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Before Piling on New Sanctions, Give Rouhani a Chance

The election of Hassan Rouhani as president of Iran may be a diplomatic opening to prevent an Iranian nuclear weapon, so the US Congress should not undermine it with more sanctions.
Supporters of moderate cleric Hassan Rohani hold a picture of him as they celebrate his victory in Iran's presidential election on a pedestrian bridge in Tehran June 15, 2013. Rohani won Iran's presidential election on Saturday, the interior ministry said, scoring a surprising landslide victory over conservative hardliners without the need for a second round run-off. REUTERS/Fars News/Sina Shiri (IRAN - Tags: POLITICS ELECTIONS)  ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. FOR  EDITORIAL U

There is widespread agreement in Washington that Iranian acquisition of nuclear weapons is unacceptable and that all options should remain on the table to prevent this outcome. There is also a broad consensus that an enduring diplomatic solution to the nuclear crisis is preferable to military action against Iran — a step that would delay but not end the country’s nuclear program and could unleash further instability in an already tumultuous region. Both an Iranian bomb and bombing Iran could prove disastrous, but with each passing day, Tehran’s continued nuclear progress brings us closer to one of these two futures.

The surprising June 14 election of moderate Hassan Rouhani, a former nuclear negotiator who campaigned on improving Iran’s economy and relations with the world, as Iran’s new president may provide an opportunity to move beyond the nuclear impasse. Indeed, in many respects, Rouhani’s election represents a repudiation of the policy of “resistance” on the nuclear program pursued by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and outgoing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, which has produced Iran’s growing isolation and its economic devastation.

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