The Looming War and Tehran’s Ostrich Politics

Shutterstock

by Shireen T. Hunter                   

Last week, tensions between Iran and the United States reached even more alarming levels. First, Iran’s  Supreme Leader admonished Iranians that since the enemy—read America—is in war mode, Iran, too, should prepare for war (Arayesh Jangi Begirad). Then there was the news of the U.S. aircraft carrier Abraham Lincoln going to the Middle East, ostensibly because of threats posed by Iran. According to some reports, this move was triggered by intelligence that Iran was moving missiles to the Persian Gulf.

In response, in a calculated step-by-step escalation, Iran declared that it will not abide by some of its obligations under the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), although during a visit to Moscow Foreign Minister Javad Zarif said that Iran will not leave the nuclear deal. Other officials in Tehran however, indicated that Iran is mulling over what its next step should be and that exiting the agreement is one possibility. Tehran gave Europe 60 days to live up to at least part of its commitments under the JCPOA by facilitating trade and banking operations.

Whether in response to Iran’s move or separate from it, Washington imposed new sanctions on a range of Iran’s steel, copper, and Iron industries, which directly or indirectly employ a large number of Iranians. In addition to eating into Iran’s foreign exchange earnings  by exacerbating Iran’s employment problems, these sanctions could potentially lead to social turmoil. Already, Iran is not able to access a significant part of its non-oil export earnings because of banking and other restrictions. A few week ago, Iran’s minister of industries said that, out of $30 billion of non-oil exports, Iran has been able only to access $10 billion.

Dangerous Illusions

Despite increasing pressures and threats, there is no indication from various Iranian media sources and statements by Iranian officials that Tehran is fully aware of the risks involved in its brinkmanship and tit-for-tat policy with Washington. Iranian authorities still apparently believe that President Trump does not want to become engaged in a war with Iran, and that only National Security Advisor John Bolton and perhaps also Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are pushing him in that direction.

This assumption may turn out to be true. But there is also at least equal and perhaps even more chance that it might not be. Let’s not forget that many Iranians rooted for Trump during the 2016 presidential campaign. Parroting what they read in Western news sites, they believed that, being a businessman, Trump wanted a deal with Iran. They did not realize that even someone as powerful as the American president cannot do everything that he or she wants. There are the demands of America’s strategic interests, domestic politics, and the wishes and demands of its regional allies.

Iran’s problems with America have structural and ideological sources: without addressing these issues and reaching some compromise, change in the in U.S. presidency would not resolve U.S.-Iran differences, although ad hoc agreements under certain conditions are possible. Had Hillary Clinton being elected in 2016, she most likely would have hardened U.S. policy towards Iran, even if she would not have withdrawn from the JCPOA. Let’s not forget that it was Clinton who worked to impose “crippling sanctions” on Iran and prevented an early agreement on its nuclear dossier by opposing the deal mediated by Turkey and Brazil in 2010. It was also she who threatened Iran with obliteration if it attacked Israel. American reaction to Iran’s nuclear ambitions have always been a symptom of their other differences, especially regarding Israel and America’s Arab allies. Even under Barack Obama, the signing of the JCPOA did not result in a marked improvement in bilateral relations. These facts are unlikely to change regardless of whoever is elected president in 2020.

Despite this history, Tehran is still hanging its hopes on Trump’s aversion to war and, failing that, his defeat in 2020. Yet, the United States would not advertise in advance any attack on Iran. Washington is adopting a strategy of unpredictability towards its enemies and rivals. This strategy will apply most of all to Iran.

Thus, war could occur as a result of either Tehran’s nerves giving way and the Islamic Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) doing something stupid, triggering an American response, a false flag operation by Iran’s regional rivals, or by a U.S. surprise attack. Iranians are also calculating that they could cause enough harm to Americans, which will force them an end to the war. They base this assumption on America’s desire to reduce its military engagements in the Middle East, plus popular opposition in America to another Middle East war. But Iranian leaders do not realize that sharply reducing or eliminating Iran’s military and economic power is deemed necessary for an eventual reduction of U.S. military presence in the Middle East. America is unlikely to leave the Middle East and allow Iran to fill the vacuum left by its departure.

Potential Losses for Iran and America

Another dangerous misconception in Tehran is that America, having spent trillions of dollars on war over the last 15 years and suffered significant human loss, would find the cost of war with Iran prohibitive. But this ignores the fact that a war with Iran will not resemble those in Afghanistan or Iraq. Today, Washington does not want to do the nation-building or democracy promotion it proclaimed for Afghanistan and Iraq. It wants is to eliminate any regional rivals and enemies, which it can do with a massive air war that destroys Iran’s military, economic, and infrastructural capabilities. It would limit its occupation of Iran to some of its Persian Gulf ports. No doubt, America, too, would have to pay a price, even a heavy price, but nothing compared to what Iran would pay. Fighting an asymmetric and attritional war as the Viet Cong did also would not be easy. During the Vietnam war, the USSR and China helped the North Vietnamese. It is highly unlikely that any outsider would similarly help Iran. Local states, including Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, would also be adversely affected. But Iran would still be the biggest loser.

According to some estimates, it could take Iran 40 years to recover from damage done by a potential American attack. This is assuming that the country will survive and will not be torn apart by a civil war, encouraged by its regional rivals and enemies. Thirty years after the end of the Iran-Iraq war, Khuzestan province, which bore the brunt of the war. has not recovered from the damage it suffered.

Unfortunately, many Western commentators tend to encourage Tehran’s ostrich-like attitude. Sitting comfortably away from the scene of potential battle, they keep saying how damaging a war with Iran would be for America or that Iran is not Iraq. But let’s see what happened to Iraq. It lost several hundred thousand people, suffered a devastating civil war, its ethnic and religious fissures grew deeper, and it remains de facto divided. Or look at Afghanistan. It is still mired in a seemingly endless war, and the dreaded Taliban have made a serious comeback, which threatens to undo all Afghan gains. Meanwhile, the U.S. economy is humming and its human losses, although lamentable, have not been anything like what those two countries have suffered.

At the moment, U.S.-Iran relations resemble a classic Greek tragedy. Both sides seem to be moved by uncontrollable passions and excessive pride toward a precipice while the rest of the world hopes for the best but fears the worst. Yet, this is real life, not a myth, and the fate of millions of Iranians is at stake. Therefore, silence and inaction are inexcusable. All who have a sway in Tehran and Washington must do what they can to stop this march towards war. One first step would be to stop feeding Iran’s illusions of its own abilities and American vulnerabilities in an eventual war.

Shireen Hunter

Shireen Hunter is an affiliate fellow at the Center For Muslim-Christian Understanding at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service. From 2005 to 2007 she was a senior visiting fellow at the center. From 2007 to 2014, she was a visiting Professor and from 2014 to July 2019 a research professor. Before joining she was director of the Islam program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a program she had been associated since 1983. She is the author and editor of 27 books and monographs. Her latest book is Arab-Iranian Relations: Dynamics of Conflict and Accommodation, Rowman & Littlefield International, 2019.

SHOW 25 COMMENTS

25 Comments

  1. Shireen finally has made a stab at a balanced article. But in the last sentence she could not help but to blame Iran, as she always does. Can Shireen, for once, take a second and realize Iran did compromise as she seems to propose in this article; And the ground was set for further discussions, but the US walked away.
    What Shireen is missing, is that, no matter what Iran does this war has been in the making for the past 40 years. Iran will be showing up with a knife to a gun fight; Iran’s delusions were that nukes are not needed. And it will learn the hard way that nukes are everything.

  2. Alistair

    Rubbish.

    More likely scenario: millions of Arabs would be trying to leave the Arabian Penninsula as Iranian precision strikes render inoperative power plants, water purification systems, and oil & gas installations.

    The Patriot missile batteries are first engaged by decoys and exhausted, followed by barrage of real missiles.

    Exports from the Persian Gulf are eliminated for a decade as both maritime insurance costs and ruined infrastructure prevent resumption of exports.

    While all of that is going on, allies of US the world over would be cursing an alliance that can only promise ruination to all.

    In the United States and European Union and India governments fall as the costs of US stupidity sinks in.

    China shines as the beacon of rationality and hope to mankind, as Anglos watch thier petrodollar glass house shattered into millions of pieces.

  3. Excellent analysis.

    Regardless of who occupies the White House, it’s a case of imperial aims to retain supremacy in the face of a country with a proud past that wants to raise its head after more recent periods of utter humiliation.

    However, 40 years of anti-Iran U.S. propaganda aided by its spineless media leave little room for anything short of Tehran’s surrender.

    To most Iranians that would be unacceptable.

  4. Dear Mrs. Hunter,
    America certainly is the most powerful military power ever existed in history of mankind. but ensuring global security is double edged sword, and perhaps the best deterrent against the almighty USA.

    The US is responsible for ensuring stability and continuity of the international order and that’s what’s restaining it from getting into an all out war against iranians; in case of direct conflict, Iranians will certainly try to expand the war to entire region and perhaps beyond the Middle East. they will attempt to paralyze the international order to detriment of the US – hoping to get other superpowers involved in the conflict – in other words, they attempt to globalize the conflict, in such scenario, despite America’s absolute military superiority, even the almighty USA will be hopeless.

    For instance, an unsuccessful shoot of Iranian missile on Saudi Arabia’s Oil production facilities may fail to cause any damage at all, but it will trigger an American sledgehammer response – e.g. B-52 carpet bombing of Iranian cities and indiscriminate killing of thousand of innocent civilians, but it will also push the price of Oil to such high levels that could trigger a global depression, therefore, disrupting the international order under the American leadership, and the US cannot do anything about that – the Iranian IRGC leadership are a bunch of leftovers from the early days of the Iranian revolution and Iran-Iraq war, they have no formal military training but learned to fight on the job, they are good at Guerilla warfare; small scale terrorist attacks and disruption of the international order, the US is poorly equipped to handle such unconventional strategies, America’s heavy duty military hardware, it’s sledgehammer approach is ill suited against relentless guerrilla warfare.

    Needless to mention, American military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan were total disaster for the US government; that wasn’t for lack of trying or the ”Nation Building Project” as you put it so naively – in fact, the US had bombed every square inches of Afghanistan, and yet, after 18 years of heavy U.S military engagement against Taliban – merely a tribe of illiterate ship hoarders – General Jim Mattis, the former U.S. Defense Secretary had this to say to the Congress in 2018: “The United States is not winning the war against Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan” and that is the fact.

    As such, a war against the Iranian IRGC will probably look a lot like the one against Talibans but at the “Global Scale” and certainly more “Sophisticated”; we all should remember the 1994 IRGC bombing of the Jewish Community Centre in Buenos Aires – Argentina; and the 2014 Cyber attack on Sheldon Adelson’s Sands Casino in Las Vegas, which shut down the Casino for weeks and cost Adelson $1Billion in damages, these styles of Guerilla warfare around the world will be IRGC routine strategy which will be sustained relentlessly if Iran is attacked directly.

    The fact is, if the US and Israel are yearning for more security and stability, a direct conflict with Iranians will produce the exact opposite results – and if we are heading for the war, then Israel will get what they always wished for; “an American military Intervention against the Islamic Republic but they also get what comes with that “ the Perpetual Insecurity for the Jewish-Zionist Interests around the world “.

    Global security is double edged sword, and perhaps, the best deterrent against the almighty USA – America should engage with Iranians diplomatically, Rouhani’s government and full Implementation of JCPOA is the better way forward, not the Gunboat diplomacy.

Comments are closed.