http://socialistworker.org/2009/06/15/iran-boils-over
ANALYSIS: LEE SUSTAR

Iran boils over

Lee Sustar looks at the dynamics driving mass protests and repression in
Iran following the rigged presidential election.

June 15, 2009

IRAN WAS in uncharted political territory following mass protests against
what was almost certainly a rigged presidential election victory for
incumbent Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. The long-festering divisions in the Iranian
ruling class have become wide-open splits as the result of mass support for
the reformist presidential candidate, Mir Hussein Mousavi.

A vicious police crackdown on demonstrations in the capital city of Tehran
was accompanied by the arrest of more than 130 prominent Mousavi
supporters--including Mohammad Reza Khatami, the brother of former President
Mahmoud Khatami, a former speaker of the parliament, and the son-in-law of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, a leader of the 1979 Islamist revolution.

Other figures rounded up by police include Mostafa Tajzadeh, a minister of
the interior under Khatami; Behzad Nabavi, a former minister of industry;
and Mohsen Mirdamadi, organizer of the 1979 occupation of the U.S. Embassy.

In the past, such crackdowns were aimed mostly at liberal newspaper editors,
human rights activists and labor union organizers. Now major politicians are
getting the same treatment from Ahmadinejad, who the street protesters call
a dictator and liken to the former Shah of Iran, the U.S.-backed strongman
who was toppled in 1979.

This struggle at the top of Iranian society may lead to more rebellion from
below. Unlike previous elections, where even victims of election fraud
swallowed the results, Mousavi has refused to do so. Instead, he called on
his supporters to remain on the streets, and formally requested that the
authorities grant permission to hold further protests.

Hard-fought presidential elections--including vote stealing to boost the
tally by one or two percentage points--are nothing new in post-revolution
Iran. But Ahmadinejad's claim of more than 62 percent of the vote isn't
credible.

While it's possible that the president's support among the poor,
particularly in rural areas, could have made him the top vote getter among
five rivals, it's highly unlikely that he could have captured an outright
majority to avoid a second-round election between the top two candidates.

The most obvious sign of fraud is that the losing candidates failed to win
even their own hometowns and regions, according to election
authorities--which is practically unheard of in Iran. For example, Mousavi,
according to the official results, did badly in the province of Azerbaijan,
even though he is an Azeri who is popular there.

As Middle East expert Juan Cole wrote:

It is claimed that cleric Mehdi Karroubi, the other reformist candidate,
received 320,000 votes, and that he did poorly in Iran's western provinces,
even losing in Luristan. He is a Lur and is popular in the west, including
in Kurdistan. Karroubi received 17 percent of the vote in the first round of
presidential elections in 2005. While it is possible that his support has
substantially declined since then, it is hard to believe that he would get
less than 1 percent of the vote.

The question is: Why would Ahmadinejad risk such an obvious and crude
manipulation of the voting results?

Any answer at this point is speculation. But there is a logic to stealing
the election, and by an overwhelming margin--by claiming an outright
majority of the vote, Ahmadinejad could avoid a second-round runoff election
against Mousavi, his main competitor.

In the last days before the June 12 vote, Mousavi's backers mobilized
demonstrations of hundreds of thousands, not just in the capital city of
Tehran, but in provincial cities as well. Ahmadinejad likely feared that
even bigger protests would unfold in a second round, and give Mousavi a
victory. The apparent calculation was that it would be safer to declare a
first-round victory to put a decisive end to any challenge. Iran's supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, endorsed the election results in the hopes
of restoring order.

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NATURALLY, THE election results spurred more protests. So far, the
demonstrations have withstood violent attacks by police and paramilitary
groups known as basij, who patrol the streets for supposedly un-Islamic
behavior such as immodest dress by women.

And by hardening the divisions in the Iranian ruling class, the election
fraud has ushered in a new era in Iranian politics, in which rival groupings
may finally crystallize into something like permanent political parties--a
development that has until now been blocked by the Shia Islamist clerical
establishment at the core of Iranian politics.

So what comes next is anybody's guess. But to better understand Iran's
political dynamics, it's helpful to look at the social base of the leading
candidates.

Ahmadinejad, as a veteran of the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s and the armed
forces' Revolutionary Guard, is the representative of the hard right within
the clergy and Iran's national security apparatus.

Relatively unknown when he ran as a candidate in the 2005 elections, he was
able--thanks to what were likely stolen votes--to get into a runoff
election. His opponent was another conservative, the former Iranian
President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani. By campaigning as a populist,
Ahmadinejad handily defeated Rafsanjani, one of the richest men in Iran and
the representative of big capital.

Upon taking office, Ahmadinejad aimed to roll back the liberal policies of
the previous administration of reformer Mahmoud Khatami. In his eight years
in office, Khatami had taken a more liberal stance on social issues in order
to cultivate the educated middle class, while forging economic ties with
Western European capital.

But Khatami failed to stand up to hard-liners' attacks on liberal students
and the media, and had little to offer the working class or the poor.
Ahmadinejad could thus benefit from the cynicism of the middle class
intelligentsia toward the reformers, while promising a better day for the
working-class majority.

Once in office, Ahmadinejad tapped into record-high state oil revenues in an
attempt to consolidate his political base. Handouts to the poor, bonuses to
government employees and local development projects were central to his
economic policy. And by boosting consumption of workers and the poor, this
state spending boosted in the income of the bazaar--the small business
interests that are the backbone of the Iranian hard right.

Other factions in the Iranian ruling class viewed these policies with
growing alarm. In the view of figures like Rafsanjani, spending on
scattershot social programs and Latin American-style clientelism was robbing
the economy of money needed for investment--in particular to modernize the
oil and gas industry. Many were leery of Ahmadinejad's confrontational
approach to the West over Iran's nuclear program, arguing that it wasn't
worth the cost of sanctions on Iran's economy.

Meanwhile, the educated middle class and professionals increasingly chafed
at Ahmadinejad's heavy-handed attempts to re-impose the social norms of the
Islamist revolution. Furthermore, the working class saw its income
constantly eroded by inflation, and efforts to organize unions were met with
harsh repression under Ahmadinejad. The president even attempted to roll
back price subsidies for staple goods for the poor, and corruption, long a
feature of Iranian government, continued.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

FOR THESE reasons, Mousavi and his supporters saw an opportunity to unseat
Ahmadinejad.

The effort brought together some unlikely allies. One of Mousavi's main
backers is Rafsanjani, even though it was Rafsanjani who, two decades ago,
pushed through the abolition of the office of prime minister in order to
oust Mousavi, who then held the post. Back then, Mousavi was a proponent of
a state capitalist economic policy that advocated restrictions on imports
and government control of key industries. Rafsanjani, a champion of private
property rights, was determined to isolate him, and largely succeeded.

Today, however, Mousavi's economic program is closer to that of Rafsanjani.
"He advocated economic liberalization, and pledged to control inflation
through monetary policies and make life easier for private business,"
British journalist Robert Fisk wrote.

While Mousavi's calls for women's rights and greater political freedom
inspired student activists and the middle class, he made no real outreach to
workers and the poor, leaving the field open to Ahmadinejad. Thus, the
Iranian president accused Rafsanjani of being corrupt during a televised
presidential debate. (The reformist presidential candidate, Karroubi, also
failed to put economic issues at the center of his campaign.)

In the post-election crisis, the limitations of the reformers' social base
have been exposed. A struggle to oust Ahmadinejad would require far more
militant mass action than anything yet seen. But it seems doubtful, to say
the least, that Mousavi, who has spent the last three decades in the
political hierarchy, would call for workers' strikes or insurrections.

He'll be tempted to play an inside-outside game, appealing for street
actions while counting on Rafsanjani--the head of the clerics' Expediency
Council and a consummate powerbroker--to cut some kind of deal with
Ahmadinejad.

It may be too late for that, however. Continued protests and repression may
compel Mousavi and his allies to build some sort of underground opposition.
In fact, Ahmadinejad has already accused Mousavi of trying to mount a
"velvet revolution," styled after the 1989 demonstrations that overthrew the
Stalinist regime in Czechoslovakia.

Certainly, the U.S. will try to use Iran's power struggle to its own
advantage by ratcheting up diplomatic pressure and increasing the usual CIA
efforts to try to co-opt sections of the opposition. This will be a gift to
Ahmadinejad, who will use any such efforts as a pretext to denounce, if not
smash, the opposition.

Real democratic change in Iran won't come from U.S. intervention, but from a
broadening and deepening of the protest movement.

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