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http://www.iranian.com/May96/Opinion/Conspiracy.html

Conspiracy theories and 
the Persian Mind


 By Ahmad Ashraf
Encyclopaedia Iranica

Conspiracy theories in Persia are a complex set of beliefs 
attributing the course of Persian history and politics to the 
machinations of hostile foreign powers and secret organizations. 

In contemporary social psychology such theories are defined as 
elaborate and internally consistent systems of "collective 
delusions," often tenaciously held and extremely difficult to refute. 

Many conspiracy theories are based on a simple dualism in which the 
world is viewed as divided between good and evil forces with the 
latter determining the course of history. Various failures and 
disasters, for example, defeats in war, revolutions, and general 
backwardness can thus be blamed on powerful enemies. 

Conspiracy theories often serve an important social function, helping 
to assuage certain kinds of anxiety among group members but also 
often limiting or hindering their capacity to respond effectively to 
external and internal social and political challenges. 

Particularly since the beginning of the 20th century, Persians from 
all walks of life and all ideological orientations have relied on 
conspiracy theories as a basic mode of understanding politics and 
history. 

The fact that the great powers have in fact intervened covertly in 
Persian affairs has led ordinary people, political leaders, even the 
rulers themselves to interpret their history in terms of elaborate 
and devious conspiracies. 

The acceptance of such theories has in itself influenced the course 
of modern Persian history, for it has engendered a sense of 
helplessness in dealing with the rumored activities of foreign 
conspirators. 

Conspiracy theories in modern Persia can generally be divided into 
two categories: those focused on supposed plots by Western colonial 
powers and those focused on satanic forces believed to have been 
active against Persia from antiquity to the present. 




Conspiracy theories focused on colonial powers
The weakness of Persia under the last three Qajar shahs (1896-1924), 
coupled with such events as the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-11, 
which had the support of Great Britain against Russian interests; the 
Anglo-Russian Convention of 1907, by which Russia and Great Britain 
divided Persia into zones of influence; the occupation of Persian 
territory by Great Britain, Russia, and Ottoman during World War I; 
the abortive 1919 Anglo-Persian agreement, by which Persia was to 
become a kind of semiprotectorate; and the British-backed coup d'etat 
of 1921, which led to the establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty, 
encouraged the development of conspiracy theories focused on foreign 
powers. 

During most of this period, foreign embassies openly intervened in 
Persian affairs through individual political notables, tribal khans, 
wealthy merchants, and members of the olama (clergy). 

For their part, these Persian notables found foreign patronage 
extremely tempting; it was easy to overcome rivals and to mislead 
timid compatriots with the air of being 'in the know.' Such notables, 
hinting at knowledge of the real intentions of the foreigners, 
fostered a general sense that Persian affairs were directed by hidden 
plotters in the embassies. 




Conspiratorial schemata focused on the British
Although there have been conspiracy theories implicating all the 
Western powers that have competed in Persia, those involving the 
British have been most popular among members of the ruling and middle 
classes born before World War II. 

The basic premise is that the British have controlled the course of 
modern world history, including all major events in Persia from the 
Russo-Persian wars of the early 19th century to the Revolution of 
1979. 

The British are depicted as cold-blooded, foxy, and cunning (rubah-e 
makkar), able to "cut off the heads of their enemies even with 
cotton" -- that is, possessing nearly miraculous powers (siasat-e 
Engelis) to achieve their ends. 

They are supposed to have duped and manipulated the "simple Russians" 
and the "naive Yankees." such notions were influenced by conspiracy 
theories abroad in France and Germany since the 18th century by 
students returning from Europe. 

Russian, German, and Ottoman propaganda against the British in the 
late 19th and early 20th centuries encouraged fears of secret British 
designs against Persia and the Islamic world as a whole. 




Conspiracy theories focused on the C.I.A.
After the C.I.A. had engineered the 1953 coup that overthrew the 
Mosaddeq government, the dominant position of the United States in 
Persia began to be reflected in conspiracy theories. 

The Persian elite of the post-Mosaddeq period, one American diplomat 
noted, belied in the myth of "American omnipotence." Imagining that 
prime ministers were chosen by the United States, "candidates or 
would-be candidates for prime minister come to advertise their assets 
and their availability." 

It was widely believed that the shah's White Revolution and the land-
reform program of the 1960s had been designed in detail by Americans, 
though in fact American officials had favored more moderate land 
reform. 

Leftists and many others in the middle class believed that the 
reforms had been designed to undermine the feudal basis of British 
interests in Persia. Khomeini, among others, considered land reform 
part of an American plot to destroy Persian agriculture in order to 
create a market for surplus American produce and to ensure Persian 
dependence on food supplies from the United States. 




Satanic theories of conspiracy
According to the satanic theories, the failure of Persia to attain 
its "natural" position of political, military, cultural, and 
religious superiority is the result of conspiracy by inimical global 
forces, variously "Hellenic westernism," Freemasonry, Zionism, the 
Bahai faith, and even the Shi'ite clergy. 

Hellenic westernism. The uneasy relationship between Persia and and 
western powers from antiquity to the present has encouraged 
intellectuals like Ahmad Fardid, Zabih Behruz, and Hosayn Malek to 
adopt theories of conspiracy. 

The term gharbzadegi ("plagued by the West" or "westoxication") was 
coined by Fardid, who claimed that Freemasons and Jews are engaged in 
a great conspiracy to "hellenize" the entire world. 

The concept of "westoxication" appears to be derived from a recurring 
theme in Martin Heidegger's works, the "darkening of the world." The 
perceived decadence of the West had already begun, according to 
Fardid, with the development of Greek philosophy, in which human 
beings (vojud) were separated from the the unity of consciousness 
(delagahi) .

The humanistic belief that man is at the center of the universe has 
determined the Western ethos since the time of the Greek 
philosophers. Western man is immersed in technology and more 
concerned with himself than with his spiritual calling in the world. 

This ethos is in conflict with the "spiritual ethos" of the East, 
but, on the other hand, the East has lost its cultural potency and is 
dominated by Western civilization. The liberal conception of a free 
society is useless in a world in which being and consciousness are no 
longer well integrated.

Fradid believed that the Constitutional Revolution in particular was 
tainted by Western Freemasonry and Judaism. His theories have been 
adopted by some intellectuals who claim that the policies of the 
current Islamic regime are manifestations of Eastern spirituality. 




Conspiracy between the shi'ite olama and world powers
In the 1980s Shoja-al-Din Shafa, a former Persian deputy court 
minister for cultural affairs, developed another conspiracy theory, 
based on ideas in the deposed shah's book that a "strange amalgam" -- 
among the Shi'ite clergy, leftists, Western media, major oil 
companies, and the British and American governments -- had set out to 
destroy the rapidly developing nation of Persia. 

Shafa suggested that "the emergence of the Shi'ite olama in the 10th 
century constitutes the greatest conspiracy in Persian history and 
perhaps the oldest conspiracy in world history." The purpose was to 
emasculate true Shi'ism by transforming it into the instrument of 
corrupt Shi'ite leaders. 

Three "capital investments" ensured the loyalty of the olama. First, 
they received financial support from temporal authorities and 
bazaaris, a "sacred coalition" of the forces of tyranny (estebdad), 
exploitation (estesmar) and demagoguery (estehmar). 

Second, they accepted the "Indian money" and other contributions from 
Great Britain in the late 19th century. Finally, in the 1970s a 
gigantic coalition of big oil companies and the intelligence agencies 
of the United States, Great Britain, the U.S.S.R., and Israel used 
the olama to mobilize the forces of the Islamic revolution in order 
to halt the development of Persia and to prevent its impending entry 
into the "northern club." 




Conspiracies of the Freemasons, Bahais and Zionists
It is commonly believed in Persia that various elite groups are 
organized in secret lodges of Freemasons under the control of the 
British, who use them to advance their secret designs to control 
world affairs. 

Groups accused of being under the thumb of the Freemasons include 
former courtiers, landowners, tribal chiefs, intellectuals, leading 
olama, wealthy merchants, contractors, influence peddlers, political 
bosses, and most politicians, including deputies to the Majles and 
cabinet members. 

Belief in a conspiracy among the adherents of the Bahai faith is 
based on a forged document attributed to Prince Dimitri Dolgorukov 
(known in Persian as Kinyaz Dalguroki), the Russian minister to 
Persia in 1846-54. 

It purports to a memoir in which the prince described how he created 
the Babi and Bahai faiths as a way of weakening Shi'ism and Persia as 
a whole. It was first circulated in Tehran in various forms in the 
late 1930s and has since been widely cited in Muslim polemics as 
evidence that the Bahais were controlled first by the Russians and 
later by the British or the Americans or both. 

Those who believe in an international Jewish conspiracy to dominate 
the world find their proof in the protocols of the Elders of Zion, a 
document originally forged by the czarist secret police but still 
widely accepted as authentic in the Middle East. 

The Zionist conspiracy is thought to have supported the "despotic" 
rule of the shah; for example, soldiers who are supposed to have 
massacred "thousands" of innocent people on Black Friday (8 September 
1978) are said to have been Israelis. 

Some people have argued that Israel supported the Islamic revolution 
in order to weaken its only potential rival for domination in the 
region by replacing the shah with a "vulnerable and dependent Islamic 
regime." 

The popularity of conspiracy theories among Persians arises from a 
combination of political, social, psychological, and cultural 
factors: frequent foreign interference during the period of 
semicolonialism in the early 20th century and great-power politics in 
the 1940s-80s; the legacy of deeply rooted pre-Islamic and Shi'ite 
cultural beliefs about satanic forces; and the effectiveness of such 
theories as a collective defense mechanism, particularly during 
periods of powerlessness, defeat, and political turmoil. 

Certain deep-rooted aspects of the Persian cultural heritage, which 
seem to have no parallel in other Muslim societies, may also have 
contributed to the popularity of conspiracy theories. They include a 
dualistic world view, probably derived from pre-Islamic religious 
beliefs, in which good and evil powers were considered to be in 
conflict, with the latter directing the course of history. 

The mythological character of traditional Persian historiography, 
which may reflect a particular receptivity to the mythological mode 
of thought; a propensity to poetic exaggeration (eghraq-e sha'erana) 
among the Persians at all social levels; and a long tradition of 
attributing miraculous deeds to the twelve Shi'ite imams are other 
probable contributing factors. 

Although blaming others can help assuage anxiety about failures, 
ready acceptance of conspiracy theories has also proved to be highly 
dysfunctional; in modern Persia it has contributed to political 
malaise that has sometimes precluded rational responses to internal 
and external crises. 


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are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are sordid matters and 
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used politically by different groups with major and minor effects spread throughout 
the spectrum of time and thought.
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DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
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CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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