Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi came to power in the autumn of 2021 when the Middle East was at a crossroads. ISIS had been defeated in Iraq and Syria between 2017 and 2019. The Abraham Accords brought peace between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain. The US was withdrawing from Afghanistan after two decades of war. The Middle East had a chance to pursue diplomacy and peace between countries after years of chaos, extremism and conflict.
Raisi had other ideas.
He will be remembered for transforming Iran into a dangerous exporter of the drones that have fuelled Russia’s war against Ukraine, and for setting the Middle East ablaze by backing Hamas and its genocidal attack on Israel on October 7. Raisi didn’t do his alone; he had the backing of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and he worked closely with his foreign minister, Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, who died with Raisi in the helicopter crash on Sunday.
Raisi was a transformative figure for Iran. His years in power saw a crackdown on protests after the morality police murdered Mahsa Jina Amini in September 2022. Raisi navigated these protests as he had other protests. Raisi was schooled in how to use power in Iran. He was cautious and pragmatic, preferring to wait and bide his time, and then crush dissent. It’s not by mistake that he was called the “butcher” of Tehran for his role in suppressing dissidents.