Iran’s political factions aren't united on Hamas, or the Middle East
But most favor a policy of restraint in reaction to
the Gaza war.
NOV 24, 2023
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/iran-politics-israel-gaza-war/
After Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, the U.S. far
right and supporters of Israel pointed to Iran as the main behind-the-scenes
culprit, hoping that their message would spur a military attack on Iran.
It is well known that the Islamic Republic has
supported Hamas for decades, but Hamas is not a puppet of Iran. During the
civil war in Syria, Hamas supported the
armed opposition,
angering both Iran’s leadership and Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad. And in
the current war, Hamas appears to be angry that Iran and its allies have not provided it
with direct assistance or intervened on its behalf.
Tehran’s leadership, as well as that of the Lebanese
Hezbollah, was as
surprised as anyone when
the attacks took place, with Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, asserting in a
speech that his
group was not given advance notice about Hamas’ plans. So did Iran’s Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who flatly
denied that Iran
had participated in planning or executing the attacks, or had advance
notice. U.S. and Israeli
officials also stated
that there is no evidence that Iran participated directly in planning the
attacks.
Khamenei has also stated that Iran will not
enter the war on
behalf of Hamas. In his recent meeting with Ismail Haniyeh, the chairman of
Hamas’ political bureau, Khamenei reportedly criticized Hamas for attacking Israel, calling it a
strategic mistake that resulted in the redeployment of a large U.S. force to
the Middle East and threw Washington’s full support behind Israel.
The Israel-Palestinian conflict began 30 years before
the Islamic Revolution in Iran and will continue indefinitely even if the
Islamic Republic disappears tomorrow, so long as Palestinians are denied their
own independent state. At the same time, the fact is that Iran’s internal
political dynamics are complex, and various political factions are not unified
about Iran’s policy toward the Middle East, in general, and the Palestinians
and Israel and the current war, in particular. There are deep fissures within
Iran when it comes to debating foreign policy, particularly Middle East policy.
To begin with, all Iranian political factions agree
on, (1) forcing the U.S. military to leave the Middle East; (2) raising the
costs of the “maximum pressure” policy that began with the Trump administration
and continued under the Biden administration; (3) the importance of having a
strong deterrent against possible military attacks by the U.S. and/or Israel,
and (4) supporting the rights of the Palestinian people.
But there is no agreement on how to put such policies
into effect. The hardliners believe that to punish the U.S. for its “maximum
pressure” policy and force its military to leave the Middle East, the best
approach is to forge alliances with China, Russia and other nations that oppose
the U.S. interventions around the world and to create problems for the U.S. in
the region. Moderates and pragmatists, on the other hand, advocate close
relations with Iran’s neighbors and the Arab nations of the Persian Gulf, as
well as with Europe, to reduce tensions.
The hardliners believe that the most effective
deterrent is arming the country and its proxies with advanced weapons, whereas
moderates, while supporting arming the nation, also believe that regaining the
confidence of the Iranian people by opening up political space, holding free
elections, and taking deep and irreversible reforms would be the most effective
deterrent. As former Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif put it recently, “what has preserved Iran is not its
weapons, but its people.”
While the hardliners equate supporting the Palestinian
people with arming them, moderates and pragmatists believe that Iran should
limit its assistance to diplomatic support and humanitarian aid.
What these factions do not agree on are (1) a foreign
policy based on ideology, which is supported by the hardliners, rather than one
generally preferred by moderates, reformists, and pragmatic conservatives that
gives highest priority to Iran’s true national – rather than ideological --
interests; (2) rapprochement with the United States, which is rejected by the
hardliners but supported by all other factions; and (3) how to punish Israel
for its campaign of assassinations and sabotage in Iran and its support for Iran’s small separatist
groups. The hardliners
view arming Iran’s proxies as the “best” option because it forces Israel to
spend its resources on its own borders, whereas all other factions believe that
diplomacy is the best possible approach.
In the current war between Hamas and Israel, all
factions have condemned Israel’s attacks on civilians in Gaza, with the
moderates having also condemned the October 7 attacks on Israeli civilians. But
the similarities end there.
At the beginning of the war, some of the hardliners
declared that Iran should join the fighting. But this was hollow posturing
whose purpose was to outmaneuver competitors within their own faction. Foreign
Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, who has always been close to the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, even warned that Iran’s proxies have “their fingers
on the trigger” and
may enter the war.
While there have indeed been skirmishes between
Hezbollah and Israeli forces, they appear to be carefully calibrated, and
viewed in Tehran as a way of lessening the pressure on Hamas, and not a prelude
to a full-blown war, unless, of course, the carnage in Gaza escalates to much
worse levels.Thus, Amir-Abdollahian’s declaration should be viewed as his
attempt to elevate himself within the hardline camp since he has been an
utterly ineffective foreign minister who even Khamenei does not seem to trust
completely.
And while President Ebrahim Raisi has adopted a hard
line regarding the war in Gaza, his stance should be best seen as an attempt to
distract attention from his administration’s failure to improve the economy and
reduce inflation.
Similarly, the IRGC’s Quds Force commander, Brigadier
General Esmail Qaani, declared, “We will do anything required in this historic
battle.” This, however, is only bluster, as Qaani is trying to use the war to
elevate himself to the level of his predecessor, Major General Qasem Soleimani
[promoted posthumously to lieutenant general], who played a key role in
organizing Iran’s proxies in the region and was assassinated by the United
States in January 2020. As noted above, Khamenei, Qaani’s boss, has already
ruled out Iran entering the war.
Qaani and the IRGC are simply trying to use the war to
regain full control of Iran’s Middle East policy and suppress voices of dissent
protesting their hardline posturing.
But, even within the IRGC, there are voices of reason
that oppose Iran’s entry into a a war with the U.S. and Israel. Brigadier
General Amir Ali Hajizadeh, commander of IRGC’s aerospace force, which oversees
its missile program, recently said that after the Trump Administration
assassinated General Soleimani, Iran did not attack all the U.S. military bases
in the Middle East
because “ten,
fifteen thousand civilians would have been killed, and the country’s
development would have been set back by 20 years.”
At the same time, moderates and pragmatists have
called for restraint, fearing a wider war in the Middle East that could engulf
Iran. As Zarif put it a few
days ago,
“Supporting the Palestinian people does not imply
that we should fight for them. The best defense of the Palestinian people is
[creating the conditions] to prevent Israel from calling them [Iran’s] proxy.
The [Iranian] people are tired of paying the price [for arming the
Palestinians].”
Former President Mohammed Khatami has also spoken out in favor of restraint. “The era of occupying
other people’s lands has ended,” he said recently, stressing that Tehran should
rely more on diplomatic initiatives based on Iran’s national interests and its
leaders should avoid taking positions based on factional politics.
It thus appears that the most important political
factions in Iran reject war with the U.S. or Israel and favor a policy of
restraint in the current war, however much this may disappoint Iran hawks in
the United States.
But so long as Palestinians are denied their
aspirations for an independent state, Iran’s hardliners and other non-state
actors, including radical Islamists like Hamas, will seek to take political
advantage of their plight. The most effective way to neutralize Iran’s hawks —
and thus reduce a chronic contributor to regional instability and tension — is
for the U.S., the West, the Arab world and Israel itself to finally grasp the
nettle and work seriously to help Palestinians realize their goal as expeditiously
as possible.
Muhammad Sahimi is a professor at the University of
Southern California in Los Angeles. For the past two decades he has published
extensively on Iran's political developments and its nuclear program. He was a
founding lead political analyst for the website PBS/Frontline: Tehran Bureau and
has also published extensively in major websites and print media.
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