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Opinion

The west must stop normalisation with Iran

Thawing of relations with Tehran’s Arab neighbours is emboldening a dangerous regime

July 6, 2023 14:58
Cruise missiles on the background of the flag of Iran (Getty)
Cruise missiles on the background of the flag of Iran. The concept of a military conflict in the Persian Gulf. The threat of war.
3 min read

The diplomatic landscape is again shifting in the Middle East, with the Iran-Saudi Arabia deals marking the ongoing normalisation of Iran’s role. A key ally, Syria, is on the same path. It’s in the process of re-admission to the Arab League despite being accountable for some 300,000 civilian deaths. But to seek rapprochement with Iran is to gloss over and facilitate a darker side of Iran’s geopolitical operations embodied by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) and its proxy organisations, whose reach extends far beyond the near East.

Iran has adhered to a persistent ideology since the 1979 revolution: to undermine the post-war international settlement, to defend Shia Islam, to become a beacon for 1.9 billion Muslims and to establish itself as the key regional power. This is defined by a pathological opposition to the US, Israel and the Jewish faith. America is the “great Satan” whom Iranian clerics and congregations denounce at Friday prayers.

Protesters in late 2022, following the death of a young woman, Mahsa Amini, after being arrested for not wearing a headscarf, were branded “moharebeh” (waging war against God) and brutally crushed, with 15,000 arrested and a number facing execution. Israel is viewed as an “impostor Zionist regime”, in the words of the commander of the IRGC, Major General Hossein Salami. Antisemitism is, of course, deeply rooted in the regime. For decades Iran has been in the business of revisionism, both about the territory of Israel but also the extent and even existence of the Holocaust. It has minced no words in its intentions to destroy Israel.

A principal function of US strategy with its regional allies, including Israel and Saudi Arabia, has been to tie up Iranian resources. The more the West is able to force Iran to commit itself to stalemates in areas where the US holds the advantage, the fewer resources there will be for Iran to funnel into terrorism, unconventional warfare, and cyber-attacks against the US, Israel and Nato allies. Conversely, a weakening of US and allied resolve and appeasement with the regime will mean a stabilised home theatre for Iran, from which it can renew its unconventional warfare overseas.