The Knockout Punch of ISIS Begins in Iran
By
Wahab Raofi
Published on Huffington Post
Politicians
keep taking jabs at ISIS, yet the world’s most notorious terrorist group
continues to carry out spectacular, deadly attacks around the world. This is because
politicians jab only at the extremities of their foe – they cannot win unless
they deliver a knockout blow to the head. And that target is Iran.
Peace-seeking governments need to
pinpoint the source of the problem. Why is ISIS, for all its brutality, still
able to recruit young Sunni Muslims from around the world? The path of
destruction leads to the doorstep of Shiite Iran.
Iran’s religious clergy oligarchy has declared
an unholy war on Sunnis. Iran blatantly interferes in the domestic affairs of
the entire region. Since usurping power in 1979, Iran’s Ayatollahs use proxies such
as Hezbollah and other Shiite groups to export its radical view throughout the Islamic
world.
Sunni-dominated Saudi Arabia,
comfortable in its lavish, petro-dollar lifestyle and averse to conflict, now ranks
among those engaged in a Cold War with Iran.
Saudi foreign minister Adel bin Ahmed
Al-Jubeir observed that Iran’s own constitution commands it to “export the
revolution,” and he accused Iran of a litany of crimes against humanity. Among
them were executing the 1996 Khobar Tower bombings and harboring Al Qaeda’s
senior leaders in 2003 when they ordered the bombing of several housing
compounds in Riyadh. He also cited Iran’s aid to the separatist Houthis, a Shiite-led
movement in Yemen.
Iran is engaged not only in Saudi Arabia,
but also interferes in the domestic security of Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan.
After Saddam Hussein’s reign was toppled
during the U.S. invasion of Iraq, Iran crept in to fill the political gap by befriending
pro-Iranian Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, which resulted in a dramatic loss
of Sunni power in the new government.
The rise of ISIS looms merely as the poster
child of Iran’s aggression.
“The Islamic State is in many respects simply the bloodiest and
most fanatical part of a region-wide Sunni uprising against Iran’s imperial ambitions in the
Middle East,” Lee Smith wrote in the Weekly
Standard.
Iran
has sent more than 2,000 religious students and scholars to Iraq’s holy cities
of Najaf and Karbala, and about one-third of them reportedly work for the
Iranian Ministry of Intelligence. Some experts estimate as many as 30,000
Iranian operatives may be in Iraq.
In Syria, Iran has conducted “an
extensive, expensive and integrated effort to keep President Bashar al-Assad in
power as long as possible while setting conditions to retain its ability to use
Syrian territory and assets to pursue its regional interests should Assad fall,”
according to the Institute for the Study of War, a non-partisan, U.S.-based
research group.
The Iran-Russia unholy
alliance is engaged in a genocide of Syrian Sunnis whose only sin was asking
for political participation in their government.
Former Afghan spy chief Amrullah Saleh
criticized Iran for interfering in Afghanistan affairs through Shiite groups
and told reporters that Iran remains a major threat for the national security
of the country unless Afghanistan becomes independent and self-sufficient.
The
Wall Street Journal reported that Iran has been recruiting
thousands of Afghan refugees to fight in Syria, offering $500 a month and
Iranian residency to help the Assad regime beat back rebel forces.
Phillip Smyth, an expert on Shiite militant
groups, estimates that up to 3,500 Afghans are currently fighting in
Syria. “Some are coerced to fight, others promised residency papers for
their family and a small salary,” Smyth said. “It demonstrates Iran's
exploitation of Afghan Shiite refugees.”
Iranian Ayatollahs usurped power and
want to keep it by diverting attention to foreign adventures. The Shiite sect
allows Taqiyya, the practice of deceit
in order to preserve one’s life or property. The Ayatollahs have adopted this as
an instrument of foreign policy.
The most dangerous aspect of Iran’s
misguided policy is that it can push Sunnis either to tacitly condone ISIS
actions or actually join the group to counter Iran’s acts of anti-Sunni genocide.
They may see two choices: flee as a refugee to Europe or join ISIS.
In fact, if it weren’t for Iran’s interference
in the Middle East, ISIS might not even exist.
Iran’s
rulers are throwing rocks, then hiding their hands behind their backs. If they want
re-engagement with the rest of the world, they must stop exporting their
radical ideology and stop playing Taqiyya.
There might not be one single knockout punch that
can destroy ISIS, but Iran holds the key to peace in the Middle East. As long
as Iran continues its destructive policies, defeating ISIS will remain a grave
challenge.
Until Iran ceases its deadly
meddling in other states’ affairs, the very least we could do is enforce economic
sanctions against its government.
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