Kuwait Times

Mideast player Iran weakened by internal woes

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Iran stands accused by the West of playing a key role in unrest plaguing the Middle East, but twin bombings claimed by Islamic State militants are a keen reminder of its own internal weaknesses, analysts say. Wednesday’s double suicide bombing left about 90 dead during a ceremony near the tomb of General Qasem Soleimani, on the fourth anniversar­y of the death of the revered former commander from powerful Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards.

Soleimani, killed in Jan 2020 by a US strike just after his arrival in Baghdad, had headed the Guards’ foreign operations arm, the Quds Force, overseeing Iranian military operations across the Middle East. Iran, sworn enemy of the Zionist entity, has establishe­d an “axis of Iranian resistance” in the region, relying on Lebanon’s militant Hezbollah group, militias in Iraq and Syria, and Houthi rebels in Yemen.

“Iran does not need to mobilize a single Iranian soldier. Its proxies do the work,” said Hasni Abidi, director of the Center for Studies and Research on the Arab and Mediterran­ean World in Geneva. But while Iran has become “an important regional power with an enormous ability to do harm, it is internally fragile”, he added. Tehran has denied any role in the Oct 7 attacks when Iran-backed Hamas militants stormed across the Gaza border with the Zionist entity. The Islamic Republic has also rejected any notion that it has helped foment Houthi attacks against ships in a key Red Sea strait in the months since the outbreak of the Zionist-Hamas war, which have badly disrupted internatio­nal trade.

Wednesday’s attack claimed by the IS militants is a potent reminder that the Zionist entity is not Tehran’s only adversary, and it faces other, strong internal threats. “The fact that the Islamic Republic remains vulnerable to terrorism and cannot protect its own citizens from a massive attack reveals serious security weaknesses,” said Sanam Vakil, a director with the Chatham House think tank. “The political and security establishm­ent will certainly be seen to be culpable.”

IS claimed its first attack in Iran in 2017, targeting the parliament building in Tehran and the mausoleum of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic. Some 17 people were killed and dozens wounded. But Iran is also confronted by several separatist movements. In the impoverish­ed province of Sistan-Baluchista­n on the border with Pakistan, unrest has involved drug-smuggling gangs, rebels from the Baluchi minority, and extremists.

In southweste­rn Khuzestan province, home to a large Arab minority, residents have long complained of marginaliz­ation, and some groups have also carried out several attacks in recent years. Iran has also announced in the past the arrests of alleged agents working for foreign countries, including the Zionist entity. And it has accused the Zionist entity of sabotaging its nuclear sites and assassinat­ing Iranian scientists. Tehran’s “inability to protect critical nuclear and military officials and facilities against covert operations” shows its “security forces have failed at (their) primary task”, said Ali Vaez, director of the Iran Project and senior adviser at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think tank.

Iran also faced months of street protests which erupted in Sept 2022 after the death of Kurdish Iranian woman Mahsa Amini. She died in police custody three days after being arrested by the notorious morality police, who accused her of violating the country’s strict dress code. Outrage at her death led to unpreceden­ted scenes of women burning their headscarve­s, and defiantly appearing in public with their hair uncovered. “Focused on harassing women without hijab or cracking down on civil society, Iranian security forces clearly have failed at getting their priorities right,” said Vaez.

Discontent has also grown amid economic hardship caused by years of internatio­nal sanctions led by the United States, targeting key sectors such as oil. According to an October report from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, inflation stood at a projected 47 percent for 2023.

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