Iran’s Destabilization Is Not in U.S. Interest

Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu (doamama via Shutterstock)

by Shahed Ghoreishi

“I will never apologize for the United States—I don’t care what the facts are.”

No, this is not President Trump. It’s August 2, 1988, and then-Vice President George H.W. Bush was giving his official take on events that that had happened the previous month.

On July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes, on patrol in the Persian Gulf during the Iran-Iraq war, shot down Iran Air Flight 665 in Iranian territorial waters, killing all 290 passengers on board including 66 children. The United States did agree to a $131.8 million settlement, but the lack of apology as well as President Ronald Reagan’s egregious decision to award the commander of the ship the Legion of Merit for his actions continue to haunt U.S.-Iran relations. The Reagan administration deemed its explanation sufficient that experienced U.S. Navy personnel mistook a large and slow Airbus A300 for a small and fast F-14 Tomcat fighter jet.

Unfortunately, indifference to the facts continues to be a trend, and not an exception, in U.S. foreign policy towards Iran and the greater Middle East. Clear-cut examples include the false claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, which led to a disastrous war.

Last week a subtler but just as ill-conceived strategy was revealed to encourage instability and protests within Iran to weaken the government—via a joint Israeli and American working group. According to an Israeli official involved in the process, “Nobody is seriously thinking about regime change, but this team is trying to see if we can use the internal weaknesses of the Iranian regime in order to create more pressure that will contribute to changing Iranian behavior.”

Given the current state of complete disarray in the region, this underreported Iran-destabilization strategy should be of grave concern. The multitude of destabilized states has been calamitous for the region.

The death toll from the Iraq War, for instance, has included hundreds of thousands of Iraqis and nearly 5,000 U.S. soldiers. The same invasion eventually led to the civil war in Syria and the creation of the Islamic State. The millions of refugees that have resulted have placed pressure on the resources and governments of nearby Lebanon, Jordan, and Turkey. They have also affected the politics of multiple European countries and even the United States, as right-wing parties have used refugees as a rallying cry for discrimination and closed borders. In Yemen, the U.S.-backed and Saudi Arabia-led intervention has caused a large-scale humanitarian disaster, including outbreaks of cholera and famine.

But all of these would look like a cakewalk next to a destabilized Iran. With an ethnically diverse population of 82 million—equivalent to the populations of Yemen, Iraq, and Syria combined—Iran destabilized would have reverberations around the globe. Iran’s powerful security architecture already has a powerful foothold from Beirut to Tehran. None of the destabilized states had anything close prior to their collapse. Oil prices could skyrocket if Iran uses its strategic options in the Strait of Hormuz.

It is not in the U.S. interest to see Iran destabilized, period. Nevertheless, the Trump administration has decided to remove itself from the Iran nuclear deal despite the International Atomic Energy Agency’s multiple confirmations that Iran has complied with the deal. The administration has also re-implemented sanctions to cause economic anxiety, sold weapons to Iran’s regional rivals, and had key officials and advisors attend a conference led by an Iranian opposition cult that once killed Americans and is looking to take over Iran. Interestingly, bots of unknown origin supporting this approach have surged in social media in recent months.

As Iran experiences genuine protests, Iran’s activists and protestors shouldn’t be lumped together with external actors who want to destabilize the country. In fact, the new U.S.-Israel working group provides the Iranian government with an easy way to delegitimize honest protestors that have been an important part of Iran’s history since 1906. Meanwhile, the economic sanctions will move Iran backwards, causing greater authoritarianism and degrading the human rights of tens of millions of Iranians. Trying to destabilize and manipulate Iran’s organic political development is virtually all risk and no reward. Just ask Mohammad Mossadegh.

An isolated, destabilized Iran will hurt U.S. allies in the region and cause blowback, per usual. Washington has engaged in enough self-inflicted crises. Economic and diplomatic engagement with Iran, on the other hand, can help restore some stability to a chronically unstable region.

Shahed Ghoreishi is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. His work can be found in The Atlantic, The World Post, and Lobe Log. You can follow him on Twitter @shahedghoreishi.

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SHOW 12 COMMENTS

12 Comments

  1. Shahed

    Surely you could put at least one sentence in your article, regarding the human rights situation in Iran, the drought, and how young girls are being picked on and put in prison.

    Surely these matters are more important than anything else.

    You might not like US foreign policy, but that does not allow you to not say one word about the Ayatollahs’ behaviour.

    Iran is suffering more from the regime than anyone else. They cannot remain. We need non-violent regime change.

    We can oppose them angrily and wage war. That would make Iranians no different than the Ayatollahs. In fact they want rage.

    Iranian opposition is united by love and peace. We have spent 40 years, teaching the youth, the peaceful Iranian philosophies, that can take rage and not react. Study Zoroastrianism. It has withstood and absorbed alien rage for thousands of years.

    You need to write about the peaceful ways to have regime change. After all, the exit options for the Ayatollahs must be emphasized. At the end of the day, that is the foundation of any change in government. It is what the democratic process is all about.

    Our culture has its own amazing literature, that shows us tolerance and spiritual awareness. Read it. Forget US or anyone else. We have our own resources.

  2. re: “Oil prices could skyrocket if Iran uses its strategic options in the Strait of Hormuz.” One industry would be happy with that. Never underestimate the power and influence of the oil industry in US policy. High oil prices mean high profits for them.

  3. Israel is increasingly concerned about Iran’s presence in Syria. From recent news articles, it appears both the US and Israel are trying to persuade Russia to get Iran out of Syria. Well that’s a tall order! Russia doesn’t control Syria or Iran. How would they do it?
    My thought is, what if the US offered to lift all sanctions on Iran, if Iran were to withdraw all Iranian troops from Syria? Not going to happen overnight but could be done step by step with the first step being to remove the flame thrower Bolton out of the White House. He is a liability both in talks with Iran and North Korea.

  4. I agree that the Iranian people should be left in deciding their own domestic future. It’s clear that the United States has not done a very good in trying to do so in the past. But if the Iranian people cannot find success on their own, and/or they are met with force and increased repression from the government — either Saddam Hussein’s massacre of domestic opposition after the Gulf War, or Bashir Al-Assad’s response to peaceful protests during the Arab Spring — should the United States then be inclined to take action?

  5. I very much agree that a stable Iran is in the best interests of the US. Great piece.

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