Regime Change  in Iran?
by Brendan Daly
Middle  East Quarterly
Spring 2012
 
There is every reason to believe that the Islamic  Republic's days are 
numbered. The current government, lorded over by the  religious supreme leader, 
Ayatollah Ali Khamene'i, and his Guardian Council of  aging mullahs, who can 
overrule any policy change by the pseudo-elected  president, seem wildly 
out of touch with the general populace. Not only are the  youth of Iran—some 
70 percent of whom are under the age of thirty—chaffing under  the 
"guardianship of the Islamic jurists" (velayet-e-faqih)—but so is the  economy, 
due to 
sanctions imposed by the West in response to the regime's  insistence on 
pursuing its nuclear program._[1]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn1)  
Inflation has  long been out of control and trade and tourism a tiny fraction 
of 
what it could  be, and yet the establishment has on the whole shown little 
interest in  sacrificing militant, revolutionary principles for economic, and 
indeed,  political expediency. Can this approach be sustained in view of the 
tightening  economic noose around Tehran, and at what cost? 
Background

The replacement of a relentlessly Islamist regime—emerging as it is in  
competition with Turkey as the primary regional superpower—with a liberal,  
secular, democratic government that will eschew domestic repression and  
international subversion is certainly attractive._[2]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn2)  And it is not  unprecedented, for Iran 
long struggled for 
constitutional and democratic rule.  The constitutional revolution of 1905 was 
the 
first of its kind in the Middle  East. Even the 1979 revolution, customarily 
referred to as the "Islamic  Revolution," was in fact, initially, the result 
of a confluence of agitators:  republican, nationalist, Marxist, and 
Islamist. But in the months and years  following the flight of the shah and 
Khomeini's triumphant return, the ayatollah  wrest control from the liberals 
and 
progressives, and through a brutal campaign  of street violence, 
assassination, intimidation, and expert propaganda, crushed  any opposition to 
his 
totalitarian ideology._[3]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn3)   
Any visitor who spends significant time in the  country will find ample 
justification for the Iranians' reputation for  open-mindedness, artistry, 
intellectualism, and an almost fanatical reverence  for culture. The most 
popular poet in Iran is Hafez, a national hero who is more  readily quoted by 
most 
Iranians than the Qur'an. His poetry is full of  wine-soaked revelry, 
unrequited and requited love, and a palpable hatred of  religious hypocrisy and 
austerity. 
Indeed, even after decades of repressive Islamist  rule, Iran is still full 
of apparent contradictions. It is run by a highly  moralistic, puritanical 
clergy, yet cannabis and heroin are more freely  available than in most 
Western countries;_[4]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn4)  a country where  
producing music with a lone female voice is illegal, yet relatively early-term 
 abortion is not;_[5]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn5)  where most 
people are constantly on guard against  expressing true political opinions, yet 
one will find an old woman who will  loudly shout "Long live the shah!"; 
where nepotism reigns at almost every level  of society and wealth and power go 
hand in hand, yet many of its most powerful  political figures were three 
decades ago "riding donkeys in the provinces" as  one Tehran resident put 
it._[6]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn6)  
Advocates of the Islamic Republic's  imminent demise point to the small 
semi-nationalist, Zoroastrian revival  burgeoning among the youth of Iran. The 
Faravahar, the symbol of the religion,  is a common sight on key-rings and 
hanging from rearview mirrors. For some it  simply represents Iran and its 
past glory. But for others, it is a real  spiritual alternative to Islam. As 
Ali-Reza, a construction worker in his  fifties from south Tehran told me: 
"My grandparents were Zoroastrian, but my  parents were forced to convert. … 
We are still Zoroastrian in our hearts, but in  Islam, if you change your 
religion, they kill you," he adds, followed by several  expletives. 
But one must be careful not to get carried away  with this narrative. For 
every Zoroastrian revivalist, for every youth in north  Tehran who spits at a 
passing bearded militiaman; for every exile who speaks in  glowing terms of 
the shah; for every student in Shiraz who visits the bathroom  with the 
words "I need to say hello to our President (Ahmadinejad)"— it is hard  to 
escape the conclusion while traveling around the country that those who  demand 
nothing less than the total abolition of the Islamic Republic are in a  
clear minority. Still, it is a minority that history and demographics would  
suggest is steadily growing. 
Why No "Iranian Spring"?
With the ostensibly pro-democratic upheavals in  the Arab world in 2011, 
many were asking why there were no equivalent mass  protests in Iran. In fact, 
in the earliest days of the Arab uprisings, Tehran  witnessed a series of 
sizeable demonstrations. Two protesters, Sane Jaleh and  Mohammed Mokhtari, 
were killed on February 14-15, 2011. Amazingly, the state-run  media tried to 
claim that they were in fact pro-government activists and that  they were 
killed by either anti-regime terrorists or supporters of Green  Movement 
leaders Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi—a quite ludicrous notion  that 
was conclusively refuted by interviews carried out with the men's friends  and 
family._[7]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn7)  
However, the bulk of the Iranian population did  not back these 
February-April protests. Even among north Tehran's educated  middle-class, the 
stronghold of the opposition movement, the prevailing feeling  since the failed 
2009 
anti-government "Green Movement" demonstrations is one of  cynicism and 
despair. Shokoufeh, 27, is an artist and veteran of antigovernment  activity. 
When I asked her in March 2011 of her estimated time-frame for the  collapse 
of the regime, she said, 
Twenty, thirty years. If we all protest now, and  don't give up, they will 
kill thousands of us. They don't care. They have all  the power, all the 
guns, and they consider us traitors. They will kill as many  of us as they 
want; they will win easily.
There is a hard-line element of the Iranian  population, estimated at 
anywhere between 10 to 25 percent, that is willing to  die and kill for the 
Islamic Republic. Furthermore, this militant minority has a  monopoly on 
political and military power. The genius of the Islamic Republic is  that for 
every 
state and civic institution—parliament, judiciary, military—there  is a 
parallel, unaccountable religious body to either mirror it or police it.  The 
on-the-ground authority of the paramilitary Islamic Revolutionary Guards  
Corps and Basij militia exceeds that of the official Iranian military and 
police  respectively._[8]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn8)  
In short, the regime is strong and dynamic. Its  byzantine political 
structure provides fundamental veto powers to any attempt at  systemic, 
democratic 
change from within, and its sophisticated security and  military apparatus 
dwarfs anything that could conceivably be mustered by the  opposition. And 
there is no indication that the supreme leader and his circle of  ayatollahs 
have any intention of "giving up one iota"_[9]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn9)  of control over  the reins of power. 
Indeed, just the opposite is 
true. 
Ahmadinejad Down, Ayatollahs Rising
In 2009, Ayatollah Khamene'i took the  unprecedented step of publicly 
backing incumbent president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's  election victory against the 
reformist opposition and its claims of electoral  fraud, declaring the 
victory a "divine assessment."_[10]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn10)  
Several 
days  later, as protests continued to escalate, the supreme leader appeared 
to  backtrack somewhat, announcing that he had ordered the Guardian Council 
to  investigate the claims of fraud—who, of course, denied the 
claims._[11]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn11)  
Virtually all serious commentators have alleged  some degree of fraud in 
the elections. The accusations came not only from every  opposition candidate 
but from numerous nongovernment clerics and from foreign  journalists._[12]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn12)  Some results, such as Mousavi's loss 
in his own home  province of East Azerbaijan, were too hard for many to 
swallow._[13]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn13)  But to what  extent 
Ahmadinejad's victory reflected, or failed to reflect, the majority's  genuine 
preference has been hotly debated. Polls conducted by Western  organizations 
both before and after the June 2009 elections, showed anywhere  between a 12 
percent to 39 percent_[14]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn14)  margin in  
favor of Ahmadinejad. However, such polls are themselves subject to a myriad 
of  weaknesses, not least self-censorship. 
Still, the Guardian Council's alliance with the  president turned out to be 
ephemeral. Ahmadinejad and his circle have never been  true orthodox 
conservatives. Instead, he is a part of a "religious nationalist"  current 
within 
the broader conservative milieu. Ayatollah Khomeini was famous  for his 
anti-nationalism: "Those who say that we want nationality, they are  standing 
against Islam... We have no use for the nationalists. … Islam is  against 
nationality."_[15]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn15)  In a Machiavellian 
twist, the president is now being  derided as a "deviant" by the conservative 
establishment, accusing him and his  inner circle of having messianic 
aspirations_[16]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn16)  and of trying  to usurp 
the 
supreme leader and the velayet-e-faqih. 
Ahmadinejad's closest friend and confidant  Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, whose 
daughter is married to the president's son, is  particularly loathed by the 
orthodox conservatives and has even been jeered at  by hardliners in the 
streets. It was the general opinion, both within and  outside Iran, that 
Ahmadinejad was grooming Mashaei to be his successor (the  presidency has a 
two-term limit)._[17]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn17)  This now seems  
impossible. When Ahmadinejad caused outrage by appointing Mashaei as first vice 
 
president (one of twelve VPs), Khamene'i quickly ordered Mashaei to resign 
from  the cabinet, forcing Ahmadinejad to appoint him his chief of staff 
instead._[18]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn18)   After being relentlessly 
slandered in the conservative state-run press, Mashaei  has now been 
implicated in the largest corruption scandal in the republic's  history—as have 
several of Ahmadinejad's other close associates._[19]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn19)  
The antipathy does not end there. On November 21,  2011, Ahmadinejad's top 
media advisor and chief of the state-run Islamic  Republic News Agency 
(IRNA), Ali Akbar Javanfekr, was arrested and handcuffed by  security services 
in 
his own office. Reportedly, only a personal telephone call  from the 
president secured Javanfekr's release._[20]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn20)  
In the ultimate affront to what semblance of  democracy the country has, in 
mid-October, the supreme leader casually remarked  that the position of a 
popularly-elected president may be abolished "someday in  the distant future" 
and replaced with a prime minister appointed by the  parliament._[21]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn21)  
These events mark a high point in Khamene'i's  involvement in politics from 
which he is traditionally supposed to be aloof.  With Mousavi under 
indefinite house arrest,_[22]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn22)  and  
Ahmadinejad's faction despised if not decisively discredited in the eyes of the 
 
Guardian Council, it is hard to imagine what kind of reformist candidate might  
be allowed to run—let alone succeed—in the upcoming 2013 presidential  
elections. 
Regime Change and the Pitfalls of Intervention
It has been a busy few months in Washington-Tehran  diplomacy. First there 
was the FBI's revelation of a plot by Iranian nationals  to assassinate the 
Saudi ambassador to the United States (and possibly bomb the  Saudi and 
Israeli embassies),_[23]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn23)  followed by a  
damning International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) report_[24]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn24)  and  Washington's promise of increased 
sanctions,_[25]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn25)  then by the  downing of 
a U.S. spy 
drone,_[26]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn26)  and now,  according to 
some reports, by placing the Revolutionary Guards "on a war  footing" in 
anticipation of further escalation._[27]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn27)  
Keeping all these recent developments in mind, it  is easy to understand 
why the rhetoric in favor of regime change and  confrontation has escalated in 
the United States. At a recent Republican Party  presidential debate, Newt 
Gingrich argued that not only was regime change in  Iran possible but that 
it could be accomplished within a year._[28]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn28)  Indeed, some  of the Republican 
presidential candidates seem to have 
been trying to outdo each  other in their willingness to use the "military 
option" to prevent Iran from  developing nuclear weapons. 
The problem with this kind of posturing, and any  possible campaigns of 
solidarity with the opposition, is the strengthening of  the regime's already 
dominant "siege-mentality"—thereby forfeiting more  credibility, in a 
domestic political sense, to the hard-line conservatives. The  success of the 
elites running the Islamic Republic depends heavily on their  ability to assume 
the moral high-ground for their domestic audience—regardless  of how twisted 
their moral compass might seem to outside observers. Events like  the 
seizure of the U.S. drone or presidential candidates hinting at invasion are  
huge 
propaganda coups for the regime. 
In the words of the pro-Western, antigovernment  Parisa, a 28-year-old 
teacher from Shiraz: "I hate the government, but I hate  more that [John] 
McCain 
would come over here and attack our country... Also, it  would be a 
disaster. It would make Iraq look like nothing." 
The Waiting Game
Some argue that sanctions have the same effect of  rallying the Iranian 
people behind the regime, but conversations with Iranians  have not borne this 
out. Whether an Iranian is likely to place the blame for the  sanctions on 
Ahmadinejad's hostile statements or U.S. and European hawkishness  tends to 
depend on their preexisting political views. It is true that sanctions  
cannot do much to hinder the activities of the likes of the Qods Force, the  
external Iranian intelligence agency, or the "millionaire mullahs,"_[29]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn29)   but their loosening or tightening can be 
an 
invaluable pressure card against the  regime. 
For all the ayatollahs' political maneuverings,  there is no doubt about 
the regime's "protracted crisis of legitimacy"_[30]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn30)   since the 1990s. So much so that, in 
sharp contrast to the 
Islamist surge  elsewhere, Iran may be the world's only sizeable 
Muslim-majority nation where  Islamism is on the decline. Whether this makes 
the regime's 
collapse both  inevitable and unpredictable, as suggested by Carnegie 
Endowment scholar Karim  Sadjadpour, remains to be seen._[31]_ 
(mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftn31)  For now, all  eyes are on the 2013 
elections 
Brendan Daly is a journalist with  extensive experience in the Middle East 
and conflict and post-conflict  zones.
_[1]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref1)  BBC News,  _Nov. 8,  2011_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-15648166) .
_[2]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref2)  Melik Kaylan, "_How  a Regime 
Change in Iran Would Transform the World_ 
(http://www.forbes.com/2010/06/24/iran-nuclear-weapon-oil-opinions-columnists-melik-kaylan.html)
 ," Forbes, 
July 24,  2010.
_[3]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref3)  Ervand Abrahamian, A History 
of Modern Iran  (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 2008), chap. 6.
_[4]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref4)  Radio Free  Europe/Radio 
Liberty, _July 18,  2005_ (http://www.rferl.org/content/article/1059991.html) .
_[5]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref5)  BBC News, _Apr. 12, 2005_ 
(http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/4436445.stm) .
_[6]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref6)   Author interview, Mar. 2011.
_[7]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref7)  The Wall  Street Journal, 
_Feb.  17, 2011_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703961104576148070942697648.html)
 ; Frontline, Public Broadcasting Service, Tehran Bureau, 
_Feb.  16, 2011._ 
(http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2011/02/saneh-jaleh-and-the-battle-for-a-slain-protesters-memory.html)
 
_[8]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref8)  _Harold Rhode,  "How Iran's 
Rulers Think about the Nuclear Program," Hudson New York,  Dec. 15, 2011_ 
(http://www.hudson-ny.org/2659/iran-nuclear-weapons-program) .
_[9]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref9)  Ministry of  Foreign Affairs, 
Islamic Republic of Iran, Tehran, _Oct. 9,  2011_ 
(http://www.mfa.gov.ir/NewsShow.aspx?NID=1527&lang=en) .
_[10]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref10)  Time Magazine, _June  15, 
2009_ 
(http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,1904645_1904644_1904643,00.html)
 .
_[11]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref11)  Press TV  (Tehran), _June 
29, 2009_ (http://previous.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=99364) .
_[12]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref12)  See, for example, Agence 
France-Presse, _July 7, 2009_ (http://www.webcitation.org/5ic3NyAu7) ; 
Reuters, _June  13, 2009_ 
(http://www.reuters.com/article/2009/06/13/us-iran-election-sb-idUSTRE55C0W620090613)
 .
_[13]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref13)  Ynet  News (Tel Aviv), 
_June 13,  2009_ (http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3730639,00.html) .
_[14]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref14)  "Iran: Public Opinion on 
Foreign, Nuclear and Domestic  Issues," International Peace Institute, New 
York, Dec. 8, 2010; "_Iranian  Opinion on Current Issues_ 
(http://www.worldpublicopinion.org/pipa/pdf/sep09/IranUS_Sep09_quaire.pdf) ," 
WorldPublicOpinion.org, Washington, D.C., Sept.  19, 2009.
_[15]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref15)  Mehregan Magazine 
(Washington, D.C.), Spring  and Summer 2003, p. 16.
_[16]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref16)  Mohebat  Ahdiyyih, 
"_Ahmadinejad and the  Mahdi_ 
(http://www.meforum.org/1985/ahmadinejad-and-the-mahdi) ," Middle East 
Quarterly, Fall 2008, pp. 27-36.
_[17]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref17)  The Guardian (London), 
_Apr.  21, 2011_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/246010) .
_[18]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref18)  Reza Molavi  and K. Luisa 
Gandolfo, "_Who Rules Iran?_ (http://www.meforum.org/2586/who-rules-iran) " 
Middle  East Quarterly, Winter 2010, pp. 61-8.
_[19]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref19)   Newsweek, _Nov.  21, 
2011._ 
(http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/11/20/ahmadinejad-s-rasputin-esfandiar-rahim-mashaei.html)
 
_[20]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref20)  The New  York Times, _Nov.  
22, 2011_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/22/world/middleeast/ali-akbar-javanfekr-top-media-aide-of-iran-president-mahmoud-ahmadinejad-reported-held-in-
raid.html) .
_[21]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref21)   insideIRAN (New York), 
_Nov.  1, 2011._ 
(http://www.insideiran.org/media-analysis/is-ahmadinejad-the-last-iranian-president/)
 
_[22]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref22)  Amnesty International, 
London, _Sept. 29,  2011_ 
(https://www.amnesty.org/en/library/info/MDE13/086/2011/en) .
_[23]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref23)  ABC News, _Oct.  11, 2011_ 
(http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/us-iran-tied-terror-plot-washington-dc-disrupt
ed/story?id=14711933) ; al-Jazeera TV (Doha), _Nov.  19, 2011_ 
(http://www.aljazeera.com/news/americas/2011/11/20111118234114352381.html) .
_[24]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref24)  Voice of  America News, 
_Nov.  10, 2011_ 
(http://www.voanews.com/english/news/middle-east/IAEA-Report-Alters-Iran-Nuclear-Debate-133638743.html)
 .
_[25]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref25)  BBC  News, _Dec. 1,  2011_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-15997065) .
_[26]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref26)  The Scotsman (Edinburgh), 
_Dec.  14, 2011_ 
(http://www.scotsman.com/news/international/iran_refuses_to_hand_back_us_drone_it_says_is_war_booty_1_2007048)
 .
_[27]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref27)  The Daily  Telegraph 
(London), _Dec.  5, 2011_ 
(http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/iran/8936797/Irans-Revolutionary-Guards-prepare-for-war.html)
 .
_[28]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref28)  The Wall Street Journal, 
_Nov.  24, 2011_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204531404577054911628578368.html)
 .
_[29]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref29)  Paul  Klebnikov, 
"_Millionaire Mullahs_ (http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2003/0721/056.html) ,"  
Forbes, 
July 21, 2003.
_[30]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref30)  Danny Postel,  "_The  
Specter Haunting Iran_ 
(http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2010/02/the-specter-haunting-iran.html)
 ," Frontline, Public Broadcasting 
Service,  Tehran, Feb. 21, 2010.
_[31]_ (mip://026c9268/default.html#_ftnref31)  Paul R.  Pillar, 
"_Inevitable  and Unpredictable Regime Change in Iran_ 
(http://nationalinterest.org/blog/paul-pillar/inevitable-unpredictable-regime-change-iran-5314)
 ," The 
National Interest, May  14, 2011.

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