Newsweek - USA (2019-12-27)

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NEWSWEEK.COM 23


a major strategic victory, it came at a steep price.


Iran’s campaigns cost capital, both human and


financial, and increasingly strict U.S. sanctions


have choked up Tehran’s access to disposable in-


come. Though the Iranian government is believed


to still have access to considerable wealth to run


its operations, the dual effects of a U.S.-imposed


trade siege and domestic mismanagement have


made life more difficult for everyday Iranians un-


able to capitalize on the economic reforms prom-


ised by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.


The Rouhani administration’s decision last month


to cut gas subsidies and ultimately transition to a


welfare-based system had actually been in the works


for some time and was supported by the Internation-


al Monetary Fund. Still, the sudden shift appeared


seismic for many Iranians accustomed to cheap fuel


and citizens rose up with a rare intensity. The govern-


ment’s reaction on the ground was swift and, against


what officials claimed were rioters, deadly.


Amnesty International has estimated that more


than 200 Iranians have been killed during the un-


rest. Brian Hook, a State Department representative


for Iran, placed the casualties at “many hundreds,


perhaps over a thousand”—a figure far higher than


other estimates provided by human rights moni-


tors. No conclusive count exists and the Iranian


government has disputed those numbers.


Some of the fiercest resistance to the crackdown


has emerged in Iran’s western Khuzestan province,


where Arab separatist groups such as the Arab Strug-


gle Movement for the Liberation of Ahvaz have re-


ported “violent clashes between residents, occupa-


tion forces and militias.” While protesters expressed


frustrations with the country’s economic situation


here, too, another potentially more serious peril


loomed: separatist groups in key border areas.


Those groups are “the biggest non-state threat to


Iran today,” Ariane Tabatabai, an associate political


scientist at the RAND Corporation and an adjunct se-


nior research scholar at Columbia University’s School


of International and Public Affairs, told Newsweek.


The most volatile border areas are Sistan-Baluchistan,


Khuzestan and Kurdistan. Watchers worry that any


escalation of insurgencies in these parts could propel


Iran toward the sectarian strife seen in Syria.


“That’s part of what’s deterring many Iranians from


outright pushing for regime collapse: The lessons of


Syria loom large,” Tabatabai added.


A RESULT, IRAN IS A ),567ʝ25'(5TA R G E T.

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