- Get link
- X
- Other Apps
By Heshmat
Alavi, Special to Al Arabiya English
The days of ISIS are numbered and voices are heard about the
entire region being forced into a far more disastrous conflict. Various
parties, mainly the US and Iran, have begun jostling, seeking to inject their
influence onto what the future holds for Syria.
As Iran has also wreaked havoc in Iraq and Yemen, concerns are
rallying on Tehran going the distance to pull the US full-scale into the Syria
inferno. Such a mentality results from misunderstanding the nature of what is
known as the Iranian regime.
Escalating tensions
After establishing a foothold in the strategic town of al-Tanf
near the Iraq-Jordan-Syria border, US forces designated a buffer zone to
provide protection for their own troops and resources, alongside their allies
of anti-Assad opposition rebels.
1) On three
different incidents Iran-backed militias have made advances into the buffer
zone, only to receive warnings and eventually be attacked by US warplanes.
2) Raising the stakes, on two occasions Iran-made pro-Assad
drones have been downed by US-led coalition forces.
3) And maybe the ultimate incident came when a US F/A-18 fighter
jet shot down a Syrian Sukho-22 warplane after the latter dropped bombs on US-backed
Kurdish forces north of Raqqa, the self-declared capital of ISIS.
Tehran’s habit
Understanding its conventional and non-conventional forces stand
no match against the classical armies of the US and the unity of its Arab
allies, Iran has for the past 38 years resorted to tactics of its own.
Terrorist
attacks across the region through proxy groups such as the Lebanese Hezbollah have proven successful. The 1982
Beirut bombings of US and French barracks led to the American pullout of this
highly fragile country. As a result, Tehran has used this method ever since to
send its message. Following the wars of Afghanistan and Iraq, Iran yet again
resorted to paramilitary and proxy methods to advance its interests in the
region.
Seeing no strong response only emboldens Iran in its pursuit of
wreaking havoc. Witnessing the disastrous and premature withdrawal of US forces
from Iraq, and Obama’s refusal to live up to his own red line after Assad
resorted to the extreme low of gassing his own people in 2013, Iran came to a
conclusion such actions will continue unabated.
The language of force
There have been cases otherwise, however, including Operation
Praying Mantis on April 18th, 1988 when the US Navy launched a campaign against
Tehran’s naval fleet in retaliation for the Iranian mining of the Persian Gulf
during the Iran–Iraq war and the subsequent damage to an American warship.
The attack came as a major wake-up call for Iran as the mullahs
in Tehran only understand the language of force. The 59 cruise missiles the US
used to target the Syrian regime airfield used to launch a chemical attack on
Homs earlier this year also rose eyebrows not only in Damascus, Moscow and
Tehran, but the world over.
The recent incidents in Syria are further serious signals for
Iran that such belligerence no longer will go tolerated, especially considering
a new US administration in Washington adopting a far different perspective and
strategy than its predecessor.
Solution
What
needs grave understanding is the fact that Iran is the last party that seeks a
full blown war in Syria, Yemen or any other region of the Middle East. The
Iranian regime is seeking a win-win solution, enjoying an open hand in meddling across the region to such extent to prevent any major
international community retaliatory action.
Has Iran been successful? To this day, mostly it has,
unfortunately, thanks to the West’s highly flawed belief in adopting a policy
of engagement with Iran to tame the mullahs and enjoy short-term economic
gains.
The
tides, however, are changing for the better. Iran’s Achilles Heel must be the
main target as seen in the recent US Senate resolution imposing sanctions on the regime’s
ballistic missile program, support of terrorism and human rights violations.
Tehran may kick, scream and threaten to abandon the Iran nuclear
deal in retaliation. Yet rest assured the mullahs will not make such a grave
mistake, triggering the automatic re-imposition of sanctions under six previous
United Nations Security Council resolutions.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards lies at the heart of the mullahs’
illicit activities both inside the country and abroad. This entity also
controls around 40 percent of the country’s already fragile and highly corrupt
economy.
To this end, there is no need for another war in the region.
Iran knows better that such an outcome would only accelerate developments
against its interests. The US and Arab world can and should lead the
international community by designating the Revolutionary Guards as a foreign
terrorist organization.
This will be a complementary measure to the abovementioned
Senate resolution, and bring Tehran to its knees. Such an initiative will place
the international community alongside the Iranian people in their struggle
against the ruling mullahs’ regime.
This is especially true after US Secretary of State Rex
Tillerson referred to Washington’s support for domestic forces seeking peaceful
regime change in Iran.
Comments
Post a Comment