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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, January 7, 2020
Soleimani’s assassination has cornered Iran
Iranian women carry images of Iranian Revolutionary Guards' Quds Force
commander Qasem Soleimani, who was killed by a US airstrike in the Iraqi
capital Baghdad, during an anti-US rally to protest the killing at
Palestine Square in the capital Tehran, Iran on 4 January 2020. [Fatemeh
Bahrami - Anadolu Agency]
The killing of Iran’s Major General Qassem Soleimani by the US in
Baghdad has been met with mixed reactions around the world. Some have
expressed their grief, while others were overjoyed at the death of the
man they call “the butcher of Aleppo” and the killer of Sunni Muslims in
the region.
Soleimani was commanding Iranian forces and their Shia militia allies at
the siege of the Syrian city of Aleppo in 2016, during which almost
1,200 people were killed. Around 31,000 have been killed there over the
course of the battle for the city from 2012 onwards. As the commander of
the elite Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp (IRGC),
he was responsible for overseeing and directing the
ongoing assault on Idlib province in north-west Syria, as well as the
Shia militias across the region who are blamed for numerous atrocities,
particularly against local Sunni Muslim populations. Syria’s President
Bashar Al-Assad himself praised Soleimani, saying that his contribution
to the regime and its military campaigns “will not be forgotten.”
It is not his contribution to foreign policy which makes Soleimani’s
death have such an impact in Iran, though, but his standing within the
country and its government. The IRGC is the guardian of the revolution
and Iran’s most powerful military force. Soleimani was thus effectively
one of the most prominent and influential men in the country, arguably
second only to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and on a par with
President Hassan Rouhani.
For US President Donald Trump to order an air strike to kill such an
important Iranian figure was reckless. It has been described as an act
of war, and yet despite the hysteria about it sparking World War Three,
the fact is that Iran has been shocked into silence, for now at least.
It is in a quandary both militarily and diplomatically in a way which it
has never been since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq war, the seizure of ships in the Gulf, the
tit-for-tat downing of Iranian and US drones last year, and the
seemingly endless sanctions regime imposed by the West on Iran have not
perplexed Tehran over the future of its foreign policy as much as the
assassination of Soleimani. The Iranian government is, in effect, short
of options for any retaliation, if it is going to retaliate at all. It
is in a no-win situation: failure to respond will be seen as a weakness
by the US, but it knows that it may not survive the consequences of any
military response, if US President Donald Trump’s aggressive tweets are
anything to go by.
Anti-war
activists hold banners during a protest organised by ‘CodePink’ in
front of the White House following the killing of Iranian Revolutionary
Guards’ Quds Force commander Qasem Soleimani by a US airstrike in the
Iraqi capital Baghdad, on January 4, 2020 in Washington, United States
[Yasin Öztürk / Anadolu Agency]
Iran was always taking a gamble by opposing US policy in the region and
attempting to control Iraq and undermine its popular protest movement.
However, America’s direct assassination of Iran’s top military figure
has brought that game to an end.
Nevertheless, those who were not upset at the killing are furious at the
US for overstepping the unwritten prohibition on targeting senior
political and military figures. Most Iranians regard the assassination
as a clear example of American terrorism.
Iran’s subsequent threats have surpassed its usual rhetoric. Despite its
desperation, Iran is not entirely toothless. It could, for example,
mobilise the Shia militias that it backs in Iraq and the Levant,
creating problems for the US and its allies in the region. It has gone
ahead and announced that it is abandoning the
crumbling 2015 nuclear deal; pushed Iraq into announcing that all US
and other foreign troops should leave the country; threatened to attack
US targets and ships in the Middle East; and even threatened to launch an attack on the White House in Washington.
Tehran also has its diplomatic and military alliance with Russia up its
sleeve. Although Tehran has very few solid allies in the international
community — and those it does have, such as Syria and Iraq, pose very
little threat to anyone — it can still count on Russia and possibly
China for support in the event of any major attack by the US. This was
demonstrated by Russia’s condemnation of Soleimani’s assassination,
while China accused the US of abusing its power. Their mutual mistrust
of the West means that the three nations may need each other in the near
future.
With Soleimani’s assassination, the US has partially succeeded in
reasserting its dominance in the Middle East at a time of increasing
Russian influence; Iran and surrounding countries have to acknowledge
this. Despite predictions of a direct military confrontation, however,
Iran and the US will most likely stick to the current pattern of
relatively small skirmishes, albeit slightly more intense. A major
conflict would bog down both sides, which neither really wants.
Even so, with two players who are very unpredictable despite their wild
rhetoric — Trump and Iran — it is hard to predict what will happen. One
thing is certain, though: Iran has been cornered politically, militarily
and diplomatically, as well as wounded severely; unless caution
prevails, it is thus likely to lash out, which isn’t likely to satisfy
any except those seeking revenge. No matter what that entails, it
wouldn’t be in anyone’s interests.