The
Protesters in Iran Need Real Help from Washington
By Michael Singh
Washington Post
January 1, 2018
With Iran experiencing its largest, most widespread protests in
years, thoughts in the White House will inevitably turn to Iran’s 2009
“Green Movement,” sparked by what was widely considered to be the rigging of
presidential elections by Iranian authorities that year. President Barack
Obama’s administration, unsure how to help the protesters and reluctant to
scuttle its nascent engagement with Tehran, responded to the demonstrations with
diffidence, prompting criticism from left and right alike.
It should thus come as little surprise that
President Trump — fresh off repudiating Obama’s nuclear deal with
Iran — has taken the opposite tack and thrown his weight behind the
protesters. But the Trump administration faces the conundrum that has long
stymied U.S. officials seeking to support dissidents abroad: What precisely can
we do, beyond issuing statements? After all, a loud statement unsupported by
action is unlikely to have more impact than one delivered sotto voce.
Like so many protests around the world, the current demonstrations in
Iran appear to have begun with bread-and-butter concerns. Iranians expected
their lives to improve after the 2015 nuclear deal, and although Iran has
experienced economic growth overall, Iranians still face rising prices and high
unemployment. Economics and politics are inextricably linked, so it is not
surprising that protesters have also decried corruption and expenditures on
foreign conflicts in Syria and elsewhere at a time when domestic needs seem so
great.
Given its own concerns about Iran’s regional policies,
Washington has a stake in this debate. Yet many, including many Iranians, will
advise the United States and other foreign governments to stay quiet on the
protests for fear of tarnishing them by association with outside powers. But the
regime will seek to paint protesters as foreign agents regardless of the
reality. The best way to counter this is not to remain silent but to ensure that
U.S. statements of support are broadly multilateral and are backed with more
practical steps.
The United States and its allies should, through public
statements, private messages, U.N. resolutions and whatever other vehicles are
available, clearly express their support for Iranians’ right to protest. They
should also warn authorities in Iran against any violent suppression of the
demonstrations, whether such violence takes place on the streets or — as
occurred after the 2009 protests — later on in homes and prisons, out of the
public eye. Both the regime and demonstrators should be made constantly aware
that the world’s attention is fixed on them.
If the regime resorts to violence anyway, the international
response should focus on diplomatic isolation. European and Asian states should
reduce their diplomatic ties with Iran and downgrade Iran’s participation in
international forums. Sanctions may also have a role, but they should be
carefully targeted against those responsible for any crackdown — as well as
those outside Iran who facilitate their actions — so as not to harm the
Iranians whom the measures aim to support.
Such warnings alone are unlikely to deter Iranian
authorities, who have proved both savvy and ruthless in employing their security
apparatus against dissidents. Thus another focus of the international
community’s response should be helping Iranians elude that apparatus and
exercise the basic rights that it seeks to deny them.
In 2009, State Department official Jared
Cohen, without authorization, implored Twitter to forgo a shutdown for
scheduled maintenance that happened to coincide with the protests in Iran.
Present-day officials, journalists and tech execs should take their cue from
Cohen but go further, seeking to provide platforms outside Iran for dissidents
to speak out and supply accurate information to those inside Iran about both the
protests and the costs of the regime’s policies, along with the technical
tools Iranians need to evade censorship and surveillance.
Finally, the Trump administration should consider how its
broader Iran policy affects what happens inside Iran. This is not to say that
the United States should be in the business of currying favor with the
regime’s “moderates” — Washington has engaged in such efforts over the
decades, largely fruitlessly. Instead, the United States can sharpen the choices
facing Iran as a whole — and strengthen the arguments of pragmatists arguing
for a change in policy — by raising the costs of Iranian regional adventurism
and nuclear pursuits while keeping the door open to diplomacy should Iran wish
to pursue its interests peacefully.
Western officials should avoid projecting their own hopes
onto the Iranian protesters, whose grievances appear varied and are not
necessarily aligned with our own complaints about the regime. Western officials
should also keep their expectations of the protests in check. They could gather
steam, or they could subside. The sign of a successful policy response will be
its ability to survive either eventuality, based on the premise that an Iran
that is more responsive to the needs of its people will be less dangerous to its
region and to the United States.