How Iran’s Ethnic Divisions Are Fueling the Revolt

October 19, 2022

Excerpt

The escalating wave of protests shaking Iran since Sept. 17 isn’t the first time the country’s theocratic regime has faced mass unrest. However, the current upheavals are exceptional in scope and they show no signs of slowing down. The protests—which followed the death of a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman under custody of the morality police—aren’t confined to Tehran and other cities in the Iranian heartland but have engulfed remote border provinces as well. Within the provinces, demonstrations are taking place outside the capital cities in dozens of locations. Industrial workers and bazaar shopkeepers—important constituencies for the regime—have joined in as well. In another departure from past unrest, protesters have been fighting back against and even targeting police and security forces, who have killed hundreds of protesters. Over the weekend, Tehran’s notorious Evin prison was on fire with gunshots heard and several reported deaths. As it continues to intensify, this wave of demonstrations may pose the most formidable challenge to the regime since the immediate aftermath of Ayatollah Khomeini taking power in 1979.

Perhaps the most important aspect to the current uprising is the major role played by Iran’s ethnic minorities. According to BBC News, security forces have targeted and killed a disproportionate number of minority protesters, with a significant concentration of deaths in Baluchistan and the Caspian region in northwest Iran. Security forces perpetrated an outright massacre in Zahedan, a city near the border with Pakistan largely populated by Baluchs. On Sept. 30, regime forces killed over 80 Zahedan residents as they were leaving Friday prayers. Security forces wore traditional Baluch dress to avoid detection before opening fire on the worshippers. That this massacre was perpetrated on the Baluch minority went unmentioned in many Western media reports. Despite the massacre, the Baluchs held more anti-regime protests after prayers.

Iran’s history of ethnic grievances—especially in the non-Persian provinces dominated by Tehran—adds additional fuel to a highly combustible mix, and the regime’s harsh crackdown in Zahedan and elsewhere suggests that the regime is aware of this. Iran’s multiethnic nature is also an important part of Iranian politics, and it’s a source of potential upheaval that has been largely left out of debates outside Iran. Western experts and commentators tend to look at Iran through the eyes of its Persian elite, just like the West has long looked at Russia through the imperial eye of Moscow with little space for Ukrainian views, let alone Dagestani or Tatar ones. We ignore these realities—and the potential for internal conflict and disintegration—at our peril.

US-Saudi rift deepens over OPEC+ oil cut logic

October 13, 2022

Excerpt

Brenda Shaffer, senior advisor for energy at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, offered that the US would derive little benefit from ratcheting up conflict with Saudi Arabia, especially in the midst of the worst energy crisis since World War II and widening global recession.

She singled the US out as the only major oil producer that did not return to pre-Covid production rates. "The US is the chief culprit for the current state of the global market and subsequent price," she added. "It is hard to fathom why the administration spends energy chastising Saudi Arabia and courting Venezuela and Iran in search of additional oil supplies, while it doesn't appeal to Houston."

Russia looms large behind OPEC+ output hike decision

Brenda Shaffer in Nikkei Asia

Brenda Shaffer, an energy expert at the U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, shares a similar view.

"The high oil price not only gives Russia high revenue, but also leverage in the current Ukraine crisis, by putting economic pressure on the West to back down from further sanctions and limits on its export[s]," Shaffer told Nikkei. "Up until ... the current recession starts to lower demand for oil, there is trepidation in the West to further remove Russian oil from the market."

Source: https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Markets/C...

Europe’s Tiny Steps Won’t Solve Its Energy Emergency

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in Foreign Policy

The European Union and its 27 member states have invested more money, effort, and political capital in energy policy than any other region in the world. Until this year, Europe was admired globally as the gold standard for energy and climate policy. Germany’s Energiewende—or energy transition—was especially touted as a shining example of how to green the energy supply.

Source: https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/07/13/europ...

A Russian oil and gas embargo is in the cards. And analysts warn it will have huge consequence

Brenda Shaffer interviewed by CNBC

Brenda Shaffer, senior advisor for energy at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, told CNBC via telephone that the prospect of removing Russian energy exports from the market would likely result in “a tremendous jolt” to global oil prices and the world economy.

“We’re in unknown territory if you pull 13% to 15% of global oil out of the pool. Sanctions on Iran and Venezuela, it’s not even comparable to what that could do to the global oil market if you actually pulled away most of Russian production,” Shaffer said.

The impact of Western oil majors pulling the plug on Russia is also likely to have “huge” economic ramifications, Shaffer said, citing a flurry of announcements from the likes of Exxon MobilShell and BP in recent days.

“People are really cheering this as a feel-good moment but it’s actually going to be a huge, huge shock to the state of these companies and to the stock market in general,” Shaffer said.

Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2022/03/03/russia-oil...

Putin Just Pushed the World Into an Even Bigger Energy Crisis

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in Foreign Policy

As we approach the 50th anniversary of the 1973 global oil crisis, international energy markets and the global economy are about to receive a similar jolt. Since Russia attacked Ukraine on Feb. 24, the price for crude oil has twice soared as high as $105 a barrel—a level last seen in 2014. And things could get a lot worse from here.

Source: https://foreignpolicy.com/2022/02/28/russi...

It’s Time to Be Honest About Fossil Fuels’ Role in Energy Transition

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in Foreign Policy

The global energy crisis has hit U.S. shores: Fuel prices are rising, and a global supply shortage of natural gas is driving up the cost of heat and electricity as winter approaches. The Biden administration, worried that rising energy prices could cost votes and kneecap its ability to implement policies, has begged OPEC to pump more oil and Russia to step up gas supplies to Europe. At the same time, the Republicans have no useful energy policy alternative on offer. The United States needs a fundamentally new energy policy that will deliver reliable energy supplies at affordable prices with low impact on the environment and climate…


Source: https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/11/15/fuel-...

A global energy crisis casts shadow on crucial climate summit

Brenda Shaffer in The Washington Post

“The current European Commission has turned energy policy into a mere subset of climate policy, with little attention paid to supply security or energy affordability,” energy analyst Brenda Shaffer wrote in Foreign Policy. “While major new sources of natural gas have been found in proximity to Europe — in the Eastern Mediterranean, for example — European leaders have bowed to activist pressure and not seriously pursued any of these newly available sources.”

Source: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/...

Is Europe’s Energy Crisis a Preview of America’s?

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in Foreign Policy

An energy crisis is affecting almost every part of the globe, marked by record-high energy prices, tight supplies, and power blackouts. Some of the world’s richest countries and U.S. states such as California have been struggling to keep their electricity systems stable.

The first energy crisis in decades has come as a shock to many, who seem to have forgotten how energy insecurity reverberates onto every major sphere of public life: the economy, national security, the environment, and public health…

Source: https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/10/05/energ...

Renewable Isn’t Always Green

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in Real Clear Energy

The Biden Administration and the European Union have launched unprecedented and far-reaching policies to promote the use of renewable energy and low carbon emitting energy. While commonly people use the terms renewable and green interchangeably, they are in fact not similar at all. The most prevalent forms of renewable energy, such as hydropower and biomass, have high environmental impact—they may be “clean” but they are not “green.”

Source: https://www.realclearenergy.org/articles/2...

Brenda Shaffer: Non-Persian Ethnic Minorities in Iran May Be Ripe for Revolt

Brenda Shaffer in Middle East Forum

Brenda Shaffer, Senior Advisor for Energy at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), spoke to a May 21 Middle East Forum webinar (video) about Iran's multi-ethnic minorities.

According to Shaffer, the size of non-Persian ethnic minorities in Iran is larger than commonly estimated by Western sources, which have relied on "old versions of the CIA Fact Book," which has been "debunked." In fact, Iranian government data mined by Shaffer for her FDD monograph, Iran Is More than Persia, shows that these minorities, including Azerbaijanis, Kurds, Baluchs, Lurs, and Ahwazi Arabs, comprise "over half of the population of Iran." According to the Iranian government's own internal polling data, some 40% of the population claims to be not fully fluent in the Persian language (Farsi).

Source: https://www.meforum.org/62473/shaffer-ethn...

Armenia’s nuclear power plant is dangerous. Time to close it.

Brenda Shaffer opinion column in The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

In late 2020, the Armenian government announced that its Metsamor nuclear power plant would close for five months in 2021 to attempt significant upgrades. Soon after, the EU urged Armenia to make the closure permanent since the plant “cannot be updated to fully meet internationally accepted safety standards.” A major nuclear or radiation accident at Metsamor would not only affect the people of Armenia, but citizens in neighboring Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Iran, Russia, and southern Europe.

Source: https://thebulletin.org/2021/03/armenias-n...