
Since 2006, the United States has imposed more sanctions on Iran than any other country, so it may have to cede the most ground to get a nuclear deal in 2014. Over the years, Republican and Democratic administrations have issued at least 16 executive orders, and Congress has passed 10 statutes imposing punitive sanctions. What does Tehran want? What are the six major powers considering as incentives to cooperate? What isn’t on the table? The White House and Congress have imposed their own types of sanctions. What would either need to do to lift them? What difference would the various sanctions relief packages make to Iran?
            On July 8, four  panelists will address the complex questions and  challenges of  sanctions in the Iran nuclear talks. It’s the last of  three discussions  hosted by an unprecedented coalition of eight  Washington think tanks  and organizations to coincide with the last three  rounds of  negotiations. A rundown of the second event is available on  USIP’s The  Iran Primer with a video, and on USIP’s blog The Olive  Branch. The  coalition includes the U.S. Institute of Peace, RAND, the  Woodrow  Wilson International Center for Scholars, the Arms Control  Association,  the Center for a New American Security, the Stimson Center,   Partnership for a Secure America, and the Ploughshares Fund.
Speakers at the July 8th event include:
- Suzanne Maloney
 Brookings Institution fellow and former State Department Policy Planning
- Kenneth Katzman
 Congressional Research Service and former CIA analyst
- Elizabeth Rosenberg
 Center for New American Security and former Treasury Department senior advisor
- Robin Wright, Moderator
 Journalist and Author, U.S. Institute of Peace and Woodrow Wilson International Center
 
