March 1995, pgs. 18-19
Will Iran Respond to Rising Internal Opposition with External
Aggression?—Two Views
An Expansionist Iran Is the Bitter Legacy of
Its Revolution
By Dr. Joseph A. Kechichian
It has been 16 years since the Revolution, seven years since the
end of the Iran-Iraq war, and six years since Ayatollah Khomeini's
death. In that time nothing seems to have changed, yet nothing is
what it used to be in Iran. Revolutionary Guards continue to monitor
public (and not so public) social behavior even as opposition to
their tactics is on the rise. More and more Iranians are looking
West, where they see less "Satan" and more consumer goods.
Khomeini's death in 1989 cast a shadow over the Revolution. Now
its supporters, including President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
face the unpleasant realities of Iran's economic difficulties. But
Rafsanjani knows that if he argues for moderation, he risks sharing
the downfall of other "moderates" who thought that the
Revolution could accommodate change and modification.
At present, it is the economy more than the Revolution that preoccupies
most Iranians. Iran's bazaari community (the merchant class
that turned against the shah in the late 1970s) no longer tolerates
Tehran's centralized economic policies. Among factors eroding Iran's
once-prosperous economy are inflation, a three-tiered exchange rate
for the riyal, the rampant favoritism and corruption that inflation
and artificial exchange rates create, a creeping foreign debt now
estimated at more than $30 billion, and mediocre standards for industrial
production.
Petroleum revenues estimated at $20 billion in 1993 are not large
enough to meet the country's growing needs. Iran's population, which
was approximately 55 million in 1994, continues to grow at an alarming
3.6 to 3.8 percent rate, placing a heavy burden on an economy whose
GNP has fallen by more than 40 percent since 1979.
Despite this legacy of problems, when voters cast their ballots
in June 1993 they reelected President Rafsanjani to a second four-year
term.
Now, however, two government courses of action suggest that to
distract attention from problems at home, Rafsanjani may be seeking
a foreign confrontation or diversions. First is the re-equipment
and reorganization of the military. Iran's half-million strong army
of 1979 was considerably enlarged during the war with Iraq. Despite
the one million casualties it caused, that war, by most accounts,
provided the armed forces with valuable experience. The availability
of substantial quantities of weapons from the former Soviet republics
now permits Iran to replenish its military stocks at very reasonable
prices.
A second Iranian effort also deeply concerns its neighbors. Iran's
export of its version of Islamic revolution is perceived as a destabilizing
influence by all regimes in the region, which also fear Iraq's secular
Ba'thism. However, they see Iranian influence in Lebanon's disintegration,
the forces undermining Palestinian-Israeli rapprochement, and manifestations
of conflict between Islam and the West. There also is evidence that
Iran is influencing events in the Sudan and in other African countries.
Do these manifestations indicate a calculated Iranian policy, reached
after thorough deliberations, or do they reflect little more than
opportunistic attempts to line up negotiating assets to "trade"
in a campaign to become a major regional power?
Whatever their motivations, some results of these Iranian policies
may be assessed. In the Arabian/Persian Gulf itself, Iran is challenging
the United Arab Emirates by rekindling the border disputes over
the Abu Musa and Tunb islands. It also is prodding Qatar to distance
itself from Saudi Arabia. Nevertheless, because the United States
currently enjoys significant military advantage in the region, any
Iranian challenge to the conservative monarchies could draw a sharp
response that could easily spell disaster for Tehran.
The economy pre-occupies most Iranians.
For this reason, Iran may launch more subtle challenges, such as
the assassinations or attempted assassinations in Turkey, Egypt
or Algeria in recent years that have been linked to Iranian groups
or influence.
President Hosni Mubarak unequivocally asserts that Iran is behind
anti-Western attacks in Egypt, and is linked to sinister designs
in Sudan. For their part, prominent Turkish leaders accuse Iran
of responsibility for raising tensions with Turkey. The ruling military
regime in Algeria makes similar accusations, alleging that although
the Islamic Salvation Front initially received financial support
from Saudi Arabian sources, it now is funded by Tehran.
In Tunisia, the al-Nahda party also allegedly is financed by Tehran.
In the Horn of Africa, Iran has been linked to armed groups in Somalia,
Uganda, Kenya, Djibouti, Tanzania and Zanzibar. In Eritrea, 2,000
rebel fighters, many veterans of the Afghanistan campaign, are believed
to be receiving support from Iran.
In short, Iranian aid is reaching paramilitary forces as well as
positive elements such as schools and educational and social service
centers in Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Algeria, Turkey and several
African and Central Asian republics. These efforts clearly illustrate
that Iran's ambitions are vast, notwithstanding its serious internal
problems.
As it pursues its assertive policies throughout the Muslim world,
however, Iran's poor economic performance threatens to impoverish
the Revolution and diminish its challenges to its Gulf neighbors
and its attempts to expand its sphere of influence in the Muslim
world.
This much is certain. Since 1979, Iran's estimated 180,000 religious
leaders have reshaped the Peacock Throne's legacy by entrenching
themselves in Shi'i traditions and by recreating the country's influence
structure. To achieve their objectives, Iran's mullahs purged elite
groups throughout the 1980s, and weeded out opponents who contemplated
"moderation." Even the eight-year-long Iran-Iraq war played
into the hands of, and was masterfully orchestrated by, the mullahs.
The war drained Iran and increased its international isolation,
thus setting in motion internal changes that strengthened Iran's
radical elements. Therefore, at this time there is little that can
be done from outside to moderate Iran's regional policies, or restore
it to a role of contributing to rather than destabilizing the security
of the entire region.
Joseph A. Kechichian is an associate politcal scientist at RAND
in Santa Monica, CA. Opinions and conclusions in this article are
those of the author, and should not be attributed to RAND or any
agency sponsoring its research. |