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Sat. Nov. 17, 2007

Politics in depth > Asia > Politics & Economy

Opinion

Tehran's Chess Game

The Threat of an American Strike*

By  Omid Memarian

Journalist - USA

 
Image

Iran's new Chief Nuclear Negotiator Saeed Jalili speaks with journalists at a news conference in Tehran November 15, 2007. (Reuters Photo)

The resignation of Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran's national-security council and top nuclear negotiator, on 20 October has provoked much discussion about what it might reveal of Tehran's complex intra-regime politics.

What has been less remarked is that this was the second key personnel change among Iran's governing elite in the past two months. This sequence of events, reflecting the key arguments and calculations of Iran's top leaders, signifies the emergence of a revised political strategy designed to cope with the heightened threat of an US military action.
 
The moderate conservative Larijani was replaced by deputy foreign minister for European and American affairs Saeed Jalili (who may have a lower profile in the West than Larijani, but has the advantage of being a close advisor of both President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei's closest advisors).

The move was a surprise - it took place only days before the meeting between Iranian and international representatives over Iran's nuclear program on 23 October in Rome (which Larijani still attended in his national-security council capacity).

What gives it added significance is that it follows the replacement with effect from  September of General Rahim Safavi as commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary Guards by General Mohammad Ali Jafari, who has a poor reputation among Iranian civil-society activists for his role in suppressing social movements in the late 1990s.
 
This reshuffle at the top involves more than "routine" political rivalries: it signifies the Islamic Republic's preparation for the worst-case scenario of a US military strike. The calculation is that the appointment of obedient middle-level officials such as Jalili and Jafari is likely to solidify the collective leadership Iran needs during a tense period where the possibility of armed escalation is very real.
 
What lies behind this calculation? And is the removal of Larijani and Safavi more likely to invite or avert war?
 
An Inevitable Confrontation?
 

The conservatives inside Iran's regime believe that any flexibility on Tehran's part will only encourage US aggression.  
The conservatives inside Iran's regime share a conviction: that the United States wishes to confront Iran regardless of their response to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) over the country's nuclear plans, and indeed that any flexibility on Tehran's part will only encourage US aggression. In their mind, if the US neo-conservatives have already decided to pursue the military option against Iran, nothing will stop them.

Thus, so the thinking goes within the Islamic Republic's inner councils: by matching Washington's high-profile military maneuvers and belligerent rhetoric, Iran's hardliners seek to remind the Bush administration that any form of war would carry a heavy military cost to the US (and a political one for the Republican Party, particularly in light of the upcoming 2008 elections).
 
The argument in Tehran, then - counterintuitive though it may seem - is that a "moderate", more amenable negotiating line (which Larijani and Safavi could be portrayed as espousing) is more likely to lead to war; whereas a tougher stance towards the Americans - who are already facing severe challenges in Iraq, Afghanistan, and potentially Pakistan - is more likely to encourage them to negotiate.

An Elite Division

The difference between this outlook and the more realistic view of Iran's military and political capabilities presented by Larijani and Safavi intensified in recent months. The growing tension between Ahmadinejad and Larijani over Iran's nuclear strategy became especially acute, not least when the president intervened at delicate stages with overheated rhetoric to signal that that he was "the man in charge". Three such moments are worthy of note.

First, the discussions between Ali Larijani and the European Union in Berlin in September 2006 were accompanied by leaked suggestions that the Iranian negotiators had agreed to suspend uranium-enrichment activities for a limited time.

Immediately thereafter, Ahmadinejad denounced the west in a speech in Karaj even for asking Iran to suspend its nuclear work. Larijani's denial that any conversations of this kind (which would indicate possible Iranian flexibility) had taken place, effectively reduced him from the status of a seasoned diplomat in charge of one of the most important political issues in the Iranian Republic's history to that of a "messenger" between the president and the EU.

Ahmadinejad has always felt threatened by Larijani, who was one of the candidates in the presidential elections of 2005.
Second, the political division between the two erupted during the security conference held in Munich on 9-11 February 2007, also attended by the US defence secretary, Robert Gates. There, Ali Larijani stated that Iran is ready for further discussions on the nuclear issue; again, Ahmadinejad - attending a commemoration of the Iranian revolution at the time - instantly responded, calling those who would abandon Iran's nuclear ambitions as "the most abhorrent".
 
Third, Larijani's attempt at negotiations with the EU's foreign-policy chief Javier Solana in September 2007 were undermined by Ahmadinejad during the latter's trip to New York to speak at the United Nations general assembly (and Columbia University); the president insisted that Iran's nuclear dossier is a closed case and negotiations with the west would be pointless.
 
Ahmadinejad has always felt threatened by Larijani, who was one of the seven candidates given permission to run in the presidential elections of 2005. Larijani was the candidate most favoured by the conservatives, including the supreme leader. In the event, the success of Ahmadinejad's populist campaign overturned expectations, and in the aftermath Ayatollah Khamenei decided to assign Larijani to the secretariat of Iran's national-security council.

This is only one of the factors explaining why Larijani has always felt a sense of accountability to Khamenei rather than Ahmadinejad. There are also family reasons (Larijani is the son of a grand ayatollah, and is married to the daughter of Ayatollah Morteza Motahari, a very influential cleric who was assassinated at the beginning of the revolution in 1979) and class-elite ones (he has held numerous high-ranking positions, including commander in the Revolutionary Guard, minister of culture and head of national television).
 
On the Precipice
 

Ahmadinejad has made the nuclear issue a matter of national pride.
This background notwithstanding, it seems that the supreme leader decided to support Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's tactics against Larijani and take a hard line over the nuclear issue. This interpretation is supported by a remark of Hamid Reza Taraghi, a ranking conservative and a member of the Hezb-e Motalefeye Eslami (Islamic Coalition Party), who asserted that "if the supreme leader did not agree, Larijani would never have been asked to resign".
 
Seyyed Mohammad Ali Abtahi, who served as deputy to ex-president Mohammad Khatami, has said that the west's perception of Larijani's resignation contains perils for Iran. Abtahi comments: "Larijani had to prepare himself for negotiations while the president announced the case was closed, and of course it is futile to negotiate about a closed case. (His resignation), which will be viewed as Iran's lack of accountability to international demands, is important and dangerous news for Iran."

Iran has repeatedly refused to halt its uranium-enrichment programme, claiming that it is being pursued solely for civil purposes. The UN Security Council, in its two resolutions of December 2006 and March 2007, has demanded substantial cuts in this programme. Ahmadinejad has made the issue a matter of national pride, and it is very unlikely that he and the senior figures in the regime - Saeed Jalili and Mohammad Ali Jafari among them - will back down.

The Islamic Republic may still at one level be eager to resolve its difficulties with the west, yet it is clearly unwilling to retreat from its tough stance on the nuclear question. Tehran's underestimation of the international community's determination to prevent Iran from completing a nuclear-fuel cycle could yet result in great harm to Iran. It is calculating that toughness pays. The problem is, so does Washington. This situation really is "dangerous".


* The article was originally published on openDemocracy.
 


Omid Memarian is a peace fellow at the Graduate School of Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. He has won several awards, including Human Rights Watch's highest honour in 2005, the Human Rights Defender Award.

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