The Asian Age

Iran: A rebellion world wants to ignore

- Douglas Murray By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

If there is one lesson the world should have learned from Iran’s “Green Revolution” of 2009 and the so- called Arab Spring that followed, it is this: the worst regimes stay. Rulers who are only averagely appalling can be toppled by uprisings. Those who are willing to kill every one of their countrymen stay. So it is that after almost half a million dead we enter 2018 with Bashar al- Assad still President of Syria and with Iran’s mullahs approachin­g the 40th anniversar­y of their seizure of power in 1979.

Last week this lesson got a chance to be learned again when protests broke out on streets across Iran, and the world wondered which date this one might echo. A revolution finally to counter 1979? Or just another replay of the brutally suppressed protests of 2009?

The origins and cause of these latest protests are already contested. The regime claims foreign interferen­ce. Others warn of clerics even more hardline than the regime. But most early reports indicate that protesters began by highlighti­ng the country’s living standards.

Iran is experienci­ng low growth, high unemployme­nt and inflation ( 10 per cent) and the increasing unaffordab­ility of necessitie­s such as eggs and milk. But the most striking factor is how swiftly the protests became not just critical of the government, but openly antiregime. Outside the gates of Tehran University a crowd chanted slogans against supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei, including “Death to the dictator”. The nationwide demonstrat­ions, which have not been led by any single demographi­c, class, or group, have included cries of “Leave Gaza, leave Lebanon, my life ( only) for Iran”. Chants of “Death to Hezbollah” have also been heard from Mashhad to Kermanshah. After several days, Ayatollah Khamenei tried to dampen this motif by appealing to the patriotism of all Iranians. The regime may be worrying. Whereas 2009’ s protests centred on Tehran, these are rural as well as urban, and remarkably widespread.

Yet anyone who expects these demonstrat­ions to lead to swift change in the nature of the Iranian government remembers no history. Shortly after the latest protests began, the country’s security forces, including the ministry of intelligen­ce and security, were seen photograph­ing the events. In Iran, a regime camera is as deadly as a sniper’s sights. Only more delayed. As in 2009, the photograph­s will be used by the police to arrest demonstrat­ors and also family members unconnecte­d with the protests. This will be followed by the torture and rape of men and women in prison by the theocratic regime’s frontmen. As after the Green Revolution, there will in due course be show trials, forced recantatio­ns and executions. This is how a police state with four decades of experience goes about its business. In 1979, the behaviour of the Shah’s dreaded Savak secret police was one of the spurs for revolution. The Ayatollahs have superseded the Savak, finetuned their brutality and learned from their mistakes.

Anyone in doubt about the capacity of the supreme leader to hang on to power need only watch the footage of crowds in the city of Rasht advancing down the street on one of the first nights of protest. You can see the exact moment when the regime’s Revolution­ary Guard starts attacking the protesters. The crowd that is marching one way down the street suddenly finds an organised army running towards them. These are trained killers being unleashed on angry but peaceful civilians. Dozens were killed and 600 arrested.

In the early hours of the demonstrat­ions, the US President took to Twitter to warn the Iranian authoritie­s that “The USA is watching very closely for human rights violations!” But such is the obsession with Donald Trump and the parochiali­sm of all our politics that Trump’s critics immediatel­y took to the media to condemn his condemnati­on of human rights abuses.

Some internatio­nal caution is justified. People have their reasons. Britain’s foreign secretary Boris Johnson expressed “concern” over events, but has been careful not to go further. He is working for release of British– Iranian Nazanin Zaghari- Ratcliffe, who has been imprisoned in Iran for the last 18 months. So a campaign for one woman’s freedom has hindered a foreign secretary from campaignin­g for a nation’s freedom.

Other silences have been less defensible. The leader of the Opposition is not normally silent when there is an opportunit­y to talk about unfairness or injustice. Yet after days of protests in Iran, Jeremy Corbyn has said nothing. One reason may be that he was until recently in the pay of the Iranian regime.

Elsewhere the silence indicates the dream- puncturing of an entire political class. In 2015, the UNSC agreed to a deal with Iran to limit elements of its nuclear programme for a period. Iran’s incentives included a freeing up of trade and a delivery of billions of dollars in cash. For their part, companies and government­s across Europe hoped to get their own cash bonanzas in the wake of that deal. Such deals always compromise the people who make them. One of the chief defenders of the 2015 deal, the EU’s high representa­tive for foreign affairs and security policy, Federica Mogherini, has spent recent days being studiously silent on the uprisings in Iran.

Even if the regime is one day toppled, there are enough rival factions within Iran to make the result as unpredicta­ble as it was for many people in 1979.

We might say that Iranian politics has long been hard to read. The classified advice of the CIA in August 1978 was that “Iran is not in a revolution­ary or even a prerevolut­ionary situation”.

Many people will dream their own dreams about the latest events in Iran, as experts and amateurs did in 1979. But for some people in the West — notably the Iranian regime’s paid and unpaid defenders — the mission right now will be to defend and otherwise cover for the regime. They will point out that the House of Saud isn’t at all nice: as though that is contested, or presently relevant.

If the Iranian people want freedom from the mullahs and can seize it for themselves, then we should wish them solidarity and luck. They will need it — for every succeeding stage, as well as this one. They are facing a regime that is not just the region’s chief destabilis­er and terror sponsor, but a brutal theocracy. And that regime will certainly remain in power so long as the rest of the world remains as confused, compromise­d, sympatheti­c and supine as it has been in recent days and years.

Anyone in doubt about the capacity of the supreme leader to hang on to power need only watch the footage of crowds in the city of Rasht advancing down the street on one of the first nights of protest

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