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Iran's Regional Ambitions: Implications For Israel, Iraq, And The Gu

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  • Iran's Regional Ambitions: Implications For Israel, Iraq, And The Gu

    IRAN'S REGIONAL AMBITIONS: IMPLICATIONS FOR ISRAEL, IRAQ, AND THE GULF STATES
    Amir Taheri

    Die Judische, Austria
    http://www.juedische.at/TCgi/_v2/TCgi.cgi? target=home&Param_Kat=3&Param_RB=5&Par am_Red=8206
    July 18 2007

    Iran's national interest would be to regard Israel as a strategic
    ally and partner because Iran does not want a Middle East which is
    entirely Arab. But the Islamic Republic wants to lead the Muslim world,
    create an Islamic superpower, and save mankind from a Judeo-Christian
    conspiracy.Jerusalem contains the al-Aqsa Mosque, but it is a Sunni
    mosque. Iranians are Shi'ites and cannot pray there because their
    prayers would not be accepted. So liberating Jerusalem is a totally
    useless project from an Iranian religious perspective.

    · The majority of the Shi'ite clergy, in Iran and elsewhere, are
    against the Iranian regime. There are more Iranian mullahs in prison
    today than workers or intellectuals. All of the grand ayatollahs
    are now bitter enemies of the regime because it is a distortion of
    Shi'ite theology.

    · Those who are fighting the regime inside Iran are mostly industrial
    workers, who have been on strike in many areas. Another group fighting
    the regime is women, who are very active, especially in hundreds
    of NGOs. The regular Iranian armed forces, as distinct from the
    Revolutionary Guards, are also unhappy with the present situation.

    · The real issue in Iran is how it can find a way to emerge from its
    revolutionary experience, keep part of it, discard other parts, and
    really become a nation state. Once Iran has become a nation state,
    instead of a country devoted to an abstract cause, then it will
    display normal behavior and not be an existential threat to anybody.

    Defining Iran's National Interests

    There are 7 million Azeris in the Republic of Azerbaijan and about
    15-18 million Azeris in Iran. Yet, paradoxically, Iran is supporting
    Armenia against Azerbaijan because the Republic of Azerbaijan is
    pro-Western and pro-American. The only yardstick that matters for
    the Islamic Republic is not Iran's national interests, but its enmity
    toward the United States.

    Iran's national interest would be to regard Israel as a strategic
    ally and partner because Iran does not want a Middle East which is
    entirely Arab. It is in Iran's interest to have a Middle East in which
    there are also Persians, Kurds, Turks, Jews, Maronites, Christians,
    and Copts. If there was no Israel, all the negative energies of Arab
    chauvinism and pan-Arabism would be directed against Iran.

    Israel should normally be Iran's best ally in the region, but the
    Islamic Republic wants to lead the Muslim world, create an Islamic
    superpower, and save mankind from a Judeo-Christian conspiracy. Since
    the Arabs and the Sunni Muslims who are the majority are reluctant
    to accept Shi'ite Iran as a leader, Iran's response is to tell the
    Arabs to destroy Israel under Iran's leadership.

    The destruction of Israel has thus become a device to avoid any
    theological discussions. In British mosques, for instance, God makes
    a cameo appearance every now and then, but the discussions have become
    entirely political.

    Since there are many different Islamic sects and many different
    interpretations, the best way to prevent dissension is to avoid
    religion and talk about politics - Israel, Chechnya, Kashmir, the
    liberation of Andalusia - issues about which all Muslims can agree.

    Iran has created a special corps to liberate Jerusalem, but suppose
    Iran were to actually liberate Jerusalem. Jerusalem has no natural
    resources and is of no strategic value. It has the al-Aqsa Mosque,
    but it is a Sunni mosque. Iranians are Shi'ites and cannot pray there
    because their prayers would not be accepted. So liberating Jerusalem
    is a totally useless project from both an Iranian religious and
    national perspective.

    The real issue in Iran is how it can find a way to emerge from its
    revolutionary experience, keep part of it, discard other parts, and
    really become a nation state. Once Iran has become a nation state,
    then it will display normal behavior and not be an existential threat
    to anybody. A nation state's demands are tangible and quantifiable.

    They are about borders, sharing water, markets, access to raw
    materials, influence, security, and geo-politics. The problem with
    a country devoted to a cause is that a cause is an abstraction. A
    defender of a cause wants everything and has no interest in
    negotiations.

    A Moment of Disequilibrium in the Middle East

    The status quo in the Middle East has been shattered as a result
    of the wars in Afghanistan and in Iraq. Now we are in a moment of
    disequilibrium. The new Middle East will either be an American Middle
    East - democratic, pluralistic, and capitalistic - or it will be a
    Khomeinist Middle East. These are two different visions and they are
    in competition.

    Iran's original calculation was to wait until President Bush finishes
    out his term, but in recent months the leadership of the Islamic
    Republic seems to have decided that it does not have to wait Bush
    out - that Bush is already finished and the "good Americans" will
    soon be back in power. Therefore, the Islamic Republic has gone on
    the offensive, as can be seen in Iraq, Lebanon, Afghanistan, and
    Pakistan. For the first time since 1988, the Islamic Republic navy
    is stopping ships, seizing British sailors. It is also intensifying
    attacks on allied forces in parts of Iraq that were not affected
    by insurgency. The Iranians want to take the credit for themselves
    (instead of allowing al-Qaeda, or the Baathist remnants to do so)
    and to proclaim themselves as the leaders of the region.

    Everybody in the region is being affected. The Arabs in the Persian
    Gulf are afraid of even the peaceful use of Iran's nuclear energy
    because the Iranian nuclear plant is less than 32 kilometers from
    Kuwait. Polluted water will pour into the Gulf where Kuwaitis get
    90 percent of their water through desalination. The nuclear plant
    has a German design, but it was built by a Russian company, the same
    company that built the Chernobyl reactor. Also the plant is located
    in one of the most active earthquake zones in the world. Scientists
    at Tehran University sent a report to the regime that this was the
    wrong site for a nuclear plant.

    The Arabs, Russians, Europeans, and Pakistanis all assume that if
    they pressure the Islamic Republic, the Iranians would make a deal
    with the Americans. They also assume that the Americans will take
    care of the Iranians if they really get out of hand.

    The Saudis have created a group of eight - six Gulf Cooperation
    Council member states plus Egypt and Jordan. They also created another
    group of seven with Islamic countries like Pakistan, Indonesia and
    Malaysia plus Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Sudan, and for the first time
    excluded Iran. The Saudis are laying markers for a third vision of
    the Middle East, one that would be different from the American and
    Iranian visions.

    Fighting the Iranian Regime

    The majority of the Shi'ite clergy, in Iran and elsewhere, are against
    the Iranian regime. There are more Iranian mullahs in prison today than
    workers or intellectuals. Of all the grand ayatollahs, the last one who
    was still cooperating with the regime until the 1980s was Montazeri,
    who was supposed to be Khomeini's successor. They are now all bitter
    enemies of the regime because it is a distortion of Shi'ite theology.

    One can help the Iranian people by helping those who are fighting
    the regime inside Iran. These are mostly Iranian industrial workers,
    who have been on strike in many areas. The Islamic Republic wants to
    introduce a new labor code which they call Islamic, but it is really
    slavery in which the worker has absolutely no rights.

    Another group fighting the regime is women, who are very active,
    especially in hundreds of NGOs. Segments of Iranian society such as
    legal and medical associations, who elect their own leaders, have
    liberated themselves in some degree from the regime. The regular
    Iranian armed forces, as distinct from the Revolutionary Guards,
    are also unhappy with the present situation.

    The forces in Iran that are represented as revolutionary are shallow,
    and they maintain their power because they control the instruments of
    coercion - they can kill people, and they control the oil money. They
    have 3-5 million people linked to them through the distribution
    of favors.

    Iraq: Situation Not as Bad as People Think

    The Americans achieved all their objectives in the war in Iraq: they
    toppled Saddam Hussein and broke his war machine. The Iraqis wrote a
    constitution, held elections, and did what was necessary to create a
    new system. In terms of war aims, this has been a very successful war.

    If things are going badly in Iraq, the Iraqis will start leaving
    in droves. Indeed, many Sunnis have left Iraq and are becoming new
    refugees in Jordan and Syria. At the same time, many Shi'ites and
    Kurds have returned to Iraq.

    When things are going badly in Iraq, the flow of pilgrims to the holy
    shrines in Najaf and Karbala slows down. According to this criterion,
    the situation in Iraq is good because since the liberation, Iraq
    has hosted some 12 million pilgrims from all over the world, for the
    first time since the late 1980s. It makes Iraq the number one tourist
    destination in the Middle East. In addition, the Iraqi dinar has been
    appreciating against both the Iranian rial and the Kuwaiti dinar.

    Iraqi agriculture has made a comeback and for the first time since
    the 1950s Iraq is self-sufficient in food after peasants reclaimed
    their lands and started growing on it. They are even exporting a lot
    of food to Iran. Furthermore, the appearance of thousands of small
    businesses everywhere shows that the situation in Iraq is not as bad
    as people think.

    --Boundary_(ID_nns52SzbIgrbwTJ3b3FUFQ)--
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