The Columbus Dispatch

Trump should keep up pressure on Iran regime

- ROGER COHEN Roger Cohen writes for The New York Times. newsservic­e@nytimes.com

Ihave a New Year’s confession: I retweeted President Donald Trump with approval, not something I had expected to do, especially on the subject of Iran. But Trump has been right to get behind the brave Iranian protesters calling for political and economic change.

The tweet in question read: “Many reports of peaceful protests by Iranian citizens fed up with regime’s corruption & its squanderin­g of the nation’s wealth to fund terrorism abroad. Iranian govt should respect their people’s rights, including right to express themselves. The world is watching! IranProtes­ts”

These are the largest popular protests since the Iranian uprising in 2009 against a fraudulent election. I was in an enormous crowd (estimated in the millions) that marched from Tehran’s Enghelab (Revolution) Square to Azadi (Freedom) Square three days after the vote. Fear evaporated in that throng.

I asked a young woman to whom I’d been talking what her name was. “My name is Iran,” she replied. The memory still gives me goose bumps.

For a few days, the Islamic republic stood on a knife’s edge. I have often asked myself what would have happened if Mir Hussein Moussavi, the leader of the reformist Green Movement who was later placed under house arrest, had told that crowd to march on the seats of power in the name of the ballot box over theocratic whim.

Signs of disarray were palpable before the regime led by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cracked down through the thugs of the Basij militia.

In Tehran, then, the silence of the Obama White House was deafening: too little, too late. Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton expressed regret over this in 2014. Excessive caution was the mother of the Obama administra­tion’s worst failures, not least in Syria.

So Trump is right to speak up in solidarity and tweet that the “wealth of Iran is being looted” by a “brutal and corrupt Iranian regime.” It is. Given where AmericanIr­anian relations stand, there is not much downside to this bluntness.

Among the most powerful slogans of demonstrat­ors have been those expressing fury at money wasted in Syria, Lebanon and elsewhere when President Hassan Rouhani had promised jobs, not more of the surrogate wars of the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps.

The demonstrat­ions, this time, reflect the economic woes of the working class more than middle-class disaffecti­on. They are happening, as Karim Sadjadpour has pointed out in The Atlantic, in an Iran of 48 million smartphone­s, against fewer than 1 million in 2009.

The West-leaning middle class, fed up with the hypocrisy of the mullahs, has long sought political change. But the working class has been a pillar of the regime. If they have shifted now, all the aging Khamenei has left is the Revolution­ary Guards and the Basij. The Revolution that promised Iranians freedom in 1979 has withered.

The monopoly of force will probably be enough to sustain the Islamic republic. A crackdown is probable at some point. The real crisis of the regime will likely come at the moment of Khamenei’s succession.

What has not changed since 2009 is the bravery of Iranians. I watched in awe as women stood their ground and faced down batonwield­ing police officers. Today, protesters are chanting that Khamenei should go. They are chanting death to the Revolution­ary Guards. They are chanting, “Independen­ce, freedom, Iranian republic.”

Trump’s White House should keep up the pressure. It should bring European allies in behind its condemnati­on and warnings. It should stop berating the nuclear deal, which gave Iranians hope and deprives the regime of a convenient scapegoat (it could always say times were hard because of Western sanctions).

It should not, whatever happens, impose new sanctions: They benefit only the Revolution­ary Guards. And it should learn, finally, that Iran is not, as Steve Bannon told Joshua Green, “like the fifth century — completely primeval” — but rather a sophistica­ted society of deep culture full of unrealized promise, better served by engagement than estrangeme­nt.

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