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Iran to Surge to a Hegemonic Position in the Middle East Without a Major War
OilPrice.com ^ | 01/01/2010 | Yossef Bodansky

Posted on 01/03/2010 4:25:10 PM PST by staffjam

Despite the lingering demonstrations and disorder in Tehran, Iran’s ruling mullahs are confident anew in their country’s ability to surge to a hegemonic position in the Middle East without a major war. The main reason for the mullahs’ confidence is their interpretation of the appeasement policies of the US Barack Obama Administration.

Most significant is the undeclared – yet widely projected – profound change in US policy regarding Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran and all other regional governments are convinced that the US now strives to “contain” a nuclear Iran rather than continue the declared objective to prevent the nuclearization of Iran.

The most important manifestation of the change in US policy is Obama’s decision in mid-December 2009 to drag out the negotiations and thus give Tehran another year to resolve the nuclear issue. The US rhetoric that patience is running out and tough sanctions are imminent are, in the words of senior US officials, “no more than a smokescreen” for the White House decision to extend the ultimatum to Iran by a whole year.

Washington is cognizant that by then “Tehran will have attained a nuclear weapon and the means of delivery”. Moreover, the US is signaling the effective removal of the military threat. This change of policy was articulated by Admiral Mike Mullen on December 21, 2009. Asked about the possible use of military force against Iran, Mullen stated: “My belief remains that political means are the best tools to attain regional security and that military force will have limited results. However, should the President call for military options, we must have them ready.”

Adamant on attaining a breakthrough with Tehran, Pres. Obama is considering the dispatch of Senator John Kerry as a special emissary. Although Kerry was first identified by the White House as its preferred point man on negotiations over new Iran sanctions, on December 15, 2009, Kerry suddenly announced that the Senate Foreign Relations Committee “needs time to consider the [Iran sanctions] bill”. With that, the Senate debate and vote on new sanctions was effectively postponed until Spring 2010. Meanwhile, US diplomats asked numerous intermediaries to notify Tehran that “Kerry is offering to travel to Tehran to try to broker a last-ditch agreement with the Iranian regime regarding its nuclear program”.

The diplomats noted Kerry’s success in achieving a breakthrough with Afghanistan Pres. Hamid Karzai in Kabul and with official Islamabad. Officially, the Obama White House insists that such a visit would be Kerry’s own initiative. At the same time, a senior White House official emphasized that this is “the kind of travel a chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee would – and should – undertake.” Unlike the undeclared negotiations run by Ambassadors Hill and Ross, Kerry’s intervention would be high-profile and would herald Obama’s new approach to both friends and foes.

In recent weeks, numerous emissaries – Chinese, Pakistani, Turkish and European – approached Tehran at Washington’s behest asking – actually pleading – for Tehran’s assistance in resolving the Afghan quagmire and expediting the US military withdrawal. Washington recognizes that Tehran has established very strong economic and political ties with Afghanistan. Although the foundations of these relations are with the non-Pushtun minorities – the Hazaras, the Uzbeks, and the Tajiks – as well as with the traditionally Persia-gravitating Herat area, Iran has close relations with Pres. Karzai’s Government. Any long-term political posture in Kabul can no longer ignore Iran’s interests and influence, for the first time since the US-aided removal of the Shah of Iran from power in 1979.

At the same time, Iranian Pasdaran intelligence and the Pasdaran’s Quds Force have developed close relations with numerous elements of the Afghan Taliban, providing them with military training, weapons, and funds. These relations reflect the complexity of Iran’s interests in Afghanistan. On the one hand, Tehran dreads a return to chaos and a massive refugee influx on its eastern border. On the other hand, and not without reason, Tehran also holds US responsible for the separatist terrorist groups – most notably the Jundullah – which have recently escalated their attacks in Iran.

Consequently, while working to bolster Karzai’s Kabul, Tehran also established a comprehensive covert infrastructure and a web of clandestine relationships that would enable the marked escalation of violence in Afghanistan at Tehran’s behest. This network is optimized for debilitating attacks on, and causing heavy casualties to, US and NATO forces rather than seizing control over Kabul or any other center in Afghanistan. This project was under the personal responsibility of the Brig.-Gen. Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the Quds Force, who even visited Kabul and Herat several times. Suleimasni’s direct role and overt involvement not only clearly reflect the importance of the Afghan network to the mullahs, but are also aimed to convey this message to the US and NATO. Indeed, the Obama White House is cognizant that any Iran sponsored escalation in Afghanistan would make it impossible for the US to withdraw on schedule. Therefore, the Obama Administration is going out of its way to appease Tehran in Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Concurrently, the US is encouraging Turkey to expand its strategic relations with Iran and Syria. Pres. Obama personally stressed this point to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan during his early December 2009 visit to the White House. The White House also assured Ankara that the US has no objection to relying on Iran as a primary source of natural gas for the Nabucco pipeline. With Turkmenistan committing to supplying the EU via Russia and the PRC, and with Azerbaijani supplies in doubt because of the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict, Iran is indeed the sole viable source in the near term and thus will make or break Nabucco.

Little wonder that on December 21, 2009, Erdogan arrived in Damascus with 10 Government ministers in order to sign a series of new accords heralding a new era of Syrian-Turkish close relations. In his discussions with Syrian Pres. Bashar al-Assad, Prime Minister Erdogan did not conceal his belief that these new Turkish-Syrian agreements also furthered Turkey’s relations with Iran.

Moreover, Prime Minister Erdogan agreed to include explicit agreement on the need “to find a solution to the historical property issues”– namely, Syria’s claim on Turkey’s Alexandreta/Iskanderun region – in the December 24, 2009, “Joint Statement of the First Meeting of the High Level Strategic Cooperation Council between Syria and Turkey”. This was the first time that Ankara had agreed to acknowledge the existence of the Syrian territorial claim and as such must be considered a major concession to both Damascus and Tehran.

These developments have already led the Arab world to reach out to Tehran and promise support in case of a US or Israeli attack. The consensus among Arab leaders is that it is in not in the interest of the Arab world to develop a crisis or military tension with Iran, and that a war against Iran due to its nuclear program would harm the vital interests of the Arab World. On the contrary, the consensus among Arab leaders appears to be that it is imperative to establish peaceful and friendly relations with Iran which preserve both Arab and Iranian interests. Arab leaders now mute their long-standing complaints about Iranian meddling in Arab affairs and Iran’s quest for expanding its power and hegemony throughout the Arab world.

Tehran has been most successful with the core argument that facing the common Israeli enemy should make the Arab world overlook its problems with Iran. Arab leaders acquiesced to Tehran’s assertion that the mere questioning of Iran’s policies amounts to serving the interests of Israel and the US and would thus be treacherous to the sacred common cause of Iran and the Arab world.

Egypt’s Pres. Hosni Mubarak and Saudi Arabia’s King ‘Abdallah have personally spearheaded this profound change of policy in the Arab world along these lines. Tehran has quickly reciprocated to the Arab feelers. On December 20, 2009, Iranian envoy Ali Larijani arrived in Cairo with a special message from Iran’s top leaders. He was treated as a head-of-state. Upon arrival, Larijani had a private meeting with Pres. Mubarak which lasted more than two hours. In the meeting, Larijani presented Tehran’s wide-ranging proposal to improve relations with the pro-Western Arab governments.

Larijani promised “a new Iranian approach to resolving outstanding issues”. He urged Pres. Mubarak that Tehran and Cairo should focus on future cooperation on key issues. “It is most important for Iran and Egypt to set aside their differences and to focus on bridging the gap between political factions in Palestine,” Larijani said. Regarding the lingering fears of Iran’s nuclear drive, Larijani assured Pres. Mubarak that the Arab World had nothing to fear and offered numerous modalities to prove this point, including “Iranian-Arab nuclear cooperation”. He also repeated Iranian Pres. Mahmud Ahmadi-Nejad’s offer to open an Iranian embassy in Cairo, the first since relations were broken off in1979 after Sadat offered the Shah refuge in 1979.

Pres. Mubarak was very impressed with the proposals outlined by Larijani. The next day, he left for a two day visit to Riyadh for lengthy consultations with King ‘Abdallah. Officially, the two leaders discussed “different Arab, Islamic and international issues”. In reality, the talks focused on Mubarak’s impressions from his talks with Larijani and their implications for the Arab world’s complex relations with Iran. According to Saudi senior officials, “Iran’s nuclear issue” topped the agenda in Riyadh. The other sensitive issue was the Saudi failures against the Iran-supported Houthi revolt in Yemen which is rapidly spreading into Saudi Arabia’s volatile Assir province. Egyptian senior officials traveling with Pres. Mubarak raised the Yemen issue with a most reluctant King ‘Abdallah in lieu of “Egypt’s worries over the security of Saudi Arabia in light of the Houthi attacks on the Saudi borders”.

It was Pres. Mubarak’s opinion that an all-Arab rapprochement with Iran is imperative for convincing Iran to cut its sponsorship of the Houthi revolt. At the same time, Pres. Mubarak refused King ‘Abdallah’s request for Egyptian special forces to fight the Houthis.

The emerging consensus in the Arab world is that “coexistence with Iran looks like a safer bet” than an alliance with the US. Under such conditions, the regional strategic balance is profoundly changing. The US influence is diminishing and Israel is increasingly isolated. Consequently, Jerusalem’s anxieties are rising. In contrast, the popularity of both Iran and Syria is growing. Damascus is not only no longer isolated, but it is considered as the best venue for passing messages to Tehran. Hence, Saudi Arabia’s close ally – Lebanon’s Prime Minister Hariri – was dispatched to Damascus in order to inform Assad of Riyadh’s growing interest in improving relations with both Damascus and Tehran. Assad encouraged Hariri to take the message directly to Tehran and handed Hariri an invitation from Ahmadi-Nejad to visit Tehran soon.

Both Iran and the Arab world are most encouraged by the latest developments in Israel. They watch with satisfaction as Jerusalem is folding under US pressure regarding negotiations with the Palestinians. Moreover, Khaled Mashal and other HAMAS leaders who now deal with Israel over Shalit have reported to Tehran about the Israeli defeatist mood. All this gives Tehran the confidence that it is highly unlikely that Israel would initiate any military action absent a US preapproval, and Tehran knows that the US would not approve any Israeli strike, neither against Iran nor against its clients in Syria, Lebanon, and the Gaza Strip. Not without reason, Pres. Ahmadi-Nejad is convinced that Obama would not permit Netanyahu to disrupt his grand plans for a US rapprochement with Iran and disengagement from both Iraq and Afghanistan irrespective of the cost to Israel.

More important, Pres. Ahmadi-Nejad is convinced that although Israeli Prime Minister Benyamin Netanyahu must be cognizant of Pres. Obama’s approach and its horrendous cost for Israel’s vital interests, Netanyahu would not do anything proactively.

Larijani returned from Cairo convinced that the door was open for closer cooperation between Iran and the Arab world. Meeting with Iran’s top leaders, he argued that Iran and Egypt did not differ in strategies regarding the US and Israel, and that the Arab world’s mistrust of, and hatred toward, both the US and Israel were palpable. “There may be differing views in tactics between Iran and Egypt but the strategies of the two countries are not different,” Larijani assured.

Tehran need not worry about the ramifications of the US-inspired rhetoric coming from Arab capitals because it is hollow and made under duress. He also attributed the tension over Iran’s nuclear aspirations to “misunderstandings” spread by the United States. Larijani was confident that it would be possible for Iran to overcome these “misunderstandings” through political means. He pointed to Mubarak’s concurrent trip to Riyadh and the Persian Gulf states as a proof of his – Larijani’s – position that convincing Cairo of Iran’s policies would lead to changes in the position of the entire Arab world.

On December 22, 2009, a very confident Pres. Ahmadi-Nejad addressed a closed meeting with regional leaders and senior officials in the Iranian city of Shiraz. He declared that the US was “bound to fail in the Middle East”. Ahmadi-Nejad reiterated that “the US will definitely fail in the Middle East, as the regional nations will not allow it to dominate the region”. He singled out Iran as the key to reversing the US influence and domination. “The problem is that the US seeks to dominate the Middle East but the Iranian nation is an obstacle [to it],” he explained. Fully aware of the importance of Iran, the US was, he said, bringing up “pretexts” such as Iran’s nuclear program and human rights in order to undermine Iran’s standing with its neighbors.

“The nuclear game is repetitious, old-fashioned and boring. Say publicly that you are seeking dominance over the Middle East but Iran does not allow [you to do so],” Ahmadi-Nejad said. He reiterated that “the world should know that the Iranian nation and the regional countries will make it impossible for the US to dominate the Middle East”.

Ahmadi-Nejad then raised the issue of Iran’s nuclear weapons. He stated that the world should “know that if we wanted to build bombs, we [would have] had enough courage to announce that we were making bombs”. He stated that there was nothing the US and Israel could do to prevent Iran from pursuing its nuclear program as it saw fit. “We are a great and brave nation. We told you that we will launch the [nuclear] fuel cycle and we did it. We told you that we will industrialize the fuel production and we did it ... we told you that we will launch a new generation of centrifuges and we did,” Ahmadi-Nejad concluded.

With the US projecting weakness and confusion – desperate to gain Iranian cooperation in furthering issues of crucial importance for Obama, namely, expedited safe withdrawal from both Afghanistan and Iraq – Ahmadi-Nejad’s Tehran is only emboldened to raise the price in the best traditions of the Iranian bazaar. Both Washington and Tehran know that time is on the side of the mullahs which means that the Obama White House will end up paying exuberant strategic price for Iran’s “cooperation”; a price which America’s allies and friends in the region will end up paying for a long time to come.

Source: Iran and The Middle East


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Military/Veterans; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: admiralmikemullen; afghanistan; america; appeasement; geopolitics; hamidkarzai; iran; iraniannukes; iransanctions; islamabad; israel; kabul; karzai; middleeast; mikemullen; mullahs; mullen; nucleariran; nukes; pasdaran; pasdaransquds; pasdareanintel; persia; qudsforce; sanctions; taliban; tehran

1 posted on 01/03/2010 4:25:14 PM PST by staffjam
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To: staffjam; Quix; TaraP
You were saying ...

Despite the lingering demonstrations and disorder in Tehran, Iran’s ruling mullahs are confident anew in their country’s ability to surge to a hegemonic position in the Middle East without a major war. The main reason for the mullahs’ confidence is their interpretation of the appeasement policies of the US Barack Obama Administration.

It doesn't matter whether we're talking about the Obama Administration or the Bush Administration -- neither one accomplished anything in regards to stopping Iran from pushing their agenda, and succeeding, in developing nuclear weapons to take this hegemonic position on the Middle East.

And, for those who've been reading the Bible, they've already known that Iran was not going to be stopped from this action, no matter what. It's not that we shouldn't have tried, but the "outcome" was already known by Bible students.

It's the Ezekiel 38/39 war that is joined by Russia and other Islamic allies that Iran is heavily involved with and they are all going to attack Israel, as a result.

That's coming up pretty soon, you can count on it...

2 posted on 01/03/2010 4:31:32 PM PST by Star Traveler (Remember to keep the Messiah of Israel in the One-World Government that we look forward to coming)
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To: staffjam

Iran probably knows more about our Muslim President than we do. He has kept his secrets from us.


3 posted on 01/03/2010 4:33:00 PM PST by Venturer
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To: staffjam
Headline needs a slight correction

Iran to Surge to a Hegemonic Hemorrhoid Position in the Middle East Without a Major War


4 posted on 01/03/2010 4:34:22 PM PST by darkwing104 (Lets get dangerous)
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To: staffjam

As soon as they develop a nuclear weapon....bet.


5 posted on 01/03/2010 4:44:34 PM PST by cranked
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To: Venturer; Kenny Bunk; swarthyguy; marron

“Most significant is the undeclared – yet widely projected – profound change in US policy regarding Iran’s nuclear program. Tehran and all other regional governments are convinced that the US now strives to “contain” a nuclear Iran rather than continue the declared objective to prevent the nuclearization of Iran.”

These people may drink a lot of tea, but cannot read American tea leaves. They do not understand the irrational grandiosity of American political class liberals. When Obama bashes Bush and sends letter after letter to Iran asking for negotiations this is not a signal of weakness or change of ultimate aims against Iranian nukes. This is about Obama and liberals. One, it flows from their fantasy that they understand the world better. Two, it flows from their grandiosity that the various interests in their cartoon-imagination of the world will submit to their beneficient moral superiority—they present themselves as the “magical liberal.” Domestically, it serves their identity politics as being “smarter” and “reality based.” They are the furthest from reality about the world, but that cannot sink in because part of their self-praise and arrogance.


6 posted on 01/03/2010 4:46:10 PM PST by Shermy
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To: staffjam

Very interesting analysis. They’re certainly feeling confident. They just refused entry to Kerry, btw, so I guess they don’t even feel the need for another boot-licking from the US.


7 posted on 01/03/2010 4:53:39 PM PST by livius
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To: livius

A-jad and his boss openly derided the letters Obama sent. Unreported in our state media.

Kerry’s idea was his own. He is personally confounded. He preached several times that because of Barack’s color and middle name and having lived in Indonesia Barack would have the ability to tell them why they were practicing their religion wrongly. No joke. Biden said it once too. I have seen this arrogant liberal lunacy regurgitated in many pundit pieces (though less lately.)

In fact, I think Kerry instructed Barack on this theory when they were on the Foreign affairs committee.


8 posted on 01/03/2010 5:00:12 PM PST by Shermy
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To: Shermy
He preached several times that because of Barack’s color and middle name and having lived in Indonesia Barack would have the ability to tell them why they were practicing their religion wrongly.

I bet that went over big with Ahmanutcase...

9 posted on 01/03/2010 5:08:07 PM PST by livius
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To: cranked

From what i have heard they already have Nukes (externally bought) - they haven’t got the capacity yet - but it seems it’s only a matter of time.


10 posted on 01/03/2010 5:51:40 PM PST by staffjam
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To: Shermy; Venturer; swarthyguy; marron
The Deer in the Headlights, aka Barry Soetoro, aka Barack Hussein Obama,Jr., or the first dual citizen to knowingly take office, has been faced from day 1 of his term with the faint odor of illegitimacy.

It's not merely that he is a bastard, but his father, if indeed that part of the crafted legend is true, was a foreigner. That BHO, Sr. was married to a woma(e)n other than Obama's mother at the time of his conception and throughout their brief time together is titillating but not the point.

In some sort of mass hypnotic state, his status a a reportedly "native born citizen," has been automatically accepted as just as good as the Constitutionally required "Natural Born Citizen."

But if the reality of valid questions about his constitutional eligibility have escaped most Americans, I assure you it has not escaped the attention of hostile foreigners, some of whom I suspect of underwriting the more absurd legal maneuvers against BHO, Jr. But now, some real live adult American lawyers have taken up the cases and are directing their efforts properly. Even if, for example, the quest for Writs of Quo Warranto wending their way to the Federal District Court in DC come to naught, they weaken Obama's ability to deal with foreigners, as did his unreported personal campaigns for the terrorist jihadi Raila Oding in Kenya.

11 posted on 01/03/2010 6:10:50 PM PST by Kenny Bunk
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To: staffjam

The author seems to think the Arabs will abide by the “If you can’t beat them, join them” axiom. I disagree. Iran has been too much of a pain in the rear for the Arab leaders and too much of a threat to control of regional oil routes, plus the age-old Sunni-Shi’ite/Arab-Persian rivalry. Of course, the Arabs hate Israel just as much as they hate Iran. Which is why they want Israel to strike Iran’s nuke facilities—that way Israel gets all the retaliation from Hamas, Hezbollah, and Syria and Iran loses its key to regional hegemony. It’s a win-win for the Arabs. That’s why FM Saud al-Faisal has been lobbying behind the scenes in DC to get the US to support an Israeli strike on Iran. That’s why the Saudis gave permission to Israel to use their airspace.

Both the Arabs and Iran’s mullahs are a problem. Which is why regime change in Iran is the cure to this mess. If we get a Western-friendly secular gov’t in Iran, THEY will be the bulwark against Saudi & Co. and not vice versa. They’ll be our ally again. Syria will lose its only regional ally, Hezbollah will lose its source of income and weaken, which the other Lebanese political parties will take advantage of, and the Hawthis, the Taliban, Hamas, Iraqi groups like the Mahdi Army and Asa’ib al-Haqq, and Somali pirates will lose a source of weapons and money. Knocking out the mullahs has the potential to transform the entire Middle East order.


12 posted on 01/03/2010 6:59:32 PM PST by G8 Diplomat
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To: Shermy; swarthyguy; livius

Everyone is acting as if Iran already had the bomb. The US is treating them as being the Great Regional Power to appease in Afghanistan. We’ve delayed our vaunted “sanctions” far into the future.

Turkey has agreed to negotiate its border with Syria, Iran’s proxy, when only a couple of years ago they were wanting to annex northern Iraq. The arabs are lining up to pledge fealty to Iran should Israel attack, when only a year ago they were rather openly begging Israel to do it.

They’ve already seen the power shift, and they are all taking the appropriate steps... they and we are too.

Maybe O is the nuke. They’ve got it and we just surrendered. The diplomacy is just a long slow dance intended to hide it from us. But no one else is fooled.


13 posted on 01/03/2010 7:29:47 PM PST by marron
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To: jhpigott; 1COUNTER-MORTER-68; SunkenCiv; SJackson; Nachum; sonofstrangelove; MestaMachine
>>>> "In recent weeks, numerous emissaries – Chinese, Pakistani, Turkish and European – approached Tehran at Washington's behest asking – actually pleading – for Tehran's assistance in resolving the Afghan quagmire and expediting the US military withdrawal. Washington recognizes that Tehran has established very strong economic and political ties with Afghanistan. Although the foundations of these relations are with the non-Pushtun minorities – the Hazaras, the Uzbeks, and the Tajiks – as well as with the traditionally Persia-gravitating Herat area, Iran has close relations with Pres. Karzai's Government. Any long-term political posture in Kabul can no longer ignore Iran's interests and influence, for the first time since the US-aided removal of the Shah of Iran from power in 1979. At the same time, Iranian Pasdaran intelligence and the Pasdaran's Quds Force have developed close relations with numerous elements of the Afghan Taliban, providing them with military training, weapons, and funds. These relations reflect the complexity of Iran's interests in Afghanistan" <<<<

Interesting long article overhere.

14 posted on 01/04/2010 9:27:25 AM PST by hennie pennie
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