The Collapse of the Khamenei Doctrine
Ayear of conflict in the Middle East has destroyed the foreign-policy approach of Irans supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. His strategy was always implausible, but its collapse has led Iran to the brink of its first international war since 1988.
What I like to call the Khamenei Doctrinethose close to him have variously dubbed it strategic patience or, more to the point, no peace, no warrests on a duality that has remained constant through Khameneis 35 years in power. Iran refuses any public dealings with Israel, clamoring instead for the Jewish states destruction and surrounding it with Arab militias that seek to destroy it. Iranian officials deny the Holocaust and chant Death to America at events and ceremonies. And yet, at no point does Khamenei intend to get into a direct conflict with Israel or the United Statesbecause he knows very well that such a confrontation could be fatal for his regime.
So what is the point of holding this contradictory posture? Khamenei is a true fanatic. He forged his beliefs as a revolutionary in the 1960s, when he read Sayyid Qutb and Mao Zedong. But he isnt blind or stupid. Rather, he is patient and pragmatic. He appears to have accepted that his dream of destroying Israel wont be realized in his lifetime, but he remains ideologically committed to it as a long-term goal for Islamists across generations. He has declared that Israel wont exist in 2040a year he will see only if he lives to be more than 100. But he seeks to advance the cause to the extent he can, building the strength of Israels enemies, and then handing off the task to his successors.
Khamenei knows that his extreme worldview is not popular among most Iranians, or even among much of the countrys ruling elite. And so he adjusts the institutional balance among the Islamic Republics various political factions, using the competition among them to gain breathing space when necessary, but never wavering from his objectives.
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