Cartoon by Mana Neyestani
Khamenei’s Brilliant Failure
By Reuel Marc Gerecht
The Dispatch: On October 6, 2023, the Islamic Republic’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, could have done a tour d’horizon of the Middle East and been proud. His anti-Israeli/anti-American battle plan was working. An array of Shiite and Palestinian Sunni Islamist militias—the Houthis in Yemen, Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and a smorgasbord of militant groups in Iraq—had effectively given Iran imperial reach at relatively little cost.
Through this “Axis of Resistance,” the clerical regime could harass Americans in Iraq and Syria. Ever fearful of escalation, Washington never took the fight back to Iran directly—with the exception of President Donald Trump’s decision in 2020 to kill in Baghdad Qassem Suleimani, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps’ Quds Force and the operational mastermind behind Iranian strategy. The axis was designed to keep America fatigued in the Middle East, to keep it leery of deeper intervention. Similarly, the alliance intended to complicate Israeli calculations, to keep Jerusalem from “mowing the lawn”—the routine pummeling of Israel’s nearest foes—for fear that military escalation against one party might trigger a wider conflict. With time, the axis would only get stronger; the Zionists and Americans weaker. For years, this approach worked.
The key component in Iranian calculations was Tehran’s decision over the last 10 years to enhance Hezbollah’s already large stockpile of missiles. It gave the clerical regime—in the eyes of the Iranians, the Hezbollah leadership, and many Israelis and Americans—a check on Jerusalem and Washington. It’s not clear how much Khamenei feared an Israeli preemptive strike on Iran’s nuclear sites before October 7; even under President Joe Biden, the potential of American power probably still made Khamenei worry about the possibility of U.S. preemption. It’s a good guess that his decision in the last four years to increase substantially uranium enrichment and undertake other experiments key to constructing an atomic device, but not rush toward a nuclear test, reflected his concern about too much provocation too quickly. Hezbollah’s missile stockpiles—along with the entire Axis of Resistance and the mayhem it could cause—gave Iran some leverage in its test of wills with Washington and Jerusalem.
Beyond the Levant, the success of Iran’s axis was enormous, especially in the Gulf. The Saudi kingdom’s vast oil infrastructure and the massive development plans—the NEOM projects—of the Saudi crown prince, Muhammad bin Salman, were wide open to the missiles and drones that Iran had spent vast sums on. Houthis, increasingly well-armed by the Islamic Republic, had often taken great pleasure in attacking Saudi Arabia. The Iranian-led attack on Gulf shipping and the Saudi oil facilities at Khurais and Buqayq in 2019, which Trump declined to respond to militarily, undermined MBS’ confidence in U.S. security guarantees. President Biden’s flip-flops on Saudi Arabia—the pariah state becomes an ally—further encouraged MBS to assume a more skeptical approach to the United States. With Iran’s axis appearing ever stronger, the kingdom hedged its bets even before October 7 and the destruction of Gaza, and became wary of the Abraham Accords. Riyadh gladly accepted Chinese intercession to restore diplomatic relations with Tehran in March 2023.
And the axis’ rise directly led to the Russians and the Chinese becoming Iran’s great-power patrons. Even before October 2023, the Islamic Republic had become the unavoidable power that the Americans and Israelis seemed unable to check. Saudi Arabia has vastly more money than Iran, which attracted both the Russians and the Chinese; Iran, however, had real muscle and a proven capacity to pressure America in the Middle East, diverting its attention from Europe and East Asia. For revisionist powers, anti-Americanism is the binding agent. The Islamic Republic, which had repeatedly sought great-power friends since Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s death in 1989, proved its worth on the ground, starting when Suleimani went to Moscow in 2015 and made the case for direct and immediate Russian intervention to save their mutual ally, Syria’s Bashar al-Assad. As Russian and Chinese animosity toward the United States intensified, having a reliably anti-American ally who could also intimidate the oil-rich Gulf states, thereby making Russian and Chinese involvement with Tehran more valuable, changed the strategic calculations of Moscow and Beijing. And for China there was the added benefit of enjoying deeply discounted Iranian oil and flipping the bird at extraterritorial U.S. sanctions.
All of this came undone when the Israelis proved, even against American resistance, that they still retained the capacity and fury to obliterate Hamas and neuter Hezbollah at stunning speed, leaving the group’s vaunted missilery of near zero strategic use against the Jewish state. We don’t know yet the extent of Iranian-Hamas joint planning for October 7, though captured Hamas documents make it clear coordination was growing. Did Khamenei agree with the Hamas chieftain Yahya Sinwar’s optimistic assessment of October 7’s cataclysmic possibilities for Israel? Khamenei had said repeatedly that he wanted to bleed Israel out slowly. Had he changed his mind? Khamenei is a devout antisemite, who alternatively sees Jews as an all-powerful global menace and as an enemy that can be buried by faithful Muslims. His antisemitism may have altered his calculations, tempting him toward greater audacity. In any case, he egregiously misjudged Israeli resolve after the horrors of October 7.
Israel’s bold covert actions in Iran, the deeply embarrassing failures of Iran’s missile barrages against Israel in April and October 2024, and then Jerusalem’s counterstrike inside Iran on October 26, left the clerical regime increasingly vulnerable. For the first time, after Israel’s last reprisal, Iranian VIPs began openly speculating that the Zionists might have the capacity to off the Islamic Republic’s senior officials whenever they wanted. The nuclear discussion in Tehran exploded when all realized that only a nuke could restore Iranian deterrence against Israel and the United States, and yet, despite the tens of billions of dollars spent to develop a nuclear weapon, the clerical regime still didn’t have the bomb. Fingers started pointing toward Khamenei for his slow chess-game approach to obtaining an atomic arsenal >>>
Comments