The Failure of U.S. “Maximum Pressure” against Iran
Five interactive
slides show just how far the U.S. campaign to pressure Iran into expanding the
2015 nuclear deal has escalated risks in the Middle East, underlining the need
for both sides to urgently resume compliance with their obligations under the
accord.
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The Trump administration ended U.S.
participation in the Iran nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan
of Action (JCPOA), in May 2018, and proceeded to launch a “maximum pressure”
campaign defined by the sweeping use of unilateral sanctions against Iran. The
strategy was ostensibly intended to persuade Tehran to agree to a “better deal”
that would include additional restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program and
an expansion of the accord’s scope to cover Iran’s ballistic
missiles and regional power projection.
But the Trump administration’s approach
erred in two crucial assumptions. The first was that Iran would not respond to U.S. sanctions by expanding its nuclear
activity. In fact, Tehran began to methodically break its JCPOA obligations in
mid-2019 once it realised that because of “maximum pressure” it would receive
none of the economic dividends it had expected from the agreement and was in
fact being penalised even more than before it signed the JCPOA. The second
mistaken assumption was that mounting economic costs would lead to Iranian
concessions, or at least blunt the country’s ability to project power in the
region. Instead, Iran raised its regional military profile, increasing tensions
with Washington and its partners and bringing the two sides repeatedly to the
brink of open conflict.
Iran’s JCPOA breaches have accelerated following the November 2020 assassination of
Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a top nuclear scientist, putting the deal’s two signal
achievements – substantial restrictions on Iran’s nuclear program and Tehran’s
submission to multi-tiered inspections and monitoring authorities –
increasingly into jeopardy. Nevertheless, there is still an opportunity to save
the deal if Washington and Tehran work with urgency toward a resumption of compliance by both sides that would
reverse Iran’s breaches and put the JCPOA back on stable footing.
To view the impact of "maximum
pressure" on five key areas kept under control by the 2015 Iran nuclear
accord, click on the ruler and sweep it all the way right and then all the way
left.
Breakout Risk
Interactive content by Flourish
A key objective for the countries that
negotiated the JCPOA with Iran (the U.S., UK, France, Germany, China and Russia,
collectively referred to as the P5+1) was extending the time Iran would require
to accumulate sufficient fissile material for a single nuclear weapon. Under
the deal, this “breakout time” was lengthened from around two to three months
to one year. As a result of Iran’s JCPOA breaches, which it made in response to
the “maximum pressure” campaign, U.S. officials now estimate that the breakout
time has dropped back to around three months.
Uranium Enrichment Cap
Interactive content by Flourish
Prior to the JCPOA, one of the central
debates between Iran and the P5+1 was whether Tehran should be permitted to
continue enriching uranium. Uranium that is enriched with a certain isotope
(U-235) to 90 per cent becomes weapons grade. The compromise the parties reached
was that Iran would be allowed to enrich uranium but required to drop
enrichment rates from 20 per cent to an upper limit of 3.67 per cent for
fifteen years. In response to “maximum pressure”, Iran has now breached that
cap, first by an increase to 4.5 per cent in 2019 and, in accordance with an
Iranian law passed after Fakhrizadeh’s killing, to 20 per cent in January 2020.
Enriched Uranium Stockpiling
Interactive content by Flourish
If capping enrichment capacity
constitutes one element of restricting Iran’s nuclear program, another is
limiting the volume of its stockpiles. The 2015 agreement limits Iran to
202.8kg of uranium (300kg of enriched hexafluoride). Iran broke that ceiling in
July 2019 and has amassed a steadily growing stockpile of enriched uranium
that, as of mid-February 2021, has approached three tons, more than fourteen
times the allowed amount.
Iran’s Enrichment Capacity
Interactive content by Flourish
Under the JCPOA, Iran had to reduce its
number of installed centrifuges by two thirds and enrich uranium using only
5,060 first-generation centrifuges (IR-1) for the next decade; an allowance was
also made for operating 1,044 IR-1 centrifuges toward the production of stable
isotopes that would not have military applications. Centrifuge enrichment
capacity is measured by Separative Work Units (SWU) per year. The IR-1
machines, which are prone to breakdown, have a SWU of around 0.9 per machine,
whereas some of Iran’s more advanced centrifuges are much more efficient. For
instance, IR-2m machines have a SWU of 3.7 and IR-6 centrifuges have a capacity
of 6.8 SWU per year. Iran is now enriching uranium using more advanced
centrifuge models, gaining irreversible knowledge. In the process, it has
increased its enrichment capacity from ~4,500 SWU/year under the JCPOA limits
to ~12,900 SWU/year.
Monitoring and Verification
Interactive content by Flourish
As part of the nuclear deal, Iran has
voluntarily allowed enhanced inspections of its facilities by the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) under the IAEA’s Additional Protocol to the
Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement. It had promised to ratify the Additional
Protocol in 2023 in conjunction with the U.S. Congress effectively lifting
(instead of suspending) sanctions. The JCPOA also allows for rigorous
monitoring measures that surpass Additional Protocol requirements. While a
February 2021 temporary technical agreement with the IAEA limits the damage
from an Iranian law sharply curbing international inspection authorities,
inspectors’ access remains at risk if the standoff around the JCPOA’s revival
is not resolved.
(ICG)
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