Russia Reform Monitor No. 2369
Pompeo accentuates the positive in Minsk;
Russian aviation company wants its French loans back;
Ergogan backs Tatars in Kyiv;
Lavrov mirrors Pompeo's moves...but in Latin America;
Another Kadyrov critic killed
Pompeo accentuates the positive in Minsk;
Russian aviation company wants its French loans back;
Ergogan backs Tatars in Kyiv;
Lavrov mirrors Pompeo's moves...but in Latin America;
Another Kadyrov critic killed
New Russian fighter captured on film;
Russia makes headway in Africa;
Crooked cops charged in Golunov case;
The fight over facial recognition in Russia
Militant Islamists rise in Africa;
At long last, a British ban on Hezbollah;
The pace of Palestinian terror;
A Saudi step forward;
How Turkey is transforming the Libya conflict
What if you held a national election and no one turned out? That’s the situation currently confronting Iranian officials, who are grappling with the aftermath of a truly disastrous outcome in last week’s parliamentary elections.
Iran’s clerical army could decide that an internal transition is the best answer, and move to remove (or at least subordinate) the country’s current clerical elite. Such a step, after all, would allow the IRGC to preserve its current, extensive grip on national power while simultaneously working to alleviate economic pressure from the U.S. and reintegrate into the international community.