"Jordan's King Abdullah II warned a year ago with uncharacteristic
bluntness that the emergence of a new government in Iraq could create
a "Shiite crescent," Shiites in Iraq reacted angrily and Jordanian
officials insisted the king had been misunderstood.
But many analysts believe he meant exactly what he said: that a
fortified Iranian influence now stretches throughout Iraq, through the
Kurdistan region into Turkey, to an ever weaker Syria and down into
Lebanon's Hezbollah-dominated south, on Israel's border. Iran's hand
also stretches into the heart of the Arabian peninsula through Shiite
communities scattered in the Persian Gulf countries."
""A weak Iraq is now sitting next to a huge, mighty Iran. Now the only
counterpart to Iran is not a regional power, but a foreign power like
the United States," said Abdel Khaleq Abdullah, a political analyst
and television host in Dubai. "This is unsustainable. It's bad for
[Persian] Gulf security. It's given Iran a sense of supremacy that we
all feel."


Note the comment from Dubai, home of DP World, soon to take over
operation of eight of the U.S. Gulf and East Coast ports.  What
happens if Iranian pressure is put on Dubai and the rest of the UAE,
all a very short trip across the Persian Gulf from well-armed Iran? 
Will the UAE "cooperate" with Iran to survive?  Will that mean passing
information from its DP World on U.S. ports infrastructure and
security to Iran and thence to Hamas, Hizballah and al Qaeda?  One
wonders.  One wonders also at the mentality of our President...

David Bier

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-iranrising18feb18,0,1393934,full.story?coll=la-home-headlines

NEWS ANALYSIS

Iran Was on Edge; Now It's on Top

The war in Iraq has bolstered the regime's influence in the region and
made it bolder.
By Megan K. Stack and Borzou Daragahi
Times Staff Writers

February 18, 2006

BAGHDAD — The Islamic government in neighboring Iran watched with
trepidation in March 2003 when U.S.-led troops stormed Iraq to
overthrow Saddam Hussein's regime and start remaking the political map
of the Mideast.

In retrospect, the Islamic Republic could have celebrated: The war has
left America's longtime nemesis with profound influence in the new
Iraq and pushed it to the apex of power in the region.

Emboldened by its new status and shielded by deep oil reserves, Tehran
is pressing ahead with its nuclear program, daring the international
community to impose sanctions. Iran is a Shiite Muslim nation with an
ethnic Persian majority, and the blossoming of its influence has
fueled the ambitions of long-repressed Shiites throughout the Arab world.

At the same time, Tehran has tightened alliances with groups such as
Hamas, which recently won Palestinian elections, and with governments
in Damascus and Beijing.

In the 1980s, Iran spent eight years and thousands of lives waging a
war to overthrow Hussein, whose regime buffered the Sunni
Muslim-dominated Arab world from Iran. But in the end, it took the
U.S.-led invasion to topple Iraq's dictator and allow Iranian
influence to spread through a chaotic, battle-torn country.

Now Iraq's fledgling democracy has placed power in the hands of the
nation's Shiite majority and its Kurdish allies, many of whom lived as
exiles in Iran and maintain strong religious, cultural and linguistic
ties to it. The two groups sit atop most of Iraq's oil, and both seek
a decentralized government that would give them maximum control of it.
A weak central government would also limit Sunni influence.

The proposed changes have aggravated ancient tensions between the two
branches of Islam, not to mention Arabs and Iranians. Neighboring
countries have historical and tribal links to Iraq's Sunnis.

"A weak Iraq is now sitting next to a huge, mighty Iran. Now the only
counterpart to Iran is not a regional power, but a foreign power like
the United States," said Abdel Khaleq Abdullah, a political analyst
and television host in Dubai. "This is unsustainable. It's bad for
[Persian] Gulf security. It's given Iran a sense of supremacy that we
all feel."

Fear of a Shiite Iraq has helped shape the Sunni Arab world's view of
the insurgency in that country. Although many revile the violence,
there is also a quiet sense that the insurgents are fighting on behalf
of Sunnis, standing up for their sect in the face of American and
Iranian attempts to dominate Iraq.

Some Sunni extremists, jihadis from Yemen to Morocco, have been drawn
to Iraq to attack symbols of Shiite power.

"When they attack the Shiites, they think they are attacking the
Iranian influence," said Mustafa Alani, a counter-terrorism expert at
the Gulf Research Center in Dubai. "They think they're attacking
Iranian agents. To them, it's a legitimate target."

Though Iran owes much of its newfound strength to the war in Iraq,
that's not the only event that has benefited it. The U.S. eliminated
another foe, the Taliban regime in neighboring Afghanistan, in 2001.

Meanwhile, hard-liners in Tehran centralized their power and quashed
dissent after winning control of the government in elections that
brought President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to office last year. U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asked Congress this week to
increase 2006 spending on promoting democracy in Iran, to $85 million
from $10 million.

Rising oil prices have deepened Iran's value as a strategic partner
and dramatically increased its assets.

Keenly aware that it is playing with a strong hand, Iran is working to
establish itself as a power to be reckoned with beyond Iraq. The
government's increasing confidence can be seen in its aggressive
insistence on the right to a nuclear program.

In 2003, when the secret program first became an international
controversy, Tehran sought to calm concerns with a conciliatory,
soft-spoken tone. Now talks with three European powers have failed,
and it is pressing ahead with uranium enrichment and even hinting that
it might pull out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. It also has
sharpened its rhetoric.

At a news conference in January, Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamid Reza
Asefi unleashed a torrent of sarcasm and taunts at Europe. British
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw was "ignorant," he said, and French
President Jacques Chirac "doesn't understand democracy."

The possibility that Iran will develop nuclear weapons is another
worry for the Sunni-dominated Arab world.

When Jordan's King Abdullah II warned a year ago with uncharacteristic
bluntness that the emergence of a new government in Iraq could create
a "Shiite crescent," Shiites in Iraq reacted angrily and Jordanian
officials insisted the king had been misunderstood.

But many analysts believe he meant exactly what he said: that a
fortified Iranian influence now stretches throughout Iraq, through the
Kurdistan region into Turkey, to an ever weaker Syria and down into
Lebanon's Hezbollah-dominated south, on Israel's border. Iran's hand
also stretches into the heart of the Arabian peninsula through Shiite
communities scattered in the Persian Gulf countries.

The roots of distrust between Sunnis and Shiites are old, and Persian
rulers have vied for centuries with Arab and Ottoman rivals. But until
the invasion of Iraq, a solid bloc of Sunni Arab governments ruled the
northern and western coasts of the gulf. Strong, oil-rich Iraq and
Saudi Arabia were seen as counterweights to Iran.

For many gulf Arabs, Iran is a long-feared boogeyman, quietly coming
to dominate Iraqi politics with an eye to controlling those vast oil
fields.

"We fought a war together to keep Iran from occupying Iraq. . . . Now
we are handing the whole country over to Iran without reason," Saudi
Foreign Minister Saud al Faisal told the Council on Foreign Relations
in New York last year.

Sunni Arab leaders across the region worry about a lessening of their
power, wonder whether they've fallen out of favor with the Americans,
and fret over increasing threats to their dominance over Shiites at home.

"The U.S. knows everything and they're allowing everything to happen,"
said Adel Mawda, a Sunni sheik and legislator in Bahrain's parliament.
"They know very well the Sunnis have lost a lot, and they are not
defending them."

The example of Iraq has inspired many Shiites living under the rule of
Sunni governments to become more outspoken in demanding their due.

In Saudi Arabia, the Shiite minority is concentrated in the east, the
same turf that covers the kingdom's vast oil reserves. For Saudi
Shiites, the war in Iraq has helped deliver increased political
participation and unprecedented religious freedoms. For the first
time, Shiites have been permitted to openly celebrate the Shiite
holiday of Ashura with traditional processions.

Saudi Arabia is leery that Iran may diminish its importance as a
regional power broker, analysts say. They cite Riyadh's involvement in
trying to craft a compromise between Lebanon and Syria as evidence
that Saudi Arabia is working overtime to establish its importance.

In tiny Bahrain, the example of Iraq has exacerbated tensions between
a disadvantaged Shiite majority and the ruling Sunni minority. Shiites
have taken to the streets in a series of increasingly volatile
demonstrations in recent months, and sectarian fault lines have deepened.

"It's reached the point where the community wants to go to the street,
to make uprising, to make a revolution," said Sheik Ali Salman,
president of Bahrain's largest Shiite organization, Al Wefaq. "Nobody
wants it to happen. But when the government doesn't want to deal with
it, we can't promise it won't happen. It's not in our hands."

Iran is also showing a more overt interest in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, nurturing its long-standing ties to the Lebanese Hezbollah
and Palestinian Hamas militant groups. President Ahmadinejad, like
those groups, has called for the destruction of the Jewish state.

The upset victory of Hamas in recent Palestinian elections also
promises to boost Tehran's regional role. If the United States and the
European Union back away diplomatically and withdraw funding from the
Palestinians, some analysts think Iran will have an opportunity to
fill in the void as a longtime supporter of Hamas, gaining an
unprecedented foothold in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Syria, internationally alienated over suspicions that it has played a
role in political assassinations in Lebanon, has also been embraced by
Iran. Just days after the slaying of former Lebanese Prime Minister
Rafik Hariri plunged Syria into deeper diplomatic distress, Tehran and
Damascus announced a "united front" to meet any threats.

There is long-standing kinship between the Shiite state and Syria's
ruling Allawite sect, an offshoot of Shiism. Analysts describe the two
countries, along with Hezbollah, as a defiant coalition that finds
common ground in its standoff with the international community.






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