From: Office of Terje Rod-Larsen ‹ >
Subject: September 23 update
Date: Mon, 23 Sep 2013 22:46:15 +0000
23 September, 2013
Article 1.
NYT
Short of a Deal, Containing Iran Is the Best Option
Kenneth M. Pollack
Article 2.
The Wall Street Journal
Russia's Anti-American Foreign Policy
David Satter
Article 3.
The Wall Street Journal
Iran's mullahs see a U.S. President eager for a
nuclear deal
Editorial
Article 4.
Los Angeles Times
A mathematical approach to Syria
K.C. Cole
Article 5.
Project Syndicate
Jimmy Carter Obama
Dominique Moisi
Article 6.
The New Yorker
syria's Shadow Commander
Dexter Filkins
NYT
Short of a Deal, Containing Iran Is the Best
OpAion
Kenneth M. Pollack
September 22, 2013 -- THIS week, Iran's new president, Hassan Rouhani,
will address the United Nations General Assembly. His message is likely to
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be a sharp change from the adolescent belligerence of his hard-line
predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Mr. Rouhani is a genuine reformer
— but his desire to move Iran in a new direction should not blind the
United States to the difficulties of achieving a diplomatic solution.
Mr. Rouhani has hinted that he is willing to compromise on aspects
of Iran's nuclear program for the sake of repairing relations with the rest of
the world and having economic sanctions on Iran removed. But he has also
warned that he cannot hold off his hard-line rivals forever, and it is unclear
whether the Iranians will be willing to make the kind of concessions that
America and its allies want. Ultimately, it is the supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, not Mr. Rouhani, who would make the final decision on a
deal. He has shown little inclination for one, although
recent statements from the leadership offer hope that their position may be
softening.
If it cannot reach a diplomatic deal, America will face a choice between
two alternatives: using force to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear
arsenal or containing a nuclear Iran until its regime collapses from its own
dysfunction.
It is going to be a difficult choice. For that reason, we need to start thinking
about it now. We cannot afford to have our diplomatic efforts collapse
suddenly and, as in Syria, be forced to lunge forward unprepared.
Sizing up the two alternatives, I favor containment over military
operations. I say that, however, understanding that each option has more
drawbacks than advantages, that there are circumstances when a military
strike would be preferable, and that those who advocate the military option
merit a hearing.
This may seem incongruous, coming from me. I supported an invasion of
Iraq 10 years ago in principle, but not the Bush administration's handling
of it. I was moved by the plight of Iraqis under Saddam Hussein's horrific
"republic of fear," as the writer Kanan Makiya called it; by the widespread
belief that he was reconstituting his nuclear program; and by his long
pattern of reckless, even suicidal, aggression.
Unpleasant as Tehran has been over the years, it has not demonstrated
anything like Mr. Hussein's recklessness. And unlike in 2003, very few
Americans would support a full-scale invasion. Therefore the military
option against Iran would have to stop with air power. But there is a
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considerable risk that airstrikes alone would not be enough to strip Iran of
its nuclear program.
Even after a devastating American military strike, I fear the Iranians would
pick themselves up and rebuild — and would withdraw from the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, evict any remaining nuclear inspectors and
deploy an actual arsenal to deter a future American strike.
Mr. Hussein offers a sobering precedent. He tried to rebuild his nuclear
program twice: successfully after Israel obliterated it in 1981 and again (at
least initially) after the United States demolished part of it in 1991.
We may not know where all of Iran's nuclear facilities are, and some are so
heavily defended that we may not fully destroy them. In the 1990s,
American intelligence officials believed that they had a good handle on
Iraq's nuclear facilities, only to find out that they were wrong.
A second concern is that the Iranians almost certainly would retaliate. They
might fire missiles at American bases in the Middle East, or persuade allies
like Hezbollah and Palestinian Islamic Jihad to fire rockets at Israel. But
my biggest fear is that they would embark on a prolonged terrorist
campaign against Americans, including attacks on the homeland.
The Iranians have said as much, and the United States intelligence
community believes that they have expanded their capacity to do so since
their failed attempt to kill the Saudi ambassador to the United States in
2011.
These problems suggest that an American air campaign to destroy Iran's
nuclear facilities would be just the beginning, not the end, of a war with
Iran.
If Iran were to rebuild, the president of the United States would not be able
to just shrug his shoulders. If Iran retaliated, and killed Americans, the
president would almost certainly have to respond, if not escalate.
I fear that if we started using force in the belief that we could keep it
limited, we would either fail and find ourselves facing an enraged, nuclear
Iran, or be dragged into another large-scale, protracted war in the Middle
East.
Containment is hardly a perfect policy, but I see the costs and risks as more
easily mitigated than those of war.
Containment is not appeasement. It would not mean simply letting the
Iranians do what they wanted. That is not how we contained the Soviet
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Union — or Cuba, or North Korea or even Iran in the decades since the
1979 revolution.
Properly understood, containment would put pressure on Iran in various
ways, to keep it on the defensive and to encourage the end of the regime. It
would hold in place painful sanctions. It would include covert assistance to
the Iranian opposition, cyberwarfare in response to Iran's support for
terrorism, and continued diplomatic isolation.
A bugbear raised by some is the notion that if Iran acquired nuclear
weapons it would use them unprovoked or give them to terrorists. This is
extremely unlikely.
Over the years, the Iranian regime has shown itself to be vicious,
murderous, anti-Semitic and anti-American. At times it has taken some real
risks. But it has never shown itself to be irrational, reckless or suicidal. It
has repeatedly shown great respect for American (and Israeli) military
power and demonstrated a willingness to back down in the face of military
retaliation. The Iranians have supported terrorism since 1979 and
possessed weapons of mass destruction since 1989, but have never mixed
the two for fear of retribution.
In the cold war, the United States and the Soviet Union spent untold
billions trying to guard against a surprise nuclear attack by the other — an
attack that neither seriously contemplated. Indeed, historical research in the
last two decades has shown that both sides actually made themselves less
secure by obsessing about this worst-case phantom, exacerbating and even
causing crises that could have ended in disaster.
Nevertheless, there are real issues with containment. Three of the most
important are the dangers of crisis management with a nuclear Iran, the risk
of additional proliferation and the likelihood that Iran will become more
aggressive in promoting instability, insurgency and terrorism. None of
these should be dismissed — but none should be seen as deal breakers,
either.
America's massive military superiority over Iran constitutes a huge
advantage. In the case of proliferation, the central problem is Saudi Arabia
(and possibly the United Arab Emirates), not Egypt or Turkey, and
persuading the Saudis not to seek nuclear weapons should not be assumed
to be impossible. And there are ways to fight state-sanctioned subversion
and terrorism. Despite efforts since 1979, the Iranians have never managed
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to overthrow a foreign government or start an insurgency or a civil war. At
most, they made bad situations (like Iraq) worse.
Diplomacy has not yet run its course with Iran. Let's hope that it triumphs.
If it does not, we will have a terrible choice to make. To me, containment
seems the least-bad option. But the worst choice would be to refuse to
decide and instead have a strategy forced on us.
Kenneth M Pollack, a former Central Intelligence Agency analyst and
National Security Council official, is a seniorfellow at the Brookings
Institution and the author, most recently, of "Unthinkable: Iran, the Bomb
and American Strategy."
The Wall Street Journal
R i ' Anti-American Foreign Policy
David Satter
September 22, 2013 -- Moscow -- Despite optimism in the United States
that the Russian peace initiative may offer a way out of the Syrian crisis,
the pattern of Russian foreign policy shows that Russia can envisage
nothing better for itself than the role of world-wide antagonist of the U.S.
The difference in values between the U.S. and Russia—and the
subordination of Russian foreign policy to the personal interests of the
members of a corrupt regime—should have been obvious to the Obama
administration from the beginning. But it did nothing to forestall the policy
of "reset." At the 2009 Moscow Summit, Mr. Obama praised the
"extraordinary work" that Vladimir Putin, who was then officially the
prime minister, had done for Russia. Mr. Obama described Mr. Putin as
"sincere, just and deeply interested in the welfare of the Russian people."
The praise was never reciprocated, in part because Russian leaders fear and
distrust their own population, and they understand that Western advocacy
of the rule of law and human rights is a potential threat to their rule. In
recent years, U.S. officials have often said that it is difficult to solve the
world's problems without Russia. Unfortunately, it is often even harder to
solve them with it. The U.S. needs three things from Russia: understanding
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in defense matters, assistance in the war on terror, and help in curbing the
ambitions of rogue states. In each case, the record of the Putin regime is
one of relentless obstruction. One source of conflict has been Russian
objections to U.S. plans to construct an antimissile shield in Europe to
protect U.S. allies against an attack from Iran. Russia has treated the shield
as a threat to its nuclear deterrent, despite the opinion of Russia's own
experts that the missiles pose no threat to the Russian ICBM force and are
intended for a completely different purpose. In 2009, Mr. Obama canceled
plans for antimissile installations in Poland and the Czech Republic, in part
to improve U.S.-Russian relations. But the U.S. is now preparing to station
interceptors in Romania. In response, Russia is demanding legal guarantees
that the missiles will not be used against Russia and is threatening to target
U.S. missile-defense sites if there is no agreement. NATO Secretary-
General Anders Fogh Rasmussen described the Russian position as "crazy."
"You can't in any rational way think that NATO constitutes a threat against
Russia," he told the AP in February 2012. "It's a complete waste of money
to deploy offensive weapons and capabilities against NATO territory."
Russia has also undermined U.S. efforts to combat terror. Two striking
recent examples are the cases of the Boston Marathon bomber, Tamerlan
Tsarnaev, and the NSA leaker, Edward Snowden.
Tsarnaev spent six months in the Dagestan region of Russia in 2012 before
the attack on April 15. Two of his contacts, Mahmud Nigal, a suspected
link with the Islamist underground, and William Plotnikov, a Russian-
Canadian Islamic radical, were killed by Russian forces while he was there.
Yet the Russians insist that Tsarnaev was not under surveillance in
Dagestan and never questioned. If this is true, it is in complete
contradiction to all known Russian practice. Tsarnaev left Russia freely
through Moscow's Sheremetevo Airport and the Federal Security Service
never warned the U.S. about his contacts in Dagestan. Russia also showed
little concern for efforts to protect U.S. civilians in its decision to shelter
Edward Snowden. In light of the quantity and quality of what Mr. Snowden
stole, an adequate damage assessment depends on getting him back to the
U.S. Until that happens, the efforts of the NSA and other agencies to
defend the U.S. against terror are going to be crippled. Aware of this, Mr.
Putin seems to be mainly concerned with subjecting the U.S. to ridicule.
The Russian media have published articles about Mr. Snowden's "new
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life," "proposals of marriage" and a future career defending human rights.
At the same time, although Mr. Putin said that a condition of Mr.
Snowden's asylum was that he "stop harming our American partners," the
leaks of NSA information have continued.
Russian obstruction of the U.S. has had its gravest consequences, however,
in interstate relations. Russia has defended Iran against Western economic
sanctions, arguing that they are "a violation of international law." Moscow
also has been unswervin. in its support for Bashar Assad in Syria, from
voting to block three M. Security Council resolutions on sanctions
against Syria to insisting that the chemical-weapons attack on Aug. 21 that
killed more than 1,400 Syrians was carried out by the rebels.
The U.S. will now try to enforce a U.S.-Russian agreement on the
elimination of Syria's chemical weapons under conditions in which Russia
and Syria can use delay, obfuscation and disinformation to string out the
process indefinitely. Meanwhile, the Syrian opposition, which has endured
chemical-weapons attacks without seeing a serious response from the
civilized world, is likely to continue to radicalize.
Russian anti-Americanism is likely to intensify. Unlike the Soviet Union,
Russia has no universal ideology capable of inspiring loyalties that
transcend national boundaries. Anti-Americanism is a kind of substitute. It
allows Russia to carve out a prominent role for itself in world affairs that it
could never have if it were concerned only with acting positively.
At the same time, and probably more important, anti-Americanism can be
used to distract Russians from the corruption of the Putin regime and the
pillaging of the country. Mr. Putin and his associates stand at the apex of a
corrupt system and, according to some estimates, control 15% of the
national wealth. During protest demonstrations last year over the
falsification of elections, Mr. Putin was openly referred to as a "thief," a
serious development in a society where the charge is widely believed but
usually not made publicly.
At the same time, the regime is threatened by a deteriorating economy. In
the second quarter of this year, growth fell to 1.2%. During the 2000s, the
rate was 7.2%. Because of its immense corruption, Russia is critically
dependent on high oil prices, and these are supported by Middle East
instability.
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Under such circumstances, the U.S. is not only a helpful distraction but a
convenient scapegoat. Mr. Putin is losing support in Moscow, but his
defense of the Assad regime evokes nostalgia for the Soviet empire and
strengthens his support among the conservative and provincial part of the
population. As Mr. Putin's political position weakens further, his
antagonism toward the U.S. will almost certainly increase.
In the wake of the Russian initiative over Syria, the U.S. is now much more
reliant on Russia than it should ever have permitted itself to be. In our
fixation with "deliverables," we forgot that what really matters in relations
between states are intangibles, such as good faith. That's something Mr.
Putin has not shown toward America in the past, and U.S. policy makers
would be unwise to rely on it in the future.
Mr. Satter is affiliated with the Hudson Institute, Johns Hopkins University
and the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. He is the author,
most recently, of "It Was a Long Time Ago and It Never Happened Anyway:
Russia and the Communist Past" (Yale, 2011).
The Wall Street Journal
Iran's mullahs see a U.S. President eager for
a nuclear deal
Editorial
September 22, 2013 -- The ruling clerics in Tehran haven't survived in
power for 34 years without cunning. Fresh from their ally Bashar Assad's
diplomatic victory in Damascus, they now see an opening to liberate
themselves from Western pressure too. They're hoping an eager President
Obama will ease sanctions in return for another promise of WMD
disarmament.
That's the prudent way to read Iran's recent interest in Mr. Obama's
entreaties after five years of rude dismissals. No doubt the mullahs are
feeling international economic pressure, especially from financial sanctions
through the world banking system. But they have shown for years that they
don't mind imposing pain on their own people.
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New President Hassan Rouhani sounds less strident notes than his
predecessor, but the regime has rolled out other presidents who turned out
either to have no power or to be false fronts to beguile the West. The real
power, as ever, resides with the clerics and especially Ayatollah Khamenei
and the Revolutionary Guard Corps. Mr. Rouhani was their nuclear envoy
in the mid-2000s when Iran accelerated its nuclear-weapons program. It's
doubtful they've had a come-to-Allah moment on nukes.
The likely reason they've finally decided to answer Mr. Obama's overtures
is because they see an America in retreat and eager for a nuclear deal. In
Syria, they saw Mr. Obama leap at Russia's diplomatic offer rather than
follow through on his threat of a U.S. military strike if Assad used
chemical weapons. Assad is now safe from Western intervention and he
can dissemble and delay on disarming his chemical stockpiles.
The mullahs can also see how eager Mr. Obama is for a second-term deal
with Iran that validates his campaign claim that "the tide of war is
receding." The President has never taken no for an answer from Tehran.
Despite being rebuffed for five years, he sent another entreaty after Mr.
Rouhani's election in June.
Mr. Obama's letter invited Mr. Rouhani to "cooperate with the international
community, keep your commitments and remove ambiguities" about the
atomic program in exchange for sanctions relief, according to a senior
Iranian official quoted in Thursday's New York Times. The letter hasn't
been released, but Mr. Rouhani called it "positive and constructive" in an
interview with NBC Wednesday.
The mullahs also learned from the Syrian fiasco that Mr. Obama wasn't
able to sway Americans to support even what John Kerry called an
"unbelievable small" military strike. They can see as well that even many
Republican leaders now want the U.S. to withdraw from world leadership.
As in the 1920s and 1970s, most American elites are eager for a diplomatic
deal of just about any kind rather than run the risk of a military strike.
The White House is already signaling its first concession by suggestin
that Mr. Obama might meet Mr. Rouhani in New York at this week's .
General Assembly. That would be the first such presidential meeting since
the 1979 Iranian Revolution, and it would give the dictatorship new
international prestige at zero cost. Iran continues to support U.S. enemies
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in Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza and Afghanistan, and it continues to crush its
political opposition at home.
Iran's diplomatic goals are obvious: Break its international isolation and lift
the sanctions in exchange for a promise not to build a nuclear weapon even
as it retains its ability to build one at a moment's notice. The Rouhani aide
said last week that Tehran was particularly eager to lift the ban on Iranian
money transfers through the Swift interbank system, and it will press for
that as an initial concession before it dismantles a single nuclear centrifuge.
The danger for world order is that Iran is already close to a nuclear
breakout capacity when it will be able to finish a device in a matter of
weeks, without technically testing or possessing a bomb. The mullahs
could also easily pull the North Korean trick of dismantling one facility
while secretly running another one. They have systematically lied about
their nuclear program for years.
All of which bodes ill for any genuine nuclear breakthrough. If true global
security is Mr. Obama's goal, then at a bare minimum any deal would have
to halt Iran's enrichment of uranium, remove the already enriched uranium
from the country, close all nuclear sites and provide for robust monitoring
anytime and anywhere.
Anything less would be a mirage. Anything less would force Israel in
particular to recalculate the risks of a pre-emptive attack compared to the
risks of future nuclear destruction. Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Iran's other
Middle East rivals will also be looking closely at the fine print of any deal.
A negotiation that dismantles Iran's nuclear program would be a great step
forward, but a deal that promises peace while letting Iran stay poised on
the edge of becoming a nuclear power would endanger the world.
Anicic i.
Los Angeles Times
A mathematical approach to Syria
K.C. Cole
September 23, 2013 -- A mathematical solution in Syria? That's not as
crazy as it sounds. In fact, the working compromise is a classic case of the
power of game theory, a branch of mathematics that analyzes the best
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possible outcomes in conflicts where neither side knows what the other
will do. It's not about winning as much as it is finding the least worst
option, which is precisely what Presidents Obama, Vladimir Putin, Bashar
Assad and company have done.
No one gets exactly what he wants. But no one loses everything either.
In its simplest form, the Syrian standoff was a classic game of "chicken,"
the game played by James Dean in "Rebel Without a Cause" when he was
challenged by a bully named Buzz to race stolen cars to the edge of a cliff.
Whoever bails first becomes the "chickie" and loses face. Dean's character,
Jim, jumps at the last minute, but Buzz's jacket gets snagged on the door
and he plunges to his death. Game over.
The least worst solution would have been for both players to swallow their
pride and jump early. The winner gets to gloat. But even the loser gets to
play another day.
Over the long term, a willingness to take less than everything is a winning
strategy.
One reason is that winner-take-all (a zero-sum game) results in unstable
situations, dangerous even for the winner. The losing side has little reason
to cooperate and every reason to retaliate in kind, or worse. (In "Rebel,"
Buzz's gang blames Jim for their buddy's death and hound him until a
predictably tragic ending is the only one possible.)
Lasting solutions require coming to an equilibrium in which all players feel
they did well enough, given the circumstances. And game theory is all
about finding equilibriums.
Such calculations apply to much more than Syria. We do the same sort of
mental math when we stop at red lights instead of barreling through at our
pleasure (road rage is the primitive brain's business). Whether we're paying
taxes or tipping waiters, we often do things that are not, from a selfish
point of view, ideal — but that we know are necessary to keep society
going. In other words, the least worst option.
When we insist on winner-take-all, nobody wins in the end. If the big fish
gobble up all the little fish, even the big guys starve. It's the argument I
most often hear from the business community for economic policies that
promote an equitable distribution of wealth. It doesn't take a lot of
calculation to see that when most people don't have enough money to buy
products, profits eventually dry up.
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Stability requires not just a measure of fairness but also the perception of
fairness. Even a monkey will turn down a treat if it sees its neighbor get
something far more delicious. (In fact, the monkey feeling cheated will
throw the second-rate treat back in the experimenter's face.) When people
feel their society doesn't distribute treats equally — be they tax breaks,
voting rights or political power — the resulting instability threatens
everyone.
Attaining a least worst solution, in other words, requires that both sides be
prepared to live with less than they ideally want; if one side feels it's
getting both the least and the worst, there's no point in even playing. Any
monkey could tell us that.
The situation in Syria, of course, is horrendously complicated, with
multiple players with unknown aims and abilities, and multiple options and
possible outcomes.
Whether or not turning over Syria's chemical weapons to the United
Nations works, the present pause in the stalemate gives everyone time to
think things through. Losing some face is worth it if you can return to play
another day — perhaps at a game that plays more to your strengths.
K.C. Cole, a journalism professor at USC and a former science writer for
The Times, is the author of "Something Incredibly Wonderful Happens:
Frank Oppenheimer and His Astonishing Exploratorium."
AnicI, 5.
Project Syndicate
Jimmy Carter Obama
Dominique Moisi
22 September 2013 -- "How many divisions does the Pope have?" Joseph
Stalin famously quipped when told to be mindful of the Vatican. In an
updated lesson in realpolitik, Russian President Vladimir Putin recently
was happy to count Pope Francis as an ally in opposing American military
intervention in Syria. Presenting himself as the last pillar of respect for
international law, Putin offered ethics lessons to the United States — and
specifically to President Barack Obama.
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With the US-Russian agreement, signed in Geneva on September 14, to
place Syria's chemical weapons under international control, Russia has
returned to the global scene — and not only because of its nuisance value.
Could Putin one day receive, like Obama before him, a Nobel Peace Prize?
Has not Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who proposed the deal, already
entered the pantheon of great Russian diplomats, as the successor of Karl
Nesselrode, the Russian envoy to the 1814-1815 Congress of Vienna and to
the Congress of Paris in 1856?
Of course, Russian diplomacy has performed extremely well recently, but
it does not stand on its own merits alone. Russia's diplomats would have
gained little without America's foreign-policy malaise — a victim of
Obama's vacillation and of Americans' hostility to any new military
adventure, however limited its scope — and Europe's deep internal
divisions.
Yes, Russia is emerging from its humiliation following the collapse of the
Soviet Union. Heir to an imperial tradition that has shaped its national
identity, Russia is resuming in the Middle East a role and status more in
tune with the one it had from the Czarist era to Soviet times.
But Russia is no match for the US militarily and no match for China
economically, and its soft power is virtually non-existent. If Russia can
provoke America — whether by granting political asylum to the "traitor"
Edward Snowden, for example, or by resisting Western diplomacy in the
Middle East — it is not because it has become a great power once again, but
simply because America is no longer the great power that it once was.
The Syrian crisis has made that plain. Recent US diplomacy has seemed
amateurish and naive. Obama's handling of the Syrian crisis increasingly
evokes Jimmy Carter's handling of the Iranian hostage crisis 33 years ago,
particularly the failed operation in 1980 to rescue the Americans abducted
following the takeover of the US embassy in November 1979. Then, too,
hesitation seemed to prevail over determination, contributing to the failure
of the mission.
Carter was a somewhat bland engineer, whereas Obama is a charismatic
lawyer. Yet they seem to share a fundamental indecisiveness in their
approach to world affairs. Carter had difficulty choosing between the
muscular line of his national security adviser, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and the
more moderate approach of his secretary of state, Cyrus Vance.
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By contrast, there are no fundamental disagreements among Obama's
closest foreign-policy advisers — Susan Rice, the national security adviser,
Samantha Power, who succeeded Rice as US Ambassador to the United
Nations, and Secretary of State John Kerry. Instead, it is Obama himself
who seems to be constantly hesitating. The divisions are not among his
advisers, but within his own mind.
As a good lawyer, Obama weighs the pros and cons, aware that it is
impossible to do nothing in the Syrian crisis but remaining viscerally
disinclined to leap into any foreign entanglement that would distract
attention from his agenda of domestic reform. More important, he seems to
lack a coherent long-term strategic vision of America's role in the world.
Neither the currently fashionable "Asian pivot" nor the "Russian reset"
four years ago constitute the beginning of a grand plan.
In such a context, the return of global realpolitik can only benefit Russia
and harm the US, despite America's many advantages in terms of hard and
soft power. The agreement on Syria's chemical weapons struck by Russia
and the US could one day be remembered as a spectacular breakthrough in
the field of arms control. But it is more likely to be perceived as a grand
deception — remembered not for helping Syria's people, but mainly as a
sign of America's growing international weakness.
In that case, the agreement will not only damage America's reputation, but
will also undermine global stability. Weakness is weakness, whether one is
in Moscow, Beijing, Tehran, or Pyongyang.
Dominique Moisi is Senior Adviser at The French Institute or
International Affairs (IFRI) and a professor at L7nstitut politiques
de Paris (Sciences Po). He is the author of The Geopolitics of Emotion:
How Cultures of Fear Humiliation, and Hope are Reshaping the World.
Anecic 6.
The New Yorker
Syria's Shadow Commander
Dexter Filkins
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September 30, 2013 -- Last February, some of Iran's most influential
leaders gathered at the Amir al-Momenin Mosque, in northeast Tehran,
inside a gated community reserved for officers of the Revolutionary Guard.
They had come to pay their last respects to a fallen comrade. Hassan
Shateri, a veteran of Iran's covert wars throughout the Middle East and
South Asia, was a senior commander in a powerful, elite branch of the
Revolutionary Guard called the Quds Force. The force is the sharp
instrument of Iranian foreign policy, roughly analogous to a combined
C.I.A. and Special Forces; its name comes from the Persian word for
Jerusalem, which its fighters have promised to liberate. Since 1979, its goal
has been to subvert Iran's enemies and extend the country's influence
across the Middle East. Shateri had spent much of his career abroad, first in
Afghanistan and then in Iraq, where the Quds Force helped Shiite militias
kill American soldiers.
Shateri had been killed two days before, on the road that runs between
Damascus and Beirut. He had gone to Syria, along with thousands of other
members of the Quds Force, to rescue the country's besieged President,
Bashar al-Assad, a crucial ally of Iran. In the past few years, Shateri had
worked under an alias as the Quds Force's chief in Lebanon; there he had
helped sustain the armed group Hezbollah, which at the time of the funeral
had begun to pour men into Syria to fight for the regime. The
circumstances of his death were unclear: one Iranian official said that
Shateri had been "directly targeted" by "the Zionist regime," as Iranians
habitually refer to Israel.
At the funeral, the mourners sobbed, and some beat their chests in the
Shiite way. Shateri's casket was wrapped in an Iranian flag, and gathered
around it were the commander of the Revolutionary Guard, dressed in
green fatigues; a member of the plot to murder four exiled opposition
leaders in a Berlin restaurant in 1992; and the father of Imad Mughniyeh,
the Hezbollah commander believed to be responsible for the bombings that
killed more than two hundred and fifty Americans in Beirut in 1983.
Mughniyeh was assassinated in 2008, purportedly by Israeli agents. In the
ethos of the Iranian revolution, to die was to serve. Before Shateri's
funeral, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country's Supreme Leader, released a
note of praise: "In the end, he drank the sweet syrup of martyrdom."
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Kneeling in the second row on the mosque's carpeted floor was Major
General Qassem Suleimani, the Quds Force's leader: a small man of fifty-
six, with silver hair, a close-cropped beard, and a look of intense self-
containment. It was Suleimani who had sent Shateri, an old and trusted
friend, to his death. As Revolutionary Guard commanders, he and Shateri
belonged to a small fraternity formed during the Sacred Defense, the name
given to the Iran-Iraq War, which lasted from 1980 to 1988 and left as
many as a million people dead. It was a catastrophic fight, but for Iran it
was the beginning of a three-decade project to build a Shiite sphere of
influence, stretching across Iraq and Syria to the Mediterranean. Along
with its allies in Syria and Lebanon, Iran forms an Axis of Resistance,
arrayed against the region's dominant Sunni powers and the West. In Syria,
the project hung in the balance, and Suleimani was mounting a desperate
fight, even if the price of victory was a sectarian conflict that engulfed the
region for years.
Suleimani took command of the Quds Force fifteen years ago, and in that
time he has sought to reshape the Middle East in Iran's favor, working as a
power broker and as a military force: assassinating rivals, arming allies,
and, for most of a decade, directing a network of militant groups that killed
hundreds of Americans in Iraq. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has
sanctioned Suleimani for his role in supporting the Assad regime, and for
abetting terrorism. And yet he has remained mostly invisible to the outside
world, even as he runs agents and directs operations. "Suleimani is the
single most powerful operative in the Middle East today," John Maguire, a
former C.I.A. officer in Iraq, told me, "and no one's ever heard of him."
When Suleimani appears in public—often to speak at veterans' events or to
meet with Khamenei—he carries himself inconspicuously and rarely raises
his voice, exhibiting a trait that Arabs call khilib, or understated charisma.
"He is so short, but he has this presence," a former senior Iraqi official told
me. "There will be ten people in a room, and when Suleimani walks in he
doesn't come and sit with you. He sits over there on the other side of room,
by himself, in a very quiet way. Doesn't speak, doesn't comment, just sits
and listens. And so of course everyone is thinking only about him."
At the funeral, Suleimani was dressed in a black jacket and a black shirt
with no tie, in the Iranian style; his long, angular face and his arched
eyebrows were twisted with pain. The Quds Force had never lost such a
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high-ranking officer abroad. The day before the funeral, Suleimani had
travelled to Shateri's home to offer condolences to his family. He has a
fierce attachment to martyred soldiers, and often visits their families; in a
recent interview with Iranian media, he said, "When I see the children of
the martyrs, I want to smell their scent, and I lose myself." As the funeral
continued, he and the other mourners bent forward to pray, pressing their
foreheads to the carpet. "One of the rarest people, who brought the
revolution and the whole world to you, is gone," Alireza Panahian, the
imam, told the mourners. Suleimani cradled his head in his palm and began
to weep.
The early months of 2013, around the time of Shateri's death, marked a
low point for the Iranian intervention in Syria. Assad was steadily losing
ground to the rebels, who are dominated by Sunnis, Iran's rivals. If Assad
fell, the Iranian regime would lose its link to Hezbollah, its forward base
against Israel. In a speech, one Iranian cleric said, "If we lose Syria, we
cannot keep Tehran."
Although the Iranians were severely strained by American sanctions,
imposed to stop the regime from developing a nuclear weapon, they were
unstinting in their efforts to save Assad. Among other things, they extended
a seven-billion-dollar loan to shore up the Syrian economy. "I don't think
the Iranians are calculating this in terms of dollars," a Middle Eastern
security official told me. "They regard the loss of Assad as an existential
threat." For Suleimani, saving Assad seemed a matter of pride, especially if
it meant distinguishing himself from the Americans. "Suleimani told us the
Iranians would do whatever was necessary," a former Iraqi leader told me.
"He said, `We're not like the Americans. We don't abandon our friends."
Last year, Suleimani asked Kurdish leaders in Iraq to allow him to open a
supply route across northern Iraq and into Syria. For years, he had bullied
and bribed the Kurds into cooperating with his plans, but this time they
rebuffed him. Worse, Assad's soldiers wouldn't fight—or, when they did,
they mostly butchered civilians, driving the populace to the rebels. "The
Syrian Army is useless!" Suleimani told an Iraqi politician. He longed for
the Basij, the Iranian militia whose fighters crushed the popular uprisings
against the regime in 2009. "Give me one brigade of the Basij, and I could
conquer the whole country," he said. In August, 2012, anti-Assad rebels
captured forty-eight Iranians inside Syria. Iranian leaders protested that
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they were pilgrims, come to pray at a holy Shiite shrine, but the rebels, as
well as Western intelligence agencies, said that they were members of the
Quds Force. In any case, they were valuable enough so that Assad agreed
to release more than two thousand captured rebels to have them freed. And
then Shateri was killed.
Finally, Suleimani began flying into Damascus frequently so that he could
assume personal control of the Iranian intervention. "He's running the war
himself," an American defense official told me. In Damascus, he is said to
work out of a heavily fortified command post in a nondescript building,
where he has installed a multinational array of officers: the heads of the
Syrian military, a Hezbollah commander, and a coordinator of Iraqi Shiite
militias, which Suleimani mobilized and brought to the fight. If Suleimani
couldn't have the Basij, he settled for the next best thing: Brigadier
General Hossein Hamedani, the Basij's former deputy commander.
Hamedani, another comrade from the Iran-Iraq War, was experienced in
running the kind of irregular militias that the Iranians were assembling, in
order to keep on fighting if Assad fell.
Late last year, Western officials began to notice a sharp increase in Iranian
supply flights into the Damascus airport. Instead of a handful a week,
planes were coming every day, carrying weapons and ammunition—"tons
of it," the Middle Eastern security official told me—along with officers
from the Quds Force. According to American officials, the officers
coordinated attacks, trained militias, and set up an elaborate system to
monitor rebel communications. They also forced the various branches of
Assad's security services—designed to spy on one another—to work
together. The Middle Eastern security official said that the number of Quds
Force operatives, along with the Iraqi Shiite militiamen they brought with
them, reached into the thousands. "They're spread out across the entire
country," he told me.
A turning point came in April, after rebels captured the Syrian town of
Qusayr, near the Lebanese border. To retake the town, Suleimani called on
Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah's leader, to send in more than two thousand
fighters. It wasn't a difficult sell. Qusayr sits at the entrance to the Bekaa
Valley, the main conduit for missiles and other materiel to Hezbollah; if it
was closed, Hezbollah would find it difficult to survive. Suleimani and
Nasrallah are old friends, having cooperated for years in Lebanon and in
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the many places around the world where Hezbollah operatives have
performed terrorist missions at the Iranians' behest. According to Will
Fulton, an Iran expert at the American Enterprise Institute, Hezbollah
fighters encircled Qusayr, cutting off the roads, then moved in. Dozens of
them were killed, as were at least eight Iranian officers. On June 5th, the
town fell. "The whole operation was orchestrated by Suleimani," Maguire,
who is still active in the region, said. "It was a great victory for him."
Despite all of Suleimani's rough work, his image among Iran's faithful is
that of an irreproachable war hero—a decorated veteran of the Iran-Iraq
War, in which he became a division commander while still in his twenties.
In public, he is almost theatrically modest. During a recent appearance, he
described himself as "the smallest soldier," and, according to the Iranian
press, rebuffed members of the audience who tried to kiss his hand. His
power comes mostly from his close relationship with Khamenei, who
provides the guiding vision for Iranian society. The Supreme Leader, who
usually reserves his highest praise for fallen soldiers, has referred to
Suleimani as "a living martyr of the revolution." Suleimani is a hard-line
supporter of Iran's authoritarian system. In July, 1999, at the height of
student protests, he signed, with other Revolutionary Guard commanders, a
letter warning the reformist President Mohammad Khatami that if he didn't
put down the revolt the military would—perhaps deposing Khatami in the
process. "Our patience has run out," the generals wrote. The police crushed
the demonstrators, as they did again, a decade later.
Iran's government is intensely fractious, and there are many figures around
Khamenei who help shape foreign policy, including Revolutionary Guard
commanders, senior clerics, and Foreign Ministry officials. But Suleimani
has been given a remarkably free hand in implementing Khamenei's vision.
"He has ties to every corner of the system," Meir Dagan, the former head
of Mossad, told me. "He is what I call politically clever. He has a
relationship with everyone." Officials describe him as a believer in Islam
and in the revolution; while many senior figures in the Revolutionary
Guard have grown wealthy through the Guard's control over key Iranian
industries, Suleimani has been endowed with a personal fortune by the
Supreme Leader. "He's well taken care of," Maguire said.
Suleimani lives in Tehran, and appears to lead the home life of a bureaucrat
in middle age. "He gets up at four every morning, and he's in bed by nine-
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thirty every night," the Iraqi politician, who has known him for many
years, told me, shaking his head in disbelief. Suleimani has a bad prostate
and recurring back pain. He's "respectful of his wife," the Middle Eastern
security official told me, sometimes taking her along on trips. He has three
sons and two daughters, and is evidently a strict but loving father. He is
said to be especially worried about his daughter Nargis, who lives in
Malaysia. "She is deviating from the ways of Islam," the Middle Eastern
official said.
Maguire told me, "Suleimani is a far more polished guy than most. He can
move in political circles, but he's also got the substance to be
intimidating." Although he is widlead, his aesthetic tastes appear to be
strictly traditional. "I don't think listen to classical music," the Middle
Eastern official told me. "The European thing—I don't think that's his
vibe, basically." Suleimani has little formal education, but, the former
senior Iraqi official told me, "he is a very shrewd, frighteningly intelligent
strategist." His tools include payoffs for politicians across the Middle East,
intimidation when it is needed, and murder as a last resort. Over the years,
the Quds Force has built an international network of assets, some of them
drawn from the Iranian diaspora, who can be called on to support missions.
"They're everywhere," a second Middle Eastern security official said. In
2010, according to Western officials, the Quds Force and Hezbollah
launched a new campaign against American and Israeli targets—in
apparent retaliation for the covert effort to slow down the Iranian nuclear
program, which has included cyber attacks and assassinations of Iranian
nuclear scientists.
Since then, Suleimani has orchestrated attacks in places as far flung as
Thailand, New Delhi, Lagos, and Nairobi—at least thirty attempts in the
past two years alone. The most notorious was a scheme, in 2011, to hire a
Mexican drug cartel to blow up the Saudi Ambassador to the United States
as he sat down to eat at a restaurant a few miles from the White House. The
cartel member approached by Suleimani's agent turned out to be an
informant for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. (The Quds Force
appears to be more effective close to home, and a number of the remote
plans have gone awry.) Still, after the plot collapsed, two former American
officials told a congressional committee that Suleimani should be
assassinated. "Suleimani travels a lot," one said. "He is all over the place.
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Go get him. Either try to capture him or kill him." In Iran, more than two
hundred dignitaries signed an outraged letter in his defense; a social-media
campaign proclaimed, "We are all Qassem Suleimani."
Several Middle Eastern officials, some of whom I have known for a
decade, stopped talking the moment I brought up Suleimani. "We don't
want to have any part of this," a Kurdish official in Iraq said. Among spies
in the West, he appears to exist in a special category, an enemy both hated
and admired: a Middle Eastern equivalent of Karla, the elusive Soviet
master spy in John le Carre's novels. When I called Dagan, the former
Mossad chief, and mentioned Suleimani's name, there was a long pause on
the line. "Ah," he said, in a tone of weary irony, "a very good friend."
In March, 2009, on the eve of the Iranian New Year, Suleimani led a group
of Iran-Iraq War veterans to the Paa-Alam Heights, a barren, rocky
promontory on the Iraqi border. In 1986, Paa-Alam was the scene of one of
the terrible battles over the Faw Peninsula, where tens of thousands of men
died while hardly advancing a step. A video recording from the visit shows
Suleimani standing on a mountaintop, recounting the battle to his old
comrades. In a gentle voice, he speaks over a soundtrack of music and
prayers.
"This is the Dasht-e-Abbas Road," Suleimani says, pointing into the valley
below. "This area stood between us and the enemy." Later, Suleimani and
the group stand on the banks of a creek, where he reads aloud the names of
fallen Iranian soldiers, his voice trembling with emotion. During a break,
he speaks with an interviewer, and describes the fighting in near-mystical
terms. "The battlefield is mankind's lost paradise—the paradise in which
morality and human conduct are at their highest," he says. "One type of
paradise that men imagine is about streams, beautiful maidens, and lush
landscape. But there is another kind of paradise—the battlefield."
Suleimani was born in Rabor, an impoverished mountain village in eastern
Iran. When he was a boy, his father, like many other farmers, took out an
agricultural loan from the government of the Shah. He owed nine hundred
toman—about a hundred dollars at the time—and couldn't pay it back. In a
brief memoir, Suleimani wrote of leaving home with a young relative
named Ahmad Suleimani, who was in a similar situation. "At night, we
couldn't fall asleep with the sadness of thinking that government agents
were coming to arrest our fathers," he wrote. Together, they travelled to
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Kerman, the nearest city, to try to clear their family's debt. The place was
unwelcoming. "We were only thirteen, and our bodies were so tiny,
wherever we went, they wouldn't hire us," he wrote. "Until one day, when
we were hired as laborers at a school construction site on Khajoo Street,
which was where the city ended. They paid us two toman per day." After
eight months, they had saved enough money to bring home, but the winter
snow was too deep. They were told to seek out a local driver named
Pahlavan—"Champion"—who was a "strong man who could lift up a cow
or a donkey with his teeth." During the drive, whenever the car got stuck,
"he would lift up the Jeep and put it aside!" In Suleimani's telling,
Pahlavan is an ardent detractor of the Shah. He says of the two boys, "This
is the time for them to rest and play, not work as a laborer in a strange city.
I spit on the life they have made for us!" They arrived home, Suleimani
writes, "just as the lights were coming on in the village homes. When the
news travelled in our village, there was pandemonium."
As a young man, Suleimani gave few signs of greater ambition. According
to Ali Alfoneh, an Iran expert at the Foundation for Defense of
Democracies, he had only a high-school education, and worked for
Kerman's municipal water department. But it was a revolutionary time, and
the country's gathering unrest was making itself felt. Away from work,
Suleimani spent hours lifting weights in local gyms, which, like many in
the Middle East, offered physical training and inspiration for the warrior
spirit. During Ramadan, he attended sermons by a travelling preacher
named Hojjat Kamyab—a protégé of Khamenei's—and it was there that he
became inspired by the possibility of Islamic revolution.
In 1979, when Suleimani was twenty-two, the Shah fell to a popular
uprising led by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in the name of Islam. Swept
up in the fervor, Suleimani joined the Revolutionary Guard, a force
established by Iran's new clerical leadership to prevent the military from
mounting a coup. Though he received little training—perhaps only a forty-
five-day course—he advanced rapidly. As a young guardsman, Suleimani
was dispatched to northwestern Iran, where he helped crush an uprising by
ethnic Kurds.
When the revolution was eighteen months old, Saddam Hussein sent the
Iraqi Army sweeping across the border, hoping to take advantage of the
internal chaos. Instead, the invasion solidified Khomeini's leadership and
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unified the country in resistance, starting a brutal, entrenched war.
Suleimani was sent to the front with a simple task, to supply water to the
soldiers there, and he never left. "I entered the war on a fifteen-day
mission, and ended up staying until the end," he has said. A photograph
from that time shows the young Suleimani dressed in green fatigues, with
no insignia of rank, his black eyes focussed on a far horizon. "We were all
young and wanted to serve the revolution," he told an interviewer in 2005.
Suleimani earned a reputation for bravery and élan, especially as a result of
reconnaissance missions he undertook behind Iraqi lines. He returned from
several missions bearing a goat, which his soldiers slaughtered and grilled.
"Even the Iraqis, our enemy, admired him for this," a former Revolutionary
Guard officer who defected to the United States told me. On Iraqi radio,
Suleimani became known as "the goat thief." In recognition of his
effectiveness, Alfoneh said, he was put in charge of a brigade from
Kerman, with men from the gyms where he lifted weights.
The Iranian Army was badly overmatched, and its commanders resorted to
crude and costly tactics. In "human wave" assaults, they sent thousands of
young men directly into the Iraqi lines, often to clear minefields, and
soldiers died at a precipitous rate. Suleimani seemed distressed by the loss
of life. Before sending his men into battle, he would embrace each one and
bid him goodbye; in speeches, he praised martyred soldiers and begged
their forgiveness for not being martyred himself. When Suleimani's
superiors announced plans to attack the Faw Peninsula, he dismissed them
as wasteful and foolhardy. The former Revolutionary Guard officer
recalled seeing Suleimani in 1985, after a battle in which his brigade had
suffered many dead and wounded. He was sitting alone in a corner of a
tent. "He was very silent, thinking about the people M lost," the officer
said.
Ahmad, the young relative who travelled with Suleimani to Kerman, was
killed in 1984. On at least one occasion, Suleimani himself was wounded.
Still, he didn't lose enthusiasm for his work. In the nineteen-eighties, Reuel
Marc Gerecht was a young C.I.A. officer posted to Istanbul, where he
recruited from the thousands of Iranian soldiers who went there to
recuperate. `4= get a whole variety of ardsmen," Gerecht, who has
written extensively on Iran, told me. "M get clerics, get people
who came to breathe and whore and drink." Gerecht divided the veterans
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into two groups. "There were the broken and the burned out, the hollow-
eyed—the guys who had been destroyed," he said. "And then there were
the bright-eyed guys who just couldn't wait to get back to the front.. put
Suleimani in the latter category."
Ryan Crocker, the American Ambassador to Iraq from 2007 to 2009, got a
similar feeling. During the Iraq War, Crocker sometimes dealt with
Suleimani indirectly, through Iraqi leaders who shuttled in and out of
Tehran. Once, he asked one of the Iraqis if Suleimani was especially
religious. The answer was "Not really," Crocker told me. "He attends
mosque periodically. Religion doesn't drive him. Nationalism drives him,
and the love of the fight."
Iran's leaders took two lessons from the Iran-Iraq War. The first was that
Iran was surrounded by enemies, near and far. To the regime, the invasion
was not so much an Iraqi plot as a Western one. American officials were
aware of Saddam's preparations to invade Iran in 1980, and they later
provided him with targeting information used in chemical-weapons
attacks; the weapons themselves were built with the help of Western
European firms. The memory of these attacks is an especially bitter one.
"Do you know how many people are still suffering from the effects of
chemical weapons?" Mehdi Khalaji, a fellow at the Washington Institute
for Near East Policy, said. "Thousands of former soldiers. They believe
these were Western weapons given to Saddam." In 1987, during a battle
with the Iraqi Army, a division under Suleimani's command was attacked
by artillery shells containing chemical weapons. More than a hundred of
his men suffered the effects.
The other lesson drawn from the Iran-Iraq War was the futility of fighting a
head-to-head confrontation. In 1982, after the Iranians expelled the Iraqi
forces, Khomeini ordered his men to keep going, to "liberate" Iraq and
push on to Jerusalem. Six years and hundreds of thousands of lives later, he
agreed to a ceasefire. According to Alfoneh, many of the generals of
Suleimani's generation believe they could have succeeded had the clerics
not flinched. "Many of them feel like they were stabbed in the back," he
said. "They have nurtured this myth for nearly thirty years." But Iran's
leaders did not want another bloodbath. Instead, they had to build the
capacity to wage asymmetrical warfare—attacking stronger powers
indirectly, outside of Iran.
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The Quds Force was an ideal tool. Khomeini had created the prototype for
the force in 1979, with the goal of protecting Iran and exporting the Islamic
Revolution. The first big opportunity came in Lebanon, where
Revolutionary Guard officers were dispatched in 1982 to help organize
Shiite militias in the many-sided Lebanese civil war. Those efforts resulted
in the creation of Hezbollah, which developed under Iranian guidance.
Hezbollah's military commander, the brilliant and murderous Imad
Mughniyeh, helped form what became known as the Special Security
Apparatus, a wing of Hezbollah that works closely with the Quds Force.
With assistance from Iran, Hezbollah helped orchestrate attacks on the
American Embassy and on French and American military barracks. "In the
early days, when Hezbollah was totally dependent on Iranian help,
Mughniyeh and others were basically willing Iranian assets," David Crist,
a historian for the U.S. military and the author of "The Twilight War," says.
For all of the Iranian regime's aggressiveness, some of its religious zeal
seemed to burn out. In 1989, Khomeini stopped urging Iranians to spread
the revolution, and called instead for expediency to preserve its gains.
Persian self-interest was the order of the day, even if it was
indistinguishable from revolutionary fervor. In those years, Suleimani
worked along Iran's eastern frontier, aiding Afghan rebels who were
holding out against the Taliban. The Iranian regime regarded the Taliban
with intense hostility, in large part because of their persecution of
Afghanistan's minority Shiite population. (At one point, the two countries
nearly went to war; Iran mobilized a quarter of a million troops, and its
leaders denounced the Taliban as an affront to Islam.) In an area that breeds
corruption, Suleimani made a name for himself battling opium smugglers
along the Afghan border.
In 1998, Suleimani was named the head of the Quds Force, taking over an
agency that had already built a lethal résumé: American and Argentine
officials believe that the Iranian regime helped Hezbollah orchestrate the
bombing of the Israeli Embassy in Buenos Aires in 1992, which killed
twenty-nine people, and the attack on the Jewish center in the same city
two years later, which killed eighty-five. Suleimani has built the Quds
Force into an organization with extraordinary reach, with branches
focussed on intelligence, finance, politics, sabotage, and special operations.
With a base in the former U.S. Embassy compound in Tehran, the force has
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between ten thousand and twenty thousand members, divided between
combatants and those who train and oversee foreign assets. Its members
are picked for their skill and their allegiance to the doctrine of the Islamic
Revolution (as well as, in some cases, their family connections). According
to the Israeli newspaper Israel Hayom, fighters are recruited throughout the
region, trained in Shiraz and Tehran, indoctrinated at the Jerusalem
Operation College, in Qom, and then "sent on months-long missions to
Afghanistan and Iraq to gain experience in field operational work. They
usually travel under the guise of Iranian construction workers."
After taking command, Suleimani strengthened relationships in Lebanon,
with Mughniyeh and with Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah's chief. By then,
the Israeli military had occupied southern Lebanon for sixteen years, and
Hezbollah was eager to take control of the country, so Suleimani sent in
Quds Force operatives to help. "They had a huge presence—training,
advising, planning," Crocker said. In 2000, the Israelis withdrew,
exhausted by relentless Hezbollah attacks. It was a signal victory for the
Shiites, and, Crocker said, "another example of how countries like Syria
and Iran can play a long game, knowing that we can't."
Since then, the regime has given aid to a variety of militant Islamist groups
opposed to America's allies in the region, such as Saudi Arabia and
Bahrain. The help has gone not only to Shiites but also to Sunni groups like
Hamas—helping to form an archipelago of alliances that stretches from
Baghdad to Beirut. "No one in Tehran started out with a master plan to
build the Axis of Resistance, but opportunities presented themselves," a
Western diplomat in Baghdad told me. "In each case, Suleimani was
smarter, faster, and better resourced than anyone else in the region. By
grasping at opportunities as they came, he built the thing, slowly but
surely."
In the chaotic days after the attacks of September 11th, Ryan Crocker, then
a senior State Department official, flew discreetly to Geneva to meet a
group of Iranian diplomats. ". fly out on a Friday and then back on
Sunda , so nobody in the office knew where . been," Crocker told me.
"stay up all night in those meetings." It seemed clear to Crocker that
the Iranians were answering to Suleimani, whom they referred to as "Haji
Qassem," and that they were eager to help the United States destroy their
mutual enemy, the Taliban. Although the United States and Iran broke off
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diplomatic relations in 1980, after American diplomats in Tehran were
taken hostage, Crocker wasn't surprised to find that Suleimani was
flexible. "You don't live through eight years of brutal war without being
pretty pragmatic," he said. Sometimes Suleimani passed messages to
Crocker, but he avoided putting anything in writing. "Haji Qassem's way
too smart for that," Crocker said. "He's not going to leave paper trails for
the Americans."
Before the bombing began, Crocker sensed that the Iranians were growing
impatient with the Bush Administration, thinking that it was taking too
long to attack the Taliban. At a meeting in early October, 2001, the lead
Iranian negotiator stood up and slammed a sheaf of papers on the table. "If
you guys don't stop building these fairy-tale governments in the sky, and
actually start doing some shooting on the ground, none of this is ever going
to happen!" he shouted. "When you're ready to talk about serious fighting,
you know where to find me." He stomped out of the room. "It was a great
moment," Crocker said.
The cooperation between the two countries lasted through the initial phase
of the war. At one point, the lead negotiator handed Crocker a map
detailing the disposition of Taliban forces. "Here's our advice: hit them
here first, and then hit them over here. And here's the logic." Stunned,
Crocker asked, "Can I take notes?" The negotiator replied, "You can keep
the map." The flow of information went both ways. On one occasion,
Crocker said, he gave his counterparts the location of an Al Qaeda
facilitator living in the eastern city of Mashhad. The Iranians detained him
and brought him to Afghanistan's new leaders, who, Crocker believes,
turned him over to the U.S. The negotiator told Crocker, "Haji Qassem is
very pleased with our cooperation."
The good will didn't last. In January, 2002, Crocker, who was by then the
deputy chief of the American Embassy in Kabul, was awakened one night
by aides, who told him that President George W. Bush, in his State of the
Union Address, had named Iran as part of an "Axis of Evil." Like many
senior diplomats, Crocker was caught off guard. He saw the negotiator the
next day at the •. compound in Kabul, and he was furious. "You
completely damaged me," Crocker recalled him saying. "Suleimani is in a
tearing rage. He feels compromised." The negotiator told Crocker that, at
great political risk, Suleimani had been contemplating a complete
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reevaluation of the United States, saying, "Maybe it's time to rethink our
relationship with the Americans." The Axis of Evil speech brought the
meetings to an end. Reformers inside the government, who had advocated
a rapprochement with the United States, were put on the defensive.
Recalling that time, Crocker shook his head. "We were just that close," he
said. "One word in one speech changed history."
Before the meetings fell apart, Crocker talked with the lead negotiator
about the possibility of war in Iraq. "Look," Crocker said, "I don't know
what's going to happen, but I do have some responsibility for Iraq—it's my
portfolio—and I can read the signs, and I think we're going to go in." He
saw an enormous opportunity. The Iranians despised Saddam, and Crocker
figured that they would be willing to work with the U.S. "I was not a fan of
the invasion," he told me. "But I was thinking, If we're going to do it, let's
see if we can flip an enemy into a friend—at least tactically for this, and
then let's see where we can take it." The negotiator indicated that the
Iranians were willing to talk, and that Iraq, like Afghanistan, was part of
Suleimani's brief: "It's one guy running both shows."
After the invasion began, in March, 2003, Iranian officials were frantic to
let the Americans know that they wanted peace. Many of them watched the
regimes topple in Afghanistan and Iraq and were convinced that they were
next. "They were scared shitless," Maguire, the former C.I.A. officer in
Baghdad, told me. "They were sending runners across the border to our
elite elements saying, `Look, we don't want any trouble with you.' We had
an enormous upper hand." That same year, American officials determined
that Iran had reconfigured its plans to develop a nuclear weapon to proceed
more slowly and covertly, lest it invite a Western attack.
After Saddam's regime collapsed, Crocker was dispatched to Baghdad to
organize a fledgling government, called the Iraqi Governing Council. He
realized that many Iraqi politicians were flying to Tehran for consultations,
and he jumped at the chance to negotiate indirectly with Suleimani. In the
course of the summer, Crocker passed him the names of prospective Shiite
candidates, and the two men vetted each one. Crocker did not offer veto
power, but he abandoned candidates whom Suleimani found especially
objectionable. "The formation of the governing council was in its essence a
negotiation between Tehran and Washington," he said.
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That exchange was the high point of Iranian-American cooperation. "After
we formed the governing council, everything collapsed," Crocker said. As
the American occupation faltered, Suleimani began an aggressive
campaign of sabotage. Many Americans and Iraqis I interviewed thought
that the change of strategy was the result of opportunism: the Iranians
became aggressive when the fear of an American invasion began to recede.
For years, Suleimani had sent operatives into Iraq to cultivate Shiite
militias, so, when Saddam fell, he already had a fighting force in place: the
Badr Brigade, the armed wing of a Shiite political party called the Supreme
Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq. The Party's leaders so
thoroughly identified with the Iranian revolution that Badr's militiamen
had fought alongside Iranian forces in the Iran-Iraq War.
The Badr Brigade spent much of its time carrying out revenge killings
against Baathists, and largely held its fire against the Americans. But
another Iranian-backed militia—the Mandi Army, headed by the populist
cleric Moqtada al-Sadr—began confronting the Americans early. In
August, 2004, after the Americans launched a particularly bloody
counteroffensive, I walked through a makeshift graveyard in the holy city
of Najaf, south of Baghdad, and found dozens of shallow graves, each
marked by a tiny glass jar containing a slip of paper with the fallen
fighter's name and address. Many of them were marked "Tehran."
Suleimani found Sadr unpredictable and difficult to manage, so the Quds
Force began to organize other militias that were willing to attack the
Americans. Its operatives trained fighters in Iran, sometimes helped by
their comrades in Hezbollah. Suleimani's control over some of the Iraqi
militias at times appeared to be total. At one point, a senior Iraqi official,
on a trip to Washington, publicly blamed the Supreme Leader for
escalating the violence in Iraq. Soon after returning to Baghdad, he told
me, he received messages from the leaders of two Iraqi Shiite militias.
Both posed the same question: Do you want to die?
In 2004, the Quds Force began flooding Iraq with lethal roadside bombs
that the Americans referred to as , for "explosively formed
projectiles." The , which fire a molten copper slug able to penetrate
armor, began to wreak havoc on American troops, accounting for nearly
twenty per cent of combat deaths. could be made only by skilled
technicians, and they were often triggered by sophisticated motion sensors.
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"There was zero question where they were coming from," General Stanley
McChrystal, who at the time was the head of the Joint Special Operations
Command, told me. "We knew where all the factories were in Iran. The
killed hundreds of Americans."
Suleimani's campaign against the United States crossed the Sunni-Shiite
divide, which he has always been willing to set aside for a larger purpose.
Iraqi and Western officials told me that, early in the war, Suleimani
encouraged the head of intelligence for the Assad regime to facilitate the
movement of Sunni extremists through Syria to fight the Americans. In
many cases, Al Qaeda was also allowed a degree of freedom in Iran as
well. Crocker told me that in May, 2003, the Americans received
intelligence that Al Qaeda fighters in Iran were preparing an attack on
Western targets in Saudi Arabia. Crocker was alarmed. "They were there,
under Iranian protection, planning operations," he said. He flew to Geneva
and passed a warning to the Iranians, but to no avail; militants bombed
three residential compounds in Riyadh, killing thirty-five people, including
nine Americans.
As it turned out, the Iranian strategy of abetting Sunni extremists backfired
horrendously: shortly after the occupation began, the same extremists
began attacking Shiite civilians and the Shiite-dominated Iraqi government.
It was a preview of the civil war to come. "Welcome to the Middle East,"
the Western diplomat in Baghdad told me. "Suleimani wanted to bleed the
Americans, so he invited in the jihadis, and things got out of control."
Still, Iran's policy toward the Americans in Iraq was not entirely hostile—
both countries, after all, were trying to empower Iraq's Shiite majority—
and so Suleimani alternated between bargaining with the Americans and
killing them. Throughout the war, he summoned Iraqi leaders to Tehran to
broker deals, usually intended to maximize Shiite power. At least once, he
even travelled into the heart of American power in Baghdad. "Suleimani
came into the Green Zone to meet the Iraqis," the Iraqi politician told me.
"I think the Americans wanted to arrest him, but they figured they
couldn't."
As both sides sought an advantage, the shifting allegiances led to
uncomfortable, sometimes bizarre encounters. The leaders of the two main
Kurdish parties, Massoud Barzani and Jalal Talabani, met regularly with
both Suleimani and the Americans. While the Kurds' relationship with the
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U.S. was usually warm, their ties to Iranian leaders like Suleimani were
deeper and more complex; the Iranian regime had sheltered Iraq's Kurds
during their war with Saddam. But it was never an equal relationship.
Kurdish leaders say that Suleimani's objective has always been to keep
Iraq's political parties divided and unstable, insuring that the country
stayed weak: the Iran-Iraq War was never far from his mind. "It is very
difficult for us to say no to Suleimani," a senior Kurdish official told me.
"When we say no, he makes trouble for us. Bombings. Shootings. The
Iranians are our neighbors. They've always been there, and they always
will be. We have to deal with them."
A senior intelligence officer in Baghdad recalled visiting Talabani at his
house during a trip to northern Iraq. When he walked in, Qassem
Suleimani was sitting there, wearing a black shirt and black jacket. The two
men looked each other up and down. "He knew who I was; I knew who he
was. We shook hands, didn't say anything," the officer said. "I've never
seen Talabani so deferential to anyone. He was terrified."
In the years after the invasion, General McChrystal concentrated on
defeating Sunni insurgents, and, like other American commanders in Iraq,
he largely refrained from pursuing Quds Force agents. Provoking Iran
would only exacerbate the conflict, and, in any case, many of the agents
operated under the protection of diplomatic cover. But, as the war dragged
on, the Iranian-backed militias loomed ever larger. In late 2006,
McChrystal told me, he formed a task force to kill and capture Iranian-
backed insurgents, as well as Quds Force operatives.
That December, American commandos raided the compound of Abdul Aziz
al-Hakim, a powerful Shiite politician, and found General Mohsen Chizari,
the head of operations for the Quds Force. According to "The Endgame,"
by Michael Gordon and Bernard Trainor, the commandos detained Chizari,
sending shock waves through Baghdad. "Everybody was stunned," a
former senior military commander told me. "All the Iranians were stunned.
We had broken the unwritten law." Nuri al-Maliki, the Iraqi Prime
Minister, demanded that the Americans turn over Chizari. When they did—
reluctantly—Maliki released him. After the incident, the American
Ambassador told Maliki that the next time they caught an Iranian operative
they were going to keep him.
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A month later, McChrystal received reports that General Mohammed Ali
Jafari, the head of Iran's Revolutionary Guard, might be in a convoy
heading toward the Iraqi border. According to other intelligence sources,
Suleimani was riding with him. A group of Kurdish fighters were waiting
to welcome them when they crossed over. McChrystal decided to allow the
Iranians to cross the border. "We didn't want to get into a gunfight with the
Kurds," he said.
McChrystal's men tracked the convoy as it drove a hundred miles into Iraq,
to the Kurdish city of Erbil, and stopped at a nondescript building, which
had a small sign that read "Consulate." No one knew that such a consulate
existed, but the fact that it did meant that the men inside were operating
under diplomatic cover. The Americans moved in anyway, and took five
Iranians into custody. All were carrying diplomatic passports, and all,
according to McChrystal, were Quds Force members. Neither Suleimani
nor Jafari was there; they had evidently broken off from the convoy at the
last minute and taken refuge in a safe house controlled by the Kurdish
leader Massoud Barzani. "Suleimani was lucky," Dagan, the former
Mossad chief, told me, referring to the raid. "It's important to be lucky."
Nine days later, five new black S.U.V.s pulled up to the gates of the
Karbala Provincial Center, in southern Iraq. The men inside spoke English,
wore American-style uniforms, and flashed M, and so they were allowed
through the gates. In the compound, they jumped out of their vehicles and
ran directly to a building where American soldiers were working. They
killed one and captured four, ignoring everyone else. In a few hours, the
four captives were dead, shot at close range.
The raid was carried out by Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, one of the Iranian-backed
militias. American officials speculated that Suleimani had ordered the raid,
in response to the capture of the Quds Force operatives in Erbil. Within
two months, the Americans had killed the alleged leader of the attack and
rounded up several of the participants. One of them was Ali Musa Daqduq,
a Hezbollah commander who had trained in Iran. At first, Daqduq
pretended to be unable to speak, and the Americans nicknamed him Hamid
the Mute. But after a time, they said, he started talking, and told them that
the operation had been ordered by Iranian officials. For the first time,
American commanders publicly pointed to Suleimani. At a press
conference, Brigadier General Kevin Bergner said, "The Quds Force knew
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of and supported planning for the eventual Karbala attack that killed five
coalition soldiers."
As the covert war with Iran intensified, American officials considered
crossing into Iran to attack training camps and bomb factories. "Some of us
wanted very badly to hit them," a senior American officer who was in Iraq
at the time told me. Those debates lasted well into 2011, until the last
American soldiers left the country. Each time, the Americans decided
against crossing the border, figuring that it would be too easy for the
Iranians to escalate the fighting.
Around the same time, Suleimani struck up a correspondence with senior
American officials, sending messages through intermediaries—sometimes
seeking to reassure the Americans, sometimes to extract something. One of
the first came in early 2008, when the Iraqi President, Jalal Talabani,
handed a cell phone with a text message to General David Petraeus, who
had taken over the year before as the commander of American forces.
"Dear General Petraeus," the text read, "you should know that I, Qassem
Suleimani, control the policy for Iran with respect to Iraq, Lebanon, Gaza
and Afghanistan. And indeed, the ambassador in Baghdad is a Quds Force
member. The individual who's going to replace him is a Quds Force
member." After the five American soldiers were killed in Karbala,
Suleimani sent a message to the American Ambassador. "I swear on the
grave of Khomeini I haven't authorized a bullet against the U.S.,"
Suleimani said. None of the Americans believed him.
In a report to the White House, Petraeus wrote that Suleimani was "truly
evil." Yet at times the two men were all but negotiating. According to
diplomatic cables revealed by WikiLeaks, Petraeus sent messages through
Iraqi officials to Suleimani, asking him to call off rocket attacks on the
American Embassy and on U.S. bases. In 2008, the Americans and the
Iraqi Army were pressing an offensive against the Mandi Army—Moqtada
al-Sadr's Shiite militia—and, in retribution, the militia was bombarding the
Green Zone regularly. Suleimani, who sensed a political opening, sent
Petraeus a message lamenting the situation and saying that he had assigned
men to apprehend the attackers. Petraeus replied, "I was born on a Sunday,
but it wasn't last Sunday." Eventually, Suleimani brokered a ceasefire
between Sadr and the government.
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At times, Suleimani seemed to take pleasure in taunting his American
counterparts, and stories of his exploits spread. In the summer of 2006,
during the thirty-four-day war between Israel and Hezbollah in Lebanon,
the violence in Baghdad appeared to ebb. When the fighting ended, the
Iraqi politician told me, Suleimani supposedly sent a message to the
American command. "I hope you have been enjoying the peace and quiet
in Baghdad," it read. "I've been busy in Beirut!"
In a speech in 1990, Khamenei said that the mission of the Quds Force is to
"establish popular Hezbollah cells all over the world." Although that goal
has not been met, Hezbollah has become the most influential force in
Lebanon—a military power and a political party that nearly supersedes the
state. Some experts on the region believe that it has grown less dependent
on Iran as it has matured. But, at a dinner in Beirut last year, Walid
Joumblatt, a Lebanese politician, complained that Hezbollah's leaders were
still in thrall to Tehran. "You have to sit and talk with them, but what do
you say?" he said to me. "They don't decide. It's Khamenei and Qassem
Suleimani who decide."
Hezbollah's leader, Hassan Nasrallah, has endorsed the concept of Velayat-
e Faqih, which recognizes Iran's Supreme Leader as the ultimate authority,
and he has acknowledged the presence of Quds Force operatives in
Lebanon. From 2000 to 2006, Iran contributed a hundred million dollars a
year to Hezbollah. Its fighters are attractive proxies: unlike the Iranians,
they speak Arabic, making them better equipped to operate in Syria and
elsewhere in the Arab world. Working with the Iranians, they have either
launched or prepared to launch attacks in Cyprus, Azerbaijan, and Turkey.
They don't always act together. After a Hezbollah operative attacked a tour
bus filled with Israelis in Bulgaria, last July, American authorities learned
that Suleimani had asked his subordinates, "Does anyone know about
this?" No one did. "Hezbollah acted on its own in that one," an American
defense official told me. Nonetheless, the Quds Force appears to have been
involved in a number of the most significant moments in Lebanon's recent
history. In 2006, Nasrallah ordered a group of his fighters to kidnap Israeli
soldiers—an operation that the Middle Eastern security official told me
was carried out with Suleimani's help. A brief but fierce war ensued, in
which the Israel Defense Forces destroyed much of Lebanon. "I don't think
Suleimani expected that reaction," the official said.
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The question of Iranian influence in Lebanon resurfaced in 2011, when the
United Nations-backed Special Tribunal for Lebanon charged four senior
members of Hezbollah with assassinating the former Lebanese Prime
Minister, Rafik Hariri, in 2005. Hariri, a Sunni, had been trying to take
Lebanon out of the Iranian-Syrian orbit. On Valentine's Day, he was killed
by a suicide truck bomb whose payload weighed more than five thousand
pounds.
Prosecutors identified the alleged Hezbollah assassins by means of "co-
location analysis"—matching disposable cell phones used at the time of the
murder with other phones that belonged to the suspects. They refrained
from indicting Syrian officials, but, they said, they had convincing
evidence that Assad's government was involved in Hariri's killing. A senior
investigator for the Special Tribunal told me that there was also reason to
suspect the Iranians: "Our theory of the case was that Hezbollah pulled the
trigger, but could not and would not have done so without the blessing and
logistical support from both Syria and Iran." One of the phones believed to
have been used by the killers had made at least a dozen calls to Iran before
and after the assassination. But investigators told me that they didn't know
who in Iran was called, and that they couldn't persuade Western
intelligence agencies to help them. As it turned out, the agencies knew
quite a bit. The senior intelligence officer told me that Iranian operatives
were overheard talking minutes before the assassination. "There were
Iranians on the phones directing the attack," he said. Robert Baer, a former
senior C.I.A. official, told me, "If indeed Iran was involved, Suleimani was
undoubtedly at the center of this."
Meanwhile, the four Hezbollah suspects in the killing have disappeared.
One of them, Mustafa Badreddine—Imad Mughniyeh's brother-in-law and
a longtime Hezbollah bomb maker—was spotted in Syria by the rebels,
who say that he is fighting for Assad.
On December 22, 2010, James Jeffrey, the American Ambassador to Iraq,
and General Lloyd Austin, the top American commander there, issued a
note of congratulations to the Iraqi people on the formation of a new
government, led by Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki. The country had been
without a government for nine months, after parliamentary elections ended
in an impasse. The composition of the government was critical; at the time
of the election, there were still nearly a hundred thousand American troops
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in the country, and U.S. commanders were still hoping to leave a residual
force behind. "We look forward to working with the new coalition
government in furthering our common vision of a democratic Iraq," the
two men said.
What Jeffrey and Austin didn't say was that the crucial deal that brought
the Iraqi government together was made not by them but by Suleimani. In
the months before, according to several Iraqi and Western officials,
Suleimani invited senior Shiite and Kurdish leaders to meet with him in
Tehran and Qom, and extracted from them a promise to support Maliki, his
preferred candidate. The deal had a complex array of enticements. Maliki
and Assad disliked each other; Suleimani brought them together by forging
an agreement to build a lucrative oil pipeline from Iraq to the Syrian
border. In order to bring the cleric Moqtada al-Sadr in line, Suleimani
agreed to place his men in the Iraqi service ministries.
Most remarkable, according to the Iraqi and Western officials, were the two
conditions that Suleimani imposed on the Iraqis. The first was that Jalal
Talabani, a longtime friend of the Iranian regime, become President. The
second was that Maliki and his coalition partners insist that all American
troops leave the country. "Suleimani said: no Americans," the former Iraqi
leader told me. "A ten-year relationship, down the drain."
Iraqi officials told me that, at the time of Jeffrey's announcement, the
Americans knew that Suleimani had pushed them out of the country but
were too embarrassed to admit it in public. "We were laughing at the
Americans," the former Iraqi leader told me, growing angry as he recalled
the situation. "Fuck it! Fuck it!" he said. "Suleimani completely
outmaneuvered them, and in public they were congratulating themselves
for putting the government together."
The deal was a heavy blow to Ayad Allawi, a pro-American secular
politician whose party had won the most parliamentary seats in the
elections, but who failed to put together a majority coalition. In an
interview in Jordan, he said that with U.S. backing he could have built a
majority. Instead, the Americans pushed him aside in favor of Maliki. He
told me that Vice-President Joe Biden called to tell him to abandon his bid
for Prime Minister, saying, "You can't form a government."
Allawi said he suspected that the Americans weren't willing to deal with
the trouble the Iranians would have made if he had become Prime Minister.
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They wanted to stay in Iraq, he said, but only if the effort involved was
minimal. "I needed American support," he said. "But they wanted to leave,
and they handed the country to the Iranians. Iraq is a failed state now, an
Iranian colony."
According to American and Iraqi former officials, Suleimani exerts
leverage over Iraqi politics by paying officials, by subsidizing newspapers
and television stations, and, when necessary, by intimidation. Few are
immune to his enticements. "I have yet to see one Shia political party not
taking money from Qassem Suleimani," the former senior Iraqi official
told me. "He's the most powerful man in Iraq, without question."
Even Maliki often feels like a prisoner of the Iranians. Exiled by Saddam,
Maliki lived for a short time in Iran, but then moved to Syria—in part to
escape Iranian influence, Iraqis who know him say. Crocker said that
Maliki once told him, "You can't know what arrogance is until you are an
Iraqi Arab forced to take refuge with the Iranians." The Iraqi politician,
who is close to both men, told me that Maliki resents Suleimani, and that
the feeling is mutual. "Maliki says Suleimani doesn't listen," he told me.
"Suleimani says Maliki just lies."
Still, Maliki may be amply repaying Suleimani for his efforts to make him
Prime Minister. According to the former senior intelligence officer,
Maliki's government is presiding over a number of schemes, amounting to
hundreds of millions of dollars a year, to help the Iranian regime outwit
Western economic sanctions. A prominent Iraqi businessman told me that
Iranian-backed agents regularly use the Iraqi banking system to undertake
fraudulent transactions that allow them to sell Iraqi currency at a huge
profit. "If the banks refuse, they are shut down by the government," he
said.
The other main source of revenue for the Iranians is oil, officials say:
Maliki's government sets aside the equivalent of two hundred thousand
barrels of oil a day—about twenty million dollars' worth, at current prices
—and sends the money to Suleimani. In this way, the Quds Force has made
itself immune to the economic pressures of Western sanctions. "It's a self-
funding covert-action program," the former senior intelligence officer said.
"Suleimani doesn't even need the Iranian budget to fund his operations."
Last December, when Assad's regime appeared close to collapse, American
officials spotted Syrian technicians preparing bombs carrying the nerve
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agent sarin to be loaded onto aircraft. All indications were that they were
plotting an enormous chemical attack. Frantic, the Americans called
leaders in Russia, who called their counterparts in Tehran. According to the
American defense official, Suleimani appeared to be instrumental in
persuading Assad to refrain from using the weapons.
Suleimani's sentiments about the ethics of chemical weapons are unknown.
During the Iran-Iraq War, thousands of Iranian soldiers suffered from
chemical attacks, and the survivors still speak publicly of the trauma. But
some American officials believe that his efforts to restrain Assad had a
more pragmatic inspiration: the fear of provoking American military
intervention. "Both the Russians and the Iranians have said to Assad, `We
can't support you in the court of world opinion if you use this stuff,'" a
former senior American military official said.
The regime is believed to have used chemical weapons at least fourteen
times since last year. Yet even after the enormous sarin attack on August
21st, which killed fourteen hundred civilians, Suleimani's support for Syria
has been unbending. To save Assad, Suleimani has called on every asset he
built since taking over the Quds Force: Hezbollah fighters, Shiite
militiamen from around the Arab world, and all the money and materiel he
could squeeze out of his own besieged government. In Baghdad, a young
Iraqi Shiite who called himself Abu Hassan told me that he was recruited to
fight by a group of Iraqi men. He took a bus to the Iranian city of Mashhad,
where he and three dozen other Iraqis received two weeks of instruction
from Iranian trainers. The men travelled to the Shiite shrine of Sayyidah
Zaynab, near Damascus, where they spent three months fighting for the
Assad government, along with soldiers from Hezbollah and snipers from
Iran. "We lost a lot of people," Abu Hassan told me.
Suleimani's greatest achievement may be persuading his proxies in the
Iraqi government to allow Iran to use its airspace to fly men and munitions
to Damascus. General James Mattis, who until March was the commander
of all American military forces in the Middle East, told me that without this
aid the Assad regime would have collapsed months ago. The flights are
overseen by the Iraqi transportation minister, Hadi al-Amri, who is an old
ally of Suleimani's—the former head of the Badr Brigade, and a soldier on
the Iranian side in the Iran-Iraq War. In an interview in Baghdad, Amri
denied that the Iranians were using Iraqi airspace to send weapons. But he
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made clear his affection for his former commander. "I love Qassem
Suleimani!" he said, pounding the table. "He is my dearest friend."
So far, Maliki has resisted pressure to supply Assad overland through Iraq.
But he hasn't stopped the flights; the prospect of a radical Sunni regime in
Syria overcame his reservations about becoming involved in a civil war.
"Maliki dislikes the Iranians, and he loathes Assad, but he hates Al Nusra,"
Crocker told me. "He doesn't want an Al Qaeda government in
Damascus."
This kind of starkly sectarian atmosphere may be Suleimani's most lasting
impact on the Middle East. To save his Iranian empire in Syria and
Lebanon, he has helped fuel a Sunni-Shiite conflict that threatens to engulf
the region for years to come—a war that he appears happy to wage. "He
has every reason to believe that Iran is the rising power in the region,"
Mattis told me. "We've never dealt him a body blow."
In June, a new, moderate President, Hassan Rouhani, was elected in Iran,
promising to end the sanctions, which have exhausted the country and
demolished its middle class. Hopes have risen in the West that Khamenei
might allow Rouhani to strike a deal. Although Rouhani is a moderate only
by Iranian standards—he is a Shiite cleric and a longtime adherent of the
revolution—his new administration has made a series of good-will
gestures, including the release of eleven political prisoners and an
exchange of letters with President Obama. Rouhani is in New York this
week to speak at the United Nations and, possibly, to meet with Obama.
The talks will surely center on the potential for Iran to restrain its nuclear
program, in exchange for relaxed sanctions.
Many in the West are hoping that Iran will also help find an end to the
grinding war in Syria. Assad's deputy prime minister recently offered the
possibility of a cease-fire, saying, "Let nobody have any fear that the
regime in its present form will continue." But he did not say that Assad
would step down, which the rebels have said is a necessary condition of
negotiations. There have been hints from powerful Iranians that Assad isn't
worth holding on to. In a recent speech, the former President Hashemi
Rafsanjani said, "The people have been the target of chemical attacks by
their own government." (After a leaked recording of the speech caused a
stir in Iran, Rafsanjani denied the remarks.) But a less sympathetic regime
in Syria would split the Axis of Resistance, and radically complicate Iran's
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partnership with Hezbollah. In any case, the Iranian regime may be too
fragmented to come to a consensus. "Anytime you see a statement coming
out of the government, just remember there's a rat's nest of people fighting
underneath the surface," Kevan Harris, a sociologist at Princeton who has
studied Iran extensively, told me. As Rouhani tries to engage the West, he
will have to contend with the hard-liners, including Suleimani and his
comrades, who for more than a decade have defined their foreign policy as
a covert war on the U.S. and Israel. "They don't trust the other side,"
Harris said. "They feel that any concession they make will be seen by the
West as a sign of weakness."
For Suleimani, giving up Assad would mean abandoning the project of
expansion that has occupied him for fifteen years. In a recent speech before
the Assembly of Experts—the clerics who choose the Supreme Leader—he
spoke about Syria in fiercely determined language. "We do not pay
attention to the propaganda of the enemy, because Syria is the front line of
the resistance and this reality is undeniable," he said. "We have a duty to
defend Muslims because they are under pressure and oppression."
Suleimani was fighting the same war, against the same foes, that been
fighting his entire life; for him, it seemed, the compromises of statecraft
could not compare with the paradise of the battlefield. "We will support
Syria to the end," he said.
Dexter Filkins joined The New Yorker in January of 2011, and has since
written about a bank heist in Afghanistan and the democratic protests in
the Middle East. Before coming to The New Yorker, Filkins had been with
the New York Times since 2000, reportingfrom Afghanistan, Pakistan, New
York, and Iraq, where he was basedfrom 2003 to 2006. His 2008 book,
"The Forever War," won the National Book Critics Circle Awardfor Best
Nonfiction Book, and was named a best book of the year by the New York
Times, the Washington Post, Time, and the Boston Globe.
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