Mordechai Kedar
To understand the election of Rouhani as president of Iran, several points must be clarified:
The first is the Shi’ite practice of taqiyya. Ever since the birth of
Shi’a in the middle of the seventh century CE, its adherents have been
so persecuted by the Sunni majority that their lives were in constant
danger and when they were caught, in many cases, they were brutally
murdered. Over the years, in order to survive, Shi’ites developed the
practice of taqiyya or “the need to survive”, which enabled them to
endure in a hostile environment despite their faith and their political
leanings. A basic component of taqiyya is khoda’a, which means
deception, or pretense. During the 1350 years of the conflict with the
Sunnis, the Shi’ites have developed the practice of taqiyya and khoda’a
into an art. They have become so adept at it, that polygraph tests
cannot detect the physiological phenomena that usually occur when a
person lies, (involving changes in perspiration, production of saliva,
heart rate, blood pressure, etc.) when the subject being investigated is
a Shi’ite. And Western police departments are aware of this.
The second point is that the office of president in Iran is not like
that in the United States, France or Brazil. In these states the
president is the head of an executive pyramid, and his policy is the
dominant factor in conducting the state’s business, because there is
usually no authority above the president. In Iran, however, the
presidency is the fourth level from the top, and there are three levels
of religious authority above him: there is the supreme leader (today
Ayatollah Khamene’i), under him is the Assembly of Experts and under
that is the Council to Ensure the Interests of the Regime. All three of
these agencies are staffed by religious authorities, and all of them are
above the president, above the government and above the parliament. As a
result, any Iranian “democratic” process has a very low level of
authority, and the influence of the elected bodies on internal and
foreign policy is quite limited.
Responsibilities of “the president” are also limited, and from our
perspective, the salient point is that they do not include the nuclear
project and the activity of the Revolutionary Guard. These two matters
are managed directly by the supreme leader. The elected bodies cannot
dislodge the supreme leader from his position. All of the candidates for
president must pass a meticulous “kashrut” test, and only a candidate
who is thought to be an integral part of the ayatollahs’ regime can be a
candidate in elections. Therefore, because of the limitations imposed
by the structure of authorities as well as the candidate’s personality,
there is no chance that the elected “president” will bring about a
fundamental change to the character of the regime or in the way that the
state functions.
The third point is that Iranian society is fairly secular, and it is
estimated that about ninety percent of the citizens do not lead a
religious way of life at all. The reason that the public appears to be
religious, especially in the way the women dress, is because the
government requires it. Most of the citizens were born after the Islamic
Revolution, which occurred in the beginning of 1979, and it is
precisely because of religious coercion that the youth leave the faith.
But these youths know the rules of the game, and are reluctant to
sacrifice their lives in order to replace a religious dictator with
another sort of dictator; nationalist, for example, such as Shah Pahlavi
in his time. The youth took part in the elections for president not
because they like any specific candidate or the way that the religious
system controls their lives, but in order to achieve the best result
from the elections within the context of existing conditions, and the
best result, for them, is to elect a candidate who is not a devout
traditionalist, but slightly more modern, moderate and attuned to the
hardships of the people. There is no other game in the field, so they
participated.
The fourth point is what happened in the elections of 2009. In those
elections, the Iranian public felt that the result had been fabricated
by agents of Hamene’i, and the reformist candidate who won – Mir Hossein
Mousavi – was thrown aside so that Mahmud Ahmadinejad – who was then
Hamenei’s preferred candidate – could continue as president. As a
result, the masses burst into the streets of the cities and the
resulting violent demonstrations cost the lives of hundreds of people.
In those days the heads of the Iranian regime feared that the
demonstrations might bring about a revolution, so three jets were
prepared in Teheran airport in order to rescue the heads of the regime
in case rebels took over the country.
Hamene’i is afraid that a similar scenario might occur, especially
because of the wave of revolutions in the Arab world that began at the
end of 2010, and therefore, this time he decided to “throw a bone” to
the people, by allowing the elected candidate to be president and not
manipulate the result of the elections. The evident joy that the youth
in the streets showed in the beginning of the week was evoked by the
fact that this time they managed to force their preference for president
on the supreme leader.
The fifth point is the negotiations with Western countries about the
nuclear project. These negotiations have been ongoing for almost 20
years and the Western countries have not been able to stop the project.
Only the invasion of Iraq in 2003 caused a delay, because the Iranians
feared that they would be next in line. Because they have since
understood that the American tiger is just a paper tiger, they have
renewed the operation of centrifuges, to the point that today they are
on the verge of creating a nuclear bomb. Undoubtedly, the tactic of the
Iranian negotiations, based on the practice of taqiyya and khoda’a –
pretense and deceit – has succeeded beyond all expectations, and has
brought them to the gates of the nuclear club without having to pay an
intolerable price.
The talk in Israel, the United States and Europe about attacking the
Iranian nuclear project has convinced Hamene’i to present a pleasant,
moderate, modern and multi-lingual image to the world, to fool the
bleeding hearts in the West into thinking that Iran has become a normal,
peace-loving state. It will take a month and a half for the new
president to assume his new role, and until he begins to function it
will take another few months, more time will pass until the appointed
time for the renewal of negotiations and then the world will find that
nothing has changed, another whole year of futile negotiations will have
passed, and meanwhile the centrifuges are spinning, the uranium is
becoming enriched in military amounts and Iran will have managed to fool
everyone again.
The sixth point is the Syrian matter. It is no secret that Iran is
deeply involved in the cruel civil war in Syria, which has deteriorated
recently into a regional Sunni-Shi’ite war. The West has known for some
time that Iran is part of the problem, and refuses to see it as part of
the solution, because from the Iranian point of view, Asad must
continue in his role. Hamene’i assumes that a”pleasant” president will
be more accepted in the West as someone with whom to discuss the events
in Syria. This way, Iran will become part of the solution and will be
able to impose its solution on the West – which has no desire to become
actively involved.
The seventh point is the economic sanctions, which have caused
significant harm to the economic stability and therefore also the
political stability of Iran. Hamene’i assumes that the president’s
pleasant demeanor will make it easier for the people in the West to
claim that the sanctions do not lead to the desired results, the
suffering gets transferred onto the simple people and the nuclear
project continues undisturbed anyway. Rouhani’s pronouncements after the
elections were exactly this. The Iranians know very well that there are
many financiers and managers of Western companies – especially in
Europe – who are burning to renew economic ties with Iran in order to
share the profits from the oil, gas, petrochemical industry and
infrastructures of this country. A president of Iran who does not arouse
opposition will help these greedy people to pressure their governments
to renew the economic connections with Iran, both over the table and
under it.
The result of all that is written above is that from the point of
view of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamene’i, the new president of
Iran should open a new page in the relations of Iran with the world as a
sort of taqiyya and khoda’a, so that Iran will continue to be what it
is – a dark and radical state, controlled by a group of narrow-minded
ayatollahs who are stirring up the Sunni-Shi’i conflict and who threaten
world peace with doomsday weapons that are meant to impel humanity into
uncontrolled chaos, thus bringing about the return of the Mahdi – the
hidden imam – to impose the Shi’ite religion on the Sunni Islamic world
in the first phase, and on all other parts of the world in the last
phase. This is their world view, and it is their declared goal.
The Sunni Arab World is Quaking with Fear
All of the above is revealed and known to the rulers of the Arab
world, especially in Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates. The numerous Shi’ite communities that are distributed
throughout all of the countries of the Arabian Peninsula threaten
stability from within, especially in Bahrain, where there is still a
Persian Shi’ite majority and an Arab Sunni minority that the British
brought in to rule over the majority. Shi’ite Iran threatens all of the
countries of the Gulf that are located within the range of its short
range missiles, and it threatens to block the movement of oil tankers in
the Strait of Hormuz, the bottleneck of oil exports from the Gulf.
These days, the Gulf countries are experiencing increasing anxiety,
mainly because the Sunni residents of the Gulf are afraid that America
will fall into the Iranian trap. With Obama’s rise to power, especially
since the Cairo speech in June of 2009, they have become concerned that
he “will throw them under the bus” in his attempt to present a pleasant
demeanor to the radical Islamists and especially to the Iranian
Shi’ites.
They have seen the American weakness in negotiations with the
Iranians and they have seen how, using deceit and deception the Iranians
continue to gain more time to develop their regional hegemony by buying
people off, frightening leaders and eliminating the opposition. The
Iranian takeover of Iraq is proof for them that Iran is galloping ahead
towards control of the Gulf while exploiting the American reluctance to
the use of force because of the tragedies in Afghanistan and Iraq. In
both of these countries, Iran played a significant role in foiling the
attempts of the West to create orderly governmental systems.
The American Passivity Toward the Iranians,
In the Gulf, they are afraid that the Americans will be even more
passive in dealing with the Iranians during the era of Rouhani. As a
result, the countries of the Gulf – headed by Saudi Arabia – are now
acting according to the saying “Ma bithak Dhahrak illa dhifrak” – “none
can scratch your back except your own fingernail” – the Arabic version
of “If I am not for myself, who will be for me?”. The countries of the
Gulf are acting against Iran with whatever means they can, mainly with
money. They purchase arms and ammunition and smuggle these implements of
war into Syria to support the rebels against Asad, the darling of the
Iranians and the backbone of their Arab project. Lately it has come to
light that Saudi Arabia has purchased shoulder launched anti-aircraft
missiles in Europe for the rebels in Syria.
At the same time, the countries of the Gulf have been supporting the
Sunnis of Iraq, who also have been raising their heads recently,
attempting to destabilize the Shi’ite rule over the Land of the Two
Rivers and harm another Iranian satellite. Sunni money from the Gulf
comes to Lebanon too, to strengthen, arm and train the opposition to
Hizb’Allah, and even Hamastan in the Gaza Strip has lately received half
a billion petrodollars from Qatar so that it will not need to depend on
Iran’s good will. The talk about renewing relations between ayatollahs’
Iran and the Muslim Brotherhood’s and Mursi’s Egypt has had its effect,
and Saudi Arabia has hurried to inject monetary support into the
diminishing Egyptian treasury so that Mursi will be able to stay in
power without having to ask for charity from the Ayatollahs.
For the sake of formality, Saudi Arabia sent a congratulatory message
to the newly elected president Hassan Rouhani, expressing the hope for
cooperation between the two countries, while everyone knows that the
Saudis see the Shi’ites as infidels, “‘Ajami”* Persians who don’t even
know how to speak Arabic, and they see the Iranians as the chief threat
to the stability of the Saudi kingdom, which rules Mecca and Medina. The
Saudis know very well how the Ayatollahs fantasize about the
dissolution of the Saudi kingdom so that they can seize control of Mecca
and Medina, the two holy places to Islam, rolling back the wheel of
history to restore the Islamic Caliphate to the family of the prophet
Muhammad, since it was stolen from him by the other families of the
Quraysh tribe – the house of Umayya and the house of Abbas.
The West is not acquainted with Shi’ite culture and is not aware of
the deep motives that drive Iran. The West keeps making the same
mistakes over and over and does not learn how to deal with Iran. The
only way to stop the Iranian nuclear project effectively is to surround
Iran with all of the naval, air and ground forces of NATO and Australia,
and to send the Iranians an unambiguous message saying: Iranian
friends, your time is up and our patience has run out. You have exactly
one week to dismantle your whole nuclear project, load it onto a ship
and send it to us. In exactly one more week we begin to flatten you with
continuous bombing, and we’ve already started warming up the engines.
Don’t call us and we won’t call you. “Read our lips” because this time
we are totally serious. Don’t ask for an extension because you won’t get
it. You have a week, not one minute more.”
The sharper, clearer and more credible this threat is, the less
likely that it will be carried out. The more serious the countries of
the West are, the more seriously Iran will take this threat. Until now
Iran has not taken the threats of the West seriously, because they were
not credible. This is the only way to stop the Iranian nuclear project,
and if the West does not do this, the world will have to accept a
nuclear Iran, which will allow Iran to threaten the whole region, the
Middle East and the whole world with doomsday weapons in the hands of
Ayatollahs, who deem themselves to be the earthly representatives of the
Almighty, Who has made them infallible. Nuclear weapons in the hands of
Iran will cause the collapse of the international system that was
formed after the Second World War to prevent global disasters like that
war itself, and the result might be disastrous to the whole world.
They will use Hassan Rouhani to anesthetize the civilized world so
that it will be unaware that it is being led to its end, the end that
the Ayatollahs have designed.
*’Ajami in Arabic refers to a non-Arabic speaker, or illiterate person
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