration has left Iran no choice but to begin stockpiling enriched uranium and heavy water.

This ignores the entire history of how we got where we are today. Indeed, these events are just the latest episode in the ongoing saga of confronting Iran’s illicit nuclear weapons aspirations, confirmed beyond doubt by the nuclear archives extracted from Tehran in January 2018. Iran blatantly violated the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty by working on a nuclear weapons program, and deceived the IAEA for years.

The U.S. is not initiating hostilities. It is responding to Iran’s threats, and aggressive regional and bad faith behavior. Despite the JCPOA having created the illusion that a give and take was necessary with Iran, the international community owes Iran nothing on the nuclear front – the burden of proof is on Iran alone, to demonstrate that it is worthy of trust after lying and cheating for years.

It has not done so. In fact, Iran has remained uncooperative as far as inspections at military facilities, any further discussions regarding its missile program and regional profile, and has become more aggressive in its activities across the region. That includes entrenching its forces in Syria, and stepping its weaponizing of Hezbollah as its strike arm through attempts to transfer precision-guided technologies.

The scenario of a possible military confrontation, while currently moving to the forefront, is nevertheless a sideshow to the central dynamic which focuses on Iran’s nuclear, missile and regional activities.

Neither Iran nor the U.S. has an interest in war. If there is escalation to military attacks due to miscalculations, it might overtake all other issues, but until then, fanning the flames of imminent war – in the media and among analysts – is a strongly ill-advised message.

At the end of the day, Iran’s threats are a desperate attempt to push back against the U.S. and Europe, and U.S. threats and military preparations are meant to deter Iran from any thoughts of initiating war, and not to provoke conflict.

Israel is currently not part of this dynamic, although if miscalculations lead to military exchange there could be serious implications. Placing the threats in their proper context is important. That means underscoring that negotiations are the goal – and war is in no one’s interest.

Source » isicrc