From the Los Angeles Times
Iran watching U.S. campaigns with hope for detente
Tehran could reciprocate by pressing Shiite
Muslims in Iraq to rein in insurgents, and by stemming violence in
Afghanistan.
By Jeffrey Fleishman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
April 22, 2008
TEHRAN —
If an Iranian woke up in America and glimpsed the front page of a
newspaper, he'd be reminded of home: a teetering economy, a rest- less
populace, a tough-talking leader.
This nation is fascinated by what it calls the Great Satan, and it is
watching the U.S. primaries for signs of how it might benefit from
crises similar to its own facing the new American president. Since the
Islamic Revolution in 1979, this theocracy has clashed with Democratic
and Republican administrations alike; it has endured international
sanctions while practicing shadow diplomacy and brinkmanship.
Iranians know the new U.S. leader will inherit an overextended military
in Iraq, a declining dollar, high oil prices and a sub-prime mortgage
crisis that are straining the American economy. This scenario, analysts
here suggest, may lead to a softer U.S. foreign policy, especially in
the Middle East, where Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has become
widely admired for his harsh line against the Bush administration.
Iran would be seeking signs of detente from the new American leader,
including the lifting of sanctions, the unfreezing of about $20 billion
in Iranian assets and Tehran's membership in the World Trade
Organization. Iran is skilled at playing the outcast, but it craves
international political legitimacy at a time its gas and oil reserves
are being sought by China and India, whose energy demands are
escalating.
Tehran could reciprocate U.S. overtures by pressuring fellow Shiite
Muslims in Iraq to rein in insurgents and militias, and by stemming
violence in Afghanistan. At recent Friday prayers, former President
Hashemi Rafsanjani hinted that Iran could work with the U.S. in calming
regional tensions. His statement was vague but suggested a degree of
diplomacy absent from Ahmadinejad's anti-Western rhetoric.
It is unclear how Iran's ruling clerics and the next American
administration would resolve Tehran's support of Hamas in the Gaza
Strip and Hezbollah in Lebanon, two militant Islamic groups that have
long been U.S. adversaries.
There is also little indication that Iran would halt its nuclear
enrichment program, which the Bush administration says is designed to
build a nuclear bomb. Tehran says its nuclear ambitions are only for
civilian energy projects.
Some analysts wonder whether the Islamic Republic, led by supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, wants a significant improvement in
relations with the U.S. Since the Islamic Revolution in 1979, when
militants in Tehran seized 52 American hostages and held them for 444
days, the weekly chants of "Death to America" have become a defining
mantra, much in the same way Bush's "axis of evil" resonates with
American conservatives.
"For an ideological regime like Iran's you need an enemy, and the U.S.
is a good enemy because of all the notorious things it's done in the
region," said cleric Mohammad Ali Abtahi, head of the Institute for
Interreligious Dialogue in Tehran. "If you have a big enemy, it makes
you big too."
But, like the U.S., Iran is feeling the squeeze of an economy in
turmoil and an uneasy population. Unemployment and inflation are high,
even as Iran is benefiting from soaring oil prices. Recent
parliamentary elections highlighted the split among conservatives
between those who support the populist Ahmadinejad and detractors who
blame him for mismanaging the economy. These concerns and the weight of
economic sanctions could lead to a less aggressive foreign policy.
Iranian analysts watching the U.S. presidential contest believe
Democratic Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton or Barack Obama, although both
viewed as sympathetic to Israel, would be better for U.S.-Iran
relations than Republican Sen. John McCain, who is regarded as
pragmatic but ideologically closer to President Bush on matters such as
Iraq and the use of military force.
Iranians have been startled by some of McCain's comments. In March, the
senator accused Iran of sheltering and training Al Qaeda militants; he
quickly retracted the statement. When campaigning in South Carolina in
2007, McCain joked about bombing Iran to the tune of a Beach Boys song.
"If Mr. Obama won the election, it would be good," said Hooshang Tale,
a former member of parliament. "He's a newcomer without the old ties,
and we can hope that American policy would undergo a deep change. I
think Mrs. Clinton still represents old Washington, the past regimes.
The U.S. must take the first step. If a small country like Iran takes
the first step it can lose face, but the big power doesn't lose his
face."
A geophysics student at Tehran University, who gave his name only as
Behrang for fear of retribution, said: "I'm a fan of Hillary Clinton.
If she is elected it will help, but, really, it's a question of whether
Iran will change, not so much who changes in the White House."
No matter who wins the White House in November, it is unlikely there
will be quick steps toward improving relations with Iran. Democrats and
Republicans blame Tehran for supporting terrorism and supplying weapons
that are killing U.S. troops in Iraq.
A recent survey by World Public Opinion found that Iranians are
softening their attitudes toward America: 57% of Iranians supported
open-ended talks with Washington, and 64% favored greater trade with
the U.S.
"All senior officials support rapprochement if there's a
significant shift in American attitudes toward Iran," said Mohammed
Marandi, director of the North American Studies Department at Tehran
University. "If the Iranians feel less threatened by America, they'll
be more open. When you have 160,000 U.S. troops in Iraq, three American
aircraft carriers in the Persian Gulf, and a president and vice
president who keep talking about military options, it's hard to think
about Iranians being open."
He added: "Obama or Clinton would be preferred over McCain, but anybody
besides Bush would be an improvement."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times