Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Iran & Sanctions Part II


# Problem context
Iran has built a number of civilian nuclear facilities that are legal under the NPT (nuclear non proliferation treaty) which Iran is a member of. But major European powers as well as the United States are suspicious that these facilities, although designed to produce electricity and other civilian uses, can be used for military purposes, and are used to construct nuclear weapons.
# Behavior over time
 On and off cooperation with the IAEA. Iran’s level of cooperation has been irregular and at times lacking. After some reports of hidden activities, and the fact that they unveiled a previously undisclosed nuclear facility underground   made some countries very nervous. Some incentives suggested by the west such as keeping the spent fuel in a third party country has backfired as the Iranians questioned why other countries , that are not even part of the Nuclear non-Proliferation Treaty, get better treatment.
# Policies now in place or under consideration
  Multiple rounds of sanctions have been imposed by the United Nations Security Council, as well as additional sanctions imposed unilaterally by the US on the Iranian military and financial institutions. The intended policy of sanctions is to push Iran back to the negotiating table and to be more flexible in their demand for controlling their own enrichment process. Despite that being the intention, it seems it has so far only aggravated the problem and reduced the amount of trust between all parties, Increased sanctions have been met with defiance and saber rattling, and this could have the potential to be damaging for both sides, as Iran might not help with the already complex situations in Afghanistan and Iraq which they border and have a certain level of influence in. The risk of war or proxy wars is also possible.
Iran seems to be motivated by a number of factors. Nuclear power would help them divert their oil supplies for further exports and bring in money. From a cultural angle, the nuclear program is the pride of Iran at this time, and is viewed by many as a great scientific achievement. Any attempts, especially by foreign powers, to step in and reverse this technological achievement, will be considered deeply offensive.
# Issues and concerns with the current situation or policies
  There is a fear that sanctions can potentially hurt ordinary Iranian citizens. There is also the concern that Iranian scientists can still, despite the current policies of sanctions and frozen assets,
continue testing and maybe further mastering uranium enrichment, to either create a nuclear device secretly or master the technology to do so at a later date.
# Study purpose and questions to be addressed
 The purpose of this study is to use a systems approach to study the cause and effect of sanctions
and defiance, incentives and cooperation, and the potential risks of a large scale air strike on Iran.

B1) Iran, under the threat of sanctions and even military action, cooperates with the IAEA. This is the mental model.
B2) As Iranian enrichment continues, international pressure increases, increasing Iran’s cooperation with the IAEA, and therefore restricting enrichment efforts.
R1) The threats to ‘’punish’’ Iran hurts their national pride, triggering a reaction in the form of increased funding to the Revolutionary Guards,  who retaliate by funding anti-coalition groups in Iraq and Afghanistan, hence further raising the risk of military confrontation or sanctions.
R2) Security Council threats trigger an escalation which results in an increase in Iranian missile testing, which itself increases international pressure.
R3) The threats to punish Iran hurts their national pride, triggering a reaction this time in the form of increased funding for the Revolutionary Guards,  which, after a delay, (the time it takes funding to translate into action) increase the testing of long range missile systems, which aggravates the problem and further  raises the risk of confrontation.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Iranian Nuclear Program


# Problem context
Iran has built a number of civilian nuclear facilities that are legal under the NPT (nuclear non proliferation treaty) which Iran is a member of. But major European powers as well as the United States are suspicious that these facilities, although designed to produce electricity and other civilian uses, can be used for military purposes, and are used to construct nuclear weapons.
# Behavior over time
 On and off cooperation with the IAEA, and some reports of hidden activities, making some countries very nervous.
# Policies now in place or under consideration
  Multiple rounds of sanctions have been imposed by the United Nations Security Council, as well as additional sanctions imposed unilaterally by the US on the Iranian military and financial institutions.
# Issues and concerns with the current situation or policies
  There is a fear that sanctions can potentially hurt ordinary Iranian citizens. There is also the concern that Iranian scientists can still, despite the current policies of sanctions and frozen assets,
continue testing and maybe further mastering uranium enrichment, to either create a nuclear device secretly or master the technology to do so at a later date.
# Study purpose and questions to be addressed
 The purpose of this study is to use a systems approach to study the cause and effect of sanctions
and defiance, incentives and cooperation, and the potential risks of a large scale air strike on Iran.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Dutch Disease

The following diagram is a simplified depiction of what is known as the ‘’Dutch Disease’’ or the curse of plenty. In short, it is the situation faced by a number of economies who were suddenly able to export large amounts of a natural resource they possess, and the effects of such a policy is reflected by the diagram. Loosely based on the Australian experience, this diagram attempts to portray the effects of such a ‘’disease’’ on the rest of the economy and what happens to the people and their currency after the ‘’delay’’.


Monday, September 13, 2010

2 possible scenarios I thought about that I can represent as a complex system:

1)The human body. But I wanted to display a scenario where the body, as a system, fails due to hypothermia.
I will have a step by step sequence of how the individual body parts, skin, etc are affected by this situation, and how, unless the person leaves the hostile environment, will start experiencing organ failure, step by step.
 soft points: the persons endurance in the cold
 hard points: the outside temperature, body temperature.

2) Coalition forces have been in Iraq since 2003. US combat troops withdrew this year, and Iraqis handle their own affairs.
 Many internal and external forces will make or break the new Iraqi democracy... examples are Iraq's neighbors and their influence, most importantly Iran. Other examples can be internal, such as whether the Sunni minority will accept a Shia majority government, and other variables. These factors can be represented as probabilities, once all put in a system can give as the chances of Iraq becoming a successful sovereign nation, or descend into more civil war.
Hard points: success of next election, nature of US- Iran relations
Soft points: whether the insurgency will go after US withdraws