by David M. Weinberg
Lubrani was convinced that Iran's nuclear program and revolutionary ambitions threatened the entire world, and that the only way to stop the ayatollahs was by supporting change from within Iran.
The
 legendary Uri Lubrani died this week at age 91. His foremost desire was
 to see the Islamic revolutionary regime in Iran overthrown, and he 
passionately believed that Israel and Western powers could and should do
 much more to bring this about. Lubrani's passing is an opportunity to 
revisit this important issue.
Lubrani was a fixture in the Israeli 
foreign affairs and defense establishment from day one, and I was 
fortunate to know him. He smuggled Jewish immigrants into British 
Mandate Palestine while serving in the Haganah, and fought in the War of
 Independence. He was bureau chief to Foreign Minister Moshe Sharett, 
and Arab affairs adviser and bureau director to Prime Minister David 
Ben-Gurion. He served under every administration since then, all the way
 through to Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Moshe Ya'alon.
While serving as ambassador to Ethiopia, he
 orchestrated Operation Solomon, which brought 20,000 Ethiopian Jews to 
Israel. In the 1980s, he was coordinator of operations in Lebanon and 
made ultimately unsuccessful efforts to repatriate captured Israeli 
airman Ron Arad.
Most notably, he was the Israeli mission's 
head in Tehran from 1973 to 1978, the final years of the Jewish state's 
warm relations with Iran before the fall of the shah. He claimed that he
 foresaw the fall of the shah six months before it happened, but nobody 
believed him, including CIA analysts.
After that, Lubrani embarked on a one-man 
campaign to foment regime change in Iran. He wrote articles and briefs 
arguing that this was possible and should be a priority program, and he 
presented his arguments to anyone in Washington and Jerusalem who would 
listen to him. He was convinced that Iran's nuclear program and 
revolutionary ambitions threatened the entire world, and that the only 
way to stop the ayatollahs was by supporting change from within Iran.
When the Green Revolution rocked the 
streets of Tehran and other major cities following the corrupt Iranian 
elections of 2009, Lubrani was joined by many other experts and 
officials who felt that an opportunity was at hand to reinforce the 
protesters and bring about an end to the regime of the ayatollahs.
But then-U.S. President Barack Obama was 
deaf to the pleas of the Iranian protesters and to free-Iran advocates 
like Lubrani. Instead, Obama already was secretly promising goodies to 
the ayatollahs in exchange for a nuclear deal.
Lubrani was out of commission when the 
latest round of protests rocked Iran beginning last December, but you 
could hear echoes of him in the ensuing public policy debates. Could 
this lead to regime change in Iran? Should America and other important 
actors weigh in with moral and perhaps material support for the 
protesters? And would such Western "interference" only delegitimize the 
protesters and ultimately backfire?
Sure enough, the usual suspects (mainly 
former Obama administration officials) argued that Washington should 
stand back and do no more than pray for the protesters. They noted that 
the Islamic republic's apparatuses were vast and sturdy, the Iranian 
machine of oppression was well-oiled and brutal, and Iran's regional and
 international alliances were impressive and empowering – so the 
likelihood of overthrowing the regime was slim. Wishful thinking, at 
best. And anyway there was Obama's signature "achievement," the JCPOA 
nuclear agreement, to protect.
Other analysts, however, noted a 
qualitative difference in the recent protests and saw opportunities to 
weaken the regime. As opposed to past protests, which had focused on the
 economy and corruption, the new ones had a nationalist edge to them, 
with the demonstrators calling for a return to a pre-Islamic Revolution 
Iran.
"Stop investing in Syria, start investing 
in us," "Clerics, go home, free the country," and "Death to Khamenei, we
 want [Shah] Pahlavi," were some of the protest slogans.
Consequently, notable Iran experts 
including former CIA agent Reuel Marc Gerecht of the Foundation for 
Defense of Democracies and former State Department official Ray Takeyh 
of the Council on Foreign Relations have argued that it is in U.S. 
interests to see the Iranian regime's internal conflicts intensify.
Specifically, they see a worsening struggle
 between President Hassan Rouhani and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali 
Khamenei that threatens Iran's governing edifice. The result of the 
factional fighting is paralysis at a time when the theocracy is facing 
popular disaffection, economic decline (with unemployment among young 
people at 40%) and imperial overstretch.
Gerecht and Takeyh argue that the U.S. can 
help crack the regime. They say that President Trump should use his 
bully pulpit and economic sanctions aggressively to expose and punish 
the regime's tyrannical behavior. Pushback against Tehran's gains in 
Syria would help too, as would a tidal wave of sanctions against the 
Revolutionary Guards. "Iran is a volcano," they assert. "We want it to 
erupt."
The Trump administration has taken some 
advantage of the unrest to back up its portrayal of the Iranian 
government as a "rogue regime" and an "evil dictatorship" not supported 
by most Iranian people. The State Department used its Farsi-language 
Twitter and Facebook accounts to offer support for the protesters, 
despite warnings from Iran and other countries, such as Russia, not to 
get involved. And U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Nikki Haley said that "all
 freedom-loving people must stand with the cause [of the Iranian 
protestors]."
That's a lot more support than the Iranian 
protestors got in the Obama era, but as far as I can tell, it remains 
merely rhetorical.
Speaking at the annual AIPAC conference this week, Prime Minister Netanyahu also sounded a note of support.
"As we counter Iran's aggression, we should
 always remember the brave people of Iran ... [including] students that 
are tortured and shot for advocating freedom. We stand with those in 
Iran who stand for freedom. I believe that a day will come when this 
horrible tyranny will disappear ... and at that point, the historic 
friendship between the people of Israel and the people of Persia will be
 re-established," he said.
Fine words and a fine sentiment. But again,
 might more be done to advance an Iranian counterrevolution? Uri Lubrani
 certainly thought so, and he was not naive.
David
 M. Weinberg is vice president of the Jerusalem Institute for Strategic 
Studies, jiss.org.il. His personal website is davidmweinberg.com.
Source: http://www.israelhayom.com/opinions/hoping-for-regime-change-in-iran/
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