By George Friedman
For centuries, the dilemma facing Iran (and before it, Persia) has been
guaranteeing national survival and autonomy in the face of stronger regional
powers like Ottoman Turkey and the Russian Empire. Though always weaker than
these larger empires, Iran survived for three reasons: geography, resources and
diplomacy. Iran's size and mountainous terrain made military forays into the
country difficult and dangerous. Iran also was able
to field sufficient force
to deter attacks while permitting occasional assertions of power. At the same
time, Tehran engaged in clever diplomatic efforts, playing threatening powers
off each other.
The intrusion of European imperial powers into the region compounded Iran's
difficulties in the 19th century, along with the lodging of British power to
Iran's west in Iraq and the Arabian Peninsula following the end of World War I.
This coincided with a transformation of the global economy to an oil-based
system. Then as now, the region was a major source of global oil. Where the
British once had interests in the region, the emergence of oil as the
foundation of industrial and military power made these interests urgent.
Following World War II, the Americans and the Soviets became the outside powers
with the ability and desire to influence the region, but Tehran's basic
strategic reality persisted. Iran faced both regional and global threats that
it had to deflect or align with. And because of oil, the global power could not
lose interest while the regional powers did not have the option of losing
interest.
Whether ruled by shah or ayatollah, Iran's strategy remained the same: deter
by geography, protect with defensive forces, and engage in complex diplomatic
maneuvers. But underneath this reality, another vision of Iran's role always
lurked.
Iran as Regional Power
A vision of Iran -- a country with
an essentially defensive posture -- as a regional power remained. The shah
competed with Saudi Arabia over Oman and dreamed of nuclear weapons.
Ahmadinejad duels with Saudi Arabia over Bahrain, and also dreams of nuclear
weapons. When we look beyond the rhetoric -- something we always should do when
studying foreign policy, since the rhetoric is intended to intimidate, seduce
and confuse foreign powers and the public -- we see substantial continuity in
Iran's strategy since World War II. Iran dreams of achieving regional dominance
by breaking free from its constraints and the threats posed by nearby powers.
Since World War II, Iran has had to
deal with regional dangers like Iraq, with which it fought a brutal war lasting
nearly a decade and costing Iran about 1 million casualties. It also has had to
deal with the United States, whose power ultimately defined patterns in the
region. So long as the United States had an overriding interest in the region,
Iran had no choice but to define its policies in terms of the United States.
For the shah, that meant submitting to the United States while subtly trying to
control American actions. For the Islamic republic, it meant opposing the
United States while trying to manipulate it into taking actions in the
interests of Iran. Both acted within the traditions of Iranian strategic
subtlety.
The Islamic republic proved more
successful than the shah. It conducted a sophisticated disinformation campaign
prior to the 2003 Iraq war to convince the United States that invading Iraq
would be militarily easy and that Iraqis would welcome the Americans with open
arms. This fed the existing U.S. desire to invade Iraq, becoming one factor
among many that made the invasion seem doable. In a second phase, the Iranians
helped many factions in Iraq resist the Americans, turning the occupation --
and plans for reconstructing Iraq according to American blueprints -- into a
nightmare. In a third and final phase, Iran used its influence in Iraq to
divide and paralyze the country after the Americans withdrew.
As a result of this maneuvering,
Iran achieved two goals. First, the Americans disposed of Iran's archenemy,
Saddam Hussein, turning Iraq into a strategic cripple. Second, Iran helped
force the United States out of Iraq, creating a vacuum in Iraq and undermining
U.S. credibility in the region -- and sapping any U.S. appetite for further
military adventures in the Middle East. I want to emphasize that all of this
was not an Iranian plot: Many other factors contributed to this sequence of
events. At the same time, Iranian maneuvering was no minor factor in the
process; Iran skillfully exploited events that it helped shape.
There was a defensive point to
this. Iran had seen the United States invade the countries surrounding it, Iraq
to its west and Afghanistan to its east. It viewed the United States as
extremely powerful and unpredictable to the point of irrationality, though also
able to be manipulated. Tehran therefore could not dismiss the possibility that
the United States would choose war with Iran. Expelling the United States from
Iraq, however, limited American military options in the region.
This strategy also had an offensive
dimension. The U.S. withdrawal from Iraq positioned Iran to fill the vacuum.
Critically, the geopolitics of the region had created an opening for Iran
probably for the first time in centuries. First, the collapse of the Soviet
Union released pressure from the north. Coming on top of the Ottoman collapse
after World War I, Iran now no longer faced a regional power that could
challenge it. Second, with the drawdown of U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf and
Afghanistan, the global power had limited military options and even more
limited political options for acting against Iran.
Iran's Opportunity
Iran now had the opportunity to
consider emerging as a regional power rather than solely pursuing complex
maneuvers to protect Iranian autonomy and the regime. The Iranians understood
that the moods of global powers shifted unpredictably, the United States more
than most. Therefore it knew that the more aggressive it became, the more the
United States may militarily commit itself to containing Iran. At the same
time, the United States might do so even without Iranian action. Accordingly,
Iran searched for a strategy that might solidify its regional influence while
not triggering U.S. retaliation.
Anyone studying the United States
understands its concern with nuclear weapons. Throughout the Cold War it lived
in the shadow of a Soviet first strike. The Bush administration used the
possibility of an Iraqi nuclear program to rally domestic support for the
invasion. When the Soviets and the Chinese attained nuclear weapons, the
American response bordered on panic. The United States simultaneously became
more cautious in its approach to those countries.
In looking at North Korea, the
Iranians recognized a pattern they could use to their advantage. Regime
survival in North Korea, a country of little consequence, was uncertain in the
1990s. When it undertook a nuclear program, however, the United States focused
heavily on North Korea, simultaneously becoming more cautious in its approach
to the North. Tremendous diplomatic activity and periodic aid was brought to
bear to limit North Korea's program. From the North Korean point of view,
actually acquiring deliverable nuclear weapons was not the point; North Korea
was not a major power like China and Russia, and a miscalculation on
Pyongyang's part could lead to more U.S. aggression. Rather, the process of
developing nuclear weapons itself inflated North Korea's importance while
inducing the United States to offer incentives or impose relatively ineffective
economic sanctions (and thereby avoiding more dangerous military action). North
Korea became a centerpiece of U.S. concern while the United States avoided
actions that might destabilize North Korea and shake loose the weapons the North
might have.
The North Koreans knew that having
a deliverable weapon would prove dangerous, but that having a weapons program
gave them leverage -- a lesson the Iranians learned well. From the Iranians'
point of view, a nuclear program causes the United States simultaneously to
take them more seriously and to increase its caution while dealing with them.
At present, the United States leads a group of countries with varying degrees
of enthusiasm for imposing sanctions that might cause some economic pain to Iran,
but give the United States a pretext not to undertake the military action Iran
really fears and that the United States does not want to take.
Israel, however, must take a
different view of Iran's weapons program. While not a threat to the United
States, the program may threaten Israel. The Israelis' problem is that they
must trust their intelligence on the level of development of Iran's weapons.
The United States can afford a miscalculation; Israel might not be able to
afford it. This lack of certainty makes Israel unpredictable. From the Iranian
point of view, however, an Israeli attack might be welcome.
Iran does not have nuclear weapons
and may be following the North Korean strategy of never developing deliverable
weapons. If they did, however, and the Israelis attacked and destroyed them,
the Iranians would be as they were before acquiring nuclear weapons. But if the
Israelis attacked and failed to destroy them, the Iranians would emerge
stronger. The Iranians could retaliate by taking action in the Strait of
Hormuz. The United States, which ultimately is the guarantor of the global
maritime flow of oil, might engage Iran militarily. Or it might enter into
negotiations with Iran to guarantee the flow. An Israeli attack, whether
successful or unsuccessful, would set the stage for Iranian actions that would
threaten the global economy, paint Israel as the villain, and result in the
United States being forced by European and Asian powers to guarantee the flow
of oil with diplomatic concessions rather than military action. An attack by
Israel, successful or unsuccessful, would cost Iran little and create
substantial opportunities. In my view, the Iranians want a program, not a
weapon, but having the Israelis attack the program would suit Iran's interests
quite nicely.
The nuclear option falls into the
category of Iranian manipulation of regional and global powers, long a
historical necessity for the Iranians. But another, and more significant event
is under way in Syria.
Syria's Importance to Iran
As we have written, if the Syrian
regime survives, this in part would be due to Iranian support. Isolated from
the rest of the world, Syria would become dependent on Iran. If that were to
happen, an Iranian sphere of influence would stretch from western Afghanistan to
Beirut. This in turn would fundamentally shift the balance of power in the
Middle East, fulfilling Iran's dream of becoming a dominant regional power in
the Persian Gulf and beyond. This was the shah's and the ayatollah's dream. And
this is why the United States is currently obsessing over Syria.
What would such a sphere of
influence give the Iranians? Three things. First, it would force the global
power, the United States, to abandon ideas of destroying Iran, as the breadth
of its influence would produce dangerously unpredictable results. Second, it
would legitimize the regime inside Iran and in the region beyond any legitimacy
it currently has. Third, with proxies along Saudi Arabia's northern border in
Iraq and Shia along the western coast of the Persian Gulf, Iran could force
shifts in the financial distribution of revenues from oil. Faced with regime
preservation, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states would have to be flexible on
Iranian demands, to say the least. Diverting that money to Iran would strengthen
it greatly.
Iran has applied its strategy under
regimes of various ideologies. The shah, whom many considered psychologically
unstable and megalomaniacal, pursued this strategy with restraint and care. The
current regime, also considered ideologically and psychologically unstable, has
been equally restrained in its actions. Rhetoric and ideology can mislead, and
usually are intended to do just that.
This long-term strategy, pursued
since the 16th century after Persia became Islamic, now sees a window of
opportunity opening, engineered in some measure by Iran itself. Tehran's goal
is to extend the American paralysis while it exploits the opportunities that
the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq has created. Simultaneously, it wants to create a
coherent sphere of influence that the United States will have to accommodate
itself to in order to satisfy the demand of its coalition for a stable supply
of oil and limited conflict in the region.
Iran is pursuing a two-pronged
strategy toward this end. The first is to avoid any sudden moves, to allow
processes to run their course. The second is to create a diversion through its
nuclear program, causing the United States to replicate its North Korea policy
in Iran. If its program causes an Israeli airstrike, Iran can turn that to its
advantage as well. The Iranians understand that having nuclear weapons is
dangerous but that having a weapons program is advantageous. But the key is not
the nuclear program. That is merely a tool to divert attention from what is
actually happening -- a shift in the balance of power in the Middle East
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