By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
How Hardliners Are Winning
We early on, in September, covered this subject with another
article emphasizing how isolated
the country has
become. . Over the past five months, a wave of protests has rocked Iran.
Young women calling for an end to the compulsory headscarf have been joined by
students, laborers, and professionals demanding individual rights, political
reform—and even, increasingly, an end to the Islamic Republic itself. These
demonstrations posed the most significant threat to Iran’s government since
1979, fueling speculation that today’s theocratic regime could ultimately go
the way of yesterday’s monarchy.
The regime has
retained the upper hand, thanks to a harsh crackdown by security forces and a
lack of leadership and coordination among the protesters. But widespread anger
is still mounting, and dire economic conditions make further unrest all but
inevitable.
So precarious is the
regime’s position that many insiders have publicly broken with the government
line. Grand ayatollahs in Najaf and Qom, former senior government officials,
and even decorated former commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps (IRGC) have criticized the government’s reaction to the protests and
decried the extent to which a small group of hardliners around President
Ebrahim Raisi has consolidated control. News outlets
popular with hardliners and close to the IRGC have openly faulted Raisi for his mismanagement of the economy, and regime
stalwarts, including former Presidents Mohammad Khatami and Hassan Rouhani and
former parliamentary Speaker Ali Larijani, have condemned the government’s
harsh reaction to the protests. Such critics have called for meaningful change
if the Islamic Republic is to weather the storm.
Since the start of
the crisis, hardliners have tightened their grip on the reins of power. This
faction opposes engagement with the West and does not wish to return to the
2015 nuclear deal. At home, it favors isolationism and tight control of the
social and political spheres. Abroad, it favors aggressive regional policies
and increasing collaboration with Russia. Far from chastened by the protests,
in other words, the regime that is now emerging from the initial phase of the
unrest is even more intransigent and potentially aggressive than ever before.
Khamenei’s Hard-Line
Iran’s hard
anti-Western turn is not driven by a desire to defend the regime’s Islamist
ideology. In every speech since the demonstrations began, Khamenei has said
little about religion—and a great deal about foreign meddling. Khamenei views
the protests as a U.S. conspiracy, hatched in concert with Israel and Saudi
Arabia, to weaken Iran and topple the Islamic Republic. In his mind, Iran must
mobilize all its resources to respond to this assault. Taking their cue from
Khamenei, security officials have blamed satellite television stations and
social media campaigns originating in Europe for stoking unrest in Iran and
mobilizing public opinion against the Islamic Republic. They have also blamed
turmoil in Iran’s Baluch and Kurdish regions on foreign interference. Last
fall, Iran rallied troops along its border with Azerbaijan and warned Iraq that
it might cross the border into that country to close down Kurdish separatist
camps.
Khamenei is
determined to preserve the regime he has ruled for over three decades. He is 83
years old and rumored to be in ill health. Compromise with dissenters at this
stage would sully his legacy and could even prove counterproductive. He
witnessed firsthand how accommodating protesters only hastened the collapse of
the monarchy in 1979.
Instead of caving to
the demonstrators or heeding critics’ advice, Khamenei has turned to violence
and repression. Since September, security forces have killed hundreds of
protesters, and many more have been maimed in crackdowns. Thousands of
protesters and dissidents are now in jail; four have been executed after
summary trials, and several face the death penalty. The regime has used sophisticated
surveillance; threats against families, employers, and businesses of
protesters; and propaganda and economic pressure to quell the unrest.
Khamenei has
also relied more heavily on the counsel of hardliners within the IRGC, the
intelligence agencies, parliament, and the media. To Khamenei,
these people understand the problem as he does, share his distrust of the
West, and oppose the nuclear deal as a trap designed to cage Iran. In
Khamenei’s mind, their distrust has been vindicated, so they should be
empowered to shun the West, restrict and censor the internet, and pursue
economic and cultural autonomy. These views have long existed within the halls
of power, but the protests have added to their prominence.
The protests have
also dimmed the prospects of restoring the 2015 nuclear deal. Since the
demonstrations erupted in September 2022, Western leaders have winced at the
suggestion that sanctions could be lifted as part of a nuclear agreement. The
Biden administration is even reluctant to pursue the release of U.S. prisoners
held by Iran, fearful of the domestic backlash it would incur if Iranian assets
were unfrozen as part of any deal. But hardliners in Tehran are unfazed by
Western opprobrium. They have invited still more sanctions by executing young
protesters and raising the possibility that the EU could designate the IRGC as
a terrorist organization.
Iran is heading into
choppy waters at the United Nations as well. Tehran’s nuclear infractions have
alarmed the International Atomic Energy Agency, whose chief recently told the
European Parliament that Iran has amassed highly enough enriched uranium for
“several nuclear weapons.” The IAEA could soon refer Iran to the UN Security
Council for censure, raising the possibility that it will reimpose UN
sanctions, especially since France, the United Kingdom, and the United States
are all eager to maintain an embargo on the sale of arms and missiles to the
Islamic Republic. Iran has threatened to respond to such a scenario by leaving
the Non-Proliferation Treaty, declaring that it will become a nuclear state.
Doing so could lead to confrontation with Israel, which attacked a
weapons-manufacturing facility in the Iranian city of Isfahan, and potentially
with the United States last month. As U.S. President Joe Biden has repeatedly
stated, his administration will not tolerate Iran becoming a nuclear state.
Iran has responded to
its deepening international isolation by drawing closer to Russia. Khamenei and
the IRGC have long viewed the Kremlin as a vital ally. Khamenei and Russian
President Vladimir Putin share the same jaded view of the West. Russia’s war in
Ukraine has brought Tehran’s and Moscow’s common grudge against the United
States into sharper focus. Khamenei brushed aside criticism from the ruling elite
to approve the supply of sophisticated drones to Moscow, which the Russian
military has used to wreak havoc in Ukraine. With the United States and its
European and Middle Eastern partners arrayed against the Islamic Republic,
Khamenei argued, Iran must consolidate its relationship with Russia where it
matters most: on the battlefield. Russia’s poor military performance in Ukraine
makes Moscow a more valuable strategic crutch because as long as the Kremlin
needs Iranian weapons, it is unlikely to turn its back on Tehran.
Iran’s decision to
provide Russia with drones predictably deepened Western anger at the Islamic
Republic, pushing Tehran closer to Moscow. In this vicious cycle, the winner
will be hardliners who have always favored closer ties between Iran and Russia
and decoupling from the West. As Iran drifts further into Russia’s orbit, the
power of these hardliners will grow, improving the odds that they will prevail
in Iran’s looming succession battle.
Iran is now seeking to
become indispensable to Russia’s war effort in Ukraine. The more Putin needs
Iran, the more likely he is to flout Western sanctions and provide Tehran with
necessary military hardware and technology, including advanced fighter jets and
air defense systems. Media outlets connected to the IRGC reported last month
that Iran would receive two dozen advanced Russian Sukhoi Su-35 air defense
fighters by March and is looking to acquire helicopters and an advanced
S-400 air defense system, which is capable of tracking U.S. F-35 fighter jets.
Such acquisitions would significantly boost Iran’s military capability,
enabling it to counter better Israeli air power in Syria and Iraq and U.S.
military pressure in the Persian Gulf. They would also give Tehran the confidence
to absorb Western pressure and plan for a potential military attack in response
to its expanded nuclear activities.
For all these
reasons, Iran’s neighbors are increasingly alarmed by Tehran’s drift toward
Moscow, fearful that it could further entrench Iranian hardliners and make Iran
even more dangerous. Ultimately, the West could face separate crises involving
Russia and Iran and the additional problem of managing their joint behavior.
This issue would be larger than the sum of its parts.
Action Over Hope
Some Western
officials and analysts hope that the power grab by Iran’s hardliners will
accelerate the protests and eventually lead to regime change. But hope is a
poor substitute for action. Thus far, the United States and European countries
have relied on sanctions and threats of war to deter Iran’s aggressive
behavior. But Israel is restive and could escalate its efforts to sabotage
Tehran’s military and nuclear programs. Doing so would only reinforce Iran’s
militant anti-Western convictions and risk an open conflagration that the
United States and its allies can ill afford amid their standoff with Russia and
China.
Therefore, Washington
and its allies best devise a credible strategy to at least slow Iran’s hard-line turn. Such a strategy will require coupling
threats and punishments with dialogue on the most urgent dangers from the
Islamic Republic, including Iran’s role in the war in Ukraine and the expansion
of Tehran’s nuclear program. Iranian and Ukrainian officials recently met in
Oman to discuss Iran’s role in the war. This was a good start. Europe and the
United States should build on such efforts, launching a broader diplomatic
initiative beyond the stalled nuclear talks to encompass Ukraine and regional
issues. Otherwise, Iran’s hardliners will continue to push the country in an
ever more dangerous direction.
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