http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/09/world/middleeast/09iran.html?_r=1

September 8, 2011
In Shift, Iran’s President Calls for End to Syrian CrackdownBy NEIL
MacFARQUHAR<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/m/neil_macfarquhar/index.html?inline=nyt-per>

For years, posters celebrating the decades-old alliance joining
Syria<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/syria/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>
and
Iran festooned the streets and automobiles of the Syrian capital — the
images of Presidents Bashar
al-Assad<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/bashar_al_assad/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 and Mahmoud 
Ahmadinejad<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/a/mahmoud_ahmadinejad/index.html?inline=nyt-per>embroidered
with roses and daffodils.

But that alliance is now strained, and on Thursday, President Ahmadinejad of
Iran became the most recent, and perhaps the most unexpected, world leader
to call for President Assad to end his violent crackdown of an uprising
challenging his authoritarian rule in Syria.

When the Arab Spring broke out, upending the regional order, Iran seemed to
emerge a winner: its regional adversary, Hosni Mubarak of Egypt, was ousted
from power and its most important ally, Syria, was emboldened.

But the popular demands for change swept into Syria, and now, as Mr. Assad’s
forces continue to shoot unarmed demonstrators, Iran sees its fortunes
fading on two fronts: its image as a guardian of Arab resistance has been
battered, and its most important regional strategic ally is in danger of
being ousted.

Even while it has been accused of providing financial and material support
for Mr. Assad’s crackdown, Iran has increased calls for Syria to end the
violence and reform its political process, a formula Tehran apparently hopes
will repair its image and, if heeded, possibly bolster Mr. Assad’s standing.

“Regional nations can assist the Syrian people and government in the
implementation of essential reforms and the resolution of their problems,”
Mr. Ahmadinejad said in an interview in Tehran, according to his official
Web site. Other press accounts of the interview with a Portuguese television
station quoted him as also saying, “A military solution is never the right
solution,” an ironic assessment from a man whose own questionable
re-election in 2009 prompted huge street demonstrations that were put down
with decisive force.

The collapse of the Assad government would be a strategic blow to
Shiite-majority Iran, cutting off its most important bridge to the Arab
world while empowering its main regional rivals, Saudi Arabia and its
increasingly influential competitor, Turkey, both Sunni-majority nations.
Iran would also lose its main arms pipeline to Hezbollah in Lebanon, further
undermining its ambition to be the primary regional power from the Levant to
Pakistan.

Not long ago, Iran and its Arab allies like Hezbollah’s leader, Hassan
Nasrallah, were seen as folk heroes to many Arabs for their confrontational
stance toward the United States and Israel.

But Iran has suddenly found itself on the wrong side of the barricades.

“Assad’s heroic image of resistance is being watered down,” said Vali Nasr,
a professor at Tufts University and the author of “The Shia Revival: How
Conflicts Within Islam Will Shape the Future.” “That’s the problem for Iran
and for Hezbollah. They are trying to find out how to have their cake and
eat it, too.”

Demonstrators clogging the streets from Tunisia to Egypt to Syria are
demanding freedom and democracy, forcing Iran to openly struggle with the
problem of how to endorse the revolutionary spirit while simultaneously
buttressing its crucial strategic Arab ally.

“They don’t fit into the framework of toppling dictators and democracy and
all that,” said Paul Salem, director of the Carnegie Middle East Center in
Lebanon.

Yet many analysts say that the Iranians have tried to play both sides of the
barricades, supporting their allies in Syria with all manner of aid while
simultaneously voicing support for the revolutions elsewhere, initially
calling them the offspring of their own 1979 revolution.

“It is mostly for the Arab gallery, rather than a tangible policy shift,”
said Cengiz Candar, a prominent Turkish columnist. “In terms of the Syrian
opposition, there is nobody Iran can stand on in case the regime is
replaced.”

Iran has been helping Syria with everything from money to advice on
controlling the Internet, analysts say, offering its expertise to help stave
off the catastrophe that Mr. Assad’s collapse would be for Tehran’s regional
ambitions. Aside from propping up Syria with billions of dollars, it has
pressed others, including Iraq, to support Mr. Assad.

Syrian protesters take it as a matter of faith that security forces from
both Iran and Hezbollah have been drawn into the fray, trading cellphone
videos that are said to show Hezbollah fighters streaming across the border
in black S.U.V.’s.

Given that the Assad government has had about 40 years to perfect the
instruments of repression, most analysts believe that it does not really
need men or much advice from the outside.

But in its ever more stringent sanctions against Syria, the European Union
included the Quds force of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, accusing it of
providing “technical assistance, equipment and support to the Syrian
security services to repress civilian protest movements.”

Analysts are convinced that behind the scenes the Iranians are pushing for a
tough line, suggesting that their repression of the 2009 democracy protests
in Iran is the model to follow.

“Iran calling for Syria to dialogue rather than use force against its
population is akin to Silvio Berlusconi telling Charlie Sheen not to
womanize,” said Karim Sadjadpour of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace, who is a sharp critic of the Iranian leadership.

Analysts say the scale and the duration of the protests in Syria just became
too great for the Iranians to ignore, and yet they still try.

“Muslim people in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia, Yemen and other countries are in
need of this vigilance today,” the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
said in a recent sermon marking the end of the holy month of Ramadan. “They
must not let the enemies hijack the victories they have gained.”

Then he talked about the oppression of people in Bahrain — which is mainly
Shiite — before moving on to the famine in Somalia.

On the other hand, the constant focus on the potential repercussions of the
uprisings clearly shows that Iran’s leaders are worried. Not least among
their worries is that the protests could set off renewed demonstrations at
home, although aside from some environmental protests in the northwest,
nothing significant has been reported.

There is also an increasingly vocal school of thought in Iran that says it
has too much vested in the Assad government. Among other things, it has
allowed regional competitors like Turkey, a largely Sunni country, to
advance at the expense of Shiite Iran. The Iranians’ minority status across
much of the Arab world can make their religious credentials suspect to the
majority — who might accuse them of being a force for sectarianism.

“The reality of the matter is that our absolute support for Syria was a
wrong policy,” Ahmad Avaei, a member of Parliament, told the Web site Khabar
Online. “The people protesting against the government in that country are
religious people, and the protest movement there is a grass-roots movement.”

At stake is Iran’s image in the wider region, and its ability to add teeth
to its claim to be upholding Arab and Muslim interests in confronting
Israel.

“Iran wants to be perceived as the voice of the downtrodden in the Middle
East, the one country that speaks truth to power,” Mr. Sadjadpour said.
“Their close rapport with the Assad regime undermines that image.”

Anne Barnard contributed reporting from Beirut, Lebanon; Heba Afify from
Cairo; and Artin Afkhami from Boston.

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Peace Is Doable

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