Archive for the 'Politics' Category

Iraqi Elections in Kayhan

kayhan iraq

As the March 7 Iraqi parliamentary elections draw near, American media have focused on renewed allegations of Iranian meddling.  Over the past week General Odierno and U.S. ambassador to Baghdad Chris Hill presented a united front in accusing Iraqi officials Ahmed Chalabi and Ali Faisal al-Lami of being improperly influenced by Iran in their decision to disqualify some 300 Iraqi politicians for allegedly being too close to Saddam Hussein’s Bath Party.  (Reidar Visser has been exhaustively covering this saga on his blog).

But how is the story playing in Iran?  For one take, I made a quick scan of the past week’s Iraq coverage in Hossein Shariatmadari’s Kayhan , a stalwart pro-regime daily.  Rather than admitting (or even celebrating) Iranian influence in Iraq as one might suspect from Kayhan’s usual ultra-nationalist coverage, Kayhan’s editors seem most interested in exposing nefarious influences from Washington and other Arab states.

One article played-up a quote from Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki condemning the millions of dollars in bribe money that Arab states (*Riyadh*, coughs the author a few paragraphs later)  have allegedly funneled into the country to support Sunni candidates.  Another piece took this narrative one step further, casting  ISCI leader Ammar al-Hakim as the protector of Iraqi sovereignty in the face of American occupation and sectarian Saudi meddling.

Kayhan never confronts the de-Baathification controversy head on, but works its agenda obliquely, reporting protests in five Iraqi cities against the “return of Baathists.”  Its coverage looks to take the spotlight off Iranian influence in Iraq, shining it instead on the American occupiers and neighboring Arab states.  Both Prime Minister Maliki and Ammar al-Hakim are quoted favorably, cast as leaders concerned with protecting Iraqi sovereignty from foreign designs — not at all surprising given they are both Shia politicians that enjoy warm relations with Tehran.

As Iraq’s elections season heats up, the Iranian position is more and more resembling a mirror opposite of the American one:  both states seek to position themselves as advocates of Iraqi sovereignty while casting the other as the meddling outsider (In recent statements Christopher Hill was careful to nuance his take on Iranian influence, but the overall U.S. messaging against Iranian meddling has not been so subtle).  Iran seems to have won the first round with the successful barring of alleged Baathist candidates, but we’ll have to wait a few more weeks to see if the pro-Iranian parties dominate at the polls.

With Obama committed to the U.S. troop drawdown, this will likely prove the most consequential Iraqi election (and post-election politicking) to date.  As this plays out, we hope to continue bringing you perspectives from Iranian media and elsewhere around the Gulf.

PS.  We’ve created a Twitter list of some of the key tweeters on Iran-GCC relations.  You can follow it here.

-WW

Defensive Offensive

Fifty dollars and a respectable-looking business card are enough to gain admission to the five-day Dubai Air Show that begins this Sunday.  Organizers expect to draw 50,000 people and 900 exhibitors, up from 45,000 and 850 in 2007.  Then, regional governments purchased an incredible $100 billion in new aircraft, both commercial and defense-related.  With Gulf economies emerging from the global recession against a backdrop of a Yemeni-Saudi border conflict and the apparent rising specter of Iran, this year’s show is likely to exhibit two broad trends:  commercial orders will be down and military orders will be up.

Emirates Airline and the aircraft leasing firm LCAL, both Dubai-based, are exploring the postponement and cancellation of orders of Boeing 787 Dreamliners in advance of the show.

Meanwhile, the attention-getting Eurofighter Typhoon, Europe’s most advanced fighter jet, is making its first appearance in Dubai.  Saudi Arabia already has 72 of them from a 2007 deal worth $8.86 billion.  As in years past, there will be more than a little bit of keeping up with the GCC Joneses in evidence for 2009— Qatar, the UAE and even Oman have all expressed an interest in placing orders for the Eurofighter.

The Dubai Air Show follows the 9th International Defence Exhibition and Conference (IDEX), held every other year in Abu Dhabi, the largest such event in the Gulf.  Journalist Robert Fisk penned an account of the 2001 IDEX in his book “The Great War for Civilisation,” (something of a doorstop, the description begins on page 926 out of a total 1283 pages).   Fisk spares little effort in hiding his disgust. He stops to talk with Mikhail Kalashnikov, the aging inventor of the AK-47, then manning a stall in the Russian pavilion.   Kalashnikov suggests a time in the future when his weapons “will be no more used or necessary.”  To say the least, Fisk is doubtful.  The author then moves on to the Iranian pavilion where he finds an arms dealer, Morteza Khosravi, selling a missile called the “Horror of Death.”  Khosravi repeats a line familiar to contemporary Iranian discourse: Iran, a peaceful state, has weapons and will also sell them, but each is true only for the purposes of self-defense.

At present, Russia is considering the sale of S300 missiles to Iran.  The S300 is capable of shooting down cruise missiles and aircraft— under pressure from Washington,  and to the exasperation of Iranian officials, the order has been held up for months.  Russia is also weighing sales to the other side of escalating tensions—Saudi Arabia may soon spend $2 billion on S400 missile defense from the Kremlin.

In an October 10th interview, former Saudi intelligence chief Prince Turki al-Faisal explained, “We are concerned not just as a government but as a people because geographically Iran is next door to us.”  As the receipts for military hardware pile up in Dubai over the next week, one could be forgiven for losing their sense of scale. Theories of deterrence may well drive sales but they will also go ignored— Iran’s annual military budget is a paltry $7.31 billion.  That amount of money, even with some impossibly deft maneuvering around sanctions, is merely enough to buy Tehran several dozen Eurofighter Typhoons.

-SW

Al-Alam Cutoff as Tehran-Riyadh Tensions Mount

al_alam_logoAs the recent Saudi air and ground raids along the Yemeni border intensified, Egypt’s Nilesat TV network and Saudi-owned Arabsat simultaneously dropped Iran’s Arabic-language news station al-Alam (The World) from service.  When living in Cairo I would occasionally tune into the station and watch some of their bog standard pro-Iranian news coverage or a stale documentary about the Iran-Iraq war.  To me, the real surprise  was that Egypt and Saudi Arabia would continue to allow the Iranian propaganda station on their satellites at all during a time when the two states were locked in a media war with Tehran.

The “media war,” going strong since mid-2008, was equal parts vicious and absurd: for the absurd see my article at ISN from a while back on a bungled Iranian documentary film portraying Sadat’s assassin, Khaled Islamboli,  as a martyr, and for vicious, see the Egyptian accusations that radicalized pro-Iranian Egyptians  committed last year’s Khan el-Khalili bombing.  Another facet was Arab accusations of Iranian proselytizing of Shi’a  Islam around the Arab world.

Was al-Alam taking the Houthi rebels’  side in coverage of the current strikes?  A quick scan of articles on al-Alam’s front page indicates that they were, but the thrust was more anti-Saudi, casting Riyadh as the aggressor, than it was pro-Houthi.  But the anti-Saudi messaging is hardly stronger than the stuff that al-Alam had been broadcasting (on Saudi and Egyptian satellite bandwidth) for the last few years.

The question of  material Iranian aid for the Houthi rebels, which have been fighting the Yemeni central government in on-off wars since 2004,  is much more murky.  The Yemeni army has essentially blockaded the Sa’ada Governorate, and cut off access to independent  press or NGOs to the warzone for the last few years (Although HRW put out an excellent report on the situation a few years back, which is here).  Absent reliable information, accusations of Iranian funding for the Huthi rebels, who are Zaidi Shi’a (as opposed to Iran’s Twelvers), have flown and been multiplied amid tense regional circumstances.

But after spending several days protesting its own involvement, today, Iran’s Mottaki fired away at Saudi Arabia for its interference in Yemen.  BBC snippet:

A country which seeks a role to establish peace and stability in all countries in the region… cannot have a role in creating tensions,” Mr Mottaki said.

“We strongly warn the regional countries to be careful, to be vigilant,” he added.

“Monetary aid, providing arms to extremist and terrorist groups or actually taking action against them and crushing those groups or the people and embarking on military operations – these all will have negative consequences.”

In an apparent reference to Saudi Arabia, with whom Tehran has had hostile relations since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, Mr Mottaki said there were “certain people who add fuel to some crises”.

“Those people should be assured that the smoke and the fire they have ignited will entangle them themselves,” he added.

This incident, far from over, has taken Saudi-Iranian tensions to their highest point in years.  At very least, the episode will further hamstring those who seek to integrate Iran into the region and help those pushing the Sunni-Shia strife narrative.  At worst, we could have a potentially destabilizing conflict in Southern Arabia.  Either way, the citizens of Sa’ada will continue to pay a heavy price, as international attention is focused elsewhere.

-WW

Viewing

If you have about seven extra hours to spare this week  I highly recommend watching the proceedings of the recent  University of Maryland conference on Iran that brought together many of the top pro-negotiation voices.  I’m working on a longer roundup piece on US-Iran negotiations, but in the meantime the link is here.

-WW

Al-Jazeera English on Iran-Iraq Water Tensions

Erdogan's Tehran Visit Yeilds Energy Deals

Iran’s Oil and Energy Information Network has a story (Persian) on two energy deals that Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan concluded on his recent visit to Tehran. Under the headline “Conditions for Transfer of Iranian Gas to Europe have been Met,” the piece quotes Ahmadinejad’s Vice President Mohammadreza Rahimi praising “brotherly” relations with Turkey and the signing of trade initiatives that would eventually total $30B.

Rahimi mentions two specific initiatives, one to cooperate towards developing an additional 6,000 MW of power generation capacity in the two countries. Second is an an agreement for Iran to supply gas to Europe via Turkey (presumably through the planned Nabucco pipeline) and also to act as a transhipment route for Turkmen gas en route to Europe.

Using Iranian gas to fill Nabucco has been discussed before, but this marks a step closer towards making it a reality. The deal, and Erdogan’s high profile visit to Tehran, are no doubt ruffling feathers in DC, but there has been little official reaction to the visit so far. This seems like another example of the “’sleeping with your friends’ enemies” argument that Bryan Early advances here. In sum, friends of a sanctioning state are in fact more likely to flout sanctions and trade restrictions because of security afforded by the alliance with the sanctioning state. Turkey’s alliance with the U.S. by virtue of NATO membership means that the U.S. is likely to be less able to compel it to adopt its Iran-isolating agenda.

-WW

Iran’s Arrest of Kuwaiti Fishermen Highlights Gas Dispute, Gulf Sensitivities

Last week, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard-affiliated Tabnak website ran a commentary (Persian) on Iran’s recent arrest of five Kuwaiti fishermen (along with one Qatari and an Egyptian) who had strayed into Iranian territorial waters. Press accounts state that the fishermen were taken to Abadan for questioning and shortly released. The reports differ, however, on exactly where the stop took place – and understandable ambiguity given the myriad maritime boundary disputes in the region.

The Tabnak piece goes on to connect this incident to a long-running Iranian dispute with Kuwait over a gas field known to Iranians as Arash and Arabs as al-Durra. The piece (a translated snip follows) gives a good sense of an Iranian nationalist point of view in which the Islamic Republic’s territory throughout the Gulf is under Arab assault. This incident and similar ones, like the 2007 arrest of British sailors in the Gulf, show how the combination of undemarcated borders and the not altogether historically unjustified Iran-under-assault worldview can be dangerous indeed. In the absence of a firm settlement, these disputes look set to heat up in coming years as demand for Gulf oil and gas grows.

- WW

Under the pretext of Iran’s rightful arrest of Kuwaiti citizens who had illegally entered Iranian maritime territory, Kuwait and its state media have recently asserted their ownership over large parts of Iranian territory in the northern Persian Gulf.

This comes at a time when the Kuwaitis, by highlighting part of our ambassador’s interview with a Kuwaiti newspaper, have [falsely] claimed that Iran was prepared to enter negotiations over the three islands [disputed with the UAE]. Unfortunately, Iran has responded to Kuwait’s aggressive claims with an inexplicable silence.

In light of this report, and based on existing agreements and the [1963] IMINOCO maritime boundary, the Iranian continental shelf in the northern Persian Gulf is Iranian property, just like the Arash gas field [marked in this map as Dorra]. The point that Iranian media have overlooked, is that because of Arab propaganda against Iran’s eternal ownership of the three islands, now Iranian gas fields like Arash and Soroush oil field, both located within Iran’s maritime exploration and production limits, are now subject to territorial claims from Arab sheikhdoms like Kuwait!

It is interesting that, by changing the name of the gas field to al-Durra, Kuwait has claimed its ownership over Iranian maritime territory, and it justifies its claim using the fanciful boundary that the anti-Iranian and anti-Persian Gulf British company Shell has drawn for them, with the Arash field lying just inside Kuwaiti territory.

More background on the Arash/ Durra field follows from the EIA:

Another large non-associated offshore natural gas field, Dorra (Durra), is located offshore near Khafji oil field in the Saudi-Kuwaiti Neutral Zone. Dorra development has been controversial since the late 1960s, however, because 70 percent is also claimed by Iran (called Arash). In addition, the maritime border between Kuwait and Iran remains un-demarcated. Saudi Arabia reached an agreement with Kuwait in July 2000 to share Dorra output equally, although the Kuwaitis are reportedly trying to purchase the Saudi share. According to Saudi Aramco, the field is estimated to contain non-associated gas reserves of between 35 and 60 Tcf of natural gas, and is under seismic study. The Kuwaiti Ministry of Oil has reported that the goal is to produce initially 600 MMcf/d from Dorra. Kuwait and Iran have intermittently discussed jointly developing the field, although production plans remain undisclosed.

Catching Up

Apologies for the lack of posting in recent weeks – was in the middle of relocating to Washington and juggling other projects. We are also in the process of re-launching the blog, so stay tuned for the new URL. Here are a few links as we get back into the swing of things:

-WW

1. Flynt and Hillary Mann Leverett have launched The Race for Iran, a new blog on Iran’s geopolitics. Also be sure to read their recent monograph on Iran-China relations.

2. Fereidun Fesharaki’s excellent talk at CSIS on world energy markets, with emphasis on Iran and China. A key takeaway is that China’s investments in Iran’s upstream oil and gas production are running at a loss, which underlines the Leveretts’ point that Chinese interest in Iran is more about building a long term strategic relationship than filling immediate energy needs.

3. I came across the following story about cargoes of Indian basmati rice, originally destined for Iran, that are now flooding the Emirati rice market. A timely reminder of how closely the region’s economies are interlinked:

“Boats filled with basmati have been lying idle in Dubai and at Sharjah Cornice. Iran used to be a good market for UAE re-exporters and the fall in demand there will definitely hurt the UAE market.”

He said prices of many premium basmati rice varieties have fallen by 30 per cent to 40 per cent.

An official at Dubai Municipality’s Food Safety Department told Emirates Business: “The Iranian Government’s decision to ban Indian and Pakistani basmati is an erratic decision based on wrong interpretation of a speech by an Indian minister appealing to farmers to stop cultivating basmati in some areas. The Iranian buyers panicked and stopped importing Indian basmati. The rice coming to the UAE is regularly checked at the port of entry for food safety.”

Required Reading: Iraq and Gulf Analysis

I’ve just come across a blog called Iraq and Gulf Analysis written by Reidar Visser who maintains the always excellent Historiae.org site on Basra and southern Iraq. As opposed to the longer essays on Historiae, this blog contains short analytical pieces and Visser’s archive of notes on Iraq from the last few years. Here’s a snip from his recent obit of Abd al-Aziz al-Hakim, the late leader of the Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq (ISCI):

Throughout the post-war period, Hakim masterfully managed to balance US and Iranian pressures and was successful in creating the impression in Washington that SCIRI was on course to liberate itself from Iranian overlordship. This involved theatrics such as a name change in May 2007, where SCIRI became ISCI (without the “revolution”) and where the rumour was circulated (but never officially confirmed) that ISCI would henceforth take its orders from the Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani in Najaf in Iraq, instead of from Iran’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei. Simultaneously, Hakim, who himself was never an Islamic scholar of repute, managed to create the impression of religious authority among Americans by focusing on his status as the son of a Shiite luminary (the Grand Ayatollah Muhsin al-Hakim) and as a sayyid (descendant of the Prophet), thereby prompting many international journalists to describe him as a “leading cleric” and one of the most “powerful” politicians of Iraq. It was only gradually since 2008 – and more pronouncedly since the local elections in January 2009 – that the idea of ISCI as a loyal ally of Iran returned to US policy-making circles in earnest.

-WW

Curiouser and Curiouser: Kamran Daneshjoo's Revised Resume

AWT IMAGE Full Name: Prof. Daneshjo, KamranPosition: Professor

Phone: 98-21-77240540-50 Ex:2906

Fax: 98-21-77240488

Email: kdaneshjo@iust.ac.ir
Address: Iran University of Science & Technology, Tehran, IRAN

University Degrees

  • PHD, Imperial College of London , U.K. (The Viva examination hereby in Iran)
  • MSC, Imperial College of London , U.K.
  • BSC, Queen Mary College , U.K.
  • I concluded last blog by giving Kamran Daneshjoo the benefit of the doubt. Perhaps Ahmadinejad’s embattled nominee to head Iran’s Higher Education Ministry could, in time, explain the unexplainable inconsistencies in his academic record—the bachelor’s degree from a vaguely-defined but plausibly Anglican university, the advanced degrees, including a Ph.D. from Manchester Imperial Institute of Science and Technology, an institution that simply does not exist.

    But instead time has complicated his story and thus simplified any possible explanation: it’s a farce. Daneshjoo’s new resume, listed above, diverges so brazenly from his old one, listed below. Today, according to the details listed on the Iran University of Science and Technology website, Daneshjoo received his doctorate and MSC from the Imperial College of London, one of England’s finest tertiary institutions. Degrees from Imperial are certainly nothing to be ashamed of and not likely to be hidden in favor of a fabricated graduation from the fictitious Manchester Imperial. For the record, Manchester and London are difficult to confuse and are separated by a four-hour drive.

    Were Daneshjoo an avid reader of the “Iran in the Gulf” blog, he might have changed his BSc from “Queen Mary” to “Queen Mary, University of London” and not “Queen Mary College.” Queen Mary College, as I’d written in the last post, is a preparatory academy. It’s good if you want to explore some GCSEs or some A-Levels but no good for picking up a BSc.

    Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani has stuck up for Daneshjoo and offered a rather involved alibi: Daneshjoo was expelled from a London college for his participation in a rally against Salman Rushdie (the details of which college employs such a heavy-handed disciplinarian were left undefined).

    The fact that Daneshjoo, a former election committee chief who willfully repeated June’s questionable election results, is being defended after this backtracking is a very bad sign. In this morning’s NYT, reporter Michael Slackman doesn’t mention Daneshjoo by name but does hit on the very real possibility of an upcoming purge of the universities. Daneshjoo’s appointment could act to facilitate just that. And secondly, what kind of message over the value of credentials and academic honesty does this send to the nearly 3 million students currently in Iran’s universities? Iran is rightfully credited for its long history of knowledge production and strong network of tertiary institutions. So here’s to hoping that come Thursday’s parliamentary vote and the narrowing of Ahmadinejad’s inner circle, a newly-revised resume for Professor Kamran Danshejoo says nothing of Iran’s Higher Education Ministry. -SW

    UPDATE: The vote on Daneshjoo, 186 votes for, 75 against, 25 abstentions. Look for this to have a major impact on Iran’s universities and particularly the teaching of social sciences. For a good list of votes on all nominees, this works.