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By Heshmat Alavi
Iran has recently witnessed increasing pressures from both sides
of the Atlantic, especially over its ballistic missile ambitions. After weeks
of deliberations, the US Congress passed initiatives imposing unprecedented
restrictions on Tehran.
Just one day after Iran test-launched a satellite-carrying
rocket, the Europeans on Friday joined their American allies in sharpening
their tone on Iran’s mullahs, demanding an immediate cessation.
The US Treasury Department also responded sharply, imposing even
further sanctions on six companies owned or supervised by the Shahid Hemmat
Industrial Group, known to play a central role in Tehran’s ballistic drive. All
their US assets have been frozen and US citizens barred from dealing with the
six firms.
As expected, Iran has continued its refusal to cooperate. “We
will continue with full power our missile program,” said Iranian Foreign
Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghasemi to state broadcaster IRIB.
The differentiation
A logical conclusion would be for Iran is to yield back on its
ballistic missile program. Yet this isn’t necessarily the case for Tehran.
We are dealing with a completely pragmatic regime, moving its
pawns very carefully, with the utmost calculus to the very end. Iran needs to
maintain face on two different issues:
1) While
not understood by many in the West, the mullahs desperately need to maintain a
straight face before its already dwindling social base.
2) Iran will continue to set the stakes high for the international community – meaning continue their missile program – until pressures corner it in the ring, similar to 2013 when sanctions forced Iran into the nuclear negotiations.
2) Iran will continue to set the stakes high for the international community – meaning continue their missile program – until pressures corner it in the ring, similar to 2013 when sanctions forced Iran into the nuclear negotiations.
Iran needs to undergo missile tests similar to those seen
Thursday, claiming to seek placing satellites into orbit. Whereas it is common
knowledge the same technology is used to develop intercontinental ballistic
missiles enabling Iran to threaten targets in mainland United States.
Foul objectives
While Iran abandoned any intention to place a man into space, it
continues to seek similar objectives even despite reports of the recent
“Simorgh” test-launch failure last week.
As Iran’s ballistic missile program is known to have received
huge amounts of support from the North Koreans, Iran itself is known for
parties abroad through providing missile armament.
The
Iran-backed Houthis in Yemen launched a ballistic
missile Thursday fired targeting the Muslim holy city of Mecca in Saudi Arabia,
only to be shot down, according to the Saudi-led coalition fighting the Tehran
proxies. This shows both the threats posed by Iran’s ballistic missile program,
as such arsenal can be provided to dangerous groups abroad, and to what extent
Iran will go.
Further
to the west in the flashpoint Middle East
region reports also indicate of Iran building and launching
underground missile production factories in Lebanon. This is a new form of
exporting instability and extremism for Iran, and these sites are currently
controlled completely by the Lebanese Hezbollah, Tehran’s main terrorist
offspring.
On a
side-note of Iran’s missile ambitions, L. Todd Reed explains in The Washington Times,
“The argument could be made that the consequence of the nuclear deal was Iran
being able to buy sophisticated weapons and Russia having the cash to stay in
the Middle East as a military power.”
A new era
What is terrifying Iran, however, is the new and unexpected
landscape it finds itself in as the Trump administration is busy overhauling
the highly flawed Obama foreign policy vis-à-vis Tehran.
Senior
Iranian regime officials were heard threatening attacks against American bases
prior to last week’s unparalleled sanctions mainly targeting the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC).
Both chambers of the US Congress passed their bills with veto-proof authority.
Iran has
also sensed this change in language by the West and has begun to act
accordingly. A recent piece in The Hill best
explains this transition:
“A mere
shift in tone from the [Trump] administration already appears to have affected
Iran’s calculus. While Iran has continued missile and space launch vehicle testing,
it has not launched another nuclear capable, medium-range ballistic missile
since being put “on notice” by
the White House in February. In Syria, Iranian-backed forces have not targeted
the U.S. military outright, even though the US twice downed Iranian-made Shahed-129 drones.”
The
Europeans have also shown signs of significant changes. While Iran has taken
advantage of its relations with the Green Continent to close economic agreements,
the European Troika – France, Germany and the United Kingdom – also joined
their American allies in condemning Iran’s recent rocket test as “inconsistent
with United Nations Security Council Resolution 2231.”
Neither destabilizing impact of Iran’s ballistic missile
ambitions on the Middle East, nor the IRGC’s role in this regard can be denied.
It is also true that Iran took advantage of Obama’s disastrous
appeasement/engagement policy to advance its missile arsenal to the utmost
extent.
Despite
the new US sanctions restricting and blacklisting the IRGC being
long overdue, needed now is for the Trump administration to fully implement
such actions against Iran. There is no more room for reservations that have to
this day provided Iran paths to bypass and derail international community
efforts.
The countries of Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen have suffered
the most of Iran’s belligerence, and the full eviction of the IRGC footprints
from these states would be the next necessary step forward against Tehran’s
regime.
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