Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi perished in what Iranian media initially labeled a “hard landing.” That Iranians celebrated with fireworks in Raisi’s hometown Mashhad reflects the hatred with which Iranians view the regime that oppresses them. This should be a warning to the regime: Raisi is one thing, but when 85-year-old Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has his hard landing, it will kick-start Iranians’ active quest for regime change.
For the European Union to send condolences upon the Butcher of Tehran’s death shows the moral blindness at the heart of European policy; it is equivalent to sending condolences upon the 1942 death of Reinhard Heydrich, the German Reich’s acting governor of Bohemia and Moravia.
For the European Union to send condolences upon the Butcher of Tehran’s death shows the moral blindness at the heart of European policy; it is equivalent to sending condolences upon the 1942 death of Reinhard Heydrich, the German Reich’s acting governor of Bohemia and Moravia.
While the White House, State Department, and CIA scramble to figure out who might permanently replace Raisi (think former Revolutionary Guards head and current speaker of the Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf), constantly playing catch-up undercuts U.S. effectiveness in the long run. A more productive approach might be to consider what other hard landings loom in the near future, adjust U.S. strategy, and recognize when Washington has invested too much in one man.
Some transitions are so certain that investing time in current leaders is foolish. Khamenei is partially paralyzed and has openly battled cancer. To assume the ailing ayatollah will be an anchor for stability is foolish. To prioritize rapprochement with his regime over strengthening traditional alliances with countries such as Israel, Egypt, or Saudi Arabia is malpractice.
Then, there is Mahmoud Abbas, the 88-year-old leader of the Palestinian Authority who is currently serving the 20th year of his four-year term. The only difference between Abbas and his predecessor Yasser Arafat is that Arafat appointed a successor and Abbas refuses to. Had the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations not treated Abbas’s illegitimacy with a shrug, the question of a Palestinian Authority role in future Gaza governance would not be such a nonstarter.
Despite President Joe Biden’s initial reticence about Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the White House has become increasingly friendly and solicitous of the Turkish dictator. The most generous read would be Biden wants to keep friends close and frenemies closer.
The 70-year-old Erdogan may be a spring chicken next to Biden, but his health is no better. He once accidentally locked himself in his armored limousine during a seizure, and, during his reelection campaign, he had a heart “incident” on camera; rumors swirl he has also faced colon cancer.
Whatever kills Erdogan, the vacuum Turkey will face following his near quarter-century reign will destabilize the country. Like Abbas, Erdogan leaves no clear successor, and so his son-in-law Bilal and Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan will battle it out as those marginalized by previous purges plot their own comebacks.
Had the Obama, Trump, and Biden administrations not treated Abbas’s illegitimacy with a shrug, the question of a Palestinian Authority role in future Gaza governance would not be such a nonstarter.
Khamenei, Abbas, and Erdogan may be obvious candidates for a “hard landing,” but what would happen should Jordan’s King Abdullah II or Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el Sisi suddenly find themselves on the wrong side of mortality? Could either pillar of stability crack? The Egyptian military would likely ensure stability, but while Jordan has a crown prince ready to take the helm, its entire ruling family continues to hemorrhage legitimacy and popularity between corruption and mismanagement. A flipped Jordan would be a nightmare scenario.
Likewise, while progressives in Congress bash Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman due to his alleged role in former Saudi intelligence and Muslim Brotherhood operative-turned-dissident writer Jamal Khashoggi’s death, what might happen if his ailing and Alzheimer’s-ridden father suddenly shuffles the deck to put a traditionalist in charge? What might it mean for Washington if a new Saudi leader turns entirely to Moscow or Beijing, fed up with Washington’s gratuitous insults?
Ironically, the only transition Biden truly wants may be the most inconsequential. Biden despises Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with the same resentment that the salutatorian of a community college class might look at a Rhodes scholar. But Israel is a democracy, and it delivers whom its people want.
Israelis want security. Iranians want freedom. A better American strategy would be to pursue both.