Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Iran’s Guards Tell Ahmadinejad To Keep Silent, As He Warns Of Regime Change – Iran International

Former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has revealed that the Revolutionary Guards' security chief for Tehran called on him at his house in east-Tehran Monday night, to tell him he was disqualified as a presidential candidate and ask him "to keep silent and cooperate."

Ahmadinejad had said during and after his registration as a candidate that if he is disqualified, he will not vote in the election, which was seen as a signal to his voters. However, fearing protests by Ahmadinejad's supporters, Iranian security officials installed security cameras all around his neighborhood during the past week and reports from Tehran said that his house has been surrounded by anti-riot forces from Monday night.

According to Ahmadinejad, the guards' security chief for Tehran told him that he is "not interested in arresting Ahmadinejad's supporters who are Hezbollahi and revolutionary individuals."

Several polls conducted in Iran and abroad indicated that Ahmadinejad could be the frontrunner in the June 18 presidential election if he were allowed by the Guardian Council to run.

The Guardian Council, an appointed body consisting of 6 high-ranking Shiite clerics and 6 lawyers, is a constitutional watchdog that vets parliamentary and presidential election candidates and operates under the supervision of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

Reacting to the development, Ahmadinejad published a statement on his official website Dolate Bahar on Tuesday and said that he has told the same to General Hossein Nejat, the Commander of Sarallah Headquarters in charge of security in Tehran. Hours after the publication the page went temporarily off the grid.

Screen shot of a report Wednesday on Ahmadinejad's website about the IRGC threat.

In the statement, Ahmadinejad said: "The country's situation is really bad. The economic situation is catastrophic and the social situation is on the verge of collapse."

Ahmadinejad further charged that infiltrators have penetrated every part of the country. "It is a combination of weakness and treason," he said, in a veiled reference to multiple incidents against high-valued targets and individuals in the country.

He also reminded General Nejat whose real name is Mohammad Hossein Zibainejad, that a low turnout in election as a result of widespread disqualifications will have major domestic and international repercussions. "The system will fall in a way that it is hard to assume that it can rise once again," said Ahmadinejad.

"Why should they disqualify me. No one has the right to do that and I would never accept this or remain silent," Ahmadinejad stressed. He added that the Islamic Republic government and the Rouhani administration are responsible for his disqualification. "They can hardly explain that now but offering an explanation for my disqualification would be much more difficult in the future."

These were apparently threats and counter-threats exchanged by Nejat and Ahmadinejad, with the former alluding to arrests and the latter making reference to sending his supporters to defend him.

Meanwhile, Ahmadinejad warned that the "current trend" will quickly worsen and the enemies will seize the opportunity to make the regime surrender and give them concessions.

Ahmadinejad charged that as people distance themselves from the regime, some elements in Iran are after disbanding the IRGC, doing away with the Guardian Council and bringing about foreign supervision of elections in Iran while the country is on course for a referendum and regime change.

The former President said that the people of Iran do not expect him to accept oppression and remain silent in the face of injustice and simply watch the destruction of the regime and the revolution as it happens. "The society is on the verge of explosion," he warned, adding that he cannot ignore people's demands.

He reiterated that he would not support any candidate and will resist against his disqualification as long as he is alive and those who have disqualified him shall remain responsible for the consequences. However, he said that he would not endorse or support protest movements as a result of his disqualification. "But those who are behind this disqualification should know that this will end in nothing other than the people's confrontation with them," Ahmadinejad warned.

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Iran's Guards Tell Ahmadinejad To Keep Silent, As He Warns Of Regime Change - Iran International

Satellites in the row in Iran to be sent into space – Tehran Times

TEHRAN Iran is designing a number of satellites, some of which are in the row to be launched into space, IRNA reported on Friday.

Pars Plus satellite with an imaging resolution of five meters, Pars 2 with a five-meter resolution multispectral imaging system, and Rasam satellite with four meters resolution multispectral imaging system are among the satellites that are being designed.

The telecommunication Nahid 1 satellite, Zoljanah, Nahid 2, Simorgh, Remote Sensing Tollou, Pars 1, and Zafar 2 are being designed and produced to put satellites at LEO (Low Earth Orbit).

Irans strategic purpose for developing the space industry is to expedite space activities including the aerospace industry, tapping the countrys scientific capacities, commercialization of space and space service.

When rockets launch satellites, they put them into orbit in space. There, gravity keeps the satellite on its required orbit in the same way that gravity keeps the Moon in orbit around Earth.

LEO is generally defined as an orbit below an altitude of approximately 2,000 kilometers (1,200 mi). Given the rapid orbital decay of objects below approximately 200 kilometers (120 mi), the commonly accepted definition for LEO is between 160 kilometers (99 mi) (with a period of about 88 minutes) and 2,000 kilometers (1,200 mi) (with a period of about 127 minutes) above the Earths surface. Because its so close to Earth, satellites must travel very fast so gravity wont pull them back into the atmosphere. Satellites in LEO speed along at 17,000 miles per hour (27,359 kilometers per hour)! They can circle Earth in about 90 minutes.

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Satellites in the row in Iran to be sent into space - Tehran Times

U.S. and Iran Want to Restore the Nuclear Deal. They Disagree …

President Biden and Irans leaders say they share a common goal: They both want to re-enter the nuclear deal that President Donald J. Trump scrapped three years ago, restoring the bargain that Iran would keep sharp limits on its production of nuclear fuel in return for a lifting of sanctions that have choked its economy.

But after five weeks of shadow boxing in Vienna hotel rooms where the two sides pass notes through European intermediaries it has become clear that the old deal, strictly defined, does not work for either of them anymore, at least in the long run.

The Iranians are demanding that they be allowed to keep the advanced nuclear-fuel production equipment they installed after Mr. Trump abandoned the pact, and integration with the world financial system beyond what they achieved under the 2015 agreement.

The Biden administration, for its part, says that restoring the old deal is just a steppingstone. It must be followed immediately by an agreement on limiting missiles and support of terrorism and making it impossible for Iran to produce enough fuel for a bomb for decades. The Iranians say no way.

Now, as negotiators engage again in Vienna, where a new round of talks began on Friday, the Biden administration finds itself at a crucial decision point. Restoring the 2015 accord, with all its flaws, seems doable, interviews with European, Iranian and American officials suggest. But getting what Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken has called a longer and stronger accord one that stops Iran from amassing nuclear material for generations, halts its missile tests and ends support of terrorist groups looks as far away as ever.

That is potentially a major political vulnerability for Mr. Biden, who knows he cannot simply replicate what the Obama administration negotiated six years ago, after marathon sessions in Vienna and elsewhere, while offering vague promises that something far bigger and better might follow.

Iran and the United States are really negotiating different deals, said Vali R. Nasr, a former American official who is now at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. Its why the talks are so slow.

The Americans see the restoration of the old deal as a first step to something far bigger. And they are encouraged by Irans desire to relax a series of financial restrictions that go beyond that deal mostly involving conducting transactions with Western banks because it would create what one senior administration official called a ripe circumstance for a negotiation on a follow-on agreement.

The Iranians refuse to even discuss a larger agreement. And American officials say it is not yet clear that Iran really wants to restore the old deal, which is derided by powerful hard-liners at home.

With Irans presidential elections six weeks away, the relatively moderate, lame-duck team of President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif are spinning that an agreement is just around the corner. Almost all the main sanctions have been removed, Mr. Rouhani told Iranians on Saturday, apparently referring to the American outline of what is possible if Tehran restores the sharp limits on nuclear production. Negotiations are underway for some details.

Not so fast, Mr. Blinken has responded. He and European diplomats underscore that Iran has yet to make an equally detailed description of what nuclear limits would be restored.

But even if it does, how Mr. Biden persuades what will almost surely be a new hard-line Iranian government to commit to further talks to lengthen and strengthen the deal is a question American officials have a hard time answering. But Mr. Bidens aides say their strategy is premised on the thought that restoring the old deal will create greater international unity, especially with Europeans who objected strenuously to Mr. Trumps decision to exit a deal that was working. And even the old deal, one senior official said, put a serious lid on Irans nuclear program.

Hovering outside the talks are the Israelis, who continue a campaign of sabotage and assassination to cripple the Iranian program and perhaps the negotiations themselves. So it was notable that the director of the Mossad, who has led those operations, was recently ushered into the White House for a meeting with the president. After an explosion at the Natanz nuclear plant last month, Mr. Biden told aides that the timing just as the United States was beginning to make progress on restoring the accord was suspicious.

The split with Israel remains. In the meetings in Washington last week which included Mr. Blinken; the C.I.A. director, William J. Burns; and the national security adviser, Jake Sullivan Israeli officials argued that the United States was nave to return to the old accord, which they think preserved a nascent nuclear breakout capability.

Mr. Bidens top aides argued that three years of maximum pressure on Iran engineered by Mr. Trump and his secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, had failed to break its government or limit its support of terrorism. In fact, it had prompted nuclear breakout.

In Vienna, by all accounts, the lead negotiator, Robert Malley whose relationship with Mr. Blinken goes back to the high school they attended together in Paris has made a significant offer on lifting sanctions inconsistent with the original deal.

On Wednesday, Mr. Blinken said that the United States had demonstrated our very seriousness of purpose in returning to the deal.

What we dont yet know is whether Iran is prepared to make the same decision and to move forward, he told the BBC.

May 13, 2021, 6:20 p.m. ET

Iran wants more sanctions lifted than the United States judges consistent with the deal, while insisting on keeping more of its nuclear infrastructure in particular advanced centrifuges than that deal permits. Instead, Iran argues that the International Atomic Energy Agency should simply inspect the new centrifuges, a position that is unacceptable to Washington.

While the talks continue, Iran is keeping up the pressure by adding to its stockpile of highly enriched uranium and the equipment to make it, all in violation of the deal.

Both Iran and the United States are working under delicate political constraints. Even as Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has supported the Vienna talks, Mr. Rouhani and Mr. Zarif are mocked by powerful conservatives who do not trust Washington and who expect to capture the presidency.

For his part, Mr. Biden must contend with a Congress that is highly skeptical of a deal and largely sympathetic to the concerns of Israel.

But with the Iranian elections close, time is pressing, and the Biden administration lost significant chunks of it as its negotiating position has evolved, officials say. The Americans initially demanded that Iran return to compliance, and then chose to keep some of the Trump administrations sanctions in place as leverage to try to force a broader negotiation.

In two discussions in February, the Europeans urged American officials to start negotiating in earnest and lift some sanctions as a gesture of good faith toward Iran. Those suggestions were ignored. But when Ayatollah Khamenei said that the country could proceed to enrich uranium up to 60 percent purity as opposed to the 3.67 percent limit in the nuclear deal Washington took matters more seriously, officials said, fearing that it would further diminish the so-called breakout time for Iran to get enough material for a bomb.

It was only at the end of March that the two sides agreed to negotiate the whole deal at once, and the Vienna talks began in early April. Then it took more time for the Americans to concede that returning to the 2015 deal as it was written was the best and perhaps only way to build enough trust with Iran that its leaders might even consider broader, follow-on talks.

Three working groups have been established: one to discuss which sanctions Washington must lift, one to discuss how Iran returns to the enrichment limits and one to discuss how to sequence the mutual return. Iran has not yet engaged seriously on its plans, still insisting that Washington move first, but another sticking point remains: which sanctions will be lifted.

Mr. Trump restored or imposed more than 1,500 sanctions in an effort to prevent a renewal of the pact. The sanctions have been put into three baskets green, yellow and red, depending on how clearly they are inconsistent with the deal. Green will be lifted; yellow must be negotiated; and red will stay, including, for example, sanctions on individuals for human-rights violations.

Deciding which sanctions to lift is politically delicate for both countries. For example, in the yellow category, Iran insists that a Trump-era sanction of its central bank under a terrorism designation must be lifted because it damages trade. But it would be even more complicated for Washington to lift the terrorism designation on the powerful Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps, the officials said.

For the Iranians to agree to a deal that does not resolve the designation of the Guards would be a hard sell, even for the supreme leader.

For Biden, its hard to justify lifting sanctions against institutions still threatening U.S. interests in the region, and its hard for Rouhani to go home boasting about lifting all sanctions except those on his rivals, said Ali Vaez, the Iran project director at the International Crisis Group.

Its a fragile process, Mr. Vaez said, noting Irans rocket attacks in Iraq. If a single American is killed, the whole process is derailed.

But how Mr. Biden gets Iran to move to negotiate a better or new accord is the question.

American officials have no real answer to this dilemma as they try to resurrect the old deal, but they assert that Iran, too, wants more benefits than the old deal provided, so it should be willing to talk further. The Americans say they are ready to discuss how to strengthen the deal to mutual benefit, but they say that would be a decision for Iran to make.

Despite Irans pressure tactics increasing enrichment to just short of bomb grade in small quantities and barring international inspectors from key sites in late February Mr. Zarif insists that these moves are easily reversible.

American intelligence officials say that while Iran has bolstered its production of nuclear material and is probably only months from being able to produce enough highly enriched uranium for one or two bombs even now, there is no evidence Iran is advancing on its work to fashion a warhead. We continue to assess that Iran is not currently undertaking the key nuclear weapons-development activities that we judge would be necessary to produce a nuclear device, Avril D. Haines, the director of national intelligence, said in a report last month.

The Israelis are more skeptical, arguing that evidence they stole from a warehouse archive of Irans nuclear program three years ago shows that Iranian scientists had already done extensive work on warhead design.

Mr. Blinken says that the Vienna talks are intended to return to the stability and oversight of Irans nuclear program that the 2015 deal provided until it was abandoned by Mr. Trump.

So theres nothing nave about this. On the contrary, its a very cleareyed way of dealing with a problem that was dealt with effectively by the J.C.P.O.A., Mr. Blinken said, referring to the 2015 deal. Well have to see if we can do the same thing again.

The atmosphere in Iran has been complicated by a recent scandal over Mr. Zarif, whose criticism of internal decision-making recently leaked, apparently in an effort to damage his reputation and any chance he had to run for the presidency.

Ayatollah Khamenei refuted the criticism without naming Mr. Zarif, but he said the comments were a big mistake that must not be made by an official of the Islamic Republic and a repetition of what Irans enemies say.

At the same time, by downplaying Mr. Zarifs role, the supreme leader reaffirmed his support for the talks while also sheltering them from criticism by hard-liners, said Ellie Geranmayeh of the European Council on Foreign Relations.

Steven Erlanger reported from Brussels, and David E. Sanger from Washington. Farnaz Fassihi contributed reporting from New York.

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U.S. and Iran Want to Restore the Nuclear Deal. They Disagree ...

Hard-liner Ahmadinejad again seeks to be Iran’s president – The Associated Press

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) Irans former hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad registered Wednesday to run again for the Islamic Republics presidency, raising the possibility that the populist leader who rapidly advanced Tehrans nuclear program to challenge the West could return to the countrys top civilian post.

Ahmadinejads attempt to run again in 2017 disregarded the words of Irans Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had warned the firebrand, Holocaust-questioning politician his standing for office would be a polarized situation that would be harmful for the county.

This time, however, Khamenei seemingly isnt directly challenging the candidacy of the 64-year-old former Tehran mayor, who joins a wide-open election to replace the relatively moderate President Hassan Rouhani. A council Khamenei oversees ultimately will determine if Ahmadinejad and other hopefuls can run in the June 18 poll.

As Iran negotiates with world powers over its tattered nuclear deal amid tensions with the U.S., the entry of Ahmadinejad could enliven an election that Iranians so far appear unenthusiastic about during the coronavirus pandemic and crushing sanctions.

Thronged by shouting supporters, Ahmadinejad marched to a registration center at the Interior Ministry, where he filled out registration forms. He held up his hands in a V for Victory salute before addressing reporters.

My presence today for registration was based on demand by millions for my participation in the election, he said, adding that the move also came after considering the situation of the country, and the necessity for a revolution in the management of the country.

Ahmadinejad previously served two four-year terms from 2005 to 2013. Under Iranian law, he became eligible to run again after four years out of office, but he remains a polarizing figure, even among fellow hard-liners. His disputed re-election in 2009 sparked massive Green Movement protests and a sweeping crackdown in which thousands of people were detained and dozens were killed.

Abroad, he became a caricature of Western perceptions of the Islamic Republics worst attributes, such as questioning the Holocaust, insisting Iran had no gay or lesbian citizens and hinting Iran could build a nuclear weapon if it chose to do so.

But Ahmadinejad remains popular among the poor for his populist efforts and home-building programs. Since leaving office, hes raised his profile via a social media presence and written widely publicized letters to world leaders. Hes also criticized government corruption, though his own administration faced graft allegations and two of his former vice presidents were jailed.

Unlike 2017, however, Khamenei hasnt warned Ahmadinejad off the campaign and is even signaling hell remain silent about his opinions.

In past elections, those who wanted to become a candidate came and asked me Do you agree? Khamenei said in a video-conference speech Tuesday night to Iranian university students. This year I said I wont even say that.

Iran opened registration for the presidential election on Tuesday, kicking off the race as uncertainty looms over Tehrans tattered nuclear deal with world powers and tensions remain high with the West. It will run through Saturday.

Also registering Wednesday was Rostam Ghasemi, who served as oil minister under Ahmadinejad and as a general in Irans paramilitary Revolutionary Guard. Hard-liners have increasingly suggested a former military commander should be president given the countrys problems, something that hasnt happened since Irans 1979 Islamic Revolution and the purge of the armed forces that followed.

A large portion of the people have gotten below the poverty line. I think mottos like it can be done or it must be done belong to the past, Ghasemi told journalists. God willing, with the experience gained from the past, the people will not give the helm of the country to people that havent even navigated a boat before.

Within Iran, candidates exist on a political spectrum that broadly includes hard-liners who want to expand Irans nuclear program and confront the world, moderates who hold onto the status quo and reformists who want to change the theocracy from within.

Those calling for radical change find themselves blocked from even running for office by the Guardian Council, a 12-member panel that vets and approves candidates under Khameneis watch.

Among the reformists, however, a clear candidate has yet to emerge. Some have mentioned Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, though he now finds himself embroiled in a scandal over a leaked recording in which he offered frank criticism of the Guard and the limits of the civilian governments power.

But Zarif on Wednesday seemed to close the door to that speculation in an Instagram post.

In my loneliness, I thought and calculated my shortcomings, both domestic and foreign, in a difficult and tense situation, he wrote. I finally concluded in good conscience that my participation does not agree with the virtuousness and expedience of the nation and the country.

___

Gambrell reported from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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Hard-liner Ahmadinejad again seeks to be Iran's president - The Associated Press

Iran attacked: Is Revolutionary Guard looking the wrong way? – The Christian Science Monitor

At a moment when Israeli agents and their allied operatives appear to regularly penetrate Iran and freely target its nuclear program, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corp. (IRGC) appears fixated instead on domestic activists and dual citizens it accuses of espionage.

That disconnect is raising questions even among staunch Iran loyalists about how an authoritarian regime obsessed with infiltrators has become so vulnerable to external threats. One root issue appears to be the cost of an ideological military force that sees itself as much more: The often hubristic self-image of the IRGC, created to protect the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has outstripped its capabilities.

In Iran, the vanguard security force seems more focused on internal dissent than on external threats. Is that a failure of imagination, or is the Guard overwhelmed by taking on too much?

Analysts say the Guard is overburdened, having assumed more and more functions of the state, thereby diluting its focus.

Incapable of preventing Mossad operations in Iran, the IRGC creates the illusion of intelligence superiority by hitting soft targets such as Iranian dual nationals, says Ali Alfoneh, an analyst and author of two books on the IRGCs rise.

They are distracted, and also I think myopic. They are looking for an easy win, says Afshon Ostovar, an Iran expert. They go after small-potato dissidents, or just invent them to begin with, because its something they can show the regime [and] everybody else.

LONDON

A veteran of 5,000 hours behind bars, accumulated during repeated bouts in prison and months in solitary confinement, Iranian Mohammad Reza Jalaeipour is very familiar with the intelligence arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and with its obsessions.

So when the political activist was summoned for questioning in March just days after being warned by the IRGC to stop helping reformists find a consensus candidate for June 18 presidential elections, or face jail he expected arrest. He quickly posted a video on social media.

Describing himself as an unimportant and low-impact citizen, whose activities are not even worth mentioning, Mr. Jalaeipour said, addressing his interrogator: Im surprised at your tyranny; at least do it in an effective way!

In Iran, the vanguard security force seems more focused on internal dissent than on external threats. Is that a failure of imagination, or is the Guard overwhelmed by taking on too much?

He added, You put me in solitary confinement many times, and you realized every time that it does not work.

At a moment when Israeli agents and its allied operatives appear to regularly penetrate Iran and freely target its nuclear program, the episode highlights the fixation of the IRGCs intelligence branch instead on domestic activists and dual citizens it accuses of espionage, providing a window into its threat priorities.

The latest alleged Israeli attack, an explosion at the Natanz uranium enrichment plant April 11 that destroyed thousands of centrifuges the second devastating strike on Natanz in less than a year comes after Irans well-protected top nuclear scientist, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, was assassinated in broad daylight last December.

The disconnect between the attacks and the IRGCs focus is raising questions even among staunch loyalists of the Islamic Republic about how an authoritarian regime obsessed with infiltrators has become so vulnerable to external threats.

For Iran, one root issue appears to be the cost of an ideological military force that sees itself as much more. The often hubristic self-image of the IRGC, created to protect the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has outstripped its capabilities.

Analysts say the IRGC is overburdened, having assumed more and more functions of the state. As the IRGC fails repeatedly to prevent sabotage widely attributed to the Mossad, they say, it seeks to compensate by hitting domestic targets.

The IRGC at times loses sight of its main mission, due to its ever-expanding portfolios, says Ali Alfoneh, an analyst at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.

Incapable of preventing Mossad operations in Iran, the IRGC creates the illusion of intelligence superiority by hitting soft targets such as Iranian dual nationals, says Mr. Alfoneh, the author of two books on the IRGCs rise.

They are distracted, and also I think myopic. They are looking for an easy win, says Afshon Ostovar, an Iran expert at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. They go after small-potato dissidents, or just invent them to begin with, because its something they can show the regime [and] everybody else.

But what they have not developed is a real unity of effort, and a real articulation of what the danger is, says Dr. Ostovar, author of Vanguard of the Imam: Religion, Politics, and Irans Revolutionary Guards.

Other inherent security vulnerabilities, say experts, are created by widespread economic discontent and inefficiencies in overlapping and redundant state institutions.

Irans economic hardship and corruption, says Mr. Alfoneh, eases recruitment of the citizenry by foreign powers.

Majid Asgaripour/WANA/Reuters/File

Protesters burn the U.S. and Israeli flags during a demonstration against the killing of Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, Iran's top nuclear scientist, in Tehran, Iran, Nov. 28, 2020.

Its not just them looking in the wrong places [for threats], but really discounting how much discontent there is within Iran within the ranks of the government, the armed forces, the civil servants, says Dr. Ostovar. This isnt all political discontent, but it leaves people more susceptible to inducements that foreign intelligence services can offer them.

Even Mossad derived a benefit from Irans many intelligence distractions, according to the London-based Jewish Chronicle. In a detailed account of the Fakhrizadeh killing published in February, citing intelligence sources, it said a team of more than 20 spies both Israeli and local Iranian agents spent eight months getting close to their target and smuggling parts of a remote-controlled gun.

The audacious operation succeeded partly because Iranian security services were too busy watching suspected political dissenters, the Chronicle reported.

Those dots have been connected in Tehran, too, raising questions like never before about IRGC priorities.

Another fire at the Natanz nuclear facility isnt it a sign of how serious the issue of infiltration is? asked former commander of the IRGC, Mohsen Rezaei, in a tweet. The countrys security apparatus is in need of cleansing.

Former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad went further, asking about Irans $1.2 billion-per-year security apparatus: How is it that, instead of fighting off the enemy, you are standing against the people? How is it that the people have turned into the threat?

The political rationale might be simple.

The regime leadership is aware of the substandard performance of its institutions in the intelligence wars against foreign powers, says Mr. Alfoneh. But I also suspect they are content as long as those same institutions display full competence suppressing the domestic opposition, which has hitherto secured the regimes survival.

The IRGCs broadening remit includes a major role in the sanctions-strapped economy; supporting regional proxy forces from Lebanon and Syria to Iraq and Yemen; building an expanding ballistic missile and drone program; and fighting a shadow war against the United States and Israel.

Yet it has also found time for lethal crackdowns on protests that left hundreds of Iranian citizens dead; made spectacles of arresting dual nationals and successfully luring dissidents within kidnapping range; and stepped into Irans vicious political fray.

The IRGC even produced an expensive TV series called Gando, a spy thriller that portrays it as invincible, while insinuating that the centrist President Hassan Rouhani and Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif are sellouts to archenemies America and Israel.

Mr. Zarif dismissed Gando as a lie, but sparked controversy in an interview leaked in late April when he said Iranian diplomacy was sacrificed to IRGC military interests. In the interview, for a government oral history project, he said the Guards much-revered Qods Force commander, Gen. Qassem Soleimani, killed in an American drone strike in January 2020, sought to scupper the 2015 nuclear deal.

Days after the leak, IRGC intelligence agents reportedly raided the offices of President Rouhani and of Mr. Zarif, and carried away documents.

The political firestorm is the latest example of how Irans deep state of security and intelligence forces, which report to Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, continue to have power without accountability and dominate the weak state, writes Karim Sadjadpour, Iran analyst of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

While the Guards use of fear and coercion might be able to indefinitely sustain the Islamic Republics internal contradictions, this should not be mistaken for popular legitimacy, Mr. Sadjadpour wrote in The Atlantic in March. During four decades, the Islamic Republic proved adept at surviving but, like many revolutionary regimes, incapable of reforming.

And that creates a systemwide lack of unity that can lead to vulnerability.

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The regime itself is a compromise, between the ruling institutions and the supreme leader who sits on top of it, says Dr. Ostovar. Mr. Khamenei has not found a way to become a dictator and just impose a king-like efficiency to the system, and theres also an indigenous looseness to the system that allows these cracks and these fissures that can be exploited by Israel and whomever else.

IRGC efforts are complicated, too, by the scale of taking on the world, or at least a significant part of it, as an enemy, says Dr. Ostovar. Its difficult for them to keep up. Its got to be exhausting, because their foot is on the pedal all the time.

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Iran attacked: Is Revolutionary Guard looking the wrong way? - The Christian Science Monitor