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So why has Tehran been silent on Gaza?

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Iran claims to be Palestine’s biggest proponent. So why has Tehran been silent on Gaza?




    • BY Trita Parsi
    • AUGUST 8, 2014
Nothing in the Middle East seems normal right now. Israel locks the United States out of cease-fire talks with Egypt over Gaza. U.S.-Saudi relations look increasingly like a marriage that both sides regret getting into in the first place. Egypt's state media publicly cheers Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he bombs Gaza. Saudi Arabia pretends to be unaware of the ongoing fighting between Israel and Hamas. Protests against Israel's bombing campaign are larger in Europe than in the Arab Middle East.

The surprises don't stop there. Iran's relative silence on the Gaza war has been deafening: Spanish actors Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem have been more forceful in their criticism of Israel's Gaza attacks than many Iranian officials.

Iran is usually known for jumping on every possible opportunity to blast Israel for its treatment of Palestinians. The Iranian game plan in the past few decades has been to boost its bid for regional leadership by portraying the Arab states as impotent "servants of American interests" in the Middle East, while portraying Tehran as the true champion of the Palestinian cause -- and therefore the leader of the Islamic world.

Fighting between Hamas and Israel in Gaza is usually a political cash cow for Iran's leaders. But by their own standards, Iranian leaders have remained curiously quiet on the ongoing, month-long fight. Why? Shifting dynamics across the Middle East and a new president in Tehran have changed Iran's political calculus on Palestine.

Iran has a widespread reputation as Hamas's main patron, providing the group with rockets and weapons over the past decade. But the relationship between the Palestinian Islamists and the government in Tehran has never been friction free. The Hamas leadership has long complained that Tehran talked a good game, but in practice did little to help the Palestinian Islamist group. Ideologically, there has always been a gulf between the Muslim Brotherhood-inspired Sunni group and the Shiite thinkers of Qom. But full-on tensions between these disparate Islamists only broke out with the Syrian Civil War, when Hamas sided early on with the Syrian opposition and Tehran backed President Bashar al-Assad. Tehran viewed Hamas Leader Khaled Meshaal's break with the Syrian dictator in 2012 as a betrayal after years of providing the group with both financial support and a base in Damascus.

Earlier this year, Hamas and Tehran officially reconciled. "Relations between Iran and Hamas have returned to be as they were before and we have no problem with Hamas," the speaker of Iran's parliament, Ali Larijani, told a Lebanese television channel. But mistrust remained amid the conciliatory rhetoric, as Iranian officials have told me. Leaders of the Islamic Republic do not have a reputation of forgetting quickly or forgiving genuinely.

It's not just international politics that affect the Hamas-Iran relationship. The election of Hassan Rouhani last year and the success thus far of ongoing U.S.-Iran diplomacy have visibly tempered Tehran's public posture on Israel. Iran has gone from questioning the Holocaust under the former president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to tweeting Rosh Hashana blessings under Rouhani.

The foreign policy team around Rouhani has long favored diplomacy with Washington, and fully understands that toning down Iran's rhetoric against Israel is necessary to make progress with the United States. Beyond Iran's changing posture since Rouhani took office a year ago -- particularly since diplomacy began anew over its nuclear program -- decade-old Iranian negotiation proposals demonstrate both their understanding of Israel's importance to U.S. foreign policy-making, and their willingness to soften their stance.

For instance, in 2003, Tehran sent a proposal for improved relations with the United States to American officials via the Swiss ambassador to Iran. At the time, Rouhani was Iran's national security adviser. His current foreign minister, Javad Zarif, was a co-author of the proposal. As part of a grand bargain with Washington, Tehran signaled its readiness to restrain Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad. (The Bush administration never responded to the Iranian offer).

But perhaps most importantly, Tehran seems not to mind seeing yet another offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood take a beating. Some in Tehran thought that after the Arab uprisings of 2011, the U.S. had concluded that the Middle East's future was in the hands of moderate Sunni Islamist national movements -- Hamas's intellectual brethren. For a moment, it seemed that Islamist parties were ready to sweep elections throughout the region. Washington wanted to be on the right side of history.

But to Iran, the United States was tilting towards the wrong Islamic movement. Once in power, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt showed stronger allegiance to its ideological partners in Syria -- fighting Tehran's ally Assad -- and spent more time flirting with Saudi Arabia than with Iran. Moreover, Tehran's suspicion of Washington's favorable view of the Muslim Brotherhood also fit with another idea it believes America has flirted with: that Turkey's Islamist democracy, led by the Muslim Brotherhood's political ally Recep Tayyip Erdogan, presents the best model for the region.

For some in Tehran, the current Gaza war --and Arab states' reactions to it -- show Washington was wrong to side with the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies. These Sunni Islamist groups lack the popular support to win the political fight for the region's future. And most importantly, Tehran believes that these Sunni movements cannot compete with Iran's ability to stabilize and lead the region. Nor do they have the popular backing to balance Iran's regional or ideological influence.

Whether Tehran's perceptions of American calculations are correct or not is, for now, irrelevant. The Iranian government has once again demonstrated -- this time through silence rather than venomous rhetoric -- that to the Islamic Republic, the Palestinian cause is a means, not an end.

 
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I believe Iranians rightfully said go bleep yourself to Hamas and Palestinians, not to mention exposed the hypocrisy of Arab leaders to the whole Middle East.
 
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Iran is silent because Hamas betrayed Iran and joined the muslim brotherhood scumbags when it came to the wahabbi terrorists in Syria.
 
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Because Iran is taking care of problem near its borders which is ISIS.
 
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Probably Iran got some favors shoved into their hands to look the other way as usual. Just like how they were silent with Invasion of Iraq and Invasion of Afghanstan and even facilitated it.
 
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@kollang @Serpentine @haman10

As usual, we get one of these meaningless flame threads meant to divert attention away from what Israel's committing in Palestine. :disagree:

The situation has nothing to do with Iran, it is Israel's ongoing occupation of decades which brought the situation to what it is today. But, you have these usual people trying to make it appear as something else.

It's amazing how far they go in disrespecting the lives of the thousands of Palestinians killed to appease the Israeli narrative.
 
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@kollang @Serpentine @haman10

As usual, we get one of these meaningless flame threads meant to divert attention away from what Israel's committing in Palestine. :disagree:

The situation has nothing to do with Iran, it is Israel's ongoing occupation of decades which brought the situation to what it is today. But, you have these usual people trying to make it appear as something else.

It's amazing how far they go in disrespecting the lives of the thousands of Palestinians killed to appease the Israeli narrative.

The author is practically pulling words out of his behind. Almost all Iranian officials have bashed Israel with the harshest tones. Iran's leader said explicitly that we (and also other Muslim states) have a duty to arm the West Bank. You know what that means when an official says something like that in public. Also millions of Iranians came in to streets in Quds day, more than any other Muslim country around the world. I don't know what Iran should have done to satisfy the author of this article, maybe attacking Israel directly?
 
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stabilizing Iraq and a possible nuclear deal with the US is more important to them, Hamas betrayed them by supporting the terrorists against Assad anyway..

Hamas will burn in hell, soon their rockets (which are rubbish anyway) will run out and then they'll have nothing.. **** hamas, though fought bravely in face to face combat but these rockets are what have caused so much misery to their own people.. + they support those ISIS scumbags so RIP hamas terrorists, you will not be missed. :nana:
 
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Probably Iran got some favors shoved into their hands to look the other way as usual. Just like how they were silent with Invasion of Iraq and Invasion of Afghanstan and even facilitated it.
you're kiding right?
iraq > saddam : i don't need to say something else except war. ok?
afghanistan > talibans : ennemies of Iran. first thing talibans did when entered in Kabul is killing Iranian diplomats . no pity for these monsters anyway. (same for ISIS)
 
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stabilizing Iraq and a possible nuclear deal with the US is more important to them, Hamas betrayed them by supporting the terrorists against Assad anyway..

Hamas will burn in hell, soon their rockets (which are rubbish anyway) will run out and then they'll have nothing.. **** hamas, though fought bravely in face to face combat but these rockets are what have caused so much misery to their own people.. + they support those ISIS scumbags so RIP hamas terrorists, you will not be missed. :nana:

What a retarded rant, you should be banned for pure idiocy.

The author is practically pulling words out of his behind. Almost all Iranian officials have bashed Israel with the harshest tones. Iran's leader said explicitly that we (and also other Muslim states) have a duty to arm the West Bank. You know what that means when an official says something like that in public. Also millions of Iranians came in to streets in Quds day, more than any other Muslim country around the world. I don't know what Iran should have done to satisfy the author of this article, maybe attacking Israel directly?

This is a troll article meant to bash Iran and Hamas and make it like they conspire for war against 'innocent' Israel to cover up Israel's occupation and deliberate attacks on Palestine. They want to display an Israeli narrative because Israel's image is getting so horrible they are getting desperate but nobody believes their narratives anymore. The Israeli policy against the Palestinian people has been heavily documented for decades now and is very clear.

Don't understand why this Indian prostitute wrote this article. She's an Zionist apologist.
 
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The author is practically pulling words out of his behind. Almost all Iranian officials have bashed Israel with the harshest tones. Iran's leader said explicitly that we (and also other Muslim states) have a duty to arm the West Bank. You know what that means when an official says something like that in public. Also millions of Iranians came in to streets in Quds day, more than any other Muslim country around the world. I don't know what Iran should have done to satisfy the author of this article, maybe attacking Israel directly?
I'm inclined to dismiss the mullah outrage in Iran as hyperbole and empty political rhetoric, or are you guys seriously willing to jeopardize a nuke deal with the US to arm a futile resistance in the West Bank ? o_O

Hamas is politically isolated and have no backers (apart from ISIS scum) in the region, may they be wiped clean off the landscape when their rockets run out.. good riddance terrorists

What a retarded rant, you should be banned for pure idiocy.
so tell me then, who is backing them ? Egypt ? no
Sauds ? nope
Jordan ? no
Iran/Syria ? not anymore, nope

ISIS ? lol, yeah.. ISIS will save Gaza :woot:


no no & no everywhere.. best of luck

btw, I support the Palestinian cause, but hamas need to go (or reform).. there is no other way, NOBODY will help you, nobody is helping you
 
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I'm inclined to dismiss the mullah outrage in Iran as hyperbole and empty political rhetoric, or are you guys seriously willing to jeopardize a nuke deal with the US to arm a futile resistance in the West Bank ? o_O

Hamas is politically isolated and have no backers (apart from ISIS scum) in the region, may they be wiped clean off the landscape when their rockets run out.. good riddance terrorists


so tell me then, who is backing them ? Egypt ? no
Sauds ? nope
Jordan ? no
Iran/Syria ? not anymore, nope

ISIS ? lol, yeah.. ISIS will save Gaza :woot:


no no & no everywhere.. best of luck

btw, I support the Palestinian cause, but hamas need to go (or reform).. there is no other way, NOBODY will help you, nobody is helping you

You're a retard, IS has nothing to do with the I/P conflict or Hamas. Hamas doesn't need to do anything, Israel attacked you clueless rabid Indian dog. After a whole month of information being posted on this thread you keep repeating the same stupid things. You're a liar and don't support the Palestinian cause. Hamas does have ties with Iran. It's very clear why Egypt/Saudi Arabia won't back any Arabs besides the stooges for Israel/US. You have zero knowledge on regional politics so shut up.

Watch this:
 
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Nothing is wrong with this report ...The reporter has presented fact as fact ....Iran is very good at verbal gymnastic against others ...but does not help the thickly sunni populated regions ....sad....!
 
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Fair-Weather Friend
Iran claims to be Palestine’s biggest proponent. So why has Tehran been silent on Gaza?




    • BY Trita Parsi
    • AUGUST 8, 2014
Nothing in the Middle East seems normal right now. Israel locks the United States out of cease-fire talks with Egypt over Gaza. U.S.-Saudi relations look increasingly like a marriage that both sides regret getting into in the first place. Egypt's state media publicly cheers Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as he bombs Gaza. Saudi Arabia pretends to be unaware of the ongoing fighting between Israel and Hamas. Protests against Israel's bombing campaign are larger in Europe than in the Arab Middle East.

The surprises don't stop there. Iran's relative silence on the Gaza war has been deafening: Spanish actors Penelope Cruz and Javier Bardem have been more forceful in their criticism of Israel's Gaza attacks than many Iranian officials.

Iran is usually known for jumping on every possible opportunity to blast Israel for its treatment of Palestinians. The Iranian game plan in the past few decades has been to boost its bid for regional leadership by portraying the Arab states as impotent "servants of American interests" in the Middle East, while portraying Tehran as the true champion of the Palestinian cause -- and therefore the leader of the Islamic world.

Fighting between Hamas and Israel in Gaza is usually a political cash cow for Iran's leaders. But by their own standards, Iranian leaders have remained curiously quiet on the ongoing, month-long fight. Why? Shifting dynamics across the Middle East and a new president in Tehran have changed Iran's political calculus on Palestine.

Iran has a widespread reputation as Hamas's main patron, providing the group with rockets and weapons over the past decade. But the relationship between the Palestinian Islamists and the government in Tehran has never been friction free. The Hamas leadership has long complained that Tehran talked a good game, but in practice did little to help the Palestinian Islamist group. Ideologically, there has always been a gulf between the Muslim Brotherhood-inspired Sunni group and the Shiite thinkers of Qom. But full-on tensions between these disparate Islamists only broke out with the Syrian Civil War, when Hamas sided early on with the Syrian opposition and Tehran backed President Bashar al-Assad. Tehran viewed Hamas Leader Khaled Meshaal's break with the Syrian dictator in 2012 as a betrayal after years of providing the group with both financial support and a base in Damascus.

Earlier this year, Hamas and Tehran officially reconciled. "Relations between Iran and Hamas have returned to be as they were before and we have no problem with Hamas," the speaker of Iran's parliament, Ali Larijani, told a Lebanese television channel. But mistrust remained amid the conciliatory rhetoric, as Iranian officials have told me. Leaders of the Islamic Republic do not have a reputation of forgetting quickly or forgiving genuinely.

It's not just international politics that affect the Hamas-Iran relationship. The election of Hassan Rouhani last year and the success thus far of ongoing U.S.-Iran diplomacy have visibly tempered Tehran's public posture on Israel. Iran has gone from questioning the Holocaust under the former president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to tweeting Rosh Hashana blessings under Rouhani.

The foreign policy team around Rouhani has long favored diplomacy with Washington, and fully understands that toning down Iran's rhetoric against Israel is necessary to make progress with the United States. Beyond Iran's changing posture since Rouhani took office a year ago -- particularly since diplomacy began anew over its nuclear program -- decade-old Iranian negotiation proposals demonstrate both their understanding of Israel's importance to U.S. foreign policy-making, and their willingness to soften their stance.

For instance, in 2003, Tehran sent a proposal for improved relations with the United States to American officials via the Swiss ambassador to Iran. At the time, Rouhani was Iran's national security adviser. His current foreign minister, Javad Zarif, was a co-author of the proposal. As part of a grand bargain with Washington, Tehran signaled its readiness to restrain Hezbollah, Hamas, and Islamic Jihad. (The Bush administration never responded to the Iranian offer).

But perhaps most importantly, Tehran seems not to mind seeing yet another offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood take a beating. Some in Tehran thought that after the Arab uprisings of 2011, the U.S. had concluded that the Middle East's future was in the hands of moderate Sunni Islamist national movements -- Hamas's intellectual brethren. For a moment, it seemed that Islamist parties were ready to sweep elections throughout the region. Washington wanted to be on the right side of history.

But to Iran, the United States was tilting towards the wrong Islamic movement. Once in power, the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt showed stronger allegiance to its ideological partners in Syria -- fighting Tehran's ally Assad -- and spent more time flirting with Saudi Arabia than with Iran. Moreover, Tehran's suspicion of Washington's favorable view of the Muslim Brotherhood also fit with another idea it believes America has flirted with: that Turkey's Islamist democracy, led by the Muslim Brotherhood's political ally Recep Tayyip Erdogan, presents the best model for the region.

For some in Tehran, the current Gaza war --and Arab states' reactions to it -- show Washington was wrong to side with the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies. These Sunni Islamist groups lack the popular support to win the political fight for the region's future. And most importantly, Tehran believes that these Sunni movements cannot compete with Iran's ability to stabilize and lead the region. Nor do they have the popular backing to balance Iran's regional or ideological influence.

Whether Tehran's perceptions of American calculations are correct or not is, for now, irrelevant. The Iranian government has once again demonstrated -- this time through silence rather than venomous rhetoric -- that to the Islamic Republic, the Palestinian cause is a means, not an end.

Don't post propaganda of this Zoroastrian writer
he wrote a book about iran and Zionist and USA as alliece
 
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