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Geopolitics

How Europe Can Help Iranian Protesters, Right Now — Blacklist The Revolutionary Guards

The European Union has been hesitant to classify Iran's national security force as a terrorist organization because of fears of a reprisal.

How Europe Can Help Iranian Protesters, Right Now — Blacklist The Revolutionary Guards

At a ceremony marking the third anniversary of the death of the late Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Soleimani on Jan 3., 2023

Kayhan-London

-Analysis-

Three years after a U.S. airstrike on the Iranian Revolutionary Guards general Qasem Soleimani, the European Union is considering whether or not to list the Revolutionary Guards, the force responsible for Iran's national security, as international terrorists. Soleimani and several collaborators were killed in a drone strike outside Baghdad, ordered by the administration of President Donald J. Trump.

The Trump administration asked the Europeans to list the Guards as terrorists as it had done, but was met by the opposition of the then-German chancellor, Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron and Britain's former Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Now, three years on, the Europeans have reached the same point as the Trump administration.

On Jan. 2, Britain's Daily Telegraph reported on the United Kingdom's intention to list the Guards as terrorists within weeks, in reaction to the Islamic Republic's suspected attempts in past months to kill or kidnap individuals on UK soil. Germany has in turn restricted ties with the Iranian regime and recently advised dual nationals or Iranian residents in Germany not to travel back to Iran, lest they be impeded from leaving.

Elements in the Iranian regime have singled out Germany and the United States as two states fomenting months of anti-regime protests, which the Islamic Republic insists are a plot rather than indicating mass discontent against it.


The late Soleimani's successor as head of the Revolutionary guards Quds Force — Iran's regional task force — Ismail Qaani, warned in late November that anyone who had "done so much as a day's work in the media against the Islamic Republic have had their names registered, and their turn will come." One day "you'll wake up," he said, and "see you have nothing left."

Regime warnings

The conservative Tehran paper Kayhan (no link with Kayhan-London) also wrote in an editorial published on Jan. 2 that Qaani had "filled Soleimani's place for the resistance front," which it said had not declined but grown "exponentially." The daily was referring to proxy militias, regional allies and collaborators, said to constitute a "front of resistance" to Western powers and Israel. It boasted that in the past three years, Qaani was behind the deaths of 25 Israelis and no less than 420 injuries caused in Israel just in 2022. If nothing else, citing such figures incriminates the Revolutionary guards and proves terrorist activities!

The situation has changed enough after almost four months of protests in Iran to change European minds.

Iranian politicians have meanwhile repeatedly warned the West against blacklisting the Guards. The corps' former chief, Muhammad'ali Ja'fari, said in 2017 that U.S. bases could become targets of Iranian projectiles if the Guards were classified as terrorists.

Other voices abroad, such as the Atlantic Council or the NIAC (the National Iranian American Council), an NGO many Iranians suspect has acted as a regime lobbyist in the United States, have been working to dampen enthusiasm for the idea. For years, such "moderating influences" have exaggerated the regime's military power, and warned that blacklisting the Guards could spark a war in the Middle East.

A member of the Revolutionary Guard stands in front of Shahab-3 missile in Tehran

Sobhan Farajvan/Pacific Press/ZUMA

Longer the wait, higher the cost

Just a year ago, EU officials like its foreign policy chief, Josep Borrell, his deputy Enrique Mora and former EU negotiators like Javier Solana, were pressuring the Biden administration to remove the Guards from the U.S. terror list, to help revive the 2015 nuclear pact, which the United States ditched, also under the Trump administration. The West hopes the pact will keep strict checks on Iran's unnerving nuclear program. Inside the United States, certain senators in the Democrats, and the NIAC were pushing for the Guards' delisting.

But the situation has changed enough after almost four months of protests in Iran to change the minds of the European powers. Even the NIAC has changed tack, and seems to be backing regime change in Iran. It wrote on its Twitter account that it backed Iranians when they wanted reforms, and now backs them in their demands to end the Islamic regime. The volte-face of lobbyists must be a sign of the gravity of the regime's situation, suggesting they have despaired of its chances of reasserting itself.

Three years ago, observers fearfully warned that striking at the Revolutionary Guards could cause war in the Middle East. Today, Europeans must not be cowed by similar threats and understand that listing the Guards as terrorists will aid the people's protests against the regime.

The more they hesitate and the longer they wait, the higher the cost being imposed on a people fighting to live in freedom.


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Society

After A Femicide, What Happens To The Children?

Children orphaned by domestic violence are a uniquely vulnerable kind of victim. An investigation from Romania.

Abstract painted image of an adult and a child walking. The adult is holding the child's hand.

Where does a child turn when their father has killed their mother?

Oana Sandu

NOTE: The names of the characters in the two stories featured in this article have been changed to protect the identity of the children.

A seven-year-old boy bounces out of the schoolyard towards his grandmother, who welcomes him happily and takes off his backpack. The child smiles at her and tells her that in one of his classes he got up from his desk and looked out of the window.

"You're not allowed!" the grandmother replies firmly. "Never do that again!"

The boy, Vladi, who has just started primary school, is puzzled: "Granny, do you forgive me? But I didn't know it was a rule. You didn't tell me I wasn't allowed to look out of the window."

"There are rules," the woman tells him. "Don't talk without being asked, don't interrupt class, don't get up from the bench."

"Yeah, but you didn't tell me I wasn't allowed to look out the window."

Grandma Ileana doesn't answer and hurries him towards the crossing to go to the supermarket. When he hears about the shopping, Vladi forgets the unspoken rule he had been warned about and is already thinking about what sweets to put in the basket.

The real reason for his visit to the supermarket in the center of a small town near Bucharest, Romania, where his grandma has lived for almost 20 years, is a promise from the manager to help her with a much-needed document.

Her daughter died three years ago and she wants to make sure Vladi and her sister have access to orphan allowances. To do this she needs the original work card for her daughter, who worked as a shop assistant here more than 10 years ago, when she was free and could choose where to work.

With her voice trembling, she tells the manager that her daughter worked here in 2009, and the government has been asking for her old work card. "It will be three years now, in February, since she died. I don't know, maybe you heard of the case?"

The manager doesn't reply, reads the document worriedly and then tells her that a long time has passed since 2009 and there is little chance that the original work card will be with them. She phones a colleague, asks a few questions and then explains to the grandmother that in 2011, work cards were given to employees, so the daughter probably already received it.

"Got it," the grandmother replies resignedly. She asks Vladi what they have to take, and he answers quickly, as if he had already learned the list: "Bread, milk, cereal — and I would like some sweets."

Vladi and his sister Eliza have been Ileana's top priority since February 2020, when their father killed their mother, Ileana’s daughter.

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