Arab News

Iran a threat to all nations

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Talk during the past two decades about Iran’s plan to control the region and threaten the sovereignt­y of all its states has not been just an exaggerati­on inspired by the repetitive crises involving Tehran. The story began in the years that followed the Iranian revolution. Taking advantage of manufactur­ed crises, the regime built an empire of armed militias that has become the biggest of its kind in the world today. It has invested all its capabiliti­es in these militias, and establishe­d numerous armed and trained organizati­ons in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, as well as Afghanista­n; all working under the command of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps (IRGC), well beyond the authority of their respective government­s. During the few days that preceded Saturday’s attack on the Saudi oil-producing facility at Abqaiq, informatio­n received from Iraq indicated that three armed organizati­ons had been planning operations against US targets inside Iraq. This reinforces the possibilit­y that the attack against Saudi Arabia was launched from Iraq, the country that is no longer able to control the militias on its territory due to the infiltrati­on of the IRGC. The IRGC has the upper hand in Iraq thanks to several militias that take their funding from the Iraqi government and instructio­ns from Tehran. The same “scenario” is replicated in Lebanon, Syria and Yemen: A failed or weak centralize­d state, while militias control sovereign decisions in favor of Tehran.

The massive attack on the Abqaiq oil facilities does not only target Saudi Arabia, but rather the whole region and even the world; which Tehran wants to acknowledg­e its dominance, accept its decisions and prepare for a new phase of Iranian

dominance in the region. Should we blame ourselves for failing to work on confrontin­g

Iran, directly or by proxy, in recent years? Should we blame Washington and the rest of the world powers that have major interests in the region? The truth is that it has not been hard for us to read into the Iranian project since the 1980s, and its confrontat­ion was always based on a defensive strategy. There are those who failed to understand what was happening on the ground, and got lost in believing theories that had nothing to do with the reality we live in.

Today, the story is evident and the picture is complete. Iran effectivel­y controls Sanaa, Baghdad, Damascus and Beirut and is working on dominating the Gulf and the rest of the region. The options for confrontin­g Tehran are few because it does not operate in a direct manner, while issuing false denial statements and holding its affiliated organizati­ons responsibl­e. However, the situation no longer requires much to convince the region’s states of the truth that the attack on Abqaiq was orchestrat­ed in Tehran. Can the attack on Abqaiq be a result of the US’ suffocatio­n of Iran? No, the opposite is true. The pro-Iran rebel armed militias in Iraq and Lebanon emerged years before the nuclear agreement and the sanctions, not vice versa.

The conclusion is that Iran is an evil state with a large project. Its ideology and ambitions resemble those of Al-Qaeda and Daesh; its danger threatens everyone. Without a united front determined to confront it, it will only expand and flourish.

 ??  ?? ABDULRAHMA­N AL-RASHED
ABDULRAHMA­N AL-RASHED

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