The National - News

Are Iran and its ‘Axis of Resistance’ closer to the endgame of weakening the West?

- DAMIEN McELROY Damien McElroy is London bureau chief at The National

Looking at the latest phases of the Middle East in crisis, an astonishin­g sequence of events has erupted along Iran’s axis of proxies and allies.

Tehran has until now operated a variation of the Goldilocks approach to its networks. The operation of convenient alliances has allowed for just enough tension to contain any given showdown from spilling over into all-out or unlimited confrontat­ion.

By sticking to recognisab­le lines, Iran’s networks have maintained a kind of equilibriu­m. European officials have been able to work with the constituen­t parts, and by extension, so has America. In the current crisis, as grave as it is, there has not yet been a departure from the known rules.

Over decades in a situation of near-internatio­nal isolation, Iran has engineered countervai­ling leverage against western pressure. The current events, not least in the Red Sea, are a working demonstrat­ion of this reality.

As the focus shifts to stopping the spreading conflict in the Middle East, Iran is presented with another opportunit­y to solidify its worldwide alliance of hardliners. Tehran, it seems, is not seeking direct confrontat­ion but works to ensure that it gains and the USbacked side loses.

The term “Axis of Resistance” is poorly understood, yet it is one of the most important factors in the global security equation today. It is not simply about the survival of the Iranian leadership, though that is paramount, but the rise of a bloc that can defy the West.

Since the emergence of the regime following the exile of the Shah in 1979, the Iranian leadership has nurtured a global vision of anti-western hegemony that is more practical than commonly appreciate­d. Resistance may be a clunky word, but its meaning is clear.

The word axis is, wrongly, not taken very seriously either. For example, on a regional level, Iran is often said to back but not control its affiliates. On a global level, not many treat the relationsh­ip between Venezuela and Iran as meaningful. But they should when Caracas uses the current situation to threaten to annex Essequibo state from the neighbouri­ng country of Guyana.

When figures such as the late journalist John Pilger propagate a worldview that is all about the conniving and insidious evil of America’s global power, there is little thought as to how it plays along with the Tehran mindset.

Yet there is a shared agenda that is constantly seeking to expand its own spheres and diminish those of the West. It is about bringing down western powers, and it is not only driven by Tehran’s pragmatic interests but by the deep and shared belief that the day of triumph will come.

Iran has been successful in developing an agenda that perfectly synchronis­es with the emergence of a new Cold War. Its alliance with Moscow to supply Shahed drones to the Ukraine offensive is a manifestat­ion of the Tehran playbook.

Looked at objectivel­y, there is no guarantee that Iran can play a local or global role of the type it has establishe­d. Its diminishin­g resources are eaten up by its security agenda. In a report in April, the Emirates Policy Centre pointed out that Iran’s military was allocated 21 per cent of the country’s New Year budget.

While noting that the published budgetary figure was only a tiny piece of the puzzle, it also drew attention to the fact that the Islamic Revolution­ary Guard Corps, one of five entities alongside the Ministry of Defence, was taking almost one third of the allocation. The IRGC is the operationa­l hub of the axis and, thus, a vital plank of Tehran’s global strategy.

Given the shrunken size of the Iranian economy due to sanctions and the moribund nature of its oil sector, it is perhaps more significan­t to note that the military economy may represent one third of Iran’s economic activity.

No one who has visited the Iranian capital can be in any doubt of the visible importance of the Palestinia­n issue in the country. Apart from anything else, giant posters hang at every strategic location.

A recent report from the European Council on Foreign Relations noted that the first foreign leader to visit the Iranian regime after it took control of the country was Yasser Arafat. But as the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on sought constituti­onal politics and entered rounds of negotiatio­n with Israel, the Iranians shifted focus to Hamas and Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad.

Even then there has been a “push me, pull you” nature to those relationsh­ips. Islamic Jihad was frozen out of Iranian funds for a time when, in 2014, it refused to back the rise of the Houthi faction in Yemen. Meanwhile, Hamas’s positions on Syria at the outset of its civil war, as well as its 2017 revisions to its charter on the Palestinia­n consensus, were both too much for Iran’s leadership to swallow.

Behind the ideologica­l ambitions, the long interests of operating an axis mean that Iran treats its network as a franchise. As with a large commercial chain, having visibility and making an impact locally is the most important principle.

That means that local management asserts its interests and makes its own choices. As long as the general direction is broadly intact, the entire axis functions as planned.

As pressure points have spread around the Middle East, there is no doubt that Iran’s focus on weakening the West is paramount. In 2024, it looks like it will view its capacity for achieving this endgame as having been boosted, not only over the past three months but in recent years.

Iran has been successful in developing an agenda that synchronis­es with the emergence of a new Cold War

 ?? Reuters ?? Iran-aligned Houthi fighters seize a ship in the Red Sea
Reuters Iran-aligned Houthi fighters seize a ship in the Red Sea
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