The election victory of Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad is likely to complicate US President Barack Obama�s new approach to
his country�s conflict with Iran.
The reason behind the foreseen obstacle is neither the US nor Iran�s refusal to
engage in future dialogue but rather Israel�s insistence on a hard-line
approach to the problem.
Iran�s presidential elections on June 12 were positioned to
represent another fight between Middle Eastern �moderates� vs. �extremists.�
That depiction, which conveniently divided the Middle East -- according to the
prevailing US foreign policy discourse -- to pro-American and anti-American
camps was hardly as clear in the Iranian case as it was in Palestine and most
recently in Lebanon.
Ahmadinejad�s main rival, Mir Hussein Moussavi served as
Iran�s prime minister for eight years (between 1981-1989), during one of Iran�s
most challenging times, its war with Iraq. He was hardly seen as a �moderate�
then. More, Moussavi was equally adamant in his country�s right to produce atomic
energy for peaceful means. As far as US interests in the region are concerned,
both Ahmadinejad and Moussavi are interested in dialogue with the US, and are
unlikely to alter their country�s attitudes towards the occupation of Iraq,
their support of Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Hamas in Palestine. Neither is
ready, willing or, frankly, capable of removing Iran from the regional power
play at work in the Middle East, considering that Iranian policies are shaped
by other internal forces beside the president of the country.
This is not to suggest that both leaders are one and the
same. For the average Iranian, statements made by Ahmadinejad and Moussavi
during Iran�s
lively election campaigns did indeed promise major changes in their lives,
daily struggles and future. But yet again, the two men were caricatured to
present two convenient personalities to the outside world, a raging
nuclear-obsessed man, hell-bent on �wiping Israel off the map,� and a
soft-spoken, learned �moderate� ready to �engage� the West and redeem the sins
of his predecessor.
Unfortunately for the Obama administration, the first
negative image -- tainted as such by mainstream media, and years of image
manipulation by forces dedicated to the interest of Israel -- won. The election
outcome in Iran presents the young Obama with a major challenge: if he carries
on with his diplomatic approach and soft overtures towards Iran, ruled by a
supposed Holocaust-denier, he will certainly be seen as a failed president, who
dared to perceive Israel�s interests in the region as secondary; on the other
hand, Obama cannot depart from his country�s new approach towards Iran, a key
player in shaping the contending forces in the entire region.
In some way, Ahmadinejad�s victory was the best news for Israel. Now,
Tel Aviv will continue to pressure Obama to �act� against Iran, for the
latter, under its current president is an �existential threat� to Israel, a claim
that few in Washington
question. �It is not like we rooted for Ahmadinejad,� an Israeli official told
the New York Times on the condition of anonymity a day after it was clear that
Ahmadinejad won another term in office.
But considering Israel�s immediate attempt to capitalize on
the outcome of the elections makes one wonder if the defeat of Iran�s �moderate�
camp was not a best case scenario for Israel. Iran will continue to be
presented as the obstacle in future peace in the Middle East, allowing Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to avoid any accountability as far as the
�peace process� is concerned. In fact, with an �existential threat� not too far
away, few in Washington would dare challenge Israel�s settlement policies in
the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem, or its deadly siege on Gaza, or in
fact its confrontational approach to Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon, the latter
seen as an �Iranian-backed militia.�
Israeli Vice Prime Minister Silvan Shalom was one of the
first top officials in Israel
to exploit the moment on June 13. The results of Iran�s elections, he said, �blow up
in the faces of those who thought Iran was built for a genuine
dialogue with the free world on stopping its nuclear program.� Ostensibly,
Shalom�s message was directed at a small audience in Tel Aviv, but his true
target audience, was in fact Obama himself.
Obama�s overtures towards Iran were not necessarily an
indication of a fundamental shift in US foreign policy, but a realistic
recognition of Iran�s
growing influence in the region, and the US� desperate and failing fight in Iraq. It was Obama�s
pragmatism, not a moral shift in US foreign policy that compelled such
statements as that made on June 2 in a BBC
interview: �What I do believe is that Iran has legitimate energy concerns,
legitimate aspirations. On the other hand, the international community has a
very real interest in preventing a nuclear arms race in the region.�
For Israel,
however, Obama�s rhetoric is a deviation from the past US hard-line
approach towards Iran.
What Israel
wants to keep alive is a discussion of war as a viable option to rein in Iran�s nuclear
ambitions and to eliminate a major military rival in the Middle
East.
Senior fellow at the pro-Israeli American Enterprise
Institute John R. Bolton expressed the war-mongering mantra of the pro-Israel
crowd in a recent article in the Wall Street Journal entitled: �What if Israel
Strikes Iran?�: �Many argue that Israeli military action will cause Iranians to
rally in support of the mullahs� regime and plunge the region into political
chaos. To the contrary, a strike accompanied by effective public diplomacy
could well turn Iran�s diverse population against an oppressive regime.�
Ahmadinejad�s
victory will serve as further proof that diplomacy with Iran is not an option
from the point of view of Israel and its supporters in the US. Whether Obama
will proceed with his positive rhetoric towards Iran is to be seen. Failure to do
so, however, will further undermine his country�s interests in the Middle East, and will prolong the cold war atmosphere of
animosity, espoused by a clique of neoconservative hard-liners throughout the
Bush administration of past years.
Ramzy Baroud is an author and
editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His work has been published in many
newspapers and journals worldwide. His latest book is The
Second Palestinian Intifada: A Chronicle of a People�s
Struggle (Pluto Press, London,) and his
forthcoming book is, �My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza The Untold Story�
(Pluto Press, London).