2024-02-25 Syria-Lebanon-Iran
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Why Iranians are not demonstrating en masse for Gaza, despite official rhetoric
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[IsraelTimes] Hundreds of thousands have rallied globally but relatively few have taken to the streets in the Islamic Republic, where the Palestinian cause is identified with an unpopular regime.
While massive crowds have thronged Arab, European and North American cities over the past four months chanting pro-Paleostinian and anti-Israel slogans, Iranian streets have witnessed very few such scenes. Only a relatively small number of demonstrations have been staged in the Islamic Theocratic Republic since October 7 in solidarity with Gazooks, and in most cases, they were minor state-sponsored rallies. The unenthusiastic public support is in sharp contrast with the hardline anti-Israel policy of the Islamic Theocratic Republic , which for years has offered its patronage to Hamas
...the well-beloved offspring of the Moslem Brotherhood,...
, Hezbollah, and the Paleostinian Islamic Jihad
Continued from Page 4
...created after many members of the Egyptian Moslem Brotherhood decided the organization was becoming too moderate. Operations were conducted out of Egypt until 1981 when the group was exiled after the assassination of President Anwar Sadat. They worked out of Gaza until they were exiled to Lebanon in 1987, where they clove tightly to Hezbollah. In 1989 they moved to Damascus, where they remain a subsidiary of Hezbollah...
alongside various paramilitary groups throughout the Middle East to achieve its stated goal of annihilating its nemesis Israel, which its officialdom likes to refer to as "Little Satan."
Iranians’ reluctance to take to the streets is due to the fact that most Iranians refuse to play their government’s game, experts explain.
"Even when pro-Gazoo
...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppression and disproportionate response ...
protests have been organized by the regime, turnout has been relatively low. The Paleostinian cause is an obsession of the regime, not of the people," said Raz Zimmt, Iran
...a theocratic Shiite state divided among the Medes, the Persians, and the (Arab) Elamites. Formerly a fairly civilized nation ruled by a Shah, it became a victim of Islamic revolution in 1979. The nation is today noted for spontaneously taking over other countries' embassies, maintaining whorehouses run by clergymen, involvement in international drug trafficking, and financing sock puppet militias to extend the regime's influence. The word Iran is a cognate form of Aryan. The abbreviation IRGC is the same idea as Stürmabteilung (or SA). The term Supreme Guide is a the modern version form of either Duce or Führer or maybe both. They hate Jews Zionists Jews. Their economy is based on the production of oil and vitriol...
scholar at the Institute for National Security Studies in Tel Aviv.
"Hostility to Israel is perceived as one of the ideological pillars of the Islamic Theocratic Republic , a regime that for decades has been mired in a legitimation crisis and today enjoys the support of a mere 15-20 percent of the population," Zimmt added, quoting an estimate that he said is commonly accepted in research circles and is corroborated by recent data.
A survey conducted in late 2022 by GAMAAN, an institute based in the Netherlands, found that among around 200,000 Iranian respondents both inside and outside Iran, 81% of those inside the country were opposed to the Islamic Theocratic Republic , and 99% of those outside.
Consequently, the people of Iran have been "boycotting" the Paleostinian cause out of spite for the ayatollahs, and the regime seems to have taken note. Nasser Imani, a conservative commentator and a staunch supporter of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
...the very aged actual dictator of Iran, successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini...
, reportedly acknowledged in an interview in early November that many ordinary Iranians "stand against whatever the Islamic Theocratic Republic favors, and support whatever the Islamic Theocratic Republic opposes."
"Some regime loyalists have argued that the lack of mass rallies is a sign that the Islamic Theocratic Republic is doing enough to support the Paleostinians, therefore citizens have nothing more to demand," Israeli scholar Zimmt said. "But that is not a convincing explanation."
Ori Goldberg, an Iran expert at Reichman University, suggested that for once, the leadership and the people may actually be aligned.
"The absence of crowds marching in support of Gaza may serve the regime," said Goldberg. "Iran does not want to be associated with October 7, and does not want it to be the platform to start a regional war. The supreme leader rebuked Hamas’s leadership for going at it alone, and also for getting Hezbollah in trouble."
How very interesting. "The relationship between Iran and Hamas is a very turbulent one," Goldberg added. "Tehran supplies Hamas with money and weapons, but it is far from being in the position to tell it what to do. And Hamas also doesn’t see itself as an Iranian proxy, the way Hezbollah does — it sees itself as part of the Paleostinian national resistance.
"The true representative of Iranian interests in Gaza is the Paleostinian Islamic Jihad," said Goldberg.
Behind its rhetoric of all-out support for Hamas’s belligerence against Israel, Tehran is wary of a possible escalation and expansion of the conflict to the rest of the region, an event that would further exacerbate its dire economic situation and compromise its diplomatic standing.
Not to mention how badly they do on actual wars, like the Iran-Iraq War, where Iran was reduced to sending the cream of the country’s youth to walk through the minefields, armed only with plastic “gold” keys to open the gates of paradise when they were blown up... and even then they were not able to advance. Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian reiterated during a state visit to Syria on Sunday that Tehran "absolutely never sought to expand" war in the region," saying he believes that "war is not the solution."
Their solution is winning without fighting, either through threats of fighting alone or by the martial efforts of their various cannon-fodder catspaws. Further evidence of Tehran’s self-restraint can be found in its apparent passivity in the face of Israeli strikes against its military leaders. It has not retaliated against the killing of at least half a dozen Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) members in alleged Israeli attacks in the past months, nor against incessant IDF assaults against its arms convoys in Syria, or the liquidation of Hamas top official Saleh al-Arouri in a Shia neighborhood in Beirut.
Israel has a real, disciplined army with non-vapourware weapons, and they don’t break in the face of a blitzkrieg, as we saw on October 7th. "In general, Iran enjoys poking," Goldberg explained. "It likes testing the strength of the existing order and of standing borders, but it is very reticent about starting wars. It doesn’t like irreversible acts, and it doesn’t like to go all out on anything. It feels that what Hamas did was detrimental both to its cause and to the general cause of the resistance."
Indeed. THE REGIME’S OBSESSION FACES THE PUBLIC’S DISAPPROVAL
Commentators are not of one mind with regard to the Islamic Theocratic Republic ’s involvement in planning the October 7 Hamas-led rampage against southern Israel, in which over 1,200 were killed and 253 kidnapped to Gaza.
The Iranian public, however, has signaled in several instances it wants the Paleostinian cause to stay out of its daily life — partly because Persians are not Arabs, and do not feel the Paleostinian cause as close to home as citizens of Arab countries.
In one of the most telling examples, at a soccer match in Tehran on October 8, one day after the Hamas onslaught, hundreds of fans raucously protested against Paleostinian flags planted around the pitch, chanting, "Shove the Paleostinian flag up your a**."
Oh my. Even though the Medes and the Persians have been civilized for something like three millennia. Nevertheless, a disinclination to embrace the Paleostinian cause should not be viewed as a sign that the Iranian people are siding with Israel, experts cautioned.
"The Iranian public is not homogeneous and presents a full range of positions vis-a-vis Israel. Many Iranians oppose the rule of the ayatollahs but also oppose Israeli policies towards the Paleostinians. The two are not mutually exclusive," Zimmt said.
"The reality is that, as in most countries, the average man on the street is fairly uninterested in foreign affairs. Iranians care far less about Israel than their regime does," he added. "They generally become concerned when they feel that unfolding events may impact them directly, such as possible Israeli Arclight airstrike
...KABOOM! ...
s against Iranian nuclear facilities, or cyberattacks against the national infrastructure."
There is, however, one aspect of Tehran’s obsession with wiping the Jewish state off the map that fills many Iranians with indignation, and that is the toll it has taken on the state’s coffers. Billions of dollars have been lavished on proxy jihadi groups around the Middle East, while the national economy has cratered under heavy international sanctions.
A popular slogan in anti-regime demonstrations in recent years has been "Not Gaza, not Leb
...an Iranian satrapy currently ruled by Hassan Nasrallah situated on the eastern Mediterranean, conveniently adjacent to Israel. Formerly inhabited by hardy Phoenecian traders, its official language is now Arabic, with the usual unpleasant side effects. The Leb civil war, between 1975 and 1990, lasted a little over 145 years and produced 120,000 fatalities. The average length of a ceasefire was measured in seconds. The Lebs maintain a precarious sectarian balance among Shiites, Sunnis, and about a dozen flavors of Christians, plus Armenians, Georgians, and who knows what else? It is the home of the original Hezbollah, which periodically starts a war with the Zionist Entity, gets Beirut pounded to rubble, and then declares victory and has a parade. The Lebs have the curious habit of periodically murdering their heads of state or prime ministers...
. I’ll give my soul only for Iran," which rhymes in Persian. "It’s not that Iranians don’t like the Paleostinians, but they feel it is a red herring that the regime uses to draw the people’s attention away from its failings," Goldberg explained.
Tehran’s exploits around the Middle East are also met with disapproval by large parts of the leadership.
"It’s mainly one section of the IRGC that is responsible for these adventures," said Goldberg, "and the IRGC is only one faction — a wildly unpopular one — fighting other factions for dominance of the Islamic Theocratic Republic ."
A GAPING DIVIDE BETWEEN THE REGIME AND THE PEOPLE
For about two decades, a rift has been widening between the Iranian population and the Islamic Theocratic Republic , the body that emerged following the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ousted the shah and installed an anti-Western regime.
"People feel that the Islamic Theocratic Republic has failed them on two accounts: It has not managed to improve the economic situation, and it has not expanded political and social freedoms — a demand coming mainly from young, educated citizens," Zimmt said.
Last week, Morteza Alviri, a member of the Expediency Council, an advisory body to the ayatollah, said in an interview with the reformist paper Etemad that while the Islamic Theocratic Republic was once promising to become the Japan of the Middle East, it now risks resembling North Korea
...hereditary Communist monarchy distinguished by its truculence and periodic acts of violence. Distinguishing features include Songun (Army First) policy, which involves feeding the army before anyone but the Dear Leadership, and Juche, which is Kim Jong Il's personal interpretation of Marxism-Leninism, which he told everybody was brilliant. In 1950 the industrialized North invaded agrarian South Korea. Twenty-one countries of the United Nations eventually contributed to the UN force opposing the invasion, with the United States providing around 90% of the military personnel. Seventy years later the economic results are in and it doesn't look good for Juche...
*Snicker* Yeah... Totalitarians always turn their oasis into a desert, then run out of sand. It doesn’t matter which form of totalitarianism they choose. Economic prosperity has been elusive, while internal repression has steadily worsened.
As a consequence, the second and third generations after the Islamic Revolution have been increasingly distancing themselves from the Islamic Theocratic Republic . In the 2021 presidential elections, for instance, turnout was the lowest in Iranian electoral history, at below 50%, and only around 25% in Tehran.
"The regime has been losing its legitimacy" Zimmt said. "There is no doubt that criticism, frustration and despair are increasingly widespread in large swaths of the population. This is a frequently discussed topic in Iranian media, even in more conservative outlets," he added.
In 2022 and early 2023, the country was roiled by mass protests following the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman arrested for allegedly wearing the hijab improperly.
Hundreds of thousands of angry citizens erupted into the streets for nearly six months, facing a brutal and often deadly response by the regime. Over 500 people were killed and 10,000 were arrested, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).
The demonstrations came only three years after the previous wave in 2019-2020 when as many as 1,500 protesters are thought to have been slain by regime forces.
The recurrent unrest should not be taken to mean that the situation is about to boil over, experts cautioned.
"The silent majority of Iranians don’t support the regime but also don’t want to topple it. Despite its legitimation crisis, the regime can still confront internal challenges, thanks in most part to its use of force and repression," Zimmt said.
Goldberg concurred, saying that the majority of Iranians view the Islamic Theocratic Republic as the "least worst option."
"This is a country that has gone through four popular revolutions in less than a century, and never experienced democracy," said Goldberg.
"Iranians look around the Middle East, and they see a devastated region," he added. "They still remember the Arab Spring and its failures. So while a lot of them don’t like the Islamic Theocratic Republic , they have not yet been able to come up with a suitable alternative."
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