(Credit: Debka)
Video version
That
the current Iranian regime poses a problem for the free world is a fact of
life. But the Iranian
dilemma comes into even sharper focus following US President Donald Trump’s
withdrawal from the 2015 nuclear deal, and the escalation of long-standing
tensions between Iran and Israel into open military skirmishes,
Today’s
difficulties stem back to the Iranian revolution of 1979, which chased the Shah,
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, from the Peacock Throne. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the
revolution, believed fervently that he was on a holy mission to rid Iran – and
possibly the world − of what he saw as Western corruption and degeneracy, and
to return his country, under an Islamic theocracy, to religious purity.
(Credit: terre d'Iran)
Khomeini
and his radical Shia Muslim regime was viscerally opposed to 80 per cent of the
Islamic world − the Sunni branch of Islam − and in particular to its leading
state, Saudi Arabia. Rejecting Sunni
Islam as apostasy, Khomeini claimed to be the leader of the entire Muslim world,
a claim rejected by the Sunni Muslim rulers of the Middle East. During the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s,
Khomeini declared that Mecca − which
with Medina, two of Islam’s holiest shrines, lies within Saudi Arabia − was in
the hands of “a band of heretics” and should be liberated by true Muslims.
(Credit: UnitedWithIsrael)
Khomeini’s burning belief in the incontestable validity of his mission led him to undertake and to commission
acts of terror against Sunni Muslims and the West, regardless of the loss of
life involved. Starting in the 1980s, a wave of kidnappings, bombings, and assassinations were carried out across the
world, maintained after his death in 1989 by his successor, Ayatollah Ali
Khameini. These include the blowing up in
1983 of a van filled with explosives in front of the US embassy in Beirut,
killing 58 Americans and Lebanese, and the bombing in the same year of the
US Marine and French Drakkar barracks in Beirut, which killed 241 American and
58 French peacekeepers. On May 30, 2003, a US federal judge ruled that
Hezbollah carried out the attack at the direction of the Iranian government.
In 1989 Khomeini put a fatwa
on Indian-born British author Salman Rushdie because of his novel The
Satanic Verses, and the Iranian government offered $2.5 million for his
murder. A bombing in London in August
1989 was assumed to be a failed Hezbollah assassination attempt.
In 1992 Hezbollah operatives
boasted of their involvement in the bombing of the Israeli embassy in Argentina
killing 29 people. Two years later
Hezbollah claimed responsibility for the bombing of a Jewish community center
in Argentina and the subsequent death of 85 people. Argentinian courts concluded
that Iran was behind the attacks.
(Credit: telersurtv)
(Credit: telersurtv)
And so the list continues, spanning
the globe – 21 people, including 12 Jews, killed in an airplane attack in
Panama in 1994; the 1996 Khobar Towers bombing inside Saudi Arabia killing 19
US servicemen; the 2005 assassination of one-time Lebanese prime minister,
Rafik Hariri; the 2012 Burgas bus bombing in Bulgaria killing 6; on and on…
The deal to limit Iran’s nuclear
capabilities in exchange for a lifting of sanctions − a high-water mark of
ex-US President Barack Obama’s legacy − was pursued on the grounds that it would
encourage Iran to adopt a more reasonable approach to its dealings with the
West, and might even end decades of hostility. In the event the opposite has been the case.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guard have spent the billions of dollars they have
acquired in expanding their malign influence throughout the Middle East. Over the past three years Iraq, Yemen,
Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Lebanon and Israel have all been on the receiving
end of unprovoked acts of Iranian aggression.
In Syria Iran has used its
alliance with Assad to build what amounts to a state-within-a state, just as it did in neighboring
Lebanon in the 1980s when it set up Hezbollah. Until Israel’s recent air attack
which disabled much of Iran’s military infrastructure in Syria, the Guard had its
own airfield, underground command and control facilities, thousands of missiles,
its own dedicated drone base, and an estimated 20,000 Iranian-trained
militiamen at its disposal. The purpose of this investment, it seems clear, was
to increase Iran’s ability to confront Israel across the Golan Heights,
while Hezbollah – armed and equipped by Iran – tackles Israel from south
Lebanon.
It is doubtful if Iran’s strategic
objectives - to expand its Shia Crescent so as to dominate the region - have the backing of Russia’s President Vladimir Putin.
(Credit: NetRight Daily)
It was widely reported that Israel’s airstrikes on Iranian positions within Syria had been the subject of an understanding with Russia, and that in consequence there was never any danger of a military confrontation between them. In fact a day or two later, Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, flew to Moscow for face-to-face discussions with Putin.
(Credit: NetRight Daily)
It was widely reported that Israel’s airstrikes on Iranian positions within Syria had been the subject of an understanding with Russia, and that in consequence there was never any danger of a military confrontation between them. In fact a day or two later, Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, flew to Moscow for face-to-face discussions with Putin.
Moreover, Iran’s regional
ambitions, both religious and political, lie well beyond Russia’s aims for
Syria. Putin intervened in the Syrian
conflict in September 2015 in
order to secure Russia’s military foothold in western Syria. This he has achieved, gaining the additional
bonus of a vastly enhanced political presence in the Middle East. Now he is looking to secure some sort of
political compromise and to back out.
Putin understands perfectly well that any final settlement cannot leave
Iran entrenched inside Syria as a permanent military and political force. Netanyahu
must have made it quite clear that Israel, with whom Putin seeks a close
relationship, would not permit it, and would itself destroy any military
infrastructure if need be.
Meanwhile the problem of how to deal with Iran remains. Trump favors bankrupting it with sanctions,
in the hope, perhaps, that deteriorating economic conditions will induce the
population to rise up and overturn the regime − or that perhaps, in line with
his interchanges with the North Koreans, determined opposition might result in Iran agreeing to recast the nuclear deal. Alternatively, there is the course that
remains the bedrock of Obama’s and the Europeans’ policy – to attempt to bribe
the Iranian regime by continuing to lift sanctions and encouraging lucrative
trade deals, letting the nuclear consequences take care of themselves.
Which is more likely to yield an effective and lasting result?
Published in the MPC Journal, 21 May 2018:
http://mpc-journal.org/blog/2018/05/21/the-trouble-with-iran/
Published in the Eurasia Review, 24 May 2018:
https://www.eurasiareview.com/24052018-the-trouble-with-iran-oped/
Published in the Jerusalem Post, 27 May 2018:
https://www.jpost.com/Blogs/A-Mid-East-Journal/The-trouble-with-Iran-558371
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