Saudi Embassy attack: Is vigilantes' excess empowering Rouhani?
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| Istanbul, Turkey
By Iranian political standards, heads have started to roll after the ransacking by hard-line forces of the Saudi Embassy in Tehran a week ago.
It was not the first foreign embassy to be attacked since Iran's 1979 Islamic revolution. Nor was the firebombing the first controversial act by hard-line vigilantes, a longstanding force in Iranian politics that often acts with impunity on behalf of shadowy 鈥渞evolutionary鈥 elements.
But this time聽President Hassan Rouhani has moved quickly,聽prompting a new debate in Iran about vigilante culture and its ability to undermine the country鈥檚 strategic aims.
The stakes are high: Iran is nearing 鈥渋mplementation day鈥 on the landmark nuclear deal signed with six world powers last July. For聽Mr. Rouhani 鈥 a centrist cleric and frequent target of hard-line rhetoric 鈥 it was a聽signal foreign policy achievement.
Calling the embassy attackers 鈥渃riminals鈥 and 鈥渆xtremists,鈥 Rouhani has asked the judiciary to immediately investigate those who tarnished Iran鈥檚 image. One security chief for Tehran governorate has been sacked; on Monday the commander of police special forces in Tehran, which are responsible for gatherings in the capital, was also replaced.
The Saudi embassy came under attack in retaliation for Riyadh's execution of a prominent Shiite cleric, Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr, along with dozens of alleged members of Al Qaeda.
So far 50 suspects in Iran have been detained, and a newly created task force that includes intelligence and law enforcement officials is to report on the identity of key actors and organizers in just over a week.聽In a letter to UN chief Ban Ki-Moon, Iran vowed to take steps to prevent any future attack on diplomatic missions.
鈥淪omebody misjudged,鈥 says Farideh Farhi, an Iran specialist at the University of Hawaii. 鈥淓ither they went too far, or [the embassy attack] was something that was unacceptable at this moment 鈥 whoever decided to push for it 鈥 because it detracts from a very, very important moment in Iran鈥檚 current history, which is [the nuclear deal] implementation.鈥
The nuclear accord was possible after several years of intense negotiation because of a consensus among key elements within Iran鈥檚 political system 鈥撀爓ith supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamanei at the top 鈥撀爐o resolve the nuclear crisis and fix the economy.
Pressure on conservatives
鈥淚mplementation Day鈥 would bring the certification that Iran has dismantled key parts of its nuclear program. This triggers the lifting or suspension of many US, European, and UN sanctions on Iran. Hard-liners accuse Rouhani of caving in on the deal.
鈥淚鈥檓 sure Mr. Rouhani is making an argument within the national security establishment that, 鈥楾his [embassy attack] is ridiculous, we can鈥檛 do this. Do you want the [deal] implemented, or not?鈥 鈥 says Ms. Farhi. 鈥淭he tactics ultimately have the ability to undercut the strategy 颅鈥撀爊o doubt that is part of the argument.鈥
As firebombs burst against the walls of the embassy, diplomatic police did not or could not prevent the angry demonstrators from taking it over. That shifted the storyline in global media from Saudi Arabia's beheadings of 47 people to Iran鈥檚 mob-style tactics.
鈥淩ouhani immediately took action not to rally his own troops, but to push his conservative friends to put pressure on other fellow conservatives, and also upstairs [in Mr. Khamenei鈥檚 office], to contain the situation,鈥 says Mohammad Ali Shabani, the Iran editor at Al-Monitor news service and a PhD researcher at SOAS, University of London.
Whereas it was months before Khamenei condemned the sacking of the British Embassy in Tehran in 2011, this time judicial and security officials took action within hours.
Condemnation of attack now widespread
The strategy worked because of Rouhani鈥檚 鈥渙wn political center-right alignment,鈥 says Mr. Shabani. 鈥淲hile far short of any specific 鈥榰nderstanding,鈥 I think moderate conservatives and Rouhani鈥檚 people alike have a mutual interest in isolating and debilitating the most hard-line forces.鈥
Condemnation of the attack has now become widespread, even from Friday prayer leaders and Revolutionary Guard commanders who often challenge Rouhani鈥檚 stated desire for 鈥渕oderation鈥 in foreign policy.
Officials have blamed 鈥渆nemy influence鈥 and even 鈥渋nfiltrators鈥 in the crowd bent on violence. And yet, often at such events it is the hard-line elements and not security forces who dictate the end result.
The reformist news website Asr Iran, for example, noted that some attackers 鈥渨ere so relaxed that they had not even covered their faces鈥 and were setting fires a 鈥渇ew steps from the police.鈥
Khamenei has not commented on the Saudi Embassy attack, but some media quoted a 1989 sermon he gave when he was president, saying: 鈥淒o not get close to embassies. If you do not like the policies of the British or Americans or anyone else, this is not the path 鈥 to climb over embassy walls.鈥
Vigilantes active in run-up to elections
Vigilante groups have been used in Iran for at least two centuries, by leaders ranging from local mullahs to the pro-West shah.
But they became far more organized and ideological after 1979. Hard-liners used them in the name of enforcing revolutionary ideals and fighting American and other Western influence. Reformists traditionally have been a target of such groups 鈥撀燼nd still are 鈥 as were Green Movement street protests against the disputed presidential vote in 2009.
They have been active again in the run-up to crucial elections on Feb. 26 for parliament and the Assembly of Experts, the body that could choose the next supreme leader to follow the septuagenarian Khamenei.
鈥淭hese groups are part and parcel of the Islamic Republic,鈥 says analyst Farhi. 鈥淭he identity of the Islamic Republic is tied to them, so the [ruling] system has a much harder time directly dealing with right-wing vigilante groups.鈥
The benchmark will be how the judiciary deals with these cases, and whether punishments are carried out, or the impunity shown in the past prevails.
A cabinet spokesman said Tuesday that the embassy attackers would be prosecuted. "The government will surely take those who attacked the Saudi embassy to court," the spokesman said.聽