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    Iran to Syria: Save regime and preserve alliance

    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Two weeks after Egypt's uprising swept aside Hosni Mubarak, the presidents of Iran and Syria stood side by side in Damascus in a blunt message to the Arab Spring: The Syrian regime can count on its allies in Tehran.

    Seven months later — and after at least 2,700 deaths in Syria — Iran is tweaking its big brother role for Syrian President Bashar Assad. The Iranian leaders are now urging him to consider talks with protesters or risk heading down a path with few escape routes.

    It's Tehran's version of tough love: Pressing Assad to do what it takes to stay in power and preserve one of Iran's most important relationship in the Middle East.

    "You have a decades-old strategic alliance on the ropes," said David Schenker, a Syrian affairs analyst at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. "No doubt Iran is very concerned."

    But Assad appears to be following his own rules in trying to ride out a mass revolt that has now spread into the security forces. Government troops have waged relentless crackdowns on opposition protesters, as well as police and soldiers who have turned against the crackdown.

    Iran is in the unfamiliar role of nervous bystander in Syria — a foothold on Israel's border and a critical conduit to Tehran-backed Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

    Syria also adds to Iran's worry about inspiration for its own internal opposition, which has been mostly dormant since the Arab revolts began in Tunisia.

    There is little chance Iran would risk the international fallout and send large-scale military forces to aid Assad, although it's likely that Iran has boosted its cadre of security advisers and other envoys in Damascus. Instead, Iran seeks to coax Assad to offer some kind of tension-easing dialogue or at least pull back on the attacks.

    Any concessions by Assad could open the way for eventual deep reforms in his authoritarian rule. But Iran would gladly take a weakened Assad over the uncertainties under a new Syrian leadership, which would likely put Assad's Iranian-oriented Alawite minority into a political deep freeze.

    "There's currently no change in Iran's support for the Syrian government," said Ahmad Bakhshayesh, a political science professor at Tehran's Azad University. "However, Iran is trying to convey the message ... that Assad is capable of carrying out reforms."

    That could be a tough sell under the current crackdowns and international backlash.

    On Thursday, Syrian troops continued their offensive in the opposition hotbed of Rastan in central Syria. At the United Nations, a European-backed proposal in the Security Council is pressing for expanded sanctions on Syria.

    Neighboring Turkey, meanwhile, has imposed an arms embargo on Syria and has hosted anti-Assad opposition figures.

    Assad still has powerful friends such as Russia and China in his corner. Yet there could be a limit to how much they would jeopardize their political credibility — and deep business interests — among the rest of the Arab world that has largely abandoned him, said Osman Bahadir Dincer, an analyst at the International Strategic Research Organization in Ankara, Turkey.

    In the end, Iran's voice could resonate the loudest. And it is telling Assad that he can't rely only on force and intimidation — ironically the formula used by Iran to dismantle protesters after the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

    Earlier this month, Ahmadinejad said "there should be talks" between Assad and the opposition. "A military solution is never the right solution," he told Portuguese broadcaster Radiotelevisao Portuguesa in an interview in Tehran.

    He later offered to host a regional meeting of Islamic nations to seek resolutions to the Syrian crisis.

    An Iranian newspaper, Shargh, reported earlier this week that about 200 prominent Iranian doctors, including a former health minister, sent a letter to Assad to end the "regretful" violence. Assad is a British-trained eye doctor.

    Efforts to break Iran's influence in Syria has been a Western policy goal for more than a decade. Assad had been viewed as more reform-minded than his father, Hafez, who ruled for nearly three decades and died in 2000.

    In 2007, then-U.S. Sen. Joe Biden said Washington should press hard to end Syria's "marriage of convenience with Iran." Last year, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the appointment of an American ambassador to Syria — after a five-year absence — was part of efforts to "hopefully influence behavior" in Assad's regime.

    On Thursday, Assad loyalists pelted the U.S. ambassador, Robert Ford, with tomatoes and then tried to storm an office where he held a meeting with an opposition leader, Hassan Abdul-Azim.

    The Arab Spring uprising could accomplish what diplomats had tried to nudge along: a new leadership that's redirected toward the West and moderate Arab states. The new, fast-moving realities of the region were once applauded by Iran, which relished the fall of pro-U.S. governments in Tunisia and Egypt and have shed no tears with the mercurial Moammar Gadhafi on the run in Libya.

    "Syria changes all this for Iran," said the Washington-based analyst Schenker. "It would be a staggering blow to lose Assad."

    It also would potentially shrink Iran's Arab world sphere to places such as Iraq, where it has close ties with Shiite political factions and militant groups, but is limited by rival Sunni groups and Baghdad's links with America.

    A former senior State Department official, Nicholas Burns, portrayed Iran's calls for peace efforts in Syria "as cynical attempts to somehow convince Arabs that Tehran is on the right side of reform."

    "If Assad falls, it might even lead the reform movement in Iran to conclude that its government was vulnerable, too," said Burns, a professor of diplomacy and international politics at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. "In general, Iran is more isolated now than it was a few years ago and is a potential regional loser as a result of the Arab awakening."

    ___

    Associated Press writers Ozgur Akman in Ankara, Turkey, and Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran, contributed to this report.

     

    152 comments

    • Sherley  •  7 mths ago
      God Bless the Syrian People........I hope they stay strong and win!.........For their sakes not the worlds...........as for Iran, they hate the regime they have..........only time will tell......
    • pappa smurf  •  7 mths ago
      lol yes finally iran begins to play it smart and shows a few of its cards ! oh what to do america what to do ! kinda hard to do something to and enemy when they are about to gain some international support! lmao they aint as stupid as one might think! be scared isreal be scared !
    • tezol  •  7 mths ago
      Anyone remember what was in the plans for Russia, Georgia, Ukraine and other states up there? h'mmmmm...I remember names like purple revolution or violet revolution.......

      Well we were not so successful in suppressing middle-east in favor of Israel...so we pushed plan C....democratic uprisings orchestrated by some greedy leaders.....we just like to change geography of politics in other countries to serve our interest better....in the meantime, if innocent people get killed...so be it....to me this is the nature of Empires and it will go on like this until the Empire is seriously challenged AND I'm afraid we are in that stage of the game.! Watch out Chine....We have long lost Latin America next is far east Asia....Just for the sake of preserving the interests of a little country called Israel!
    • Apt Consideration  •  7 mths ago
      "Iran is trying to convey the message ... that Assad is capable of carrying out reforms."
      Really?! What hypocrisy! Iran is well known to stomp any dissidence into oblivion. What a pile of hooey!
    • Jeffrey  •  7 mths ago
      to those ignorant fools who hate israel,
      where is your outrage??? do you simply hate israel or have uber hatred for muslims???
      assad-syria has murdered more innocent, unarmed muslims in the past ten weeks than israel has defending herself over the past ten years. and this clown ahmedonut had the gumption to criticize london this past summer while he remains silent on the thousands of slaughtered muslims in syria.
      again, where's the outrage??? your silence reminds the world that all you care about is hating israel - and you could really care less about muslims one way or the other.
    • Radman  •  7 mths ago
      Sadly Mr. Burns has stated what he would like to believe rather than the actual realities of the region. Iran may very well cope with a post-Assad Syria via the money and influence it has. Iran can easily ally itself with fundamentalist Islamic groups in Syria who oppose peace with Israel and are more anti-American than Assad. So in turn, I don't believe that Iran may be the biggest loser when Assad is toppled. I see Israel as having the most to lose as it's long border with Syria may become unstable as a result of this uprising with no real authority to keep the chaos to turning into a full blown war.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  7 mths ago
      Whenever an idea dictates death to those who speak against it, it is enslavement.
    • Jeffrey  •  7 mths ago
      @"Gofer" or whatever your real muslim name is,
      if you love iran so much please leave usa and go there.
    • 10jdb43  •  7 mths ago
      Syria's friends, Russia and China. If anyone thinks China is our friend, you'd better think again and remember that when you make a purchase.
      • Adam Gahool 7 mths ago
        Yeah, stop buying Chinese, buy American. Buy guns, tanks and while you are at it a couple throns, You never know, Blacks, Muslims, Hispanic Americans could be up to something. What else US makes?
      • 10jdb43 7 mths ago
        We make almost everything here in the US , maybe not like years ago. And no matter what anybody says, if its MADE IN THE USA its better quality. Always has been 'always will be.
    • Doc  •  7 mths ago
      Support the youth of Iran and Syria....there in lies the solution
      • mehdi 7 mths ago
        By youth you means US made riots like what you did in case of Al Qaeda, I guess.
      • MIDCLAS61 7 mths ago
        Oh mehdi you are confused. Iran and its puppet friends, syria and hezbollah cause most of the problems for the people there. Its leaders will not tolerate any deflection from their hardline goals. The youth is anyone with new ideas, and the old hardliners don't like "new ideas"
      • Sayyed Mohsen 7 mths ago
        i think it is Israel that every one year begin a new war in middle east
    • WD3007  •  7 mths ago
      Someone earlier stated that the capitol of Syria will fall according to bible prophesy I say only if Assad takes a bullit will that happen.
    • beau10  •  7 mths ago
      Golly Gee, and why would Iran be worried??? Could it be the possibility of regime change?
    • Lin 4 the win  •  7 mths ago
      Iran is supplying Syria with weapons and troops during the crackdown. Someone needs to tell the U.N.
    • Willem  •  7 mths ago
      I think Iran will hold out while it has money from oil.
      The regime will be gone when the world uses electricity for fuel.
    • SIMON SAYS  •  7 mths ago
      I'm sure the Iranian regime would be glad to step in and beat the Syrian people into submission.
      After all, that's the way they do things in Iran.
    • Philip J. Frye  •  7 mths ago
      Anwar Al Awlaki has been killed in Yemen, nothing to do with this article, but good news none the less.
      • Clandestinus Burpatum 7 mths ago
        No one being killed anywhere is good news. It is just news. If death makes you happy you are diseased.
      • michael 7 mths ago
        clandestinus burpatum.....i think death of a person who is currently trying to kill my family and loved ones here in America makes me quiet relieved that he cannot continue to pursue that goal. So in turn I know it makes me happy. I think maybe you need to wake up from your dream land and realize that in the real world we have enemies who want to hurt us and we need to do what we needs to be done to protect ourselves.
      • James Sr. 7 mths ago
        Clandestie, you need to put the keyboard away and go to bed. It is late and the adults are talking.
    • ron  •  7 mths ago
      In the end, Iran's voice could resonate the loudest. And it is telling Assad that he can't rely only on force and intimidation — ironically the formula used by Iran to dismantle protesters after the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

      ---------------------------------------------------------
      Dear yahoo,

      this statement is unbelievably biased and untrue. U should be careful about always bashing Iran just because that's what all the other medias are doing. It is wrong and unjournalistic
      • TG 7 mths ago
        yes ironic, but they resorted to killing a few hundred, not 2700 people like Assad has. I doubt the regime in Iran would ever allow its thugs to do that kind of a mass killing given the way the internet and social networks can pickup what is going on ... they are just a tad bit smarter than Assad
    • Razul  •  7 mths ago
      Iran is pressing Syria on talking to protesters. What about them?
    • john  •  7 mths ago
      Iran is terrified it's next on the list for revolt and it scares them shitless that this time the whole world is going to support the young Iranians who only want to get the crazy fanatic mullahs off their backsThe zealots are #$%$ in their turbins while quaking in fear of the people they have locked up,torcherd,beaten and murdered.And this time I hope America will support the Iranian people.I hope America will come to realize that the citizens of Iran are not our enemies.They want the same things we want.They don't want a fight with the U.S. and would like civilized relations with the rest of the worldThe days of zealot rule in Iran are numbered and the Iranian people will gain their rights and freedom and America should back them.And we don't need to start another war to do it !!!!!!!!
      • ucnada 7 mths ago
        Iran is terrified it's next on the list for revolt. BECAUSE IT IS. IT´S NEXT ON THE LIST FOR A FEW THINGS. ACTUALLY
      • Papyrus 7 mths ago
        Wishful thinking...The military/security apparatus in Iran is too powerful to be brushed aside by street demonstrations, and, unfortunately, unlike other countries, the Revolutionary Guard IS THE REGIME. The only way Iran will change, is if the US opens diplomatic ties....diplomatic overtures weaken regimes, isolation does not. As far as next on the list...we'll see about that. I highly doubt Russia or China would allow the US to gain influence in Iran over their backs....therein lies the problem. Instead of actually witnessing the end of Syria or Iran, I think we are heading towards the economic collapse of the US and Europe. Especially, now that we know China is exchanging their dollar reserve for gold.
      • Fast Freddy 7 mths ago
        IRI has cook her own goose. The mullahs, 30 years ago had a chance to change but they went the wrong way. The time for fanatic regimes like Iran is expired. They will fall and when the right time comes they will fall fast. Guard or no guard.
    • JimOne  •  7 mths ago
      This is just a stupid, ignorant article. Iran doesn't care about
      the 'Arab Spring' because Iranians are NOT Arabs. As for Syria,
      just look at a map. You can't get there from here!! Iran does NOT
      border Syria!!! To get there they would have to go through Iraq
      and the US Army or Turkey and NATO or send a flotilla via the
      Suez Canal and through the Israeli Navy. Syria is on their own.
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