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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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October 2, 2015
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Rouhani
Offers Futile Bribe to Hardliners for Nuclear Deal Support
by IPT News • Oct 2, 2015 at 2:14
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Iranian President Hassan Rouhani is seeking to bribe the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) to cease its efforts to undermine the
nuclear deal with global powers, reports Ali Alfonen – a senior fellow with the
Foundation for Defense of Democracies – writing for the Arab Weekly.
In a Sept. 15 address to the IRGC's senior leadership, Rouhani bragged
about the "revolutionary deed" of "breaking the unjust
sanctions regime" and called for the IRGC and other military and
security apparatuses to "help the government and the people in
production, development and economic growth."
According Alfonen – an expert on the IRGC – Rouhani's message suggests that if
the IRGC supports the agreement, a significant amount of money released to
Iran as part of the economic sanctions relief will reach the IRGC's
extensive business dealings.
Alfonen argues that Rouhani's risky tactic will not prevent the IRGC
from accepting the bribe while continuing its staunch opposition to the
nuclear agreement. For Rouhani to deliver such an address, the IRGC
leadership would have been consulted beforehand, indicating that the
hard-line faction accepted the bribe.
But the continued opposition, as Alfonen's headline indicates, could
"could torpedo" the nuclear deal.
Increased financial flows to the IRGC's widespread economic interests
will lead to more clients and political influence over Iran's elites. Such
a situation would only further undermine Rouhani and the relatively
pragmatic camp's power struggle with hardliners who actively oppose the
nuclear agreement.
This type of deal is reminiscent of former Iranian President Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani's attempt to encourage the IRGC to stay out of political
concerns in return for taking control of significant post Iran-Iraq war
reconstruction projects. The IRGC exploited that opportunity to create its
now bourgeoning business empire which encompasses major construction,
energy, and airline contracts.
Many critics of the Iran deal argue that economic sanctions relief will empower the
IRGC and enable hardline factions in Iran to enhance their regional
hegemonic ambitions and state sponsorship of terrorism globally.
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