Home Page - Gulf in the Media
HomePoliticsEconomy                               Set Gulfinthemedia.com as home page
Opinions
"Postings of opinions published in the Gulf and international newspapers
 Print  Send This Page
Save Listen to this Article
Consequences of Rafah attack and the Iranian connection   

Arab News - 12 August, 2012
Author: Ali Buluwi

There are those who mess with the security of Egypt. They aim to entangle Cairo in internal issues so that it cannot assume an active regional role. Additionally, there are those who try to spread regional anarchy. Sinai is important because of its proximity to Israel. Any player, who wants to send a message to Washington can mess with the security of Sinai. Seen in this perspective the recent Rafah incident serves the interests of both Iran and Hezbollah and therefore they are involved in it.
During the reign of President Hosni Mubarak, Sinai had security problems. Some external players were messing with the area's security to embarrass the Egyptian president to the extent that Israel hinted at reconsidering the issue of authority in Sinai — a matter strongly rejected by the Egyptians. After investigation, it was clear that Islamic Jihad and the Tawhid movement are behind what took place in Sinai. Moreover, instructions to these two movements came from Tehran and Damascus.
Tehran thinks it has the ability to extend its influence in Egypt. Therefore, it is trying to drive a wedge between Egypt and Gulf countries. Iran considers the Gulf Salafists as a formidable opponent to its hegemonic designs. In view of that, Tehran has been trying to link Saudi Arabia with extremism although the fact is that Salafism is the original source of moderation. Additionally, Sunni thinking is practical and it is against violence. The Iranian revolution and its challenge to Arabism and Sunnis pushed Tehran to adopt an arrogant Safavid discourse that tries to control the Arab Shiites. But most of the Arab Shiites reject the Iranian attempt.
Seen in this way, messing up with the Egyptian security has greater ramifications due to complex political conditions in both Syria and Iran. Therefore, Iranians and the Syrians have adopted a policy to create tension in the region. Iran tried this in Yemen and succeeded in controlling some important part of the state facilities. It cemented its alliance with the Houthis and the communists. The aim again was to hurt the Gulf security and to stir Shiite citizens in the Eastern Province. We expect that Iran's failure to protect Assad will push Tehran to commit more such reckless deeds.
Iran is seeking to cause trouble here and there to grant Assad more time and to weaken the impact of economic and oil sanctions imposed on Tehran. We cannot also rule out that the Rafah incident came as a clear message to Tel Aviv in view of the perceived intention of Israel to strike at the Iranian nuclear facilities.
While Al-Qaeda was used in the attack, the message aimed to prevent any understanding between Cairo and Gaza or between Hamas and the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood. This is true especially after the visit of Khaled Meshaal and Ismail Haniyeh to Cairo. Iran is perturbed by what is seen as Hamas retreat from the Iranian and Syrian clout and because of the new Palestinians' pro-revolution attitude in Syria. It is not surprising, therefore, for Iran and Syria to besiege Hamas and to put a huge price tag for its recent retreat from its alliance with Iran and Syria. The Rafah incident is linked to the statement of the Iranian Parliament speaker in which he made it clear that if fire catches Syria it will reach Israel. This statement can be seen as a threat by an Iranian senior official to shift the war from Syria to the Egypt-Israeli borders.
In his meeting with the army, intelligence, the Republican Guard and the Jerusalem Squad, Ali Khameinei told them to get ready as his country was approaching war. The war is of course the result of its failed policies. Iranian citizens have to stand in a long queue to buy a chicken. This is disgraceful for an oil-based country that gives billions of dollars to Assad regime while depriving its citizens a dignified life. It seems that there are signs of an impending revolution in Iran. Iranian Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi thinks the symptoms of a huge shakeup in Iran are obvious. As soon as Assad regime collapses, the echo will be heard in Iran, according to Shirin Ebadi. It is worth mentioning that Moscow will also be affected.
Iranian officials' visits to Assad are desperate attempts to revive a dead body. Assad's bloody crackdown on his people has created a deep schism between him and the people that cannot be bridged. Assad himself knows that his days are numbered especially after defections have become a commonplace. The Syrian intelligence expects that some 60 percent of the party men, 40 percent of the army, and 75 percent of bureaucrats will defect. This raises the question about the state itself and what is left.
Now the question is about the future of the free army and the opposition in a post-Assad Syria. The Iranian and Russian influence will not hold as the will of the people is bound to prevail.
Regardless of the Russian and Iranian justifications for their stand vis-a-vis Syria, it is obvious that they are supporting a sect rather than a state and the Syrian people.
Western press confirms that Iranian forces are defending Assad and that these forces are overseeing the attack on Aleppo. The Iranian captives whose release Iran is seeking are in fact soldiers with documents to prove Iran's involvement.
Some of them admitted that they worked for the Republican Guard. According to one senior Iranian figure from the opposition, going to war is the only way out of this deadlock. A war is seen as a preemptive action for an imminent internal revolution. He adds that the reaction of other non-Persian nationalities will be strong and that the regime in Tehran will use force more than what Assad has been doing. The opposition figure thinks that Iran will push Hezbollah to engage with Israel and the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) to engage with Turkey. It will also use all tools at its disposal to create tension in the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran had put pressure on the Iraqi Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani to open a safe passage for Iran to send military supplies to the PKK. When Barzani refused, Iran sent the Republican Guard in Iraq army uniform to areas under PKK control to hit the Turkish security in a bid to keep Turkey away from Syria. Assad's game is over and this is confirmed by intelligence sources. It is obvious that Assad is spending an interim period to allow both Moscow and Tehran to do some internal arrangement to lessen the impact of his fall. Tehran is more convinced than ever that Assad's departure is imminent and that Iran will have no influence in a post-Assad Syria. Syrians will keep remembering that the bloodbath in Syria was fully supported by both Tehran and Moscow.
 
When the Russian Baath Scolds Damascus
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-14
Author : Zuheir Kseibati
When Moscow distances itself from any moral responsibility for its contribution in the killing of the Syrians with Russian weapons, the only way for it to cover up the pretext...
Intervention in Syria inevitable
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-14
Author : Aaron David Miller
Incremental steps being considered probably won't work without a much more sustained and aggressive military intervention....
Still room for surprises in Iran presidential elections
Source : The Peninsula  
Date : 2013-06-14
Author : Michael Axworthy
As Iranians vote today they are faced with a choice of six potential presidents, two having dropped out of the running in the final few days. One of these was...
Legal And Illegal Expats Cannot Be Treated Alike
Source : Kuwait Times  
Date : 2013-06-14
Author : Labeed Abdal
Deporting the whole family of an expat who has violated Kuwaiti laws, particularly if his wife and children hold dependent visas, calls for a little reconsideration....
Can the Syrians still believe Washington's promises?
Source : Asharq Al-Awsat  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Eyad Abu Shakra
On top of Turkey's protests and Iran's elections, two interesting incidents happened over the past few days in the Middle East. First, Moscow's offer to send its troops to join...
Syria's long road to Geneva
Source : Al Arabiya TV  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Joyce Karam
As the proxy war sets in fully in Syria with equal determination among all sides to change the calculations on the ground, the hopes for a major diplomatic breakthrough in...
What happened to the Green Movement in Iran?
Source : Aljazeera.com  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Hamid Dabashi
As Mahmoud Ahmadinejad serves out the final days of his lame-duck presidency, and as the ruling regime of the Islamic Republic stages yet another useless spectacle to prove it is...
Who Killed the Syrian Peace Talks?
Source : The Counter Punch  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Shamus Cooke
The long awaited Syrian peace talks - instigated by power brokers Russia and the United States - had already passed their initial due date, and are now officially stillborn....
Ignoring the Real Reason Behind Terrorism
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Jihad Al Khazen
Terrorism is terrorism, whether perpetrated by the Israeli occupation army, or a Muslim extremist from the deviant faction, who knows not his true religion....
The New American Injection
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Abdullah Iskandar
Ever since American Secretary of State John Kerry recognized that his country was late to handle the Syrian crisis, it seemed clear that President Barack Obama's administration, which made threats,...
The Iranian Elections Will Enshrine the Regime's Policy
Source : Al Hayat  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Randa Takieddine
The victory by one of the conservative candidates as Iran's president – Ali Akbar Velayati, the adviser to the Supreme Leader on international affairs, Tehran Mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf or...
Be decisive on Iran
Source : Arab Times  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Khalaf Ahmed Al Habtoor
"If you are out to describe the truth, leave elegance to the tailor," said Albert Einstein. So get ready for some straight talking on what I believe is the greatest...
Russian fleet in the Mediterranean
Source : Saudi Gazette  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Hassan Tahsin
Nobody pays much attention these days to who is being killed in Syria and whether he is Shiite, Sunni, Kurd or Druze. The Syrian government claims that these...
Roller coasters and local raids
Source : Kuwait Times  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Labeed Abdal
Since my childhood, I have not been a big fan of roller coasters in any amusement or theme park where it slides along the railroads with vertical loops and sudden...
Electricity, Sweet Simplicity
Source : Kuwait Times  
Date : 2013-06-13
Author : Badrya Darwish
Electricity, electricity, sweet simplicity. This ad slogan is stuck in my mind since the good old days in London. Whenever I used to turn on some of the local channels,...
Total 200 Results in 14 Pages
  4 
For more news, views and reports about this topic, please subscribe
to GRC website: www.grc.ae
Wed Jun 19, 2013| 10-شعبان-1434هـ
Saudi King: Interference by some countries destabilizes region
Saudi banks to benefit from strong sukuk market growth
Rowhani hopes for new accord with world powers over N-issue
ADPC and Abu Dhabi Customs sign an agreement
Assad says Europe would 'pay price' for arming rebels
Qatar Holding sells back 10pc Porsche stake
Taliban 'set to open office in Doha'
India cuts Iran oil imports by more than 40pc
Under pressure, Ahmadinejad summoned to appear in court
Oman's market to see major IPOs
Bombs, suicide attack kill 12 in Iraq
e-fraud in Saudia among lowest in the world: BMAC
National Media Council's responsibilities redefined
Qatar building 77 new hotels: QDB analysts
Coronavirus spreads: Four more die, three others infected
Etihad Airways inks IMU with Serbia
    Newspaper Editorials
Talking to the enemy
James Bond state
More>>  
    Opinions
What happened to the Arab superpowers?
The red lines over Syria have not been crossed
More>>  
    GCC Press Agencies
Day's main stories from the GCC Press Agencies
    Reports
Syria and WMD: Deepening Uncertainty
Iraq Ten Years On
More>>  
    Bank Reports
GCC Cement Sector Quarterly – 1Q13
GCC Real Estate Quarterly – 1Q13
More>>  
    GRC Analysis
Building a Strong Saudi-Japan Relationship
Poor Gulf: Inequality and the Lack of Statistics
Whither GCC-US Relations?
    GRC Commentary
On Relations between Rulers and Citizens: The Need for a New Social/Political Contract in the GCC States
Key Issue Facing the Saudi Ruling House.
    GRC Book Review
Beyond Regionalism? Regional Cooperation, Regionalism and Regionalization in the Middle East
India, GCC and the Global Energy Regime: Exploring Interdependence and Outlook for Collaboration.
    GRC Press Release
Gulf Research Center press releases to the media
    GRC Publications
The Uneasy Balance: Potential and Challenges of the West's Relations with the Gulf States
Asia-Gulf Economic Relations in the 21st Century: The Local to Global Transformation
Assessment of the Security Situation in Iran, Iraq, Yemen, Syria and the Arab Gulf States
    GRC Newsletters/Bulletins

Enter your email to get the Newsletter
Go
      
Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Terms & Conditions | About Us |
Weather | Qibla Directions | Hijri Date Conversion Tool
Full Page :total time:1  |   54-- 55 Middle Page :0  --   | Right : 54 - 54--en--sess-enreq-en-coming