Ali KhameneiBreaking NewsDonald TrumpiranIran Nuclear DealIran WarIslamisraelmiddle eastNational SecurityOpinion

How Trump’s War Could Reshape Iran’s Future – Reuel Marc Gerecht

Before the coming of Donald Trump, Republican presidential candidates always adopted a harsh line toward the Islamic Republic. If elected, they softened their approach. Ronald Reagan established the pattern. In the baptismal moment for U.S. policy, Reagan failed to respond meaningfully to the Iranian-orchestrated attack on U.S. Marines and the embassy in Beirut in 1983. The caution of Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger and his senior military officers won the day against Secretary of State George Shultz, who wanted to punish Tehran directly. Two years later, a national security decision directive, penned for National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, claimed that “dynamic political evolution is taking place inside Iran.” In part, the Iran-Contra mess grew out of this hopeful analysis. At Langley, the principal Central Intelligence Agency officers in the Near East Division of the operations directorate who were advising the director, William Casey, saw the possibility of an Iranian Thermidor.

Like a communicable disease, these sentiments circulated through each subsequent administration, inevitably fed most by those who saw foreign policy as a “realist” endeavor of competing nationalist and personal interests (to wit: the State Department, the CIA, and the Pentagon). This mindset climaxed in Barack Obama’s presidency, where the 2015 nuclear deal was meant to normalize the Islamic Republic so that the sunset clauses in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action wouldn’t really matter since the clerical regime would evolve into something less threatening. 

Easily the most unorthodox, histrionic, and fickle president since World War II, Trump has discarded most of the establishment’s Iran restraint even while putting “realism” into transactional overdrive. From his decision to kill the Revolutionary Guard dark lord, Qassem Suleimani in 2020, to his bombing run against the clerical regime’s nuclear sites in the 12-Day War, to the American-Israeli bombing campaign today, Trump has done things that only the most ardent hawks in Washington ever dreamed of. 

This sharp divergence from American practice has certainly surprised the clerical regime, which, though fearful of U.S. power, had wanted to believe that the Islamic Republic was too formidable to attack. It’s a bit mystifying that Ali Khamenei, the now late supreme leader, was so casual about a national security council meeting in a compound without bunker-like protection. Since the 12-Day War if not earlier, when the Israeli assassinations of nuclear scientists started to pile up, the Iranians have been well aware of Jerusalem’s in-country intelligence assets. They knew that Israelis were damn good at co-opting telephonic and other electronic equipment. They have known for decades about America’s intercept capacity. The kind of hubris that once was typical of the clerical regime—the assumption that the country’s long-range ballistic missiles, well-armed proxies, and fondness for terrorism gave the regime sufficient immunity against an American or Israeli assassination campaign—should have evaporated. 

Source link

Related Posts

1 of 617