-Caveat Lector-

>From ProJo (URL @ bottom)

Dilip Hiro: Enemy of my enemy is my friend - Bush's tactice could bring Iraq and Iran 
closer

08/02/2002

WASHINGTON

IT CAME as no surprise that President George W. Bush has abandoned hope of working 
with Iranian
President Mohammad Khatami's reformist government. After all, he had famously and 
controversially labeled
Iran part of the "axis of evil" in his State of the Union speech; and Khatami, who was 
elected in 1997 and re-
elected last year, has yet to trounce his conservative adversaries. But Khatami's 
angry response revealed
the possibility that, with its bellicose and intolerant words, the Bush administration 
may well achieve what 20
years of diplomacy has failed to bring about: an alliance between the beleaguered 
Tehran and Baghdad.
Such an alliance would portend further instability in a region that contains 
two-thirds of the world's proven oil
reserves -- and frustrate the United States' aim to be the unchallenged foreign power 
in the region.

"We wish to caution the great powers against further interference in the affairs of 
this region and against the
exacerbation of the flames of war," warned Khatami last week, newly incensed by Bush's 
apparent advocacy
of the overthrow of the regime to which he belongs and, as I discovered on a recent 
visit there, reflecting
sentiments that are prevalent in Iran. Khatami's warning came at the end of a 
fortnight of invective between
Tehran and Washington, triggered by Bush's statement earlier this month in which he 
criticized the country's
"uncompromising, destructive polices." Bush went on to further anger Khatami by 
praising the students'
demonstrations in Tehran, demanding that the government listen to the "Iranian people 
who have no better
friend than the U.S."

Such statements are counterproductive. By making Iranian reformists appear as stooges 
of Washington, thus
undermining their nationalist credentials, they end up harming those the Bush 
administration is trying to
bolster and aiding instead their adversaries, the conservatives. The upshot is that 
leaders of the reformist
and conservative camps vie with one another in denouncing the United States for poking 
its nose into Iran's
domestic politics.

This time popular resentment was expressed in the form of one of the largest 
anti-American protests in
Tehran since 1999, with followers of both camps participating. "Different factions, 
although they have
disputes, told the Americans to mind their own business and told them not to interfere 
in Iran's internal
affairs," Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran, told worshipers in 
Tehran. "President Khatami
took a position against Bush and slapped him in the mouth."

These latest verbal salvos resound against a backdrop of growing distrust between the 
two countries over
Afghanistan. Iran had been infuriated by Bush's allegation that its government had 
provided refuge to al-
Qaida fugitives -- an accusation denied stoutly by Tehran.

In Tehran, I heard foreign diplomats back the Iranian version. "Some of the al-Qaida 
members might have
crossed into Iran over Pakistan's Baluchistan border, which is a very difficult 
terrain to monitor," an Asian
ambassador told me. "But the Iranian authorities were not involved. They arrested some 
al-Qaida members
of diverse nationalities and informed the respective embassies here of their 
detention."

More specifically, Washington is upset by Iran's special relationship with 
Afghanistan's western region around
Herat -- and unjustly so, from an Iranian point of view. There are long-established 
cultural and economic ties
between this Farsi-speaking area and Iran. After his defeat by the Taliban in 1995, 
the local warlord Ismail
Khan, an ethnic Tajik belonging to the Iranian-backed Northern Alliance, took refuge 
in the eastern Iranian
city of Mashhad. It was from there that he coordinated his attack on the Taliban 
regime in western
Afghanistan last October as part of the Pentagon's anti-Taliban campaign.

Two months later, the Iranian delegation worked closely with its American counterpart 
in Bonn to install Hamid
Karzai as leader of the interim Afghan government. Since then Tehran has backed Karzai 
consistently. "It was
the Iranians who put a reluctant Ismail Khan on their plane and flew him to Kabul to 
attend Karzai's swearing-
in ceremony on 22 December," the Asian ambassador told me. Since then, Tehran has 
pledged $560 million in
aid to Afghanistan over the next five years, and Karzai has visited Tehran. Khatami 
telephoned Karzai to
congratulate him on his election by the loya jirga in Kabul last month.

"On the ideological-political front, Khatami and Karzai are on the same wavelength," 
said Mohammad
Soltanifar, managing director of the pro-reform Iran News. "Both are committed to 
Islamic democracy and the
rule of law." Iranian officials always consult Karzai before doing or saying anything 
about his country, I was
told by regional diplomats in Tehran.

On the American side, under the pretext of making the war-ravaged Afghanistan secure, 
the Pentagon
rushed to set up "an observation post" at the Qala-e Qalat fort near the Afghan- 
Iranian border. During his
most recent visit to Afghanistan, U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld made it a 
point to visit Herat
and lecture Khan on the importance of his region to the stability of Afghanistan. "We 
have repeatedly voiced
support for peace and calm in Afghanistan, but stationing American forces on our 
eastern borders is not a
neighborly act," said an Iran News editorial in May.

Compounding the Iranian leaders' anxiety about the American entrenchment to the east 
is Bush's plan to
overthrow the regime of President Saddam Hussein in Iraq, with which Iran shares its 
750-mile western
border. Having fought a bloody war with Iraq in 1980-88, the Iranians have no 
illusions about the nature of
the Iraqi president or his authoritarian regime. But, 14 years after the end of that 
conflict, they would rather
deal with the Hussein they have known than a henchman installed by Washington as his 
successor. "If
President Bush hits Iraq, it will be very bad for our country, which will be exposed," 
said Soltanifar. "We will
be his next target."

What, the Iranians wonder, if the Americans succeed in overthrowing Saddam without 
attacking his country?
"That will still be bad for Iran," Soltanifar argues. And the idea prompts talk of 
forging an alliance with Iraq for
the sake of self-preservation. As it is, the Iranians and Iraqis are on the verge of 
resolving the long-running
dispute over the exchange of prisoners of war. Iranian Foreign Minister Kamal Kharrazi 
was the first minister
to visit Baghdad since 1980 when he boarded the maiden Iran Air flight from Tehran in 
October 2000 to meet
the Iraqi leader. His trip started a process that led to a reciprocal visit by his 
Iraqi counterpart Naji Sabri early
this year -- and a considerable warming of relations.

What's more, both countries are pursuing staunchly pro-Palestinian policies in the 
Israeli- Palestinian conflict.
Last month, the Iranian government hosted an international conference which rejected 
the U.S.-sponsored
peace process, such as it is.

The stands of Iran and Iraq on the Palestinian issue are in line with that of Syria, a 
neighbor of Iraq and a
strategic ally of Iran for the past two decades. Being on Washington's list of 
countries that sponsor
international terrorism, Syria could be another Bush administration candidate for 
regime change someday --
after Iraq and Iran. Syrian President Bashar Assad cannot be unaware of that.

This therefore raises the possibility of an Iranian-Iraqi-Syrian alliance, stretching 
from the Arabian Sea to the
Mediterranean -- an alarming prospect for the Bush White House but the one that flows 
logically from its
campaign for regime change in Iraq. The administration's current policy risks driving 
its declared enemies into
each other's arms, where they will pose a more potent challenge to the United States.

Dilip Hiro's latest book is War Without End: The Rise of Islamist Terrorism and the 
Global Response
(Routledge). He visited Iran last month.



Online at: 
http://www.projo.com/opinion/contributors/content/projo_20020802_hiro2.b9fcb.html
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