Iran's Shattered "Axis of Resistance"
"The Syrian debate is happening at all levels of Society.""People are asking: Why did we spent so much money there? What did we achieve?""What is our justification now that it's all gone?"Hassan Shemshadi, Iranian analyst
AP Photo |
Iranians
appear to be awakening from their stupor of victimization by their
theocratic regime; influential critics in the country now speaking out
publicly of the futility and regional destabilization fomented by the
Islamic Republic of Iran, short-changing the great Iranian people living
in poverty and repression crushed beneath the fist of the Islamist
Khomeinist regime under Ruhollah Khomeini's successor Grand Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, carrying on the vision of his predecessor.
The
sudden collapse of the Alawite regime of President Bashar al-Assad,
propped up by Tehran, has taken the Iranian Mullahs and their Republican
Guard Corps by surprise; no longer can they rely on Syria as a conduit
for weapons meant for the terror groups founded and funded by Iran and
others dependent on its support; Tehran's infamous 'axis of
resistance'.
The
public has always grumbled in fruitless frustration over billions spent
by their government to recruit, train and arm their proxy militias,
while depriving the people of Iran of basic necessities of life. That,
and the Iranian lives sacrificed to help support the Syrian regime in
its long-standing civil war against Syria's Sunni population, and its
and conflict with foreign Sunni-led Islamist groups like the Islamic
State; all to naught.
AP Photo |
"No one will be able to waste Iran's dollars for maintaining a spider web anymore",
stated former lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahatpisheh in a social media
post, urging Iranians to celebrate the fall of Bashar al-Assad. A
professor of international relations at Tehran University, Ebrahim
Motaghi stated that Iran had been reduced from regional power to merely
another country, on a talk show viewed widely.
The
Iranian regime's strategy to become a dominant regional force capable
of confronting Israel and the United States, its support of militant
Islamist groups across the Middle East it named the axis of resistance,
is being questioned not only by an incensed public, but also by
well-placed authority figures. Mohammad Shariati Dehghan, former Iranian
representative to the intergovernmental Organization of Islamic
Cooperation wrote in a front-page opinion piece that the Assad defeat
exposed Iran's strategy as misguided, "built on weak foundations".
A
new approach was required, to prioritize building alliances with other
countries rather than propping up militant groups, while redirecting
funding and resources back to the people of Iran. This open public
debate is a departure from the norm since for many years leaders of Iran
placed support for Syria and allied terrorist groups fighting Israel to
be a non-negotiable focus of the Islamic revolution, which national
security demanded.
These open comments, infuriating to Ayatollah Khamenei, were, he said, "a crime",
having the effect of sowing fear and uncertainty in the public mind.
Iran's judiciary responded by announcing a criminal investigation into
specific prominent figures and news outlets identified as leading the
criticism. Among them, former lawmaker Heshmatollah Falahtpisheh who had
revealed the Syrian debt to Iran came to $30 billion.
Syria
had become Iran's central command base in the region for over 40 years.
Military bases, missile factories, tunnels and warehouses were all
controlled by Iran. Weapons, cash and logistical support to Hezbollah in
Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza and terrorists in the West Bank and Iraq were
all beneficiaries of Tehran's largess in building its 'axis of
resistance'.
When
the Assad regime was deposed, Syrians stormed the Damascus Iranian
Embassy, smashing photographs of Iranian leaders, and hauling down the
Iranian flag. The Islamist rebel leader, Ahmed al-Shara, who spearheaded
the insurgents, warned Iran he would not tolerate continued Iranian
interference in Syria's affairs. Gone forever, the Assad regime's
complicity with the Republic.
AP Photo |
"Why were you spending billions of dollars of oil revenues that belong to the Iranian people on Assad until the very end if he wasn't even listening to you?""At least on the topic of Syria, stop lying and be honest with the people."Alireza Mokarami, Iranian, Syrian civil war veteran
Labels: Axis of Resistance, Bashar al-Assad, Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Insurgency, Islamic Republic of Iran, Syria
<< Home