The US And Iran Are Getting Close And Could Get Much Closer
1979 was the year Islamist revolutionaries overthrew the sometimes brutal US-backed dictator, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Islamists took 53 Americans prisoner for over a year, demanding the return of the former dictator who had fled to America on "medical grounds."
In the US, the hostage crisis helped sink Jimmy Carter's presidency and burned Iranian chants of "Death to America" into the public's collective consciousness. In Iran, opinions were later hardened by America shooting down a passenger aircraft and killing 290 Iranian civilians in 1988, and when President Reagan backed Saddam Hussein while he used chemical weapons on Iranians in the Iran-Iraq war.
But with historic nuclear talks now underway, a reformist president in Iran, and joint interests in combatting ISIS and stabilizing Iraq, now marks the highest point for the relationship in decades. It helps that Iran already is one of the more liberal and stable countries in the Middle East.
While it's by no means certain, the idea of Iran and the United States developing further ties through military and economic cooperation is starting to look likely.
Allied Against ISIS
"Both Iran and the US view the expansion and threat of Islamic State as extremism that could spill over, it's a Sunni extremist ideology it could also be a threat to Iran's Shiites and its influence in Iraq," Princeton-based Iranian expert Emad Kiyaei told Business Insider.
"Iran and the US have clear common interests. Had it not been for political obstacles domestically and internationally, [an alliance] would be a complete no-brainer," said Trita Parsi, author of "A Single Role Of The Dice: Obama's Diplomacy with Iran."
Both Kiyaei and Parsi lead American-Iranian advocacy organizations, and both told Business Insider the emergence of Islamic State as a primary US adversary is only the latest in a series of common US-Iranian security issues.
After 9/11, Iran assisted NATO with its military strategy and aided in the formation of a new government in Afghanistan - though the US State Department has also accused Iran of supporting anti-government elements fighting against the US in the country, including the Taliban and the Haqqani Network.
Despite divergent visions for Iraq's future, the US and Iran also both supported the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, with Iran having fought a long and brutal war with the dictator in the 1980s.
"It is in the national interest of United States to cooperate with Iran on Islamic State - they have the intelligence, knowhow and people on the ground," Kiyaei said.
America reportedly reached out to the Iranians earlier this week, only to be slapped down publicly by Iran's outspoken supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, and Foreign Minister Javad Zarif. Political power in the country is balanced between the hardline supreme leader and the more moderate, internationally-minded president, Hassan Rouhani.
STRINGER Iraq/REUTERSIraq's Kurdish forces in the north of the country reported that when they asked for military aid, Iran was the first to respond.Kurds battling Islamic State in northern Iraq report that Iran was the first country to respond when they requested support. Although they're not publicizing it, reports from al Arabiya show the country has been has been supplying weapons and even ground forces to fight against ISIS for more than a month.
Even if direct coordination with Iran is out of the question, the two countries appear to have been working in tandem on key issues.
Kiyaei told Business Insider that after the US urged Iraq's divisive leader Nuri al Maliki to stand down in June, it was the Iranians who eventually forced his resignation last month. "Tehran was the straw that broke the camel's back in Iraq, with a successor approved by both the Americans and the Iranians," he said.
Currently, Kiyaei believes the military establishment in Washington may be further ahead on the idea of Iranian cooperation than politicians. "That's not really not an unusual thing considering that they are fighting the same enemy in three major military theaters Afghanistan, Iraq, and the mess that is Islamic State," Kiyaei said.
Kiyaei pointed to reports that Saudi Arabia, a close American ally, is the largest sponsor of Islamist terror groups, arguing that "the US has more in common with Iran than Saudi Arabia at this point."
However, Washington still has a way to go before it catches up, "Washington's foreign policy in the Middle East has not shifted enough to see convergence of Tehran and Washington interests," he said.But while common security interests are strong pragmatic motivators, there is still a long list of issues both sides will have to work through.
Strident Opposition
For one, there's the ongoing nuclear talks, with Western powers attempting to curb Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program in exchange for relief from punishing sanctions. With Rouhani staking his presidency on mending ties with the West, there's a strong incentive for him to strike a deal this November. "Political isolation has created tremendous economic and political problems for Iran," Parsi told us. Iran's more hardline and conservative Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, appears to be in no mood to become friends anytime soon. Khamenei - often at odds with his President - reportedly intervened to prevent talks on further cooperation, and is publicly critical of the US role in the region. Parsi explains that older revolutionaries like Khamenei still appeal to the sentiments behind the '79 Islamic revolution. "Hard-liners in Iran don't want to lose their revolutionary credibility by collaborating with the US," he said. Kiyaei told Business Insider that while President Rouhani wants better relations with America, the Iranians still consider the US to be it's primary strategic threat. "Iran does not fear Israel, it does not even fear Saudi Arabia, it considers it's number one concern the US presence in every country which is surrounding it," he said.Closer Values
Common security interests in the region aren't the only things which could bind Iran and the US together. Compared to many other countries in the Middle East, they have surprisingly similar values as well.
Ultimately, both Iran and the United States have much to gain from an improving relationship. However, with hawks on all sides working against any reconciliation, the skill and influence of presidents Obama and Rouhani will be sorely tested.