Five reasons why Iran is involved in so many global conflicts – BBC World Service

[Gunfire]
Behind many of the world’s conflict flashpoints
there’s one country that keeps being mentioned:
Iran. 
Iran used to be this powerful state, 
an empire, but it has lost that power. 
Iran tries to influence politics in the region.
Is Iran a mastermind that is basically running
this very complex game of chess?
What does Iran want?
And how does its history impact the country’s 
current relations with the wider world? 
Here are five reasons why Iran’s 
involved in so many different conflicts. 
First of all, to understand Iran in the 
21st Century, we have to go back in time.  
Situated at the crossroads of 
Asia, Iran is home to one of the  
oldest continuous civilisations in the world.
The Persian Empire, had 50 million people living  
in it at its peak, and this may have been as 
much as half the world’s population at the time. 
There’s this notion within Iranian elites, 
but also among a lot of ordinary people,  
that Iran has this glorious past. It deserves a 
significant role in regional and global affairs. 
A series of successive empires ruled 
the Iranian plateau for hundreds of years.
Then Muslim-Arab armies conquered the 
region bringing in Islam in the 7th Century. 
At the start of the 20th Century, the 
country made a splash on the world  
stage when the British discovered oil in Iran. 
While Iran was never colonised by the British,  
the creation of the Anglo Iranian Oil 
Company – which became BP – meant they  
had a lot of influence in the country.
In 1953, a coup engineered by the US  
with British help, ousted the democratically 
elected prime minister, Mohammad Mossadegh,  
who had nationalised oil, leading to trade 
embargoes which disrupted the economy. 
The pro-Western Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, then 
enjoyed 26 years of relatively peaceful rule… 
[News report] There seems to be no place for the 
past in Tehran, the present capital. 
… until 1979.
[Gunfire]
[News report]: This is the man  
they call the father of the revolution, and this 
is the moment that millions in Iran have been waiting for. 
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, became 
the country’s supreme leader,  
ruling a new Iran with religion at its core.
[News report]: It’s extraordinary how one  
man can command such adoration.
When Khomeini returned he wasted
little time in making his political ambitions 
known, which brings us to our next reason. 
The crowd shouted ‘death to the Americans’, 
‘death to the Shah’, ‘death to Carter’. 
[News report]: The crowd shouted ‘death to the 
Americans, death to the Shah, death to Carter’ 
With the Iranian Revolution, Iran radically 
broke from its alliance with the Western powers. 
Our victory will dawn
when the hands of the foreigners
are severed from our country.
“Death to America!”
Tensions between Iran and the US deepened when 
a group of students supporting the new regime  
stormed the American embassy in the capital 
Tehran, sparking a 444-day stand-off which  
led to international sanctions. 
But since then, Iran has tried to  
protect itself from what it perceives 
to be a constant attempt by the United  
States to overthrow the Islamic Republic.
Over the decades there have been flares of  
violence between the two countries.
[Missile launch] 
[News report] The United States has admitted it shot down an 
Iranian airliner over the Gulf early this morning. 
We had it guys, it was dead on.
The Iranians say 290 people  
were on board, 66 of them children.
In 2020, after a period of increased conflict,  
an influential Iranian general, Qassem 
Soleimani, was assassinated by the US. 
[News report]: American officials say the 
airstrike which killed Qassem Soleimani  
was carried out in self defence.
Qassem Soleimani has been killed  
and his bloody rampage is now forever gone.
In the four months following the outbreak  
of the Israel-Gaza War in 2023, the US 
recorded 170 attacks from Iran-backed  
militias on their bases in the Middle East. 
A 20-fold increase on the four months before. 
After three American soldiers were 
killed, the US threatened to retaliate. 
Make no mistake, we will defend our people, we 
will defend our security, swiftly and decisively.  
This marked a significant 
drop-off in attacks on US bases. 
Iran tries to show itself to be the 
most anti-US government of the region. 
It is also looking to gain international allies. 
They have therefore always sided with  
the other side’s enemy.
They see Russia as an ally,  
because they have no one else.
The US has accused Iran of providing weapons  
to Russia for its war against Ukraine. 
This is perceived as an attempt by Tehran  
to strengthen its ties with Moscow
and increase its own global influence.
So Iran wants to actually not only  
push the United States out of the region, 
they also want to actually fill that vacuum. 
But there are two major powers in the 
Middle East competing for dominance. 
First up: Israel
[Crowds chanting]: “Death to Israel” 
The biggest threat perception of 
Iran is related to the United States,  
and then right after that is Israel.
Do not test Israel’s resolve. 
And it has over the years created this 
network of partners and proxies to deter an  
attack on Iranian soil. This is a network 
that is known as the axis of resistance. 
The reach of Iranian influence across 
the Middle East comes in the form of an  
alliance of militia groups, known as proxies, 
including Hamas in Gaza, Hezbollah in Lebanon,  
the Houthis in  Yemen as well as several other 
well-armed groups in Iraq, Syria and Bahrain.  
Most have been designated terrorist 
organisations by some Western states.
There’s always a degree of plausible 
deniability that Iran can maintain. 
With regards to their decisions and actions
the members of the axis of resistance
do not take their orders from Iran.
The network is more coordinated than ever,  
and is more capable than ever.
But having said all of this,  
post-October seventh, it was very 
clear that Iran was taken by surprise. 
[Sirens and rockets]
On the 7th of October 2023, Hamas militants  
attacked and killed 1,200 people in Israel, a 
catalyst which ignited the most deadly war in the  
history of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.   
Iran denied any involvement in the attack,  
but did publicly support the actions of Hamas.
Since then what Iran has tried to do has been  
to demonstrate moral support for Hamas, 
which is now under tremendous pressure. 
Without doing too much that would 
actually drag Iran or Hezbollah,  
or other members of the Axis into a direct 
confrontation with the US and Israel. 
Not every member in the axis of resistance 
has the same kind of relationship with Iran.  
[Chanting]: Hezbollah…
Hezbollah is the most capable.
It is the crown jewel of Iran’s axis of resistance.
Hezbollah, a group which emerged in the 1980s,
is based in southern Lebanon and provides a 
military threat on Israel’s northern border. 
One assumption in Tehran is that Israel wants to 
first destroy Hamas and then go after Hezbollah.  
I think Iran would draw a line making sure 
that that conflict is so devastating that the  
next stage would not be a direct attack on Iran.
Saudi Arabia also poses a problem for Iran.  
It is the largest Sunni power in the Middle 
East, while Iran is the biggest Shia power. 
The different branches of Islam go back to the 
conflicting beliefs each has about whether the  
Prophet Muhammad declared a successor.
While the countries have never been in a  
direct war, Iran and Saudi Arabia have been 
engaged in a proxy conflict for decades. 
Iran, as the largest Shia state in the 
region, considers itself as the natural  
leader for Muslims in the Middle East, but 
especially the Shia community across the region. 
Also Iran is trying to undermine the 
Saudi position through, for example,  
helping the Houthis.
[Helicopter] 
[Shouting]
Since the civil war in Yemen began in 2015,  
the Houthis, a group seeking to overthrow the 
government, have been fighting with Saudi Arabia. 
As regional tensions intensified 
in 2023, the Houthis have also been  
taking aim at the Red Sea, a geopolitically 
important shipping route for world trade. 
The Houthis have now gained control of 
almost half of the country,
and a bit like Hezbollah,
they do listen to what Iran is saying… 
While the Houthis are pulling the trigger, so 
to speak, they are being handed the gun by Iran. 
…but they don’t necessarily obey every 
order that comes from the Islamic Republic. 
Iran denies supplying weapons 
to the Houthis, and says it  
only supports them politically.
Iran also showed its political  
allegiance in the Syrian Civil war.
[News report]: This war pitches the  
government against an armed rebellion.
Iran’s position was against
anyone that Saudi Arabia supported, 
and therefore was in support of Assad. 
It provided support to Bashar al-Assad’s 
ruling government against the Arab and  
Western-backed rebels.
It wasn’t ideological,  
as some people have put it, it was more pragmatic.
This also explains why Iran supports  
Hamas – who are Sunni – showing how Iran’s 
strategic goals often go beyond religion. 
Whenever Iran is facing an external enemy, 
real or perceived, Iran is not shying away  
from supporting groups which are not 
necessarily religiously close to it. 
Ultimately, Iran tries to keep the fight away 
from its own borders, our fifth and final reason. 
Iran has not fought a war on its own soil since 
the Iran-Iraq war ended in a ceasefire in 1988. 
[News report]: The tank was 
Iraqi; the town was Iranian. 
The war had a traumatic impact on Iran because 
Iran is at least three times the size of Iraq  
and yet Iran wasn’t able to defeat Iraq.
[News report]: Many civilians died in the attack,  
and the signs of panic to escape 
are everywhere to be seen. 
It took a long time for Iran 
to recover from the war. 
Ever since, its military strategy has been 
aimed at avoiding another direct conflict. 
This has led Iran to focus on 
developing its missile programme. 
It is acting as a deterrent against any potential 
attack on Iran, and it’s able to project power  
well beyond its borders without actually engaging 
in a direct conflict to any particular state. 
But it seems that Iran’s strategy of 
avoiding direct engagement is evolving. 
In January 2024, Iran struck what it claimed to 
be enemy targets in Iraq, Syria and Pakistan. 
And Pakistan, not wanting to 
be undermined, retaliated. 
What is seen in Tehran as defensive, is 
seen by the rest of the region as offensive. 
My fear is that as a result of the war in Gaza, the credibility  
of Iran’s regional deterrence has diminished.
It might now try to compensate that shortcoming  
with nuclear deterrence. Basically the ultimate deterrent. 
We will not allow Iran to 
acquire a nuclear weapon. 
 Diplomatic efforts have been made 
by the West to prevent Iran from  
ever developing a nuclear weapon but President Trump withdrew from  
a landmark deal that aimed to secure this in 2018. 
The fact is this was a horrible, one-sided 
deal that should have never, ever been made. 
However, at the end of 2023, US 
intelligence said it believed Iran  
could be weeks away from creating one.
What does Iran want in the region? 
Iran’s Islamic Republic hasn’t really 
achieved many of the claims that it had. 
It also wants to be seen, at least, as the leading 
state within the Muslim world itself. 
It’s a country that has been under an arms 
embargo for many years, it’s a country that is  
outspent by most of its rivals in the region.
It’s primarily after self-preservation.

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