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How To React To Iranian Provocations Without Overreacting – OpEd


How To React To Iranian Provocations Without Overreacting – OpEd

By Leonard Weinberg

On January 28, the Islamic Resistance in Iraq, an Iranian-backed group, launched a successful and lethal drone attack on Tower 22, an American military outpost in northeast Jordan. Three US service members were killed and 47 more wounded. While Iran-backed groups have been attacking US positions across the Middle East since the outbreak of the Israel–Hamas war last October, this was the first strike to kill US soldiers.

The attack has prompted strong demands in Washington and elsewhere for a powerful US response. Instead of targeting the various groups in Iraq sponsored to one degree or another by the regime in Tehran, advocates call for striking at Iran directly. Such a response might involve disrupting Iran’s petroleum industry by bombarding the relevant facilities.

The demands for a strong kinetic response are countered by warnings about the US being drawn into a wider regional war in the Middle East. The unsuccessful American military effort to stop the Taliban’s control of Afghanistan and a less ambitious but equally unsuccessful intervention in the Lebanese civil war in the mid-1980s provide reasons for caution.

So, the alternatives — at least those discussed in public — are either continued tit-for-tat responses to attacks by Iranian-sponsored bands in Syria and Iraq or direct measures against Tehran with the accompanying danger of an escalatory spiral leading to a large-scale regional war. The latter would lead to a growing number of American military casualties, which would have to be absorbed in a presidential election year.

There is a third way, one well worth consideration by policy-makers and members of the American public.

How the US can exploit Iran’s weaknesses and avoid bloodshed

The Islamic Republic is a formidable adversary. Its political and military leaders, from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, to President Ebrahim Raisi, Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) head Hossein Salami and Quds Force commander Esmail Ghaani, have shown themselves to be quite ruthless and adept in maintaining their grip on power. To this end, they are aided by the IRGC, an organization of some 150,000–190,000 fighters or potential fighters. The IRGC is, in turn, divided into the Quods Force, whose tasks include foreign terrorist operations in the Middle East and beyond, and the Basij an organization devoted to the maintenance of internal security — by all means necessary, including torture.

Despite a political culture of religious repression and the weapons available to a modern police state, the Islamic Republic is not invulnerable. By many accounts, the regime is highly unpopular, especially among the educated middle classes of Tehran and the other major cities. Also, whether deserved or not, the regime has acquired a reputation for corruption, particularly among leaders of the IRGC.

Iran’s population is close to 88 million, a significant proportion of whom are young people under the age of 20. At last count, the country’s unemployment rate was around 10% of the workforce. These figures suggest a less than contented population.

Public protests against the Islamic Republic are hardly out of the question. The most spectacular of these manifestations so far was the sustained protests by Iranian women following the death in custody of a young woman, Masha Amini, arrested for not wearing her hijab appropriately. Beginning in September 2022 and continuing into 2023, the forces of repression had to be employed throughout much of the country.

Furthermore, the Iranian population is less than homogenous; aside from the majority Persian ethnicity, there are Azeris, Kurds, Balochis and Arabs. In past decades, leaders of these communities have sought to achieve greater autonomy from Tehran, sometimes by the use of violence, albeit short-lived.

This combination of demographic and political characteristics point to some of the Islamic Republic’s vulnerabilities, ones that might be exploited by the United States, at least in the long-run. Subversion appears to be a sensible means of weakening the regime of the ayatollahs. The Central Intelligence Agency has extensive experience in weakening various hostile regimes in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, not to mention the successful 1953 coup it promotedagainst the nationalist regime of Muhammad Mosaddegh that brought the Shah back to power. 

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Fair Observer’s editorial policy.

  • About the author: Leonard Weinberg is foundation professor emeritus at the University of Nevada. Over the course of his career he has served as a visiting professor at King’s College, University of London, the University of Haifa (Israel), and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). He is the author of many books on terrorism and right-wing politics.
  • Source: This article was published by Fair Observer

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South Caucasus News

Jerry Brown And Gavin Newsom Team Up Against Voters – OpEd


Jerry Brown And Gavin Newsom Team Up Against Voters – OpEd

California’s Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act gives voters the final approval on future taxes and fees imposed by state and local governments. The measure gathered nearly one million signatures and has qualified for the November 5 ballot. Gov. Gavin Newsom and former governor Jerry Brown want the state supreme court to take the measure off the ballot, and it’s easy to see why.

The Act requires voter approval for all new taxes passed by the legislature and two-thirds voter approval for all new special tax increases. The Act also requires clear definitions of what is a tax or a fee, along with truthful descriptions of new tax proposals. Before any tax or fee is enacted, politicians must clearly outline how the revenues would be spent, and so on.

Gov. Newsom contends that the measure is a constitutional revision, rather than a constitutional amendment, and would “effectively block the state’s ability to quickly respond to major challenges.” Proponents of the measure called the “revision” argument weak and in an amicus brief, Republicans decried a “blatantly undemocratic attempt to disenfranchise voters by removing a voter-qualified initiative from the ballot.” The battle has now been joined by former governor Jerry Brown, who at age 85 needs some updating.

In 1974, Gov. Brown showcased his “simple lifestyle” credentials by rejecting the new governor’s mansion and moving into an apartment near the state Capitol. In 2015, Brown returned to the refurbished original governor’s mansion. After four terms in office, with a net worth of an estimated $12 million, Brown occupies a2,500-acre estate in Colusa County.

Brown’s January 31 amicus brief makes the same argument as Gov. Newsom, that the measure is a constitutional revision rather than an amendment, basically a distinction without a difference. Surprisingly, the former governor mentions the 1978 Proposition 13, the People’s Initiative to Limit Property Taxation, which limited property tax increases and required a two-thirds vote of the legislature to increase non-property taxes.

The state supreme court ruled that Proposition 13 “was both modest and does not change our basic governmental plan.” According to Brown, a Yale law alum, the Taxpayer Protection and Accountability Act, “turns our governmental plan inside out,” and more. The measure “echoes a 1950s film noir in which a police officer tells a crowd, ‘there’s nothing to see, move along,’ when the police officer in fact is standing in front of a corpse—in this instance (to apply the metaphor to the facts), the corpse of our State Government.” That is hard to top, but the former governor wasn’t done.

“Governor Brown’s many years of service in state and local government,” the brief claims, “have given him an unprecedented understanding of how government functions and a deep interest in ensuring that our state and local government entities continue to serve the public effectively.”

Brown cites his four terms as governor and stints as California’s Attorney General, Secretary of State, and mayor of Oakland. The brief even notes that Brown “served as a law clerk to Justice Mathew Tobriner of this Court from 1964 to 1965,” but leaves out some other realities.

In 1976, 1980, and 1992, Jerry Brown mounted presidential bids “all of which fell short of making him a true contender for the White House,” according to veteran California commentator Dan Walters. In 1982, Brown also lost a Senate race to Pete Wilson, Republican mayor of San Diego.

Gov. Brown called Proposition 13 a “rip-off” and denounced the measure in apocalyptic terms. After a full 64.79 percent of voters approved the measure, Brown proclaimed himself a “born-again tax cutter,” which was never true. On Brown’s watch, California became one of the highest-tax states, with an onerous regulatory regime and little accountability.

Jerry Brown helped transform the Golden State from a place people wanted to live to a place people want to leave. The recurring governor, with “unprecedented understanding” of government, now targets the already qualified Taxpayer Protection and Accountability Act. The reason should be clear to all but the willfully blind.

Proposition 13, the People’s Initiative to Limit Property Taxation, inspired tax reform across the country. Brown and Newsom fear that the Taxpayer Protection and Accountability Act would do the same.

Jerry Brown is a graduate of UC Berkeley, where the outcry was once “power to the people.” Brown and Gov. Newsom now seek to take power from the people. Replies to the amicus briefs are due on February 14 and the case must be decided before June 27, the deadline to place initiatives on the November 5 ballot.

This article was also published in The American Spectator


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@mikenov: RT @Bundeskanzler: Thank you, Joe!



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South Caucasus News

Houthis Fire Missiles at Cargo Ship Bound for Iran, Their Patron – Bloomberg


Houthis Fire Missiles at Cargo Ship Bound for Iran, Their Patron  Bloomberg

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South Caucasus News

Iran marks Islamic Revolution’s 45th anniversary amid Mideast tensions – FRANCE 24 English


Iran marks Islamic Revolution’s 45th anniversary amid Mideast tensions  FRANCE 24 English

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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

@mikenov: RT @Bundeskanzler: Das Schutzversprechen der NATO gilt uneingeschränkt: alle für einen, einer für alle. Jede Relativierung der Beistandsgar…


Das Schutzversprechen der NATO gilt uneingeschränkt: alle für einen, einer für alle. Jede Relativierung der Beistandsgarantie ist unverantwortlich und gefährlich. Niemand darf mit Europas Sicherheit spielen oder „dealen“. Wir stärken die NATO weiter, für die Sicherheit Europas!

— Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz (@Bundeskanzler) February 12, 2024


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

@mikenov: RT @anders_aslund: I must admit that I am impressed by how Nikki Haley refutes most of Trump’s nonsense in foreign policy.


I must admit that I am impressed by how Nikki Haley refutes most of Trump’s nonsense in foreign policy. https://t.co/eZfBRvzlvv

— Anders Åslund (@anders_aslund) February 12, 2024


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Audio Review - South Caucasus News

@mikenov: RT @Robert4787: The FBI arrested the leadership of the neo-Nazi terrorist network Atomwaffen Division a while back- the governor is lucky t…


The FBI arrested the leadership of the neo-Nazi terrorist network Atomwaffen Division a while back- the governor is lucky to be alive. Time for #FBI to arrest domestic extremists for conspiracy to commit violence. #EXTREMISTS #Nazi #domesticterrorismhttps://t.co/hY0pvQDyZf

— Robert Morton (@Robert4787) February 13, 2024


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South Caucasus News

@mikenov: RT @Bundeskanzler: Das Schutzversprechen der NATO gilt uneingeschränkt: alle für einen, einer für alle. Jede Relativierung der Beistandsgar…


Das Schutzversprechen der NATO gilt uneingeschränkt: alle für einen, einer für alle. Jede Relativierung der Beistandsgarantie ist unverantwortlich und gefährlich. Niemand darf mit Europas Sicherheit spielen oder „dealen“. Wir stärken die NATO weiter, für die Sicherheit Europas!

— Bundeskanzler Olaf Scholz (@Bundeskanzler) February 12, 2024


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South Caucasus News

@mikenov: RT @anders_aslund: I must admit that I am impressed by how Nikki Haley refutes most of Trump’s nonsense in foreign policy.


I must admit that I am impressed by how Nikki Haley refutes most of Trump’s nonsense in foreign policy. https://t.co/eZfBRvzlvv

— Anders Åslund (@anders_aslund) February 12, 2024