Commentary: Will Iran’s new president bring in a new era of foreign policy?

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Diplomacy, sanctions and soft power have failed to deter Iran’s anti-West agenda. A new Iranian president provides an opportunity to reset relations - or not, say two academics.

New: You can now listen to articles.on Friday may provide Tehran an opportunity to press reset on foreign policy issues after years of increasing hawkishness. Indeed, a key campaign issue has been the extent to which the candidates may – or may not – pivot to more engagement with the West.

Since Iran’s Islamic Revolution in 1979, the US and Iran have had no formal diplomatic ties. But that doesn’t mean that there are no diplomatic efforts. In fact, there are unofficial channels, such as the US working through the Swiss government. The Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the nuclear nonproliferation agreement signed in 2015 but abandoned by the Trump administration in 2018, is a prime example. Western leaders have sought to ensure that Iran does not acquire nuclear weapons, but they failed to get cooperation from Iran after president Donald Trump’s withdrawal from the agreement.

But to date, both goals seem elusive, with Iran’s continued, unabated uranium enrichment and its attacks throughout the Middle East regularly taking place. In recent years, the US and Europe have increased sanctions on Iran for a variety of reasons. Iran’s repressive response to the 2022 protests following the death of a young woman, Mahsa Jina Amini, in police custody

While sanctions have demonstrably weakened Iran’s economy, their success in achieving the broader strategy of bringing Iran back to the negotiating table – particularly concerning its nuclear programme and regional activities – is less clear.

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