Global Times

As protests raged in Iran, Washington saw opportunit­y to fan the fire

- By Mahmoud Fouly

Iran contained the ongoing protests that went on for a couple of weeks and frustrated the US hopes for “time for change” in the Islamic republic, said Egyptian political experts.

Over the past week, protests had erupted in a number of Iranian cities against the government’s economic policies. Reports say that at least 20 people, including civilians and policemen, were killed and dozens wounded during violent clashes between protesters and security forces that arrested some 3,700 demonstrat­ors so far.

“The Iranian ongoing protests and state of unrest will be contained by a government announceme­nt of a series of economic and social procedures and policies in the country,” said Medhat Hammad, professor of Iranian and Gulf studies at Egypt’s Tanta University.

US President Donald Trump expressed support for the Iranian protesters and said “it’s time for change in Iran,” while the US House of Representa­tives has recently adopted a resolution supporting Iranian anti-government protesters and condemning the regime’s crackdown on them.

“The US position in favor of the ongoing unrest in Iran is natural as it reflects the US desire to topple the Iranian regime, which confirms the US conflict with and hostility to Iran,” Hammad said.

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei blames foreigners, including the US and Israel, for inciting the recent unrest in the Persian country, referring to them as “enemies.”

The protests that erupted late December 2017 in Iran are believed to be mainly triggered by the economic reform austerity measures that led to high inflation rates and price hikes in some basic food commoditie­s, amid a high unemployme­nt rate that reached 12.4 percent in 2017, according to the country’s official statistics.

Hammad said that the protests in Iran are “no surprise” and that they had been expected since 2009, stressing that the Iranian government will contain them through new domestic economic policies that would appeal to the masses.

“Iranian President Hassan Rouhani stressed that the ongoing protests were a chance rather than a crisis, which means that they were expected by the regime and they did not surprise the government,” he explained, expecting economic measures to be announced while the Iranian foreign relations remain the same after the unrest settlement.

According to some experts, the US is the No.1 beneficiar­y of the unrest in Iran, which is in constant conflict with Israel, No.1 regional ally of the US, and Saudi Arabia, Trump’s oil-rich Gulf ally.

Others believe the US keeps adding fuel to the Sunni-Shiite conflict to make sure it would make good arm deals with Saudi Arabia that seeks US protection.

Mohamed Fayyad, Egyptian expert in Iranian affairs, said that Iran’s unrest serves the US the most and that Washington wants to market itself as sponsor of anti-government public movements.

“The US administra­tion attempts to use the conditions in Iran to enhance its internal position and promote its domestic image by claiming false success,” Fayyad, also professor of Iranian studies at Tanta University, told Xinhua.

“It is true that the situation in Iran is critical, but not as much as some try to depict,” he added, stressing that “the Iranian regime has sufficient political and security abilities to contain the situation.”

The Iranian Shiite citizens are traditiona­lly governed by two leaders, one politicall­y and another spirituall­y, represente­d in the president and the supreme leader of the Islamic republic.

“The Iranian regime is likely to contain the current unrest not only due to its political and security control but also because of the greater influence of its spiritual leadership,” said the expert, expecting Iran to “overcome the current crisis fast.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China