by Majid Rafizadeh, Europe Has Apparently Learned Nothing :: Gatestone Institute
- Once
again, Europe seems to have slipped into a dangerous fantasy: that
engaging in polite diplomatic parleys with promises of sugar plums will
tame Iran's rapacious ambitions.
- France,
Germany, and the United Kingdom (E3), acting as the European Troika,
declared their intention to revive the long-stalled nuclear negotiations
with Iran.
- At
the core of the E3's plan lies the deeply flawed assumption that Iran can
be wooed into restraint through incremental "incentives." These
generally consist of easing financial pressure, lifting trade
restrictions, or delaying multilateral sanctions in exchange for ephemeral
commitments.
- Sadly,
Europe appears to be pursuing the worst lessons of appeasement: the
dangerous illusion is that you can temper a ravenous aggressor by
conciliation, weakness and generosity. The aggressor immediately sees that
the best route for him is to demand more. The cycle becomes
self-reinforcing.
- By
treating the Iranian regime as a legitimate negotiating partner — and by
discounting the moral and strategic gulf that separates it from liberal
democracies — Europe is bankrolling the terrorism industry.
- President
Donald J. Trump's current posture — doubling down on sanctions, refusing
immediate diplomacy until leverage is secured — should jolt Europe out of
its passivity.
- The
European Troika's charade must stop. Anything less just prolongs the
threat.
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