Iran regime incapable
of reform, Alain Vivien writes in Le Monde
NCRI - Many people hoped for moderation of the Iranian regime
after the accession of Hassan Rouhani as president, but they forget that the
theocratic regime is by its nature incapable of reform, argues Alain Vivien, a
former French secretary of state for Foreign Affairs.
Writing
for France’s Le
Monde on Friday, Mr. Vivien pointed out that the international
community is more than ever “perplexed by the political instability” in Iran.
Following
the regime’s nuclear deal with the major world powers last July, its Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei has no longer been able to maintain the “cohesion of his
regime,” Mr. Vivien wrote, adding that other regime veterans have gone so far
as to publish open letters against him.
The
regime’s weakness is also reflected in Khamenei’s inconsistent decisions such
as his constant diatribes against the West despite the nuclear deal.
“Foreign
observers are both stunned by the violent tone of the Iranian leader and
worried about the prospect of relations with a country whose leaders are still
locked in the past,” Mr. Vivien wrote.
He
added that today the regime is paralyzed by a deadly dilemma: should it be
locked again on itself in the hope of preserving the religious-political
ideology and power of the mullahs; or should it open up to the world giving
Iran the prominent place that it deserves among the nations of the world? But
any opening up would mean abandoning the ‘principle of the supremacy of the
Supreme Leader’ and the influence of the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) on society
and the Iranian economy. Such a prospect would be an admission of weakness that
the regime seeks at all costs to avoid, Mr. Vivien said, adding that Khamenei
knows that the Iranian people, disillusioned, are waiting for the first
opportunity to express their anger, as they did in the nationwide uprising
against the regime in 2009.
He
pointed out that the IRGC, which both serve as army and the regime’s storm
troopers control many economic sectors including those of international trade
and energy. The IRGC and economic institutions tied to the Supreme Leader
control more than half of the country’s economic activity (more than 50% of the
country's GDP, estimated at $400 billion, according to Reuters), causing a
major handicap for development. The current situation leads firstly to the
squandering of resources (in the nuclear projects, support for Islamist and
terrorist movements, the military intervention in the Syrian conflict, etc.).
On the other hand it undermines the confidence of investors who do not wish to
do business with entities that, despite the partial lifting of sanctions,
remain classified as a terrorist organization listed by the United Nations and
the United States, Mr. Vivien argued.
The
French Committee for a Democratic Iran, which we founded in 2007 with François
Colcombet and Jean-Pierre Michel, believes that in the current situation, the
West cannot be content with only one conclusion of a nuclear agreement, he
said. Repression and executions have not halted in Iran. Women activists, trade
unionists, leftist intellectuals, the members of the People's Mujahedeen (PMOI
or MEK), and even representatives of religious and ethnic minorities are
imprisoned, he pointed out. Since Rouhani took office, death sentences and
executions in Iran have reached record levels.
Moreover,
the regime remains uncompromising in its policy of interference in Yemen, Iraq,
Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere, Mr. Vivien wrote.
“We
must demand Iran respect its international commitments and for an end to its
nefarious hegemonic strategy for the region, including in Syria. This requires
Iran to accept the moratorium proposed by non-governmental organizations on the
death penalty. The international community must not lower its guard on these
fundamentals. It can and must take concrete steps to help Iranian democrats who
are working for democratic change in their country,” he added.
Alain
Vivien, a former secretary of state for Foreign Affairs in France, is
co-founder of the French Committee for a Democratic Iran (CFID). Members of the
CFID are planning to participate in the major “Free Iran” gathering on July 9 in Paris.
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