By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
Here is a useful bit of counterfactual history to think
on right now:
Imagine a world in which Saddam Hussein had been … smart.
If you were not around for the events that followed the
Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990, you may not appreciate how powerfully the
U.S. response—Operation Desert Storm, launched in January 1991—shocked not only
the Middle East but the entire world. Bush may have been too bipartisan and
accommodating (that broken tax pledge!) for some of his detractors on the
right, but he was, and arguably remains, the most capable man to serve
in the U.S. presidency since Dwight Eisenhower. He quickly assembled a
wide-ranging coalition—his intelligent maneuvering to keep the Israelis on the
sidelines enabled a multi-nation response that included not only NATO members
but also Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Syria—and, apparently having exorcised the
ghosts of Vietnam when no one was looking, handed the Iraqis a beating that
made war look like a weekend outing. Every intelligent observer knew the
Americans would rout the Iraqis, but the extraordinary
lopsidedness of the fight was something of a wake-up call from Tehran to
Brussels, to say nothing of Moscow and Beijing.
The American assault on retreating Iraqi forces in late
February 1991—not quite as brutal as legend has it, but an unsentimental
move—put an exclamation mark at the end of the sentence. A more intelligent
kind of dictator, having received a beating that humiliatingly effortless,
might have changed his course, and if Saddam Hussein had sobered up and decided
that Lee
Kuan Yew might be a better role model than Joseph Stalin—well, he could
have kept the mustache and might have ended up dying
in bed in a wealthier, more secure Iraq.
There is more than one way to do regime change. In Iraq,
the United States ended up invading and occupying the country, deposing Saddam
Hussein, and trying and failing to set up a durable reform and reconstruction
project along the lines of what was done in postwar Japan. Now lacking the
appetite for such multigenerational projects, the United States left Iraq free
of one brutal caudillo but subject to a series of setbacks and
disasters: Baathist
revanchism, the Islamic State, Iranian interference. Iraq is better off
today than it was under Saddam Hussein (a very low bar to clear), but the
overthrow of that earlier regime did not produce the results the United States
wanted.
Another way of saying this is that when it comes to
regime change, the change is more important than the regime.
The Israeli
and American
assaults on Iran have conspicuously spared the political leaders of the
so-called Islamic republic. The Israelis have shown that they can get to almost
anybody in Iran they choose, and it is difficult to conclude that this has been
anything other than an intentional choice. The Trump administration’s
forswearing of an Iraq-style occupation and the president’s characteristically
barstool-level talk about not killing Iranian leader Ali Khamenei “at
least not for now” underlines that choice, if in crayon.
The message in that seems clear enough: What Israel and
the United States expect from Iran is regime change—a change in the character
and the behavior of the regime, if not in its personnel. When the ayatollahs greenlit
the brutal attack on Israeli civilians on October 7, 2023, they obviously
miscalculated the response, probably in the mistaken belief that Benjamin
Netanyahu’s difficult political position and the United States’ post-Iraq
nausea at the prospect of another Middle Eastern entanglement would keep the
superior military forces of their enemies on a political leash. Instead, Iran
has been deprived of its main proxies (Hamas and Hezbollah) and their critical
base of operations in Gaza, and now its nuclear facilities have suffered a
direct U.S. attack—the efficacy of which remains unknown as the Trump
administration and the Defense Intelligence Agency offer
different evaluations.
Israel is a thriving democracy with a sophisticated
high-tech economy. The United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and other Gulf states have
followed a path that we might describe as liberal authoritarianism—not much in
the way of political rights but oriented toward trade, investment, economic
development, and a more widely shared prosperity. Saudi Arabia under Crown
Prince Mohammed bin Salman has followed a reformist path as well, if not as
deeply or as quickly as many in the West would prefer. Iran is neither Arab nor
a monarchy, but the Arab monarchies provide potentially instructive models for
would-be reformers there.
As it stands, Iran remains stuck in the quagmire of its
outmoded revolutionary ideologies, partly informed by Islamist radicalism and
partly (more than many U.S. observers seem to appreciate) by a more
familiar left-wing sensibility subsumed within its revolutionary dogma,
nationalist ideologies of the kind associated with 20th century
Third World liberationist movements, and other elements. Pro-market autocracy
along Emirati lines is far from ideal, but similar models have produced their
share of long-term success stories, too: Singapore, Chile, the Republic of
Korea. Spain and Portugal both had been under nationalist military
dictatorships during my lifetime but grew more democratic and more free as they
grew more prosperous. None of that should be taken as minimizing the horrific
abuses of an Augusto Pinochet or a Chun Doo-hwan, and the counterexample of
China is a very prominent reminder that while a little bit of capitalism can do
miracles, it is no guarantee of more general liberty. But Iran does not need to
become Switzerland by Friday to begin the process of becoming a more normal,
more prosperous, happier country that is better integrated into the wider world
order.
If the Tehran regime should change without being
subjected to “regime change” per se, nobody would be better pleased than
Iran’s supposed enemies in Israel and the United States—nobody except, perhaps,
the Iranian people, who have been taking it in the neck for far too long.
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