January 2, 2009

Better watch where that logic leads

By: David Donadio

Reuel Marc Gerecht’s latest brings an unintended smirk:

Anyone who knows anything about the Middle East knows that Sunni and Shiite radicals don’t work together — er, except when they do. Proof that the conventional wisdom is badly wrong is on offer in Gaza, where the manifest destiny of the Islamic Republic of Iran is now unfolding. Tehran has been aiding Hamas for years with the aim of radicalizing politics across the entire Arab Middle East. Now Israel’s response to thousands of Hamas rocket provocations appears to be doing just that. . . .

Although often little appreciated in the West, revolutionary Iran’s ecumenical quest has remained a constant in its approach to Sunni Muslims. The anti-Shiite rhetoric of many Sunni fundamentalist groups has rarely been reciprocated by Iran’s ruling elite. Since the death in 1989 of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the charismatic, quintessentially Shiite leader of the Islamic revolution, Iran’s ruling mullahs have tried assiduously to downplay the sectarian content in their militant message.

Khomeini’s successor, Ali Khamenei, has consistently married his virulent anti-American rhetoric (Khomeini’s “Great Satan” has become Khamenei’s “Satan Incarnate”) with a global appeal to faithful Muslims to join the battle against the U.S. and its allies. Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the most politically adept of the revolution’s founding clerics, loved to sponsor militant Sunni-Shiite gatherings when he was speaker of parliament and later as president (1989-1997). He and Mr. Khamenei, who have worked hand-in-hand on national-security issues and have unquestionably authorized every major terrorist operation since the death of Khomeini in 1989, have always been the ultimate pragmatists, even reaching out to Arab Sunni radicals with a strong anti-Shiite bent.

Gerecht knows what he’s saying, of course, but the WSJ may have just unwittingly made the case that Iran is a rational state actor. Because after all, if you skillfully manage your relations with the Sunnis of Central Asia and the Hindus of India, conduct back-channel dealings with the Jews of Israel against Saddam, and then work with the Christians who brokered the UN-mediated truce with Iraq, maybe you’re not so ideological after all. . . .