By Trudy Rubin
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Unless the virus is quashed everywhere, it can resurge anywhere. That means the U.S. government has to be concerned about the skyrocketing epidemic in Iran, where a venal theocracy and crippling sanctions have left the population exposed.
We should also be concerned about (at least) four U.S. citizens (and half a dozen other Westerners) who are being held as political prisoners in Iran, where the crowded prisons are petri dishes of contagion, without medicine or disinfectants or gloves or temperature checks.
So here's a spot of good news: The pressure of the epidemic may force a humanitarian deal between Washington and Tehran. At the start of the Persian New Year, there are signs that Iran may free some U.S. citizens while Washington may finally facilitate desperately needed humanitarian aid to Tehran. Neither could happen too soon.
On Thursday, Iran released U.S. Navy vet Michael White on medical furlough to the Swiss Embassy in Tehran, which represents American interests.
White apparently had the misfortune to visit an Iranian girlfriend in 2018 in the northeastern city of Mashhad, at a time when Iran's Revolutionary Guards were seeking payback for U.S. sanctions, in the wake of the Trump administration's withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal.
Since then, Iran has been arresting Western academics and dual citizens visiting Iranian family members and holding them as hostages in future political bargaining.
White was sentenced to 13 years for "espionage" and is now suffering from cancer, besides being exposed to the virus. It's unclear yet when or whether White will be allowed to return home.
Equally painful is the case of dual Iranian American citizen and U.S. businessman Siamak Namazi, who was jailed in 2015 while visiting family in Tehran, and his then 80-year old father, Baquer, who was arrested the following year after he came to try to help his son. Baquer has been paroled but can't leave Tehran.
And, although the regime has furloughed tens of thousands of Iranian prisoners over the Nowruz holiday, Siamek remains in a crowded cell. "The only way to describe it is beyond horrific," his brother told NPR on Wednesday. "Imagine a room which is very, very small with 15, 20, 25 people crowded in there, not having access to basic products for disinfectants, not having medicine, not being tested. The prison is not containing the virus."
Nearby Namazi is dual British American citizen Morad Tahbaz, whom I've written about, held since 2018, whose crime was working with the Persian Heritage Wildlife Foundation to save endangered cheetahs (all nine of the PHWF staff were also imprisoned; one, a Canadian Iranian died during interrogation). Tahbaz also has cancer and hasn't been furloughed.
"The prisons by definition are the complete opposite of social distancing, like sitting ducks being sacrificed, a way to get rid of a lot of political prisoners," I was told by Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the U.S.-based Center for Human Rights in Iran.
So hats off to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for calling on Iran to release "all wrongfully detained Americans as COVID-19 spreads to Iranian prisons." He's also insisted that "any nation considering humanitarian assistance to Iran should seek the release of all dual and foreign nationals," i.e., hostages who come from Britain, France, Austria, and elsewhere.
But, of course, the question is what kind of aid the Iranian government would seek in return.
Only last week, the Trump administration piled more sanctions on Tehran, designed to further squeeze any efforts to evade past sanctions on Iranian oil sales. Oil sanctions have cratered the Iranian economy (with no clear U.S. definition of what it would take to get them lifted).
And there's no question that the sanctions have blocked Iranian access to desperately needed medical supplies and equipment to fight the coronavirus, even though humanitarian goods are supposed to be exempted.
Washington has just established a "Swiss humanitarian channel" to take food and medicine to Iran, which is starting trial operations. But any one business must receive written guarantees from the United States that they will not be sanctioned.
Such a limited channel at a time of coronavirus is surely a sham. True, the Iranian regime has been shockingly lax in confronting the pandemic, with many of its own political elite infected. But Iran's death toll is soaring. It has a decent health system, but without improved medical supplies its caseload could soon spiral out of control.
So Pompeo (together with European counterparts) should go big on a humanitarian aid deal in exchange for the release of Western hostages. This is not about Tehran regime change or shaming the ayatollahs. It's not about punishing Iran for its malfeasance in the Middle East.
"An urgent bypass to sanctions is needed to focus on the epidemic," says Ghaemi, "which is in everyone's interest. This is above geopolitics. It is about bringing a pandemic under control, about addressing a collective danger."
A pandemic explosion in Iran threatens us all.
Trudy Rubin (trubin@phillynews.com) is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Her commentary was distributed by Tribune Content Agency.