Iran: From Eschatology to 21st-Century Foreign Policy

by Clare Lopez
inFocus Quarterly 
<http://www.jewishpolicycenter.org/2142/iran-eschatology-foreign-policy> 
Winter 2010

http://lopez.pundicity.com/9357/iran-eschatology-foreign-policy


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The United States faces no greater foreign policy challenge than managing the 
threat from the jihadist regime in Tehran while also standing unequivocally 
with the Iranian people in their struggle for liberty. Indeed, a succession of 
U.S. administrations has been wrestling with that challenge for over 31 years. 
The Islamic Republic of Iran is not easily compared to other nations or even 
other totalitarian dictatorships: after Arabia, Iran is the second state in the 
modern era to be captured by violence and ruled by the forces of Islamic jihad. 
The threat to U.S. national security and international stability derives from 
the primary mission of this regime, enshrined in its 1989 constitution: the 
establishment of an Islamic state worldwide and subjugation of all people on 
earth to Sharia, or Islamic law.

When Iran's constitutional mandate is coupled with a theological belief system 
that holds the Shi'ite messianic figure, the Twelfth Imam (or Mahdi), can be 
prompted to return to earth through the instigation of Armageddon, then 21st 
century U.S. foreign policy must reckon with 7th century eschatology in quest 
of the bomb. Whether or not the Supreme Leader and the clerical clique that 
supports him seek "martyrdom" on a national scale, Iran's aggressive 
militarization and international power projection via its terror proxies 
present U.S. foreign policymakers with a set of challenges that must top the 
list in terms of immediacy and import.


Nuclear Weapons Ambitions


The Ayatollah Khomeini founded the Iranian revolution in 1979 on a deep-seated 
hostility to modernization and secularization in an increasingly Westernized 
world. But it was his near-disastrous military face-off with neighboring Iraq 
that prompted the order to acquire nuclear weapons. Pursued in secrecy for 
years before the Iranian opposition's August 2002 revelations stunned the 
world, Iran's quest for the bomb was jump-started by substantial assistance 
from Pakistan's AQ Khan in addition to help from China, North Korea, and 
Russia. After years of defying UN Security Council and International Atomic 
Energy Agency (IAEA) demands that Iran honor the nuclear Non-Proliferation 
Treaty and come clean about the entirety and purpose of its nuclear program, 
today Iran appears closer than ever to achieving a deliverable warhead 
capability. The threat of Iranian weapons of mass destruction (WMD) 
proliferation, perhaps to terrorist associates such as al-Qaeda or Hezbollah, 
represents an additional concern while other regional nuclear programs may well 
emerge under regimes that fear Iranian hegemony and perceive a diminution of 
the U.S. leadership role in the world.

Nuclear weapons enable this regime's key objectives: regime survival as an 
Islamic jihadist state; regional hegemony in the Middle East and maximization 
of broader geo-strategic influence; destruction of the State of Israel; and 
global domination of Islam and Sharia law. Grasping the primacy of these goals, 
it becomes easier to understand why years of U.S., European, and international 
negotiations with this regime have come to naught in achieving a voluntary 
slowing or halt to Iran's nuclear enrichment activities. Neither have stringent 
economic sanctions accomplished much beyond imposing additional hardships on 
the Iranian people. Only a covert campaign aimed at Iranian nuclear scientists, 
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC), and intelligence agency defections, 
and the introduction of sabotaged components into the Iranian nuclear supply 
chain, reportedly have achieved some involuntary setbacks to the program.

Despite such successes that at best will buy some time, continued U.S. failure 
to comprehend the eschatological and existential nature of Iran's nuclear 
weapons quest leaves it ill-prepared to meet this regime's hostile intent. Only 
credible threats to the existence of that regime are likely to have any effect 
on its determination to carry on. And only regime change in favor of a 
democratic opposition pledged to eschew WMD of all kinds can eliminate for good 
the possibility of nukes in the hands of the mullahs.


Alliances in the Axis of Terror


Iran's chummy relations with regimes hostile to U.S. and Western interests add 
complexity to dealings with Tehran. Iranian dependence on proliferation 
assistance for its chemical, biological, nuclear weapons, and missile programs 
from countries like China, North Korea, Pakistan, and Russia has been 
problematic for many years. The ineffective international inspection and 
enforcement mechanisms that allowed nuclear proliferation to culminate in a 
nuclear weapons capability for Pakistan looks likely to end the same way for 
Iran. U.S., UN, and other efforts to impose sanctions, pass resolutions, and 
issue toothless condemnations are mostly disregarded with contempt by the 
Tehran regime.

Tehran's closest ally and partner in WMD development and sponsorship of terror 
is Syria. Iran is the dominant partner in the relationship, but both gain from 
an alliance that meets strategic needs of each. Iran receives logistical access 
to its terror proxy, Hezbollah, penetration for its revolution deep into the 
Arab world, and a frontline position from which to confront Israel. Syria 
receives a powerful ally that helps it dominate Lebanon (historically 
considered a Syrian province) and relieves Syria's isolation as a secular 
dynasty ruled by the Alawite minority Muslim sect, considered heretical by many 
Muslims. Given these mutual benefits, U.S. and Israeli fantasies about 
separating Syria from its Iranian orbit must be seen as the pipedreams they are.

The Iranian ballistic missile program owes much to its North Korean 
partnership. Tehran and Pyongyang often act as a tag team to demand or distract 
international attention, but their antics cannot minimize the underlying deadly 
intent to perfect a nuclear delivery system. Although the Iranians are not 
known to have achieved yet the difficult task of miniaturizing its warheads to 
fit ballistic missile nosecones, joint development of this technology with 
North Korea clearly appears headed in that direction. The threat from Iran's 
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) eventually will reach the U.S. 
homeland unless steps are taken to forestall that possibility.

Closer to home, the Iranian beachhead in Venezuela raises echoes of the 1960s 
Cuban missile crisis for strategists observing Venezuelan President Hugo 
Chavez's romance with Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Since 2001, the 
two have signed dozens of defense, economic, and political agreements to cement 
a relationship that provides Iran with intelligence and military outposts in 
America's backyard. Chavez assists Iran on myriad fronts, from evading UN 
sanctions to mining for uranium; Ahmadinejad reciprocates with an influx of 
military and intelligence operatives who train Venezuelan forces at covert 
Iranian facilities around the country. The relationship involves Hezbollah as 
well, as 2010 photos of Venezuelan officials meeting with Hezbollah officials 
in Lebanon demonstrate. Iran also has been courting other Latin countries, 
including Bolivia, Ecuador, and Nicaragua.


Military Influence


Tehran's aggressive drive for expanded geo-strategic influence in the Persian 
Gulf, broader Middle East, and southwest Asia, harnessed to its determination 
to seize leadership of the international jihad, alarms neighboring Sunni 
regimes that also fear erosion of the traditional American defense commitment. 
Iran's IRGC, Qods Force, Bassij, and Ministry of Intelligence and Security 
(MOIS) are Tehran's lead organizations for domestic control at home and 
jihadist terror projection abroad. Each of these demands attention by U.S. 
policymakers to understand its mission and capabilities, and to formulate 
effective countermeasures that check Iran's international agenda.

The IRGC was established by Khomeini in the early months of the 1979 revolution 
to augment the regular army's defense of Iran's borders and ensure the 
obliteration of Khomeini's domestic rivals. Later, its primary function became 
keeping the regime in power, especially after the widespread street 
demonstrations that followed the June 2009 presidential elections. Afterward, 
regime fears about survivability led to large infusions of resources to the 
IRGC to boost its ability to suppress internal regime opposition.

The Qods Force's stature and capabilities also have expanded in recent years. 
The operational terror arm of the Iranian regime, the Qods Force is responsible 
for liaison with Iran's terror affiliates, including al-Qaeda, Hamas, 
Hezbollah, and the Taliban. Both the IRGC and Qods Force (in addition to the 
MOIS) maintain an undercover presence in Iranian diplomatic facilities 
worldwide, from which joint al-Qaeda-Hezbollah-Iran operations are launched. 
Together, they project Iran's writ in Lebanon, which the UN Special Tribunal on 
Lebanon looks unlikely to weaken, even with indictments expected to name Qods 
Force commander, Qassem Suleimani, for his role in the 2005 assassination of 
Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. IRGC and Qods Force operatives run 
training camps where Hezbollah explosives experts pass on their deadly skills; 
they also provide funding, training, and weapons to terrorist militias in Iraq 
and Taliban forces in Afghanistan. The Qods Force handles Iranian relations 
with organized crime and narco-traffickers, including Afghan drug lords. 
Investigative reporting from Africa and the Americas indicates an expanding 
presence of these terrorist elements in these areas as well.

Meanwhile, in the MOIS, the Iranian regime fields a world-class, well-funded 
intelligence service that is directly commanded by the Iranian Supreme Leader. 
Numbering some 30,000 personnel, the MOIS is highly sophisticated as well as 
brutal and ruthless. Its number one mission is to defend the regime against all 
threats, domestic or foreign. Together with the IRGC and Qods Force, the MOIS 
shares responsibility for infiltration and suppression of regime opposition by 
any and all means and liaison with terror organizations worldwide. U.S. 
national security leadership should not have too much trouble recognizing its 
tactics and tradecraft, as the MOIS was trained by the Soviet KGB.

The MOIS has developed an extensive network of individuals, groups, think 
tanks, and others that the Iranian media have openly referred to as "the Iran 
Lobby in America." The principal objective of this lobby is to infiltrate top 
U.S.-Iran policymakers and persuade them to take a conciliatory approach to the 
Iranian regime, oppose coercive diplomacy, stringent sanctions, and any sort of 
military action, and to urge instead a policy of concessions and negotiations. 
It is concerning that some of the individuals affiliated with the "Iran Lobby" 
should have found their way into influential government posts as well as 
positions of trust from which to advise and brief U.S. Iran policymakers.

Indeed, U.S. civilian, intelligence, policy, and military leadership have yet 
to either comprehend or counter the deadly activities of these regime actors.


A Terrorist Regime's Terror Ties


There is no clearer evidence of the Iranian regime's commitment to jihadist 
violence than the words of its own constitution, calling for the "continuation 
of that revolution both inside and outside the country." Regime preference to 
accomplish that relies on terrorist proxy groups such as Hamas and Hezbollah as 
well as operational alliances with al-Qaeda, the Taliban, and other jihadist 
groups.

Thanks to Iranian funding and training, Hezbollah in 2011 stands on the brink 
of dominating Lebanon both militarily and politically. Its effective overthrow 
of the Lebanese government in January 2011, coupled with assumptions of 
impunity for its role in the 2005 assassination of Lebanese Prime Minister 
Rafik Hariri, places the sovereignty of a free Lebanon in jeopardy and poses an 
important test for U.S. policymakers. Iran both aids and uses Hezbollah's rise 
to power in Lebanon as part of its own overall strategy to position itself as a 
rising regional power and rival to U.S. predominance.

U.S. leaders face a crucial choice: support the brave Lebanese who fought and 
died for the Cedar Revolution or see Tehran take a front-line position against 
the State of Israel—which it threatens regularly with genocide—as well as a 
foothold on the southern shores of the Mediterranean.

Hezbollah not only has developed into one of the most tightly disciplined, 
superbly trained, and fanatically dedicated fighting forces in the world, but 
it also has grown into a global terrorist network with a presence in Africa, 
Europe, and the Americas. That presence directly threatens U.S. national 
security imperatives, not least because of Hezbollah's history of acting as the 
Iranian regime's cat's paw for a litany of bloody terror attacks, but also 
because of its expanding relationships with Mexican and South American drug 
cartels.

Iran also provides significant material support to Hamas, its Muslim 
Brotherhood terror proxy in Gaza. That support includes financial infusions, 
terror training conducted by the IRGC/Qods Force and Hezbollah, and the 
provision of thousands of rockets and missiles that Hamas launches across the 
border into Israel. Dismissive of any genuine attempts at nation-building, 
Hamas under Iranian tutelage instead implements Islamic law and assails Gazan 
Palestinians with an incessant barrage of media messages conveying Jew-hatred 
and glorification of suicide killings.

Effective defense of U.S. national security priorities in the Middle East as 
well as the homeland requires understanding that the Iranian regime has worked 
for years in close coordination not only with Hezbollah and Hamas, but also 
with Osama bin Laden, Ayman al-Zawahiri, and al-Qaeda to mount terrorist 
operations against U.S., Israeli, and Western interests around the world. This 
jihadist alliance began when Osama bin Laden contracted with Iran for 
explosives and other training from Hezbollah's global terror chieftain, Imad 
Mughniyah, in the early 1990s. Iran later hired out Hezbollah to Hamas, the 
Iraqi terror militias, and the Taliban. Major terror attacks from the Khobar 
Towers bombing to the East Africa Embassy bombings, the attack on the USS Cole, 
September 11, and attacks against U.S. and Coalition partners in Afghanistan, 
Iraq, and elsewhere, are the result of this tri-partite arrangement.

Iran and these jihadist organizations are unified in their enmity to the U.S., 
Israel, and all Western-style civilization. U.S. policymakers must prioritize 
the urgency of studying their motivation to wage doctrinally-commanded jihad 
against non-Muslim targets for the purpose of imposing Sharia worldwide. 
Unequivocal denunciation of Iranian-sponsored terrorism and refusal to 
legitimize terrorist policies even when supported by a radicalized electorate 
must be the cornerstones of American leadership.


Tehran's 21st Century Threat


The history of the Khomeinist regime in Iran has been written in blood: first 
and foremost, the blood of its own people, but also in every place the regime's 
emissaries—the IRGC, Qods Force, MOIS, Hamas, Hezbollah, and others—have 
extended their reach. The U.S. holds a leadership role in the free world; 
people everywhere yearning for liberty look to the U.S. for moral inspiration 
and a superpower's protection against tyranny. Tehran's naked ambition for 
geo-strategic hegemony, inexorable march to a nuclear weapons capability, 
embrace of terror as a policy tool, and horrific record of human rights abuses 
at home define a regime that is deeply and inherently destabilizing to the 
international system.

U.S. policy decisions about how to deal with this Iranian regime will be among 
the most crucial American leadership must make in the coming months. 
Underestimating the hostile intent of Iran's agenda or failing to recognize the 
compelling strength of the Islamic jihadist ideology that binds them and their 
terror allies together in enmity to free societies under rule of man-made law 
will lead to increasing global destabilization. U.S. leadership must grapple 
with the reality that this Iranian regime is a serious adversary that poses a 
grave threat to the democratic way of life everywhere. Absent a strong, 
credible U.S. response, Tehran will interpret American resolve as lacking and 
react accordingly—advancing its hegemony over neighbors, threatening Israel, 
and holding U.S. policy hostage to terror and nuclear blackmail. Should 
Washington falter before this challenge, not only would it fail the American 
and Iranian people alike, but it would betray the United States' essential 
commitment to defend liberty wherever it is threatened by tyranny.

 



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