Rouhani's Dual Messages And
Iran’s Security Strategy
By Gareth Porter
October 01, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "MEE"-
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s address at
the UN General Assembly and a talk the previous night to about 150
Americans touted the recent nuclear breakthrough as a precedent for
further diplomatic accommodation with the United States. But both
speeches also called on Washington to change its policy toward the
conflicts in the Middle East.
Despite notable differences between the two
presentations, the thrust of Rouhani’s argument was that Iran is
ready to apply the style of diplomacy that brought about the nuclear
breakthrough to conflicts in the Middle East, but that it could not
accept a US policy that puts the survival of the Syrian state at
risk.
In the UN speech Rouhani called the Joint
Comprehensive Plan of Action (the official name for the nuclear
deal) an historic “victory over war” but had harsh words for US
support for the destabilising policies of its allies in the region.
In the talk to the American audience, which this writer attended, he
was more precise on both scores. He offered to apply the model of
“win-win” negotiations to a peaceful settlement of the war in Yemen
that would involve all Yemeni parties to the conflict. He vowed, “We
are willing to help with actionable measures to maintain everyone’s
safety.”
But Rouhani was also very firm in insisting that
the United States should agree to common actions to stop the threat
of a takeover by “Daesh” (Islamic State group - IS) before
discussing the fate of the Assad regime. “The priority” on Syria, he
said, “is the duty to collaborate against terrorism,” although he
then added that this “doesn’t mean a future form of government in
Damascus should not be thought of”.
In the past, Obama administration officials and
their think tank advisers have explained Iran’s support for the
Syrian war against IS as an indication that Rouhani - and perhaps
even Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei as well - have to placate the
powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps by supporting its
operations in Syria and Lebanon.
But that politically convenient interpretation
ignores the fundamental fact that Iran’s national security strategy
has had two primary objectives ever since Khamenei became Iran’s
leader: to integrate the Iranian economy into the global system of
finance and technology and to deter the threats from the United
States and Israel. And Rouhani had primary responsibility for
achieving both tasks.
When Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani succeeded Khamenei
as president in 1989, he chose Rouhani to be the secretary of the
newly-created Supreme National Security Council (SNSC). Rafsanjani
was the leader of the political faction that favoured a more liberal
economic policy for Iran and was determined to find a way to end the
hostility between Iran and the United States.
It is well known that Khamenei and Rafsanjani have
long been political rivals with different visions of Iranian society
and economy. What is much less well known is that it was Rafsanjani
who nominated Khamenei to
succeed Ayatollah Khomeini
after Khomeini's death. And after Rafsanjani was elected president
in 1989, the two figures agreed that Iran should test Washington’s
willingness to enter into a dialogue with Iran.
Rouhani remained in the position of secretary of
the SNSC until 2005 – the equivalent of serving as national security
adviser for three or four successive US administrations of different
parties. The remarkable continuity that he brought to Iran’s
foreign policy during that 16-year period was a reflection of the
confidence that Khamenei placed in him. Rouhani’s best-known
accomplishment was his astute management of Iran’s nuclear policy
when the Bush administration was threatening to take Iran to the UN
Security Council from 2003-05.
But more fundamental to Khamenei’s confidence in
Rouhani was certainly the fact that he presided over the building of
a successful Iranian deterrence strategy. Iran’s unique approach to
defence policy is the result of its relative conventional military
weakness and the serious possibility of an attack on Iran from the
United States or Israel from the early 1990s on.
The Clinton administration’s demonisation of Iran
as a “rogue state” and its accusations of Iranian WMD ambitions and
terrorism against the United States left little doubt in Tehran that
a possible US air attack against Iran had to be deterred. Meanwhile,
both Labor and Likud governments in Israel were making explicit
threats to attack Iran’s nuclear and missile programs from 1995
through 1997.
Since Iran lacked an air force, Rouhani and the
SNSC adopted an unorthodox deterrence strategy. In the mid-1990s
Iran began developing an intermediate range missile that could
strike Iraq and that would, with later redesign, be able to reach
Israeli targets as well as all US military bases in the region. But
that would take the IRGC several more years and was subject to a
number of uncertainties. In the meantime, Iran’s ties with Hezbollah
provided a more immediate capability. Beginning in 2000, Iran
provided thousands of rockets to Hezbollah for retaliation against
northern Israel in case of a US or Israeli attack on Iran.
When Israel launched its war in Southern Lebanon
in 2006, it was to destroy the key element in Iran’s deterrent.
General Mohsen Rezai, the former head of Iran's Revolutionary Guard,
commented explicitly on that central reason for the Israeli attack.
"Israel and the US knew that as long as Hamas and Hezbollah were
there,” he said, “confronting Iran would be costly".
The Israeli war to disarm Hezbollah was a major
failure, however, and Iran then supplied Hezbollah with far more
numerous, more accurate and longer-range missiles and rockets, to
supplement the few hundred Iranian missiles capable of reaching
Israeli targets.
But Hezbollah’s role in Iranian deterrence
depended on the ability to supply Hezbollah through Syrian
territory. The Israelis schemed unsuccessfully for years to exploit
that potential Iranian vulnerability by trying to get the United
States to overthrow the Assad regime militarily. Now, however, IS
and al-Qaeda are threatening to accomplish what the Israelis had
failed to do.
That is why Iran’s commitment to the defence of
the Assad regime is not a function of the power of the IRGC, but a
requirement on which Rouhani and Khamenei are in full agreement.
Rouhani’s dual message of diplomatic engagement with Washington and
insistence that cooperation on resisting “Daesh” is the priority in
Syria reflect the essentials of Iran’s national security strategy.
- Gareth
Porter is an independent
investigative journalist and winner of the 2012 Gellhorn Prize for
journalism. He is the author of the newly published Manufactured
Crisis: The Untold Story of the Iran Nuclear Scare.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani Address to the
U.N. General Assembly