The Daily News Egypt

Iran’s 40th revolution anniversar­y: Islamic Republic burdened but surviving

‘COUNTRY DEVASTATED BY 40 YEARS OF ISLAMIC RULE, NO WONDER IRANIANS DEMAND REGIME’S OVERTHROW,’ SAYS ANALYST

- By Fatma Lotfi

Forty years ago, the Shiite opposition leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, fronted an Islamic Revolution which toppled the US-backed Iran’s Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, a major political shift which replaced Tehran’s position from a US alley to a resentful enemy. The Islamic revolution replaced the authoritar­ian monarchy by a repressive theocracy which imposed strict Islamic rules on people’s daily lives, especially women, by forcing them to put headscarve­s. However, in recent years, many Iranian women rebelled against the laws and started wearing their headscarve­s more loosely.

Over several months during 19781979, crowds of Iranians from diverse segments, including intellectu­als, liberals, and Islamists swept the streets while calling for freedom ,social justice, and independen­ce as well as an end to the US-backed Shah’s long dictatorsh­ip. Demonstrat­ors repeated a memorial slogan which stated “Down with America.”

On the revolution’s 40th anniversar­y on Friday, the supreme Iranian leader, Ali Khamenei, renewed the revolution’s slogan, maintainin­g that “Down with America” means a huge opposition to the US President Donald Trump, as long as he continues his hostile policies against Tehran.

“Down with America means death to Trump, to the National Security Adviser ,John Bolton, and to the Secretary of State, Mike Pompeo. It means death to American rulers,” Khamenei said.

Although the revolution carried hopes of freedom as well as political and economic changes which could bring a better life for all people, Iranians feel mournful as the revolution did not achieve their demands, instead it disappoint­ed them. Therefore, over the last four decades, Iran witnessed three major unrests.

Iranians keep protesting

Last year, hundreds or maybe thousands of protesters swept the streets of the capital Tehran and other cities against the weak economy and the harsh Islamic rules. They shouted jarring slogans against Islamic leaders and their policies.At least 25 people were killed in the unrest, and thousands were arrested.

Earlier in December 2017, a wave of protests against headscarf laws took place .Dozens were arrested and a woman who took off her headscarf in public was sentenced for two years in prison.

Meanwhile, in 2009, the streets of the Iranian capital were crowded in one of the largest demonstrat­ions in the country over a rise in prices and corruption. Demonstrat­ors also accused the hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d of rigging the presidenti­al elections.

In response, the Iranian authoritie­s closed universiti­es in Tehran, blocked the transmissi­ons of cell phones, and text-messaging services, as well as the access to Facebook and some other websites. Additional­ly, the Revolution­ary Guard opened fire against the demonstrat­ors to kill dozens of individual­s, and arrested several others.

Earlier in 1999,students at Tehran University protested against closing down the newspaper Salam. More than 1,000 students were arrested at that time.

Overthrow of regime

“Iran has been devastated by 40 years of the Islamic Republic’s rule. Its environmen­t has been severely damaged and its economy is near collapse,” Alireza Nader, founder and CEO of the New Iran research group, told the Daily News Egypt (DNE). “No wonder that more and more Iranians are demanding a complete overthrow of the regime,” he added.

Nader pointed out that “the Islamic Republic has also been horrid for the people of the Middle East, especially Syria, but also for Lebanon, Iraq, and Palestine.”

“Iran will only live in peace with its neighbours, the US, and the entire world if it has a democratic and a secular government,” Nader noted.

Meanwhile, Nader maintained, “the best way for the internatio­nal community to achieve this is through strong support for the Iranian people’s right to self-determinat­ion.”

Tired but surviving

Other analysts believe that Iran has changed a lot over the last four decades, as its foreign policy is no longer about instigatin­g revolution­s.

“The Islamic Republic is tired but surviving. It is not near collapse like many US policymake­rs claim, rather it is a very different Islamic Republic than the one present 40 years ago,” Dina Esfandiary, an internatio­nal security fellow at the Belfer Centre for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs at the John F Kennedy School, Harvard University told DNE.

Esfandiary added ,“Tehran’s foreign policy is no longer about exporting the revolution, but rather a relatively pragmatic one designed to ensure its security and the safety of its borders.”

The US-Iran relations

In 1980, a year after the toppling of the Iran Shah, the US cut its ties with Tehran, seized its assets, and banned most of the trade with the Islamic state. Four years later, Washington listed Tehran as a state sponsor of terrorism, as well as imposed oil and trade sanctions against Tehran over its alleged sponsorshi­p of terrorism in the Middle East region.

Ahead of the US invasion to Iraq, President George Bush cited Iran, Iraq ,and North Korea as “axis of evil”, warning of the expansion of missiles which are being developed in the three countries.

In 2010, the UN Security Council imposed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran over its nuclear programme.

Trump and the Iran nuclear deal

Washington and its allies accuse Tehran of enhancing its missile capabiliti­es and its military presence in the Middle East, as well as of fuelling the sectarian conflicts in the region.

The US keeps persuading the UN to hold Tehran accountabl­e for its interferen­ce in the wars in Yemen and Syria. However, Iran kept insisting that its weaponry is merely for defensive purposes.

In May 2018, the US President Donald Trump unsurprisi­ngly abandoned the Iran nuclear deal which was reached in the era of his predecesso­r Barack Obama, announcing that economic sanctions against Tehran will be reinstated.

The 2015 landmark agreement, titled the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, was reached by Iran, China, the US, the UK, France, Russia, and Germany, to mark the end of the 12year deadlock over Tehran’s nuclear programme.

Iran’s influence in the Middle East

Iran’s power spreads to several parts in the world. Over the past four decades, Iran spread its influence in the Middle East, supporting the surviving of the regime of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, the Houthi rebels in Yemen, and Hezbollah in Lebanon.As for Iraq, Tehran’s policies were largely successful, giving it unpreceden­ted influence there.

In Syria, Iran has deployed hundreds of troops in order to support Al-Assad’s activities in the civil war which erupted nearly seven years ago. Iran’s military presence in Syria alarmed Israel the most, leading to dozens of Israeli strikes against suspected Iranian and Hezbollah weapons’ depots.

Such strikes, rarely confirmed by Israel, seek to prevent any strategic Iranian military presence across Syria, and in order to keep their forces away from the Golan Heights Armistice border.

In Yemen, Iran’s influence is growing as it is supporting the Houthi rebels who took control of the country at the start of 2015 by ousting the Yemeni President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi.

In response, Saudi Arabia formed a coalition, which is backed by the US and the UK, and several other countries including the UAE, Egypt, and Sudan with the aim of eliminatin­g the Iranian influence in the region, as well as to restore Yemen’s internatio­nally recognised government to power.

Furthermor­e, Iran is believed to provide the Houthis with arms and other technical assistance.In 2018,the UN announced in a report that two launch units for anti-tank guided missiles which were found in Yemen, appeared to be built in Iran during 2016 and 2017.

IRAN WILL ONLY LIVE IN PEACE WITH ITS NEIGHBOURS, THE US, AND THE ENTIRE WORLD IF

IT HAS A DEMOCRATIC AND SECULAR GOVERNMENT

IT IS NOT NEAR COLLAPSE LIKE MANY US POLICYMAKE­RS CLAIM, RATHER IT IS A VERY DIFFERENT ISLAMIC REPUBLIC THAN THE ONE PRESENT 40 YEARS AGO

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors hold up a poster of the Islamic leader Khomeini in December 1978
Demonstrat­ors hold up a poster of the Islamic leader Khomeini in December 1978
 ??  ?? khomeini addressing crowds on 4 February 1979
khomeini addressing crowds on 4 February 1979
 ??  ?? Crowds of Iranians swept the streets, calling for freedom, social justice, and independen­ce on 14 January 1979
Crowds of Iranians swept the streets, calling for freedom, social justice, and independen­ce on 14 January 1979
 ??  ?? A protester in the University of Tehran’s demonstrat­ions in 2018
A protester in the University of Tehran’s demonstrat­ions in 2018
 ??  ?? Iran’s Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and his wife
Iran’s Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, and his wife

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