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Iran Is Exhausted! Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Hezbollah in Lebanon And The Houthis
25 April 2016 By Abdulrahman Al-Rashed
Iran's supreme leader bitterly complains that the West has not kept its
promises and that economic sanctions on his country have not been lifted
although Tehran has halted its nuclear program as required. The situation in
Iran must be difficult for the Iranian government to complain this much.
It has a very bad luck as the oil prices are still cheap and this is why
Iran's financial situation, after signing the nuclear deal, is much worse than
it was at the same time last year after accepting the initial agreement!
The Iranian command did not think this will happen as it assumed lifting
sanctions will end its economic crisis.
At the same time, the scope of Iran's military involvement in other countries
has increased due to the escalation of battles and funding of its allies, such
as Bashar al-Assad in Syria, Hezbollah in Lebanon and the Houthis in Yemen.
Iran, like the rest of oil-producing countries, has lost more than 60 percent
of its major income and financial transactions, which it regained from its
frozen assets, that did not help it either.
Moreover, the contracts and deals it rushed to sign with several governments
and global companies to buy weapons and civil aircrafts and carry out
infrastructure projects lack funding; this means that Tehran will have to pay
more interests for banks and fines if it delays the payments.
The Iranian government did not get to be happy that it signed the nuclear deal
and this is why the supreme leader is expressing his anger in bitterness
towards the West.
He, himself, might have been deceived when his team, which was enthusiastic to
reconcile with the West, convinced him that the nuclear deal will resolve the
country's financial problems; however, he realized that revenues have
significantly decreased.
Nevertheless, this is not the case of his neighbors who compete with him, such
as the oil-producing Gulf countries because they have massive reserves and
funds capable of financing the deficit; in addition to that world banks are
also willing to lend them money when needed. Iran does not have any of that.
This is why the government in Tehran has to realize that the reconciliation
with Washington alone will not grant it wealth, influence or dominance.
Perhaps, it has to realize that no matter how much it empowers its military
force and its Revolutionary Guard Corps, it will not be able to end the
deficiency in the budget of bread and rice and meet its citizens' basic needs.
Iran wants to impose its conditions everywhere and in all the fields. It wants
to raise the oil prices globally without getting affected, like it did in the
recent OPEC conference in Doha after it has repeatedly refused to decrease its
share of production and asked other OPEC countries, such as the Gulf ones, to
decrease their shares for the prices to increase.
Not only that, but Iran also wants the Yemen crisis' peace negotiators in
Kuwait to grant its Houthi ally more than it deserves at the expense of the
Yemeni situation, which existed before the Houthis' coup.
It refuses to make any concessions in Syria as it insists to maintain the
entire Damascus regime represented by Bashar al-Assad and uses its militias to
serve this purpose.
It pushes its allies in Iraq, such as former Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, to
stir chaos by altering the political map.
Possibly, what further increased frustration in Iran is that the supreme
leader, the president and the rest of the state figures have promised the
Iranian people, at the beginning of this year, that there will be a phase of
quick boom. They did so to convince them that regardless of them being forced
to tolerate the international sanctions for 20 years, they have finally won
the battle, although they did not fulfill their promise of a nuclear bomb.
Nonetheless, the Iranians currently realize that this is not the truth and
that they put up with 20 years only to become poorer than they already were.
After failing to make profits from the nuclear deal, has the formula become
clearer to policymakers and those executing these policies in Tehran? The
reconciliation with the West will not succeed at resolving Iran's structural
crises and will not address the regime's urgent needs.
If Tehran's regime ruled upon logic and reason, it would have extended its
hand to all of its neighbors to overcome its crises, which are mostly
triggered by it.
The regional reconciliation can achieve the same goals of stability and
prosperity for the Iranians and their Gulf neighbors. However, for regimes
like Iran and North Korea, this logic is difficult to understand, and
continuing to reject this logic only worsens Tehran's crises. Iran wants to
expand and dominate when it can't even feed its own people.
Al Rashed is the general manager of Al -Arabiya television. He is also the
former editor-in-chief of Asharq Al- Awsat, and the leading Arabic weekly
magazine, Al Majalla. He is also a senior Columnist in the daily newspapers of
Al Madina and Al Bilad. He is a US post-graduate degree in mass
communications. He has been a guest on many TV current affairs programs. He is
currently based in Dubai.
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