So Dick Cheney was right. In the end the Iraqi people did respond to United States soldiers with flowers. The only trouble was, it was their shipping out, not their digging in, that the Iraqi people celebrated.
This week, as US forces marked their formal withdrawal from the towns and cities they invaded more than six years ago, the Iraqi people showed the kind of spontaneous joy the former vice-president once imagined would welcome the 173rd Airborne Brigade. There were streamers and balloons, pop concerts in the park and, yes, flowers, garlanding the abandoned checkpoints of the US military in petals.
Now, as Iraq recedes, it is the country next door that looms ever larger. Handled the wrong way, Iran threatens to define Barack Obama the way Iraq defined George W Bush.
Some believe Bush’s mistake was not to have shifted his aim eastward: that if he was looking for an oil-rich state in the Persian Gulf with links to terrorism and dreams of weapons of mass destruction then Iran, not Iraq, should have been his target.
That kind of talk makes others nervous. They fear that the US might one day repeat the Iraq calamity, with the ayatollahs cast in the role of Saddam Hussein.
Those worriers will hardly find it comforting that the men who agitated for invasion in 2003 are back on the warpath: Paul Wolfowitz, former deputy defence secretary, castigated Obama in the Washington Post earlier this month for taking “a neutral posture” towards the street protesters in Iran and called on the president to throw all his prestige behind the uprising and against the regime. He wasn’t calling for regime change in Tehran, exactly, but Wolfowitz spoke about Iran’s rulers in the same way he once spoke about Saddam.
Have the events of the past three weeks in Tehran made the prospect of US-led action against Iran — up to and including the use of military force — more or less likely?
At first glance, those advocating regime change seem to have had a boost. The world has just watched a three-week infomercial exposing the brutality of Iran’s leaders. If it’s not allegations of a stolen election, including the black comedy of Monday’s announcement by the Guardian Council that, yes, there had been an error in the count and therefore Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s vote would be revised upwards — it’s the violence that has followed.
One Western diplomat says opinion in the chancelleries of Europe has hardened, even among those once well-disposed towards Tehran: “They have seen the face of this regime — and it’s not pretty.”
What’s more, those eager for confrontation might find a willing partner in Iran’s rulers. Noted authority Ali Ansari predicts that a regime that now “suffers from a serious domestic legitimacy problem — and knows it — will seek a foreign foe, something to rally the country around”. Ansari predicts “acts of provocation” and hopes Israel is wise enough not to take the bait.
Above all, those pushing for regime change could find international public opinion more receptive than a month ago. Three weeks of YouTube footage, including the blood-spattered image of Neda Soltan, the female protester shot dead in cold blood, has surely created a well of public sympathy from which any advocate of action against the mullahs could draw.
One can imagine the arguments as, in 2011, Obama, backed by his loyal ally Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain, addresses the United Nations demanding a united show of strength to save the people of Iran.
But the events of recent weeks could point in the opposite direction too. Officially the US and United Kingdom say they want a change in policy, not regime — and, despite everything, that door is not closed. Indeed, it’s possible that the supreme leader’s Robert Mugabe-like attacks on Britain — casting London and the BBC as the puppet masters behind the uprising — are a diversionary tactic by an elite that does not want to attack the US. Ali Khamenei has pointedly failed to rebuff Obama’s outstretched hand. In other words, a policy change by Iran is still possible.
But the deeper point relates to public sentiment, especially in the US. Seven years ago Bush cast Iran as part of the “axis of evil”, a faraway, abstract place clothed in black and bent on destruction. Now the world’s people have read Iranians tweeting, minute by minute, on their aching desire for freedom. They have seen that Iranians have a human face.
In this, an unexpected but eloquent source has been, of all things, Comedy Central’s satirical Daily Show. Incredibly, the programme had its own correspondent in Iran. Brilliantly sending up the grammar of flak-jacketed TV reporters, he has been ushering real Iranians into American living rooms — listening in mock frustration as they refuse to conform to the stereotype, telling him: “We don’t hate Jews, we don’t hate Americans, we don’t hate anybody.”
Even the goat herder in a remote village shows a stunning knowledge of US geography; a market trader correctly identifies the US speaker of the House. As anchor Jon Stewart put it on the eve of the election: “The evil, despotic, apocalyptic death cult we know as Iran appears to be one of the more vibrant democracies in the Middle East.”
This could cut both ways. Some Europeans and Americans might feel such empathy for the green revolutionaries that they join the neocon call and demand their governments act to rescue the Iranians from tyranny.
But it’s more likely that many would recoil from a shock-and-awe bombardment that would kill thousands of the very people for whom they now have a strong affinity. There was, alas, too little feeling for the peoples of Iraq and Afghanistan: they were always faceless, even in death.
All of which leaves Obama engaged in delicate diplomatic footwork. He must stand up for democracy, condemning the suppression in Iran as “outrageous”, even as he gives the ayatollahs no excuse to crack down on the protesters as foreign agents, and all the while ensuring the Western offer to Iran of rapprochement in return for compromise remains on the table.
It is subtle work. But now that the world’s people have seen the human face of Iran, nothing less will do. —