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Furthermore, irrespective of the election outcomes in Morocco, Tunisia, and Egypt, the Arab Rising has shaken other Sunni leaders' confidence. Tehran's rhetoric, which tars those heads of state as self-serving cronies of the US and Israel, leaves them vulnerable to Islamist and populist rebellions. Not surprisingly even Sharia-following Sunni leaders in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf Emirates perceive the ayatollahs' hands behind the Arabs revolt although an official report on the unrest in Bahrain affirmed that no direct Iranian involvement could be discerned.

So the Saudi monarchy, its own totalitarianism notwithstanding, has led the Gulf Cooperation Council's resistance to Iranian influence. It also is spearheading the Arab League's economic sanctions, assets freeze and investment embargo against Tehran's major Arab ally - the government of Syria. Tehran and Damascus denounce those actions as escalation of centuries-old sectarian attacks against Shiites by Sunni hegemons. Commanders of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which reports to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, may have tried retaliation too, for the US government connects them to an assassination attempt on the Saudi ambassador in Washington, DC.

The greatest setback to Iran's foreign-policy goals has been the uprising against the Syria's Alawite - a Shiite sect - elite led by dictator Bashar al-Assad. When Syrian protestors, a majority of whom are Sunnis, began seeking domestic change, Tehran initially provided guidance and technology for Assad's forces. But as the revolt spreads, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and other officials of Iran's executive branch urge Assad to accommodate his "people's legitimate demands" while warning against Libya-like "interference by foreigners." Iran's presidency increasingly seems to write off its Damascene counterpart and has made contact with Syrian opposition groups.

The ayatollahs do not concur with abandoning Assad. So responding to the Arab Rising's impact on Syria divides Iran's powerbrokers, adding to schisms over domestic demands for socio-political liberalization. Despite their differences, however, Iranian officials seek to maintain influence over an Arab nation that facilitates supplying resources to the Shiite Hezbollah in Lebanon and Sunni Hamas Palestinians in Gaza.

Despite setbacks, Tehran's ayatollahs still nurture hopes of spreading their radical model of Islamic politics. Because the dissatisfaction fueling Arab protest is homebred, they realize that Sunni rulers may not be able to hold the line against fundamentalism.

Indeed once Tunisians concluded voting, Iran's Foreign Ministry revealed Islamic Renaissance Movement leaders were in regular contact with Tehran while planning election strategies. Muslim Brotherhood and Salafi organizers too visited Tehran frequently, since Mubarak's fall, in preparation for Egypt's elections and for Pan-Islamic Awakening conferences.

On the military front, powerful rebel army commanders in Libya have ties to Iran's military. As factions within the new Libyan polity contest one another, the ayatollahs could equip groups sympathetic to them. Likewise the eclipse of President Ali Abdullah Saleh will not end the Houthis' rebellion against Yemeni society. A Yemeni-Saudi counteroffensive there could beget rebel dependence on Tehran.

The ayatollahs' ideology and resources remain a potent threat to the establishment of representative governments throughout the Arab Middle East. Tehran's biggest appeal is its anti-monarchist, anti-Western words and deeds. As Arabs seek significant political restructuring and attempt to rebuild their nations, Iran's ayatollahs will continue to point to the US, England and Israel as obstructing tangible change.

But ongoing contention with the West over Iran's nuclear program is producing additional sanctions which could cripple Tehran's ability to finance overseas influence-peddling. The recent attack by the Basij paramilitary, which like the IRGC reports to Supreme Leader Khamenei, against the British embassy in Tehran is leading to further international isolation too.

It may seem that Iranian leaders often unwittingly sabotage their own plans while strengthening the world's will to oust them. But ayatollahs' see more isolation from democratic currents of the West and Arab world as strengthening their grip at home. Taking on the US also facilitates depiction of themselves to the Arab masses as defiant Muslim victims of the global powers.

So the struggle to contain Iran's fundamentalists while enhancing democracy in the Arab world will continue.