By Victoria Coates
Monday, August 02, 2021
By adapting the Obama-era policy of
“strategic silence” in the wake of the selection of Supreme Leader Ali
Khamenei’s enforcer Ebrahim Raisi as president of Iran, the Biden
administration is tacitly endorsing his appointment, presumably in hopes of
persuading him to return to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or nuclear
deal, after his inauguration in August. The ballooning social protests across
Iran, however, suggest that a return to “strategic silence” at this critical
juncture could be as great a missed opportunity this summer as it was twelve
years ago when the then Obama administration studiedly ignored the greatest
threat to the Islamic Republic since its inception in 1979. A more productive
policy might be to revisit the successful Cold War precedent, summed up in the
word “solidarity,” for forward-leaning engagement with the Iranian people.
In June 2009, as tens of thousands of
brave Iranians took to the streets to protest the fraudulent reelection of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as president, John Kerry, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, wrote in
the New York Times to caution “neoconservatives” to “think
before you speak” about developments in Iran. Kerry cautioned that, while he
was “inspired” by the protesters and “sympathized” with their aspirations,
strongly supporting them would only empower the hardliners. President Obama, on
the other hand, by keeping quiet and “offering negotiation and conciliation to
Tehran,” had “put the extremists on the defensive.” The result of this
remarkable discretion was the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, or Iran
nuclear deal.
Following the corrupt and undemocratic
selection of Raisi as president, the Biden administration has reprised the
silent treatment, declining even to put out an anodyne statement on this
theater-of-the-absurd form of democracy from the State Department let alone
anything from President Biden himself. This glaring omission began to get so much
attention that the State
Department spokesman felt compelled to respond that
comments in his daily briefing were the statement, a claim that is laughable
given State’s routine practice of putting out statements on
elections, great and small, around the world. The decision not to condemn the elections is so obviously the price
for the ongoing nuclear talks in Vienna that it hardly requires articulation.
But for two reasons the Biden
administration might want to reconsider its decision to not condemn the Iranian
“elections.” First, Raisi is a particularly dangerous combination of thug and
cleric. Second, the Iranian people may be waiting for just the sort of robust
encouragement the Obama administration withheld in 2009.
One thing the election made clear is that
the Supreme Leader no longer sees a benefit to paying lip service to
useful-stooge “reformists” in the regime, such as outgoing president Hasan
Rouhani and foreign minister Javed Zarif. Raisi’s background suggests that he
has a very important — and potentially personal — role in maintaining the
Khamenei family’s control of Iran.
The new president cut his authoritarian
teeth in the 1979 Islamic revolution, and he quickly became prominent in the
Iranian judiciary, a position he used to coordinate the brutal crackdowns on
any dissent, including the 1988 wholesale massacre of political prisoners,
which was part of the case the Trump administration built in 2019 to sanction
him under Executive Order 13876 targeting the inner members of the Supreme Leader’s circle. Raisi
also spent three years as the chairman of Astan Quds Razavi, an organization
that is ostensibly a religious
charity but is actually part of the shadowy
network of slush funds making up the Khamenei family fortune.
Raisi therefore knows where the bodies are
literally buried in the Supreme Leader’s support structure, as well as how to
clamp down on any burgeoning opposition — making him the ideal candidate to
oversee any unrest that might emerge around the time of Khamenei’s abdication
or death. This is not to say there is any precise knowledge of when that might
take place, but it would be logical to assume it might well be during the four
or eight years of Raisi’s tenure. While the Supreme Leader’s ultimate goal is
likely to ensure the elevation of his son, Mojtaba (also sanctioned under E.O.
13876), to the Supreme Leadership, Raisi would be an excellent caretaker to
ensure that the succession takes place and that the family’s fortune is
preserved.
While these developments are certainly in
the best interests of Khamenei, they are not likely to be well received by the
Iranian people, for whom regime corruption is a top concern. They know
perfectly well that as they have suffered and starved under the international
sanctions placed on Tehran, the top clerics and generals have grown enormously
wealthy off profiteering and illicit oil sales while stifling what little (if
any) opportunities exist for democratic change. Regime apologists explained the
shockingly low participation in the June 18 presidential elections as voter “apathy,” but apathy does not appear to be the cause, as the second-place
finisher, after Raisi, was a blank or deliberately voided ballot. While we
cannot know the precise number, this organized campaign combining boycott and
rejection of all the candidates may have gotten as much as 75 percent of the
vote. The Iranian people may not be so apathetic after all.
In addition, protests have broken out
across Iran in recent weeks, but, unlike the primarily political protests of
2009, these uprisings are being fueled as well by social issues, such as unrest
among the labor unions over reduced wages and dangerous conditions,
particularly in the petroleum sector. These demonstrations pose a significant
challenge to the regime, as indiscriminate murders of these workers could
provoke additional strikes and disruptions in production in this critical
industry that the weakened Iranian economy could not sustain. In addition,
protests in Khuzestan Province over a severe water shortage are spreading
across the country, in a sort of collective cri de coeur against the systemic
corruption and mismanagement by Tehran that has turned a wealthy, resourceful
country into a barren desert.
When directly asked in press conferences,
the State Department reports that it is “monitoring” the situation, but it took
more than three weeks to issue any official statement, and then only from the
press secretary, who “urged the Iranian government to allow its citizens to
exercise their right to freedom of expression and to freely access information, including via the Internet,”
which is hardly a robust expression of support from senior officials in
Washington.
As Raisi prepares for his inauguration
this week, it has been revealed that Iran is responsible for the attack on
the Mercer Street (a civilian commercial vessel tied to
Israel) in the Arabian Gulf that killed two members of its crew, in a clear
signal that Tehran is doubling down on its belligerent hostility toward the
United States and our allies regardless of the conciliatory gestures and
concessions from the Biden administration. But if the demonstrations continue
to intensify, there could be one last opportunity — before the Iranian regime
entrenches itself for another generation — for American political leadership to
change course and speak up powerfully on behalf of the protesters and to
galvanize international opposition to the regime that has oppressed Iranians
for so long.
After all, such a tactic helped the United
States win the Cold War: America successfully supported the Polish labor
movement in the 1980s through mechanisms such as the congressionally funded
National Endowment for Democracy, and it encouraged U.S. unions to support
their Polish counterparts. Potential Iranian regional allies such as Israel and
Saudi Arabia, which are at the cutting edge of water security, can publicly
outline plans to reverse Iran’s catastrophic water shortage. Congress can
finally move to provide free and uncensored
satellite Internet access so
the protesters can organize and get their story to the outside world. This show
of solidarity might be just what the Iranian people need to reshape their
destiny, but it won’t happen if President Biden and his administration continue
to pursue a strategy of silence.
No comments:
Post a Comment