|

|
|
|
|
|
Resources |
|
|
|
Postwar Iraq: Regional Power or Pariah?
| Article
# : |
13841 |
|
|
Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
|
| Issue
Date : |
12 / 1988 |
2,489 Words |
| Author
: |
Christine Moss Helms Christine Moss Helms is the author of The Cohesion of Saudi
Arabia: Evolution of Political Identify and Iraq: Eastern
Flank of the Arab World. |
Iraqi political behavior can be understood only within the context of its geostrategic concerns and with the knowledge that Iraqis are fully cognizant of, if perplexed by, Western preoccupation with Iran.
The memory of Iran's Islamic revolutionary involvement in global terrorism has been all but erased in the feverish embrace with which the West greeted Iran's sudden acceptance in July of UN Resolution 598, which provides for a negotiated settlement of the Iran-Iraq War, and the emergent leadership of a "moderate," Hashemi Rafsanjani. France, Britain, and Kuwait hastened to normalize diplomatic relations with Iran, which had never ceased to be touted in the West as the unquestioned strategic prize and in the region as a power to be placated. Hesitation on the part of the United States to follow suit is attributed to its desire to be perceived as chaste maid, rather than ardent suitor, because of its own domestic pressures.
The passion of the West's embrace, however, is disproportionate. Rafsanjani has long been an active, influential member of Ayataollah Ruhollah Khomeini's inner circle, clouding assertions about his moderation. The motives and latent intent of Iran's mercurial conversion from implacable stands have yet to be subjected to scrutiny. Iranian domestic stability in the next decade remains no less tenuous. Factors contributing to the instability of the shah's regime in the 1970s have yet to be addressed in the 1980s. Wile 97 percent of its population is Shi'ite Muslim and speaks Farsi, Iran has numerous fissiparous tendencies disguised by an unexamined assumption that, unlike its Arab neighbors, it has always been united as a natural geopolitical entity.
... (1937 of 16139 Characters)
Read Full Article
|
|