Monterey Herald

‘Days of God’: A look at Iran’s mounting crises

- By Joseph Krauss

DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES >> Iran’s supreme leader says his nation is living through “days of God.”

The Islamic Republic has been reeling from one crisis to another, from the targeted killing by the United States of its top general to the Revolution­ary Guard’s accidental shootdown of a passenger plane carrying scores of young people, most of them Iranians. U.S. sanctions have crippled its economy as tensions with America have soared.

In a rare Friday sermon in Tehran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei stuck to the playbook Iran has relied on since 1979, blaming the country’s woes on the U.S. and other Western powers, and proclaimin­g that Iranians still support the Islamic Revolution.

He pointed to the outpouring of grief after Gen. Qassem Soleimani, Iran’s top general, was killed in a U.S. airstrike in Baghdad. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians attended funeral services across the country for Soleimani, who was revered by many as a war hero. But the funeral itself was marred by tragedy when 56 people died in a stampede of mourners in Soleimani’s hometown of Kerman.

U.S. sanctions

After unilateral­ly withdrawin­g from Iran’s 2015 nuclear agreement with world powers, President Donald Trump began ratcheting up sanctions. The sanctions have exacerbate­d an economic crisis, sending the local currency into a freefall and wiping away many people’s life savings.

The Institute of Internatio­nal Finance, a global associatio­n of financial institutio­ns, estimates that Iran’s economy will contract this fiscal year by more than 7%, mostly because of the drop in crude oil exports due to sanctions. The report found that as a result, Iran’s reserves are expected to dip to $73 billion by March, totaling nearly $40 billion in losses over two years.

The loss of soleimani

As head of the Revolution­ary Guard’s elite Quds

Force, Soleimani was the architect of Iran’s regional military operations and its support for armed groups in Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Yemen. He was blamed for the killing of hundreds of American soldiers by Iranbacked militias in the years after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. He also helped Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces battle rebels and Islamic extremists. In Iran, he was seen by many as a mythic figure who had defended the nation. Critics and supporters alike say he will be tough to replace.

The plane tragedy

In response to the killing of Soleimani, Iran launched a wave of ballistic missiles at U.S. bases in Iraq. No one was seriously wounded, though several soldiers were screened for concussion­s and sent to Germany for medical treatment. As Iran braced for a counteratt­ack, the Revolution­ary Guard shot down a passenger plane shortly after it took off from Tehran’s internatio­nal airport last week, mistaking it for a U.S. cruise missile. Most of those killed were Iranians.

Iranian authoritie­s concealed their role for three days, initially blaming a technical failure, until Western leaders said they had mounting evidence that a surface-to-air missile had brought the plane down.

Street protests

As the economic crisis has worsened, Iran has seen wave after wave of sporadic, leaderless protests. The protests are usually sparked by economic grievances but rapidly escalate into calls to overthrow the Islamic Republic. The demonstrat­ions have often turned violent, and security forces have responded with force. Amnesty Internatio­nal says more than 300 people were killed in protests in November over a hike in gasoline prices, when authoritie­s shut down the internet for several days.

The Revolution­ary Guard’s announceme­nt on Saturday that it was responsibl­e for shooting down the plane sparked days of protests in the streets and on university campuses. Security forces dispersed some of the crowds with tear gas and live ammunition.

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