July 12,
2008: Iran is a mess. The economy
suffers from growing inflation (over 25 percent) and unemployment (ditto). Jobs
are more available to those who behave and avoid outspoken opposition to the
religious dictatorship that has ruined the economy and made Iran an outlaw
state in the world community. The government uses police state tactics to
harass or imprison trade unions and media that speak openly about the
incompetence and cruelty of the government. Thousands of "Revolutionary Guards"
and guys who can best be described as "street thugs", are on the government
payroll to intimidate or assault anti-government people, wherever they can be
found. This sort of thing even makes many government supporters (about 20
percent of the population, mostly Islamic conservatives) uneasy.
More and
more Iranians are finding out the extent to which their oil revenue has gone to
prop up Hizbollah (Shia Islamic radicals in Lebanon), Syria (run by a Shia religious
minority as a hereditary dictatorship) and Hamas (Palestinian Islamic radicals
dedicated to the destruction of Israel, which has impoverished and imprisoned
1.5 million Palestinians.) Iran has also been funding religious radicals in
Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan, and Iranians are not happy with all this
expensive troublemaking. The Iranian government responds with more religious
(lifestyle) police and increased political restrictions. This extensive
troublemaking has brought about increased restrictions on Iranian access to the
international banking system. This is part of a growing effort to shut down
three decade old Iranian smuggling efforts (in response to embargos). That is
working, and the Iranians are paying more for the smuggled goods, or not
getting them at all. Iranian financial support for Islamic terrorists is
getting more expensive as well, often requiring the use of couriers carrying
large quantities of cash across many international borders. This results in
lots of loss (to bribes, seizure and theft).
Decades of
sanctions, with no dramatic result (like a new Iranian government, or a more
cooperative one) has led to more nations joining in on the sanctions, and more personalized
sanctions. This angle has been taken to the extent that individual Iranian
officials now have all manner of travel and financial restrictions on them.
This sort of thing has an effect, if only because of the personal nature of it.
Iran is
also defenseless. The military has been without upgrades to its equipment since
the 1980s. Even then, the last new military technology received has been second
rate North Korean, Chinese or Russian stuff, and not much of it. A recent
shouting contest between Iran and Israel (over a threatened Israeli air raid on
Iranian nuclear weapons development facilities) made it clear that Israel had
real capabilities, while Iran was mostly blowing smoke. For example, Iran was
caught, once more, issuing doctored photographs of missile tests. It's also
been pointed out that, Iranian attempts to halt Persian Gulf oil traffic two
decades ago failed, and since then, Iran's relative military power has
declined. U.S. naval commanders have flat out stated that Iran would not be
able to halt oil traffic. No details were given, which reflects the need to
keep combat plans as secret as possible (lest the enemy have an opportunity to
develop countermeasures.) The one Iranian threat that has some relevance is
terrorism. Iran has invested billions of dollars in developing a terrorist infrastructure
throughout the region, and the world. Many major intelligence agencies have
detected this network, which has rarely been put to work carrying out attacks.
If the Iranian terror network were ordered to make an all-out effort, it's
uncertain how dangerous they would be. This, of course, is another reason most
of the World does not want Iran to develop nuclear power plants (a source of
radioactive material for terrorists) or nuclear weapons.
Many
Persian Gulf Arabs, with a sense of history and experience dealing with
Iranians (there is still a large, if often illegal, trade across the Gulf),
believe that the Iranians will not do anything dramatic. There are two reasons
for this. First, the Iranians have a history, and it is one of pragmatism and
reluctance to do crazy things. The Arabs have always considered this scary,
although reassuring under the current circumstances. Secondly, the religious
dictatorship in Iran has lots of economic and political problems at home. Yes,
the Iranian dictators would love to have the Israelis or Americans attack Iran,
as this would divert the Iranian public for a few months, or years, from the
real enemy (themselves). Many Arab diplomats in the Gulf caution their Western
counterparts to beware of Iranian attempts to goad the West into attacking
Iran. Leave the Iranians alone, the Arab wise men say, and the Iranians will do
one thing they constantly do, fall into disorder and civil war. That's how the
Arabs won their single great victory over the mighty Iranians, 1400 years ago, and
installed Islam as the new Iranian religion. But since then, the Iranians have
gone back to being what they have always been; the neighborhood bully.
July 6,
2008: Iraq is making stronger and
stronger protests against Iranian attacks on Iraqi villages along the Iranian
border. These villages are used, by Kurdish separatist terrorists, as bases for
operations inside Iran. Iraq does not want to get into a border war with Iran,
but the constant Iranian attacks are getting embarrassing. The Iraqi press is
calling for "something to be done."
June 28,
2008: On the Pakistani border, Baluchi rebels
killed two of the sixteen Iranian policemen they kidnapped two weeks ago. The
rebels are Sunni Moslems, and that religious difference, added to the ethnic
ones (Baluchis and Iranians have been fighting for centuries) has created a
bitter struggle along the border. Iran blames the U.S. for this current
outbreak of tribal violence, leaving out the long and bitter history of the
area. The Baluchi tribes live on both sides of the border, and the Pakistani
government refuses to get involved when Iranian Baluchis hide out across the
border.