The revolutionary regime would be the first to fall in an Iranian war with the world
What befell Iran in the last few weeks following the European and US ban on transactions with its central bank has had the same devastating effect on it as a small nuclear bomb, suggested the columnist Abdelrahman Al Rashid in the pan-arab newspaper
Asharq Alawsat.
This is the highest level of international animosity and pressure that Tehran has been subjected to since the end of its war with Iraq 23 years ago. This explains the silent state of alert in Iran and its threats to block the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation.
This vital waterway for world economy is controlled by two states: Iran and Oman. It allows for the transportation of approximately fifth of the world’s oil.
However, due to the new embargo, it has become quite difficult for president Ahmadinejad’s government to collect the revenues of the oil it sells in world markets because the dollars and the euros it earns have to be channelled through western banks that are banned from transferring them to Iranian banks.
It is comparatively a tighter embargo than the one imposed on the Saddam Hussein regime in Iraq during the 1990s. The Iraqi government at the time was allowed to sell its oil under an international agreement.
“How will Ahmadinejad’s government pay its employees?” asked the writer. “How will it procure its nutritional and military needs without money, except by resorting to a highly costly money laundering scheme, which would cost it half its income?”
The current situation suggests that we are on the fast track to the final chapter of the strained global relationship with Iran, which, in the best-case scenario, could end positively should Iran back down and halt its nuclear project or, in the worst case, could escalate into an armed confrontation.
The international pressure crank-up on Iran under president Obama has been slow and gradual. The ban placed on transactions with the central bank of Iran offers support to the Iranian opposition that is getting ready for the first phase of municipal elections this year to be followed by parliamentary elections.
“In addition to Tehran’s economic and financial plight, its essential ally in Syria is also hopelessly wavering as the Arab monitors mission did it no favours, nor did its manoeuvres to annihilate the opposition and quell the protests,” added the writer.
Should Iran resort to military confrontation to ease its besieging in the Gulf, the war would ensue would be completely destructive and its first victim would be the Iranian regime itself.
Despite Iran’s developed military arsenal, in the balance of power, it is still the weaker part in the face of the combined forces of the Gulf States as well as the US and other western forces that are all fighting a fateful war in Gulf waters.