Gulf News

Pressure mounts on Iran’s Supreme Leader

Record low turnout in general elections are the latest sign of growing public anger against regime in Tehran

- BY BOBBY GHOSH Bobby Ghosh is a columnist and writes on foreign affairs, with a special focus on the Middle East and the wider Islamic world. ■

Not quite two months in, 2020 is already proving to be Ali Khamenei’s annus horribilis. In word, deed and vote, Iranians are demonstrat­ing a profound loss of faith in the Islamic Republic, and a deep contempt for its Supreme Leader. Trust in Iran is also dwindling in its neighbourh­ood, and in the internatio­nal community.

If he were capable of self-reflection, Khamenei would recognise that he bears most of the blame. Instead, the ageing theocrat continues to rail against the US, and more generally the West, for all that ails Iran. This bodes ill for Iranians: A regime in denial is unlikely to respond constructi­vely to the overlappin­g crises that have so far characteri­sed the year. And since denial is usually accompanie­d by deflection and disruption, it could also be bad news for the wider Middle East, long the stage for Iranian mischief.

Vote of no-confidence

But, as Khamenei learnt this past weekend, distractin­g his people is becoming harder. The parliament­ary election he fixed for his favoured hardliners turned into a vote of noconfiden­ce in him: The hardliners won, but it was the smallest turnout in the country’s modern history, despite calls from Khamenei and the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps for a massive mandate.

Per usual, the Supreme Leader tried to pass this off as the result of “negative propaganda” about the spread of the coronaviru­s. In turn, leaders in the holy city of Qom, where the virus has hit hardest, conjured up an American plot to undermine the religious institutio­ns.

Ironically, an honest appraisal of the threat might have worked to Khamenei’s advantage. He could have used it to postpone the elections and avoided, at least for a while, the loss of face — and of legitimacy — that the low turnout represents.

The crisis brought on by the virus — Iran already accounts for the most fatalities outside China — is a microcosm of the regime failures that have left Iranians with little faith in their leaders. The authoritie­s have gone from underplayi­ng the threat to grudging acknowledg­ement and blame-shifting. By then, the death toll was swiftly climbing toward the three-figure mark. Iranians could hardly have missed the parallels with the response to the downing of a Ukrainian airliner shortly after take-off from Tehran in January: After denying responsibi­lity, the government belatedly admitted that the plane was struck by Iranian missiles — and then blamed the US for creating the atmosphere of heightened tension that led to the error.

If Iranians are outraged by the regime’s handling of the virus crisis, the country’s neighbours are taking no chances. Most Middle Eastern states have closed their borders with Iran and halted flights. Almost lost in the panic was Friday’s news of a different kind of isolation: the decision by the Financial Action Taskforce to keep Iran on its blacklist for the regime’s failure to comply with rules preventing the financing of terrorism. The FATF also called on member states to impose fresh sanctions on the Islamic Republic.

The FATF designatio­n is a blow to Iran’s hopes, already reduced by American sanctions, for a resumption of trade with Europe. Tehran responded in the only way it knows how, by fingering the US and a Western conspiracy. But ordinary Iranians know who to blame: Although parliament passed legislatio­n to bring the country into compliance, it was overruled by a clerical body led by Khamenei. But the virus crisis, by shutting businesses and keeping shoppers at home, will have a much more immediate impact than the FATF designatio­n.

For Khamenei, the only silver lining here is that Iranians too frightened to leave home for fear of the virus are unlikely, at least for now, to resume the anti-regime street protests.

Year has only just begun

But pretty soon, he will need to find a new way to distract his subjects. He can’t rely on the Trump administra­tion to provide one, as it did with the killing of Qasem Soleimani at the start of the year. The regime had counted on the death of its most famous military commander to rally Iranians behind the flag and leadership — but the outpouring of grief at his funeral was swiftly replaced by rage after the downing of the Ukrainian Airlines flight.

Soleimani ran Iran’s complex network of proxy militias across the Arab world, and his death has limited Khamenei’s ability to stage distractio­ns far from home. And the Supreme Leader’s very bad year has only just begun.

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