Scenarios of the Past and Future for Iran: U.S. Options

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Thu Jul 30, 2009 7:28pm EDT

WASHINGTON, July 30 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Thursday, 30 July 2009, the
Iran Policy Committee (IPC) held a Congressional briefing for Members of
Congress and their staffs, the press, and the general public to discuss 2009
election unrest in Iraq and the attack by Iraqi Security Forces on Iranian
dissidents in Iraq.

According to IPC President and former member of the National Security Council
Staff at the White House, Professor Raymond Tanter, "The main similarity
between the 1979 Iranian Revolution and events of 2009 is that the people
wanted and want regime change, respectively, not just an alteration in
policies or personnel. The principal difference: In 1978, the Street brought
down the Shah from within with some inadvertent political support from the
United States; in 2009, it is less the Street and more lack of regime unity in
face of a cycle of demonstrations and repression that could spell the end of
clerical rule in Iran." 

Prof. Tanter continued, "President Obama leaves the door open for direct talks
with Tehran in face of its suppression of Iranian oppositionists. But now is
not the time to engage the clerics, given their violent repression of the
Iranian people. If President Obama extends a warm hand toward the
clerical-military rulers after they assassinated protesting Iranians like
Neda, he is likely to wind up with warm blood on his hands. Business as usual
is unseemly in the face of cold-blooded murder."

Dr. Kenneth Katzman, Middle East specialist for the Congressional Research
Service said, "[President of Iran] Ahmadinejad is very much off balance and
his support base is evaporating rapidly. Former allies are deserting him and
he is now in an open dispute with the Supreme Leader. He is going to likely
have major difficulty obtaining Majlis [parliamentary] approval of a full
cabinet. There is now a substantial and growing chance that he could be
impeached by the Majlis or the Supreme Judicial Council, and that the Supreme
Leader would ratify his removal as president."

Dr. Katzman continued, "A special election could provide reformists with
another chance to prove their electoral strength, although it is likely that a
moderate conservative such as Ali Larijani or Mohammad Baqr Qalibaf might run,
and conceivably win. A new election would help Iran's regime overcome its
current crisis of authority."

According to R. Bruce McColm, President of the Institute for Democratic
Strategies, IPC Board of Directors, "Within a day after the election, the
armed forces of Iran said they would not get involved in the domestic
situation or be used against the demonstrators; but the head of the
Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) openly backed Ahmadinejad -- something prohibited
by law. Several IRGC commanders were arrested when demonstrations started
because they refused to get involved in the repression. One leading commander
was arrested for arranging a secret meeting with other officers."

McColm described the Iraqi police attack on Iranian dissident in Camp Ashraf,
Iraq: "A four month siege by Iraqi Forces at the behest of Tehran is ending
tragically. It was the Baghdad Brigade of 2,000 and the Iraqi police that
invaded Ashraf. Seven dead, 400 injured at this hour, 85 disappeared, and the
leadership of the main Iranian dissident organization arrested. Several people
are in comas -- the wounded are being prevented from receiving medical
attention. While the U.S. military medical facility is only minutes away, the
Americans seem to be uninvolved."

McColm concluded that, "Because the United States military has played a
monitoring role over the Iranian dissidents to ensure their security as
'protected persons,' Washington could be implicated in any war crimes or human
rights violations that befall them as they are assaulted in their homes."

Regarding the plight of Iranian dissidents in Ashraf, Iraq, IPC President and
former member of the National Security Council Staff at the White House,
Professor Raymond Tanter told of his visit to Iraq in October 2008 to conduct
interviews with Iraqis. Tanter reported that, "Both Sunni and Shiite Arab
leaders said how they feared an assault by Iraqi Security Forces on the
unarmed Iranian civilian Iranian dissidents in Iraq. Iraqis stated that if the
people of Ashraf are harmed by Baghdad, it will be to serve the interests of
Tehran."

Commenting on the "assurances" Baghdad would ensure the safety of the people
of Ashraf, Steven Schneebaum, an attorney who represents Iranian Americans
with family members in Ashraf, stated that, "Washington received assurances
that Iraqis would not enter Ashraf with lethal force, but the Iraqis used such
force entering Ashraf. Despite the statement of General Ray Odierno, Commander
of Multi-National Force-Iraq that the Iraqis had used only 'non-lethal force'
entering Ashraf, deaths and injuries are indications of lethal force." 

Attorney Schneebaum concluded by stating that, "It is odd that Secretary of
State Hillary Clinton criticized the Iranian regime for mistreatment of
Iranians demonstrating in opposition to the clerical regime in Tehran, but she
failed to criticize Baghdad for using lethal force against Iranian dissidents
in Iraq." 



SOURCE  Iran Policy Committee

Prof. Raymond Tanter of the Iran Policy Committee, +1-202-249-1142,
rtanter@iranpolicy.org
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