Iran's Deadly Ambition. Ilan Berman
Iran was no different. Publicly, officials in Tehran took an exceedingly optimistic view of the antiregime sentiment sweeping the region. High-ranking Iranian officials repeatedly depicted the regional ferment as an outgrowth of Ayatollah Khomeini’s successful 1979 revolution and the start of an “Islamic awakening” in which the Islamic Republic would inevitably play a leading role.1 Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, even ordered the creation of a special “secretariat” headed by former foreign minister Ali Akbar Velayati to help bring Islamic movements to the political fore throughout the region.2
Privately, however, officials in Tehran were all too aware that they could become the next casualty of the Arab Spring. The controversial June 2009 reelection of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to the Iranian presidency had brought millions of protesters into the streets of Tehran and other Iranian cities—a groundswell of popular outrage that coalesced into the so-called Green Movement. Months of unrest aimed at the ruling clerical regime followed, presenting the Islamic Republic with its most fundamental political challenge since its 1979 revolution. Although the Iranian government successfully beat back this “green wave,” mostly through the use of widespread brutality and repression, officials in Tehran were all too aware that discontent continued to simmer beneath the surface of Iranian society. They therefore worried that popular revolts taking place in Tunis, Cairo, and elsewhere could easily translate into renewed disorder at home. As a result, they determined that, in keeping with the old axiom that “the best defense is a good offense,” the surest way to prevent a “Persian Spring” was to harness, co-opt, and exploit these same stirrings abroad.
COURTING CAIRO . . . AND SUBVERTING AL-SISI
Egypt presented Iran with its first opportunity to influence the politics of the Arab Spring. During the three decades before Mubarak’s ouster in February 2011, Tehran and Cairo were regional rivals and ideological adversaries. The animus dated back to the early 1980s and stemmed from Iran’s opposition to Egypt’s initiative, codified at Camp David, to normalize relations with the state of Israel. When Egyptian president Anwar Sadat was subsequently assassinated by a gang of militant army officers, the Islamic Republic openly took the side of the extremists, going so far as to name a street in Tehran after the lead gunman, Khalid Islambouli.3
The resulting hostility between the two countries was both deep and enduring. Diplomatic relations, suspended after Sadat’s assassination, remained frozen for the following thirty years, as myriad issues—from Iran’s sponsorship of the Hamas terrorist group to its nuclear ambitions—created tensions between Tehran and Cairo. But Mubarak’s departure and the subsequent rise of a new, Islamist government in Egypt afforded Iran a new strategic opportunity.
Speculation about contacts between Shia Iran and Sunni Islamists, chief among them Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood, had been swirling around for years, encouraged by Iran’s cooperation with Hamas and its tactical contacts with al-Qaeda.4 The rise of the Brotherhood to political prominence in Egypt following Mubarak’s ouster brought these connections to the fore. In February 2011, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei met Kamal al-Halbavi, a senior member of Egypt’s Brotherhood, in Tehran, in what was widely seen as an Iranian effort to position itself at the vanguard of the Arab Spring.5 Thereafter, Tehran became a vocal supporter of the Brotherhood’s political agenda and ascent to power in Cairo.
Even before the Brotherhood seized power in 2012, Tehran had already improved its position vis-à-vis the Egyptian state. In mid-February 2011, Iran requested, and Egypt’s caretaker government granted, permission for two warships to transit the Suez Canal, which was the first time in more than three decades an Iranian warship passed through those waters.6 In the weeks that followed, the new government in Cairo also agreed to reestablish long-frozen diplomatic ties.7 Some Egyptians even went so far as to flirt with the idea of accepting Iran’s long-standing offer of nuclear cooperation, something the Egyptian government under Mubarak had categorically rejected.8 These changes transformed Egypt from a hedge against Iran’s regional ambitions into an enabler of them.
The subsequent rise of the Muslim Brotherhood to power in Cairo further deepened this budding alignment. Iranian leaders took pains to praise the “Islamic awakening” that had taken place in Egypt and made concrete political steps to normalize the long-unsettled relationship between Tehran and Cairo.9
Iran’s ayatollahs found a willing partner in Cairo. In the run-up to his election as president, Mohammed Morsi allegedly conducted an interview with Iran’s FARS News Agency, in which he waxed optimistic about the possibility of reactivating bilateral ties. “We must restore normal relations with Iran based on shared interests, and expand areas of political coordination and economic cooperation because this will create a balance of pressure in the region,” Morsi is said to have told the news channel.10 Morsi subsequently denied the interview, perhaps to appease his domestic Sunni constituency. But he said much the same thing in more muted tones in September of that year at the annual summit of the Non-Aligned Movement, coincidentally held in Tehran, when he declared that he was handing over the movement’s presidency “to our brothers, the Iranians.”11 (These contacts would come back to haunt Morsi; in February 2014, Egyptian authorities charged the ousted president with espionage and treason, accusing him of conspiring with “foreign powers”—Iran chief among them.12)
The Iranian-Egyptian détente turned out to be short-lived, however. In June 2013, Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood–dominated government was overthrown and replaced with a military clique dominated by General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi. Initially, al-Sisi struck a conciliatory tone toward the Islamic Republic, making a point of inviting Iran’s president-elect, Hassan Rouhani, to attend his swearing-in ceremony—the first time such an offer had been extended since Sadat’s assassination.13 Rouhani demurred, sending an official representative in his place. But the incident was enough to fan speculation that Cairo and Tehran were improving ties.
Indeed, early on, al-Sisi’s government appeared genuinely interested in engaging the Islamic Republic. Seeking to fill the void left by the deterioration of the long-standing Egyptian-American strategic relationship, Cairo began courting all manner of new foreign-policy actors—including, most conspicuously, Russia, with which the al-Sisi government signed a multi-billion-dollar deal for arms and defense supplies.14 Iran figured prominently in this calculus as well; in October 2013, the interim foreign minister Nabil Fahmy said as much when, in an interview with Iran’s Press TV, he called the Islamic Republic a “very important” country with which his government is seeking better relations. “The new Iranian president has sent out to the world some positive signals and the world is interested in engaging Iran,” Fahmy said.15 Cairo, moreover, continued to thaw chilly relations despite significant domestic opposition in Egypt over the prospects of détente between the two longtime regional rivals.16
Quickly, however, Cairo soured on the possibility of resetting relations with Tehran and came to view Iran once again as a destabilizing force—and for good reason. In January 2014, Egypt’s chargé d’affaires to Tehran delivered a communiqué to Iran’s foreign ministry formally complaining about Iran’s interference in Egypt’s internal affairs.17 Egypt’s complaint was a reflection of the Iranian perception that al-Sisi, who launched a very public campaign to clip the political wings of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, was not a worthwhile ally in their “Islamic awakening” and a response to Tehran’s consequent attempts to subvert his government.
Iran’s efforts in this regard appear to be under way. The Iranian regime reportedly formulated a strategy to train and equip Islamic militants opposed to the Egyptian government.18 This initiative included training a Libya-based proxy group known as the Free Egyptian Army in northwest Libya and a similar effort by the Islamic Republic’s Quds Force paramilitary to train Muslim Brotherhood militants in Sudan, thereby expanding the lethality and sophistication of the insurgent threat facing the Egyptian government.19
QUIET SUBVERSION IN BAHRAIN
Egypt was not the only arena in which Iran attempted to improve its regional position. In the Persian Gulf kingdom of Bahrain, Arab Spring–related