Texarkana Gazette

Latest plan for Iran is disruption

- Eli Lake

Since President Donald Trump ordered the drone strike that killed Iranian General Qassem Soleimani earlier this month, his administra­tion has argued the attack has two main benefits. Taking out Soleimani helped to prevent a series of attacks he was planning, officials say, and his death will deter Iran from further escalation­s against the U.S. in Iraq and the region.

For a handful of Trump’s advisers, however, there is a third strategic benefit to killing Soleimani: Call it regime disruption. Trump and top U.S. officials have said repeatedly that the U.S. does not seek regime change in Iran, but they have also in recent days cheered on Iranian protesters who have flooded the streets blaming their country’s supreme leader for the downing of a Ukrainian passenger jet.

The case for disruption is outlined in a series of unclassifi­ed memos sent to former National Security Advisor John Bolton in May and June 2019 — the period when Iran’s latest round of escalation­s began in the Persian Gulf.

Their author, David Wurmser, is a longtime adviser to Bolton who then served as a consultant to the National Security Council. Wurmser argues that Iran is in the midst of a legitimacy crisis. Its leadership, he writes, is divided between camps that seek an apocalypti­c return of the hidden imam, and those that favor the preservati­on of the Islamic Republic founded in 1979. All the while, many Iranians have grown disgusted with the regime’s incompeten­ce and corruption.

Wurmser’s crucial insight, and one that goes some way toward explaining the Soleimani strike, is that Iran’s leaders expect America to respond to its provocatio­ns in a measured and predictabl­e fashion. “Iran has always been careful to execute its ambitions and aggressive aims incrementa­lly to avoid Western reactions which depart from the expected,” Wurmser argues. “In contrast, were unexpected, rule-changing actions taken against Iran, it would confuse the regime. It would need to scramble,” he writes.

Such a moment of confusion, Wurmser writes, will create momentary paralysis — and the perception among the Iranian public that its leaders are weak.

Wurmser’s memos show that the Trump administra­tion has been debating the blow against Soleimani since the current crisis began, some seven months ago. In addition to Bolton, the memos were also shared with senior State Department officials. (I obtained them through a source who supports the Soleimani strike.)

In May, Iran began sinking oil tankers in response to Trump’s decision to tighten sanctions on Iran’s oil. In June, Iran downed a U.S. surveillan­ce drone. It would later launch drones and missiles on Saudi Arabia’s largest oil refinery facility. The U.S. nearly responded to the shooting down of the drone in June with attacks of its own, but Trump called off the strike 10 minutes before missiles were launched.

After Iran downed the drone, Wurmser advised Bolton that the U.S. response should be overt and designed to send a message that the U.S. holds the Iranian regime responsibl­e, not the Iranian people. “This could even involve something as a targeted strike on someone like Soleimani or his top deputies,” Wurmser wrote in a June 22 memo.

Trump chose instead to offer Iran negotiatio­ns while also warning its leaders that the U.S. would respond militarily if an American were to be killed in an Iranianspo­nsored attack.

That is precisely what happened, and the U.S. eventually responded by killing Soleimani.

Wurmser predicted that many Iranians would welcome a strike on a senior commander such as Soleimani. “Iranians would both be impressed and potentiall­y encouraged by a targeted attack on symbols of repression,” he wrote. That remains to be seen. What is already evident, however, is that in the aftermath of Soleimani’s death the Iranian leadership has committed a series of errors that has weakened its position at home and abroad.

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