Abbas Milani reports that the coup is coming to Syria. Assad will
go. Iran’s clerics are about to go with him.
By Abbas Milani
Clerics listen to,Ayatollah Mahdavi Kani (unseen) Chairman of the Assembly of Experts during opening ceremony of the assembly per annum meeting in Tehran, Iran on September 6,2011 (UPI)
Iran’s
clerics are afraid. Very very
afraid. With Syria in shambles, they
rightly wonder if their alliance with Bashar al-Assad and his cronies will
herald the end of their own despotic reign.
The
Syrian regime has been Iran’s most reliable—indeed sole—ally in the Muslim
Middle East. Tehran has handed over billions of dollars to keep Syria in its
grip. In recent months there have even been allegations that units of the
Iranian military—and its special forces, the Qods Brigade—have been sent to
Syria and used as Assad’s personal storm troopers.
Yet
as Syrian democrats continue to surprise the world with their tenacity, the
long-sustained unity between Syria and Iran is beginning to fray. The Iranian
regime’s public statements are discordant. And this is both tactical—intended
to confuse the world, and existential, reflecting the massive fissures and
warring factions in the power centers of Iran. Initially, Iran offered
unmitigated support for Assad. Today they are pulling back. The Iranian clerics want to claim both that
the Arab Spring was inspired by their own Islamic model and yet Syria is meant
to be the exception—nothing but a conspiracy designed and acted out by Israel
and the United States. When Turkey, increasingly a rival to Iran for influence
in the Muslim world, sided with the Syrian democrats, when polls in countries
such as Egypt show a sharp decline in the popularity of the Iranian clerical
regime among Muslims, when there were increasing signs of Sunni concern about
the possible existence of an Iranian conspiracy to reestablish a “Shiite
empire”—a concern specifically voiced by some members of the Syrian
opposition—the Iranian regime began to gingerly but discernibly distance itself
from Assad. Iran’s foreign minister declared that Syria must listen to the
voice of its people, followed by another statement by Ahmadinejad reiterating
much the same position. He even proposed hosting a meeting of Arab Muslim
leaders to find a collective “Muslim solution” to the problem. Unless we do
something now, he told them, the same thing will happen in all Arab states!
Iran
and Syria are kindred spirits. Both are pseudo-totalitarian regimes that rule
in the name of an ideology: in Syria, the Ba’ath ideology that is an odd amalgam
of European fascism and Arab nationalism; and in Iran the theory of velayat-e
fagih that is an eclectic mix of Shiite beliefs in the clerical interpretation
of law and Plato’s notion of the need for the absolute rule of the philosopher
king. In both countries, a small minority that considers itself the state’s
ideological custodians rules over a reluctant majority with an iron fist. In
both countries, the ruling minority stays in power with the help of a
well-greased, oppressive intelligence, militia and military apparatus. Both
regimes are distrusted Shiite minorities in the Sunni-Arab dominated Middle
East. Both countries have hitherto weathered their political storms with the
economic help of outside forces: in the case of Syria through substantial subsidies
received from Iran, and other rich Arab states; in Iran through the sudden
unexpected rise in the price of oil. In both, the absolute ruler for
life—Khamenei in Iran and Assad in Syria—were anointed through virtual palace
coups and certainly without a popular election. They both threaten and
intimidate their neighbors and foes through support for terrorist
organizations. They both consider Lebanon their turf, and use Hezbollah as
their instrument of choice. As Shiites, they both believe in tagiyeh, or
equivocation, a concept central to Shiism that allows the pious to lie and
cheat in the service of their faith. These affinities are arguably at the heart
of the 40-year dalliance of Iranian and Syrian despots.
Now
there are clear signs that beneath the conservative camp’s intransigent support
for Syria, Khamenei and his cohorts are concerned about the possibility of
Assad’s fall, and its consequences in Iran. In a meeting of the Council of
Experts (an 86-member body of clerics nominally entrusted with the task of
supervising the work of the “Supreme Leader”) the most noticeable hint of
change was the prominent place afforded former president Rafsanjani. Until a
few weeks ago he was a virtual persona non grata in the Council and among the
conservative camp because of his ostensible support for the clerical
opposition. Now, in official photos of
the meeting between Khamenei and members of the Council, Rafsanjani is shown
prominently, sitting right next to Khamenei. Moreover, the leaders of the Green
Movement, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karubi, now in prison for more than 170
days, were granted much-publicized visits with their families. These are all
clear signs the hard-line clerical rulers are in deep trouble—and they know it.
A
Syrian Spring of democracy could well catalyze the end of Iran’s long cold
winter of despotism.
This commentary was published in The Daily Beast
on 13/09/2011
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