by Col (Res.) Dr. Raphael G. Bouchnik-Chen
The clerics in Iran are holding fast to their policy of denial or at least minimization of the coronavirus catastrophe while encouraging the IRGC to proceed with its regional activities in support of Iran’s aspirations in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen.
BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 1,525, April 10, 2020
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: Coronavirus
 has killed thousands in Iran and sickened more than 60,000. If the 
virus is not contained, hundreds of thousands more Iranians risk 
infection and death. If skillfully handled, this crisis might present 
the Trump administration with a unique opportunity to reduce the Iranian
 nuclear threat.
It’s too early to say that the coronavirus 
pandemic is out of control, but several countries critically hit by the 
virus are desperately calling for help. While in the US and Europe full 
transparency is an indispensable tool in combatting the disease, 
countries in the Middle East are sticking to their traditionally opaque 
approach to crises in an effort to downplay the full scale of the 
emergency.
Iran is the outstanding example of this syndrome. A
 steady stream of news from that country, consisting primarily of leaks 
from unofficial sources, suggests that the disease is rampant. The death
 and sickness toll in Iran is already terrible and if the virus is not 
contained, it will threaten the lives of hundreds of thousands more 
Iranians. The country may well be approaching the point of no return.
The severity of the situation is an indictment of 
the ruling regime’s incompetence. It critically failed to ready the 
country for a crisis of this kind, leaving medical personnel scrambling 
to cope with extreme shortages of even the most basic supplies necessary
 to fight the virus and protect themselves. The state-run daily Ressalat, reflecting
 the regime’s orchestrated cover-up policy, wrote in early March that 
“the statistics [of medical personnel infected] are completely 
security-related and cannot be revealed.”
This policy of obfuscation is not only a danger to Iranian medical professionals. As The New York Times wrote, ”the [Iranian] authorities seem as worried about controlling information as they are about controlling the virus,” and The Washington Post cautioned that “Iran’s reaction to coronavirus has become a danger for the world.”
Unofficial reports from Iran suggest that the IRGC
 and the Ministry of Intelligence have been tasked to threaten families 
of victims into keeping silent in an effort to cover up the true number 
of fatalities. IRGC command has ordered its provincial divisions to be 
present at hospitals and medical centers to control reporting on the 
numbers of patients infected or killed by the virus. Families of 
coronavirus victims are pressured not to disclose the real cause of 
death, and an almost hermetic censorship has been imposed on social 
networks and online media.
Looking backward, it is now clear that the 
coronavirus outbreak in Iran started in the holy city of Qom in February
 2020. Calls to quarantine the city were strongly opposed by the mullahs
 and by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who not only would not allow the 
city’s holy shrine to be closed but urged pilgrims to continue to visit 
it. One of Khamenei’s aides was quoted on February 22nd as saying, “The 
enemy intends to show that Qom is insecure and take revenge, but it will
 never succeed”. Another cleric said four days later, “We consider the 
holy shrine a ‘house of cure’ and it must remain open and people must 
resolutely visit the shrine.”
On March 29, a group of 100 Iranian academics and 
political and social activists published a letter holding Khamenei 
chiefly responsible for the epidemic’s becoming a national disaster. 
They claim that Khamenei is preventing citizens from receiving American 
or other humanitarian aid while ensuring that he and other regime 
officials have access to medical treatment.
The clerics in Iran are holding fast to their 
policy of denial or at least minimization of the coronavirus catastrophe
 while encouraging the IRGC to proceed with its regional activities in 
support of Iran’s aspirations in Iraq, Syria, and Yemen. On April 1, 
President Trump warned Iran against using its proxy forces to attack 
American troops in Iraq and hinted that the US military is considering a
 direct strike on Iranian forces. He said his administration has “very 
good information” that Iran-backed militias are planning more assaults. 
In parallel, it appears that the Iran-backed Houthi militia in Yemen has
 augmented its ballistic missile launches against Saudi strategic assets
 as well as Yemen’s governmental targets during the crisis. The latest 
attack, which was directed at the Yemenite district of Saada, occurred 
on April 5.
An additional worrisome dimension has to do with 
Iran’s activities in the nuclear domain. Unofficial Israeli sources have
 expressed concern that Iran is taking advantage of the coronavirus 
crisis to accelerate uranium enrichment under the radar. This is 
entirely possible, as IAEA inspectors are refraining from visiting 
Iranian nuclear sites and several have fled Iran entirely due to the 
high risk of contamination. Iran’s continued violations of its 
commitments according to the JCPOA have potentially dangerous 
ramifications, as the US is of course fully aware.
Iran poses a triple threat that must be 
acknowledged and assessed by the international community: a catastrophic
 and possibly out-of-control outbreak of coronavirus, ongoing aggressive
 efforts led by IRGC-related proxies to interfere in and disrupt the 
region, and a prohibited acceleration of the national nuclear program.
The world is thus faced with a dilemma: a moral 
obligation to take a humanitarian approach to Iran versus a policy of 
squeezing the Iranian regime economically and psychologically to achieve
 strategic gains. Does the extremity of the crisis faced by Tehran 
present an opportunity for Washington?
On April 12, 1959, John F. Kennedy said, “The 
Chinese use two brush strokes to write the word ‘crisis.’ One brush 
stroke stands for danger; the other for opportunity. In a crisis, be 
aware of the danger—but recognize the opportunity.” A similar saying 
attributed to the Italian Renaissance writer Niccolo Machiavelli 
recommends that we “never waste the opportunity offered by a good 
crisis.”
Crisis and opportunity are two sides of a single 
coin. Should we focus on the crisis or look for the opportunity? 
Considering how long-lasting and potentially explosive the Iranian 
nuclear issue is, it seems sensible to consider the strategic dimension 
under the current extraordinary circumstances.
Provided that it is handled skillfully by the 
Trump administration, the coronavirus crisis could present a unique 
opportunity to reduce the Iranian nuclear threat. The plan should be 
twofold: an international campaign led by the US to offer Iran the 
maximum humanitarian and medical assistance to contain the epidemic, and
 the acquiring of Iran’s commitment to a new nuclear agreement that 
fills the gaps left by the JCPOA.
Though the US is itself in the midst of fighting 
the virus, it can handle such an initiative, as it holds the winning 
cards. The outcome of such a far-reaching approach to Iran could be 
worthwhile in both the short and the long terms.
Timing is the name of the game, considering the 
scale of the catastrophe in Iran as well as the simmering domestic rage 
against the clerical regime. The walls are closing in on Khamenei and 
his entourage.
Col (Res.) Dr. Raphael G. Bouchnik-Chen is a retired colonel who served as a senior analyst in IDF Military Intelligence.
Source: https://besacenter.org/perspectives-papers/iran-crisis-opportunity/
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