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ByAnonymous, Anonymous

Opinion

Most Iranians want ties with Israel, not with Hizbollah

March 4, 2011 10:06
6 min read

Well before the recent wave of Arab revolt swept the Middle East, the region had already witnessed a historic, people-power challenge to a despotic order. In 2009, three million Iranians poured into the streets of Tehran to protest against President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's fraudulent re-election. His government put down these protests brutally but the scenes of Tehran thronged with millions of protesters seared themselves into the Middle East's consciousness. For an instant, it became tantalisingly clear to the ordinary people of a region paralysed by dictatorship that they could indeed rise up against their autocrats.

It is now Iranians who are watching enviously from the sidelines, inspired by the will of Egyptians and Tunisians to claim their liberty. Twice this past month, tens of thousands of protesters turned out across Iran to chant for an end to the Islamic regime, their hopes for change buoyed by the peaceful uprisings in the neighbourhood. While strict restrictions on journalists inside Iran make it difficult to gauge the scope of the turn-out, the flaring up by Iran's politically disaffected makes it clear that Persian Iran will not be unmoved by the Arab world's tremors.

Iran's hard-line regime crushed last month's protests as swiftly and cruelly as it did those of 2009. When it comes to dealing with a rebellious population, Iran's leaders have more in common with Colonel Muammar Gaddafi of Libya than Egypt's Hosni Mubarak: they will not relent without a bloody fight. The oil revenue they have at their fingers buys them shock-troops and the allegiance of a small minority they can use to club dissent.

This is partly why Iranians' struggle for democratic change is likely to be so much more protracted than what has unfolded in Egypt and Tunisia. Iran's protest movement lacks momentum and has yet to produce the kind of sustained confrontation with authorities that has altered politics in places like Egypt and Bahrain.