Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Iran. Show all posts

Thursday, March 16, 2023

China has shattered the assumption of US dominance in the Middle East

 

China has shattered the assumption of US dominance in the Middle East

Nic Robertson

Analysis by Nic Robertson, CNN

Published 12:21 AM EDT, Wed March 15, 2023

 

With a grandiose diplomatic flourish China brokered a rapprochement between Saudi Arabia and Iran, in the process upending US calculus in the Gulf and beyond.

 

While the United States has angered its Gulf allies by apparently dithering over morality, curbing arms supplies and chilling relations, Saudi Arabia’s King-in-waiting Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, known as MBS, has found a kindred spirit in China’s leader Xi Jinping.

 

Both are bold, assertive, willing to take risks and seemingly share unsated ambition.

 

Friday’s announcement that Riyadh and Tehran had renewed diplomatic ties was unexpected, but it shouldn’t have been. It is the logical accumulation of America’s diplomatic limitations and China’s growing quest to shape the world in its orbit.

 

Beijing’s claim that “China pursues no selfish interest whatsoever in the Middle East,” rings hollow. It buys more oil from Saudi Arabia than any other country in the world.  

 

Xi needs energy to grow China’s economy, ensure stability at home and fuel its rise as a global power.

 

His other main supplier, Russia, is at war, its supplies therefore in question. By de-escalating tensions between Saudi and Iran, Xi is not only shoring up his energy alternatives but, in a climate of growing tension with the US, also heading off potential curbs on his access to Gulf oil.

 

Xi’s motivation appears fueled by wider interests, but even so the US State Department welcomed the surprise move, spokesman Ned Price saying, “we support anything that would serve to deescalate tensions in the region, and potentially help to prevent conflict.”

 

Iran has buy-in because China has economic leverage. In 2021 the pair signed a trade deal reportedly worth up to $400 billion of Chinese investment over 25 years, in exchange for a steady supply of Iranian oil.

 

Tehran is isolated by international sanctions and Beijing is providing a glimmer of financial relief.

 

And, in the words of Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei last year, there’s also the hope of more to come as he sees geopolitical power shifting east.

 

Asia will become the center of knowledge, the center of economics, as well as the center of political power, and the center of military power,” Khamenei said.

 

Saudi has buy-in because war with Iran would wreck its economy and ruin MBS’s play for regional dominance. His bold visions for the country’s post fossil-fuel future and domestic stability depend on inwardly investing robust oil and gas revenues.

 

US State Department spokesman Ned Price pictured in July 2022.

US State Department spokesman Ned Price pictured in July 2022.

Stefani Reynolds/Pool/AFP/Getty Images

US influence on the wane

It may sound simple, but the fact the US couldn’t pull it off speaks to the complexities and nuance of everything that’s been brewing over the past two decades.

 

America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have burned through a good part of its diplomatic capital in the Middle East.

 

Many in the Gulf see the development of the war in Ukraine as an unnecessary and dangerous American adventure, and some of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s territorial claims over Ukraine not without merit.

 

 

What the global West sees as a fight for democratic values lacks resonance among the Gulf autocracies, and the conflict doesn’t consume them in the same way as it does leaders in European capitals.

 

Saudi Arabia, and MBS in particular, have become particularly frustrated with America’s flip-flop diplomacy: dialling back relations over the Crown Prince’s role in the murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi (which MBS denies); then calling on him to cut oil production swiftly followed by requests to increase it.

 

These inconsistencies have led the Saudis to hew policy to their national interests and less to America’s needs.

 

During his visit to Saudi last July, US President Joe Biden said: “We will not walk away and leave a vacuum to be filled by China, Russia, or Iran.” It seems now that the others are walking away from him.

 

China steps up

On Beijing’s part, China’s Gulf intervention signals its own needs, and the opportunity to act arrived in a single serving.

 

Xi helped himself because he can. The Chinese leader is a risk taker.

 

His abrupt ending of austere Covid-19 pandemic restrictions at home is just one example, but this is a more complex roll of the dice.

 

Mediation in the Middle East can be a poisoned chalice, but as big as the potential gains are for China, the wider implications for the regional, and even global order, are quantifiably bigger and will resonate for years.

 

 

Yet harbingers of this shake-up and the scale of its impact have been in plain sight for months. Xi’s high-profile, red-carpet reception in Riyadh last December for his first overseas visit after abandoning his domestic “zero-Covid” policy stirred the waters.

 

During that trip Saudi and Chinese officials signed scores of deals worth tens of billions of dollars.

 

China’s Foreign Ministry trumpeted Xi’s visit, paying particular attention to one particular infrastructure project: “China will deepen industrial and infrastructure cooperation with Saudi Arabia (and) advance the development of the China-Saudi Arabia (Jizan) Industrial Park.”

 

The Jizan project, part of China’s belt and road initiative, heralds huge investment around the ancient Red Sea port, currently Saudi’s third largest.

 

 

Opinion: What to make of China's role in the handshake heard round the world

Jizan lies close to the border with Yemen, the scene of a bloody civil war and proxy battle between Riyadh and Tehran since 2014, sparking what the United Nations has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

 

Significantly since Xi’s visit, episodic attacks by the Iran-backed Houthi rebels on Jizan have abated.

 

There are other effects too: the plans to upscale Jizan’s container handling puts Saudi in greater competition with the UAE’s container ports and potentially strains another regional rivalry, as MBS drives to become the dominant regional power, usurping UAE’s role as regional hub for global businesses.

 

Xi will have an interest seeing both Saudi Arabia and the UAE prosper, but Saudi is by far the bigger partner with higher potential global economic heft and, importantly, massive religious clout in the Islamic world.

 

Rivals share common ground on Iran policy

Where the UAE and Saudi align strongly is eschewing direct conflict with Tehran.

 

A deadly drone attack in Abu Dhabi late last year was claimed by the Houthis, before the rebels quickly rescinded it. But no one publicly blamed the Houthis’ sponsors in Tehran.

 

biden saudi crown prince split

'There is only so much patience one can have': Biden appears to back off vow to punish Saudi Arabia

A once shaky ceasefire in Yemen now also seems to be moving toward peace talks, perhaps yet another indication of the potential of China’s influence in the region.

 

Beijing is acutely aware of what a continued war over the Persian Gulf could cost its commercial interests – another reason why a Saudi/Iran rapprochement makes sense to Xi.

 

Iran blames Saudi for stoking the massive street protests through its towns and cities since September.

 

Saudi denies that accusation, but when Iran moved drones and long-range missiles close to its Gulf coast and Saudi, Riyadh called on its friends to ask Tehran to de-escalate. Russia and China did, the threat dissipated.

 

Questions remain over nuclear weapons

Tehran, despite US diplomatic efforts, is also closing in on nuclear weapons capability and Saudi’s MBS is on record saying he’ll ensure parity, “if Iran developed a nuclear bomb, we will follow suit as soon as possible.”

 

Late last week US officials said Saudi was seeking US security guarantees and help developing a civilian nuclear program as part of a deal to normalize relations with Israel, an avowed enemy of Iran’s Ayatollahs.

 

Indeed, when US Secretary of State Antony Blinken visited Israel late January, concerned over a rising Palestinian death toll in a violent year in the region, potential settlement expansions and controversial changes to Israel’s judiciary Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke to Blinken about “expanding the circle of peace,” and improving relations with Arab neighbours, including Saudi Arabia.

 

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in May 2021.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken (left) with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in May 2021.

Haim Zach/Government Press Office/Getty Images

But as Saudi seems to shift closer to Tehran, Netanyahu’s mission just got harder. While both Saudi and Israel strongly oppose a nuclear-armed Iran, only Netanyahu seems ready to confront Tehran.

 

“My policy is to do everything within Israel’s power to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons,” the Israeli leader told Blinken.

 

Riyadh favors diplomacy. As recently as last week the Saudi foreign minister said: “It’s absolutely critical … that we find and an alternative pathway to ensuring an (Iranian) civilian nuclear program.”

 

By improving ties with Tehran, he said, “we can make it quite clear to the Iranians that this is not just a concerns of distant countries but it’s also a concern of its neighbors.”

 

For years this is what America did, such as brokering the Iran nuclear deal, or JCPOA, in 2015.

 

Xi backed that deal, the Saudis didn’t want it, Iran never trusted it, Biden’s predecessor Donald Trump’s withdrawal confirmed Iran’s fears and sealed its fate, despite the ongoing proximity talks to get American diplomats seated at the table again.

 

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman welcomes Chinese President Xi Jinping in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on December 8, 2022.

5 key takeaways from Xi's trip to Saudi Arabia

Iran has raced ahead in the meantime, massively over-running the bounds of the JCPOA limits on uranium enrichment and producing almost weapons-grade material.

 

What’s worse for Washington is that Trump’s JCPOA withdrawal legacy tainted international perceptions of US commitment, continuity and diplomacy. All these circumstances perhaps signaled to Xi that his time to seize the lead on global diplomacy was coming.

 

Yet the Chinese leader seems to accept what Netanyahu won’t and what US diplomacy is unable to prevent: that sooner, rather than later, Iran will have a nuclear weapon. As such, Xi may be fostering Saudi-Iran rapprochement as a hedge against that day.

 

So Netanyahu looks increasingly isolated and the Israeli leader, already under huge domestic pressure from spiking tensions with Palestinians and huge Israeli protests over his proposed judicial reforms, now faces a massive re-think on regional security.

 

Pieces of regional puzzle shifting

The working assumption of American diplomatic regional primacy is broken, and Netanyahu’s biggest ally is now not as hegemonic as he needs. But by how much is still far from clear.

 

It’s not a knockout, but a gut blow, to Washington. How Xi calculates the situation isn’t clear either. The US is not finished, far from it, but it is diminished, and both powers are coexisting in a different way now.

 

Earlier this month, the Chinese leader made unusually direct comments accusing the US of leading a campaign against China and causing serious domestic woes.

 

Wang Yi, a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and director of the Office of the Central Foreign Affairs Commission attends a meeting with Secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council Ali Shamkhani and Minister of State and national security adviser of Saudi Arabia Musaad bin Mohammed Al Aiban in Beijing, China March 10, 2023. China Daily via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. CHINA OUT.

Iran and Saudi Arabia signal the start of a new era, with China front and center

“Western countries led by the United States have contained and suppressed us in an all-round way, which has brought unprecedented severe challenges to our development,” Xi told a group of government advisers representing private businesses on the sidelines of an annual legislative meeting in Beijing.

 

Meanwhile, Biden has defined the future US-China relationship as “competition not confrontation,” and he has built his foreign policy around the tenets of standing up for democracy.

 

It is striking that neither Xi, nor Khamenei, nor MBS are troubled by the moral dilemmas that circumscribe Biden. This is the big challenge the US president warned about, and now it’s here. An alternative world order, irrespective of what happens in Ukraine.

Monday, November 14, 2022

IS IRAN ON THE BRINK OF A NEW REVOLUTION?

 

IS IRAN ON THE BRINK OF A NEW REVOLUTION?

   

 

BY HAMMAD SARFRAZ |

Design: Ibrahim Yahya

   

PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 13, 2022

KARACHI:

From the outside looking in, seismic changes seem afoot in neighbouring Iran. While our own ongoing political turmoil has a stranglehold on headlines and airwaves at home, the Islamic Republic has been rocked by youth-led protests on a scale seemingly unprecedented since the 1979 revolution that brought its ruling order to power.

Triggered by the tragic death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini following arrest and alleged torture at the hands of Iran’s Guidance Patrol, mass demonstrations against Iran’s hyper-conservative government have been taking place and gathering strength since September. Young women, especially from schools and universities, are refusing to wear the hijab in solidarity for Amini and other women who have allegedly suffered at the hands of Iranian authorities, particularity those that enforce a strict code of ‘modesty and morality’. Both young men and women have flaunted restrictions that call for gender segregation while openly calling for the Islamic Republic’s ruling elite to leave power.

The response by the Iranian government has been swift and strict. In addition to counter-rallies upholding ‘traditional values’ and denouncing the youth protestors as ‘traitors’ – rallies authorities maintain they had no role in – purported leaked documents revealed orders to Iranian security forces to quash mass demonstrations using nearly any means necessary.

Clashes between protestors and security forces have resulted in the deaths of more than 300 civilians and at least 33 officials. Many, including the journalists who broke the story of Amini’s alleged torture and subsequent coma and death, have been arrested while around 1,000 have been charged by Iranian courts of "corruption on Earth" and "waging war against God", which carries the death penalty.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and President Ebrahim Raisi have repeatedly blamed outside forces and foreign powers of stoking unrest while downplaying its scale and labeling youth activists as ‘misguided’. But already, there appear to be some cracks with senior conservative figures like Ali Larijani calling for a re-examination of enforcement of mandatory hijab and retired IRGC general Hossein Alaei suggesting the abolishing of the morality patrol altogether.

Experts on the ground and abroad view the situation as simultaneously unprecedented and a result of missed chances and missteps on the part of Iran’s government. While approaching the developments with cautious optimism for the Islamic Republic’s long-term future, they decry, however, misplaced priorities on the part of other nations when it comes to the goings-on in Iran.

Fear and uncertainty

Speaking to The Express Tribune, seasoned Iranian journalist and scholar Fariba Pajooh said there is massive fear prevalent at the moment among almost everyone from Iran, whether they remained home or abroad. “I don’t feel good about the situation in Iran at the moment. But I’m out and I’m so thankful to be out during this time. Still, it doesn't matter where you are. Wherever you are, you carry your home with you,” she shared. “I too carry the fear with myself and I don't know what will happen next.”

Pajooh stressed that for any civilised government, shooting or attacking women and children should be a red line they never cross. “In Iran, the regime has already violated that line. Everything changed after they killed people, after the government used force against innocent people. Iran is certainly not going back to where it was two months ago,” she said. “But we are not surprised at the reaction from the government in Tehran. It was expected.”

Partly, for Pajooh, whose journalistic experience spans 15 years across the globe and who had been sent to jail by Iranian authorities for a considerable time, the reaction of the Iran government to protests was no different from many other nations. “What we see now is naked violence against people. And it is not just happening in Tehran but in many cities across the country,” she pointed out. “But the regime does not understand that they are wrong.”

The reporter, who is currently a PhD student and graduate teaching assistant at a university in the US, made a reference to the George Floyd case that rocked America in 2020. “Those responsible [for Floyd’s death] were arrested. Apologies were issued and the country moved on,” she said.

According to her, the Iranian regime missed a chance in the case of Mahsa Amini. “The regime and the Supreme Leader could have issued an apology and the country would not have convulsed as it is now,” she noted. “But, of course, it is a dictatorial regime. They have not done anything sensible or right.”

The Iranian government and ruling elite’s reaction to Amini’s death, according to Pajooh, reveals how ‘disconnected and insulated’ they are from the ‘real world’. “They cannot see how the world is changing and how Iran needs to adapt. So, to shut the movement and the anger of the people, they decide to use brute force,” she said. Comparing her own self to the current generation of Iranian youth that is rising up against Iran’s clerical regime, the journalist highlighted that they are more connected, more savvy and more energetic and ‘certainly more committed and brave’.

“They are connected to the most powerful tool that is the social media and it won't be easy for the regime to suppress this movement,” Pajooh said. “The youth of Iran will not back off and accept the primitive way of life that is being offered to them by the regime. They will not go back to the same situation they were in before the protests, and the regime seems to be showing no sign of backing off. Hence, Iran stands at a dead end.”

A sliver of hope?

Amid fear of further repression and violence, some Iranian voices expressed cautious hope for Iran’s people and their future due to the scale and grass roots nature of the present protest movement. Among them is Dr Elham Hoominfar, who has extensive teaching experience in the United States and Iran and is currently an assistant professor at Northwestern University.

“I’m really optimistic. ​​It’s a grassroots movement and it’s really progressive,” she said while speaking to The Express Tribune. “Iranian powers have used religion for their gain. After 1979, Sharia law took over women’s bodies and lives. It separated them from individual freedoms and marginalised them. The Iranian people understand that,” Dr Hoominfar explained.

According to her, many Iranians, especially the young protestors currently standing up to the Iranian government, have been undertaking a historical struggle to restore human dignity and personal and social freedoms. “The slogan ‘Women, Life, and Freedom’ means that society cannot be freed till women are freed. They want secularism, and religion should not be in power,” she said.

Agreeing with Dr Hoominfar’s observations, Fariba Pajooh noted that while claiming to be the guardians of Islam in Iran, the present regime had actually forced a generation away from religion by its actions. “The current generation, perhaps due to the restrictions, doesn’t want to follow anything related to religion. I have some beliefs, but less than my parent’s generation. The current generation is running away from religion because it was forced on them by the regime,” she noted.

“So when the government brands the current protests against religion and Islam, it is not true. It is not against Islam. It is clearly against the dictatorship that has oppressed the people of Iran for decades,” Pajooh added. “It is about freedom to dress, freedom to live and freedom in general. That's the slogan, people want a normal life and not a regimented existence.”

Is regime change possible?

While the people of Iran may be ready for secularism, Dr Hoominfar believed the clerics would certainly not give up power without a fight. “They [the clerics] are in power because of religion,” she said. “They have substantial economic, political, and social interests. That is why they are brutally murdering the Iranian protesters.”

She viewed this conflict of social, political, and economic interests between the clerics and the people of Iran, particularly Iranian women, as the central conflict in this period. “That is why you hear the slogan, ‘Akhund (the cleric) should get lost’,” Dr Hoominfar explained. She warned, however, that the clerics were only one part of the problem. “Another goes back to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC),” she said adding that while these two social elite groups have strengthened each other, they can also stand against each other.

To that equation, seasoned Iranian journalist Fariba Pajooh pointed out that the Islamic Republic’s regime has the financial resources to continue. “It continues to receive support from Beijing and Moscow. It continues to sell oil through these channels,” she pointed out. “Under these circumstances, I don't expect a conflict with the US, and Washington will not get into a military conflict or start an invasion.”

Dr Hoominfar voiced two fears: “First, more political suppression and massacre. The ruling power elite has substantial economic interests in Iran and wants to stay in power at any cost,” she said. To stand up to that, the people of Iran need international solidarity, she stressed. “My second fear is the existence of the ‘counter-movements’ that, with the support of foreign powers, can again prevent the victory of a democratic movement in Iran,” the scholar added.

According to Pajooh, what has happened over the past few weeks is a major step forward towards regime change. “However, regime change will not take place at this time,” she believed. “This is the first major step toward change in Iran and it won't be the last one. But the actual regime change is not going to happen this time.”

Global disinterest

Despite the strength and scale of the Mahsa Amini protests, Pajooh did not see the international community coming together and creating policies against Iran at this point. “There has been some movement from Germany, a statement from Biden, but I cannot see what they actually want to do for the people of Iran,” she said.

Uppsala University’s Professor Ashok Swain agreed with that assessment. “The situation is quite serious and there is no doubt about that. The regime in Tehran, with all its power, is trying to maintain its grip on the country and its people who have been protesting for several weeks now. Despite the force being used against the people of Tehran, the protesters are getting stronger,” he noted.

He admitted, however, that the international community hasn't had any logical approach or policy towards Iran. “Since the US withdrew from the nuclear deal signed during the Obama era, the West has not been coherent. Iran has been left in isolation and none of the efforts, so far have resulted in creating any positive progress,” he said. “There is now a clear credibility gap between the people of Iran and the West. Hence, those protesting in the streets of Iran, perhaps have very little hope of support from the West.”

Prof Swain added that on the other hand, the regime is doing everything in its power to present the ongoing protests as a Western-backed plot to unseat the clerics. “They are trying to brand the protests as against the values that represent Islam. For the people of Iran, it is entirely against oppression and primitive ideologies. In short, the regime is legitimising its actions against the citizens by branding the protests as a Western plot.”

Prof Swain also pointed out the fact that the protesters don't have clear leadership. “In order to change things in Iran, a coordinated movement would be needed. Even while this current uprising has gained considerable momentum, it lacks strong leadership that can challenge the regime,” he said. “The protesters, as we know, don't have direct or tangible international support but there is anger and resentment. This makes the situation more volatile than it seems from the outside.”

All in all, Prof Swain saw the present situation as very difficult for the people of Iran. “The government in Tehran is waging a war against its own people. With little hope for international mediation, the regime, without a doubt, will exercise maximum power and force against the protestors. And if it manages to crush the uprising, it will become even more ideologically rigid than it is at this point,” he said.

According to Prof Swain, the West has different parameters to deal with such situations. “If this was an uprising in a former Soviet State or Eastern Europe, you would have seen a more engaged media and the international community. It is hypocrisy on display. We live in a world that has different standards for different situations,” he said. “There is very little equality of respect or equality of concern for the people of Iran. At the international level, I think the global community is very divided. The world lacks unanimity on the level of support it needs to offer to those who stand up for democracy, stand up for human rights and stand up for the rights of minorities.”

He also pointed out that Western priorities vis-à-vis Iran are presently misplaced. “Iran's supply of drones to Russia has become a bigger issue than what is happening inside Iran.” But that's not new or unexpected, he added. “Examine the global reaction to deaths and violations taking place in Burma. A huge humanitarian disaster is taking place for more than two years in the Tigray War. More than 600,000 people have been killed. Millions have been kept under some kind of sanctions regime and they are not able to access food and medicines but the international community is totally silent on this.”

View from abroad

Despite the apparent global disinterest in Iran and the attempts by its government to downplay the unrest, foreign experts saw the current movement as very different from other recent protests in the country.

Speaking to The Express Tribune, former adviser to an Australian government minister and a shadow minister, Dr Claude Rakisits, agreed that this is a very different sort of protest from the previous one. “This one probably presents the most serious challenge to the Islamic Republic since its foundation in 1979. But more importantly, this one is led by women and girls, who have been joined by men and people from all walks of life and all parts of Iran,” he said.

“Whether it will succeed is difficult to tell at this point. The last massive protest in 2009 against the rigged presidential elections did after all go on for four months before collapsing,” noted Dr Rakisits, who is an honorary associate professor at the Australian National University and Deakin University. “[But] while it was sparked off by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, it has since ballooned from anti-hijab protest to a counter-revolution demanding the end of the Islamic Republic.”

That said, Dr Rakisits voiced alarm that after weeks of protests more than 326 people, with quite a number of them children, were killed by the security and police forces using live ammunition. “This is before the regime has deployed in full force the ruthless IRGC. So I expect things to get much worse before they settle down.” He explained that the IRGC's raison d'être is the protection of the Islamic Revolution. “Put differently, if there is no longer an Islamic regime there is no longer any need for the IRGC. So, for the IRGC, the protests must not become an existential threat to their corporate interests.”

When asked, Dr Rakisits disagreed that the global community, the West in particular, is unconcerned with developments in Iran. “Ukraine and all developments associated with it do take a lot of the western media attention. However, this doesn't mean that the global community doesn't care about the protests. It's not mutually exclusive,” he stressed. According to him, a big problem is that it is virtually impossible for the international media to go into Iran to report on what is happening. “Most of the world's information comes from social media platforms, and these are restricted in any case.”

That said, he admitted that there is little the global community can do to prevent repression by Iran’s government. “With Iran, for all intents and purposes, a part of the Russia-China axis, we could expect support from China and other Islamic countries in the Human Rights Council if the situation came up for discussion. Any discussion on this issue in the UN Security Council would be guillotined by China and/or Russia, and possibly others as well,” Dr Rakisits said.

The sanctions question

On the topic of global assistance and punitive measures, Dr Elham Hoominfar stressed that indiscriminate maximum sanctions or any attempts that hurt the Iranian people are not right. “Targeted sanctions on the revolutionary guards and the regime’s top figures would be more effective,” she said, while urging the global community to ‘let people in Iran decide the future of Iran’. “We need international support and solidarity, particularly from grassroots movements. But it is the Iranian people who should decide about their future, not foreign governments,” she said.

Australia’s Dr Claude Rakisits, when asked the same, admitted that there has indeed been a certain degree of isolation of the people of Iran. “However, even with the Iranian clerical regime trying to further cut the Iranian people off from the rest of the world by limiting access to the internet and various social media platforms, it has not been able to stop the outside world from finding out what is really happening inside Iran,” he said.

While voices from Iran have been critical of sanctions and their effects, other international groups and activists see targeted sanctions as a useful tool to punish the regime. As opposed to blanket sanctions, the Human Rights Foundation has welcomed the increase in the use of targeted sanctions toward Iran’s regime, especially in response to grave human rights violations, HRF Chief Advocacy Officer Roberto González told The Express Tribune.

“Both the US and the UK have sanctioned the morality police in Iran for its abuse and violence against Iranian women and the violation of the rights of peaceful protestors,” González said. Asked what the global community can do, he suggested: “Democratic governments can impose sanctions, make statements against the Iranian regime’s oppression, and engage in a diplomatic boycott of Iran’s regime. And the wider public can take action and advocate for women in Iran, by sharing stories, amplifying voices from those on the ground, and supporting NGOs and civil society actors working on these issues.”

On a question about the isolation of the Iranian people, Human Rights Foundation Chief Advocacy Officer Roberto González said we must continue to stay informed, amplify Iranian women’s voices, and report on the deaths, internet censorship, and other human rights abuses committed by Iran’s regime. “As long as the global community continues to share the stories of the women on the frontlines of this revolution, they are not isolating the Iranian people. We need to show support and solidarity with them, and ensure that we continue to expose the regime’s oppressive treatment of women,” he added.

Speaking on the issue of sanctions, a senior European diplomat with considerable insights on Tehran said the increase of the international sanctions in the last years up to now are mostly due to the nuclear file, which is, at this stage, the most pressing issue for the international community.

“Unfortunately, after Trump's decision to leave JCPOA in 2018, despite many attempts to restore it, talks have failed for many reasons. As of today, the geopolitical scenario has changed considerably. The war in Ukraine has de facto strengthened the relationships between Moscow and Tehran. The Iranian circle of power around Khamenai is more determined to pursue the “looking to the east” policy, by strengthening relationships with China and the countries of the region,” shared the diplomat, who wished to remain anonymous due to established protocols.

The diplomat said Iran’s signing of the memorandum to join as a permanent member the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation was highly significant. “In this situation it is difficult today to talk again about nuclear negotiations with Tehran when the echo of the wave of protests is still present in the international media.”

The diplomat also said it is worth noting that opponents of nuclear negotiations, through their organisations and their influence in the media, have taken the opportunity and are exploiting the situation to try to block any possible return to such negotiations. “In any case, balancing necessary contacts with Tehran to restart negotiations while maintaining a condemnation of the Iranian Government for the repression against protesters is going to be a difficult task, at least in the short term. Only at a later stage it will be possible to assess the possibility of the return to the nuclear talks.”

Khamenai’s successor

As protests wage on, reports have suggested Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenai’s son Mojtaba will most likely succeed him on account of his ailing health. Against the backdrop of unrest, The Express Tribune asked foreign observers their views on the possible transition.

According to HRF’s Roberto González it is almost certain that Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba, will continue the tyrannical regime that oppresses women, commits human rights abuses, and kills peaceful protestors. “Given the current situation, we at the HRF are concerned about and condemn the continuation of the crackdown on demonstrators and the merciless killing of civilians. However, we also believe that Iran is at a turning point — one which we hope will pave the way for a transition to democracy in the country,” he said.

Australia’s Dr Claude Rakisits, however, did not think it is a given that Khamenei's son is going to succeed as the supreme leader of the Islamic Revolution. “On the contrary, the massive uprising has diminished his chances because his selection would further enrage the protesters. Moreover, it would seem that the IRGC would prefer to have President Ebrahim Raisi as the successor, someone whom they feel they could more easily control.”

According to him, the only good news for Iranian people is that the "morality police" has lost its fear clout and it will never be able to regain it. “Of course, the regime also knows that if it loosens the rules on the wearing of the hijab the protesters will demand even more. And the protesters know that the regime is fully aware of this. All in all, the Ayatollahs can't win this one in the long run. And they would know this privately.”

According to the senior European diplomat who spoke on condition of anonymity, the question of the succession of Khamenei is a very complex issue. “There are many speculations in this regard. The possibility that Mojtaba would replace him in due time is one of them. However, the history of the Islamic Republic would advise caution in making predictions,” he said. “There is no doubt that the entire process will be managed in accordance with all centers of power, especially IRGC and the security apparatus. Whatever the outcome of the process, undoubtedly it will affect the future of the country and the region as well.”

A clerical view

Speaking to The Express Tribune on condition of anonymity, a senior Iranian cleric reiterated the stance of the nation’s supreme leader and president on the ongoing protests. “The Islamic Republic of Iran is facing another attempt by the West and those who are part of the disintegrating Western world order to destabilise the Islamic state by sponsoring and triggering protests,” he maintained. The protestors, the cleric alleged, are ‘backed by Western machinery’ and so, he insisted, the Iranian government had “no reason to legitimise the sponsored conspiracy against the Islamic Republic and what it stands for – the faith.”

“There is no space for such antics inside Iran,” the cleric stressed, adding that the Iranian government and lawmakers have expressed their support for strong action against the protesters. “They [the protestors] will be taught an exemplary lesson if they don’t comply,” he warned. https://tribune.com.pk/story/2386020/is-iran-on-the-brink-of-a-new-revolution