Iran And America: The Will To Change

*By Yacov Ben Efrat*

29 June, 2009
*Challenge-mag.com * <http://www.challenge-mag.com/>

Two weeks have passed since the Iranian elections of June 12, 2009, and the
storm aroused by the putative result refuses to die. What's happening there
is not a democratic disagreement, as the Emir of Qatar described it, but a
conflict between two well-defined forces over the country's future. We
cannot know who really won the election, but even supposing it was incumbent
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, his "victory" has revealed a deep schism.
The struggle concerns the nature of government in Iran, and the results of
this struggle will extend much farther than the questionable election
results.

The huge demonstrations of the first week reflected lack of confidence in
Iran's electoral system, not merely because the regime can easily fabricate
the result, but also because, at base, this system is far from reflecting
the will of the people. Political parties are outlawed, so the choice is
among personalities. In order to prevent the election of anyone who is
anti-regime, every candidate must be approved by the "Committee for
Preservation of the Constitution," whose task is to ensure fidelity to
Islamic rule.

Among 475 initial candidates this time (including 42 women), only three men
were permitted to challenge the incumbent. Thus anyone who wanted to depose
Ahmadinejad had to vote for one of these. As it turned out, Mir Hossein
Mousavi, who had been prime minister under the Ayatollah Khomeini, garnered
support from most of those who were fed up with Ahmadinejad and his patron,
the supreme religious authority in Iran, Ali Khamenei.

What caused hundreds of thousands to pour into the streets and risk their
lives? How did it happen that the Supreme Authority lost his authority? Iran
is an enormous exporter of oil, like several other third-world nations, and
its economic situation is no better than theirs. It is no accident that the
president of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, came out in support of Ahmadinejad.
Both countries produce oil; both suffer from chronic unemployment, rising
inflation and poverty that cries to the heavens. Chavez is the idol of the
masses. Ahmadinejad too, by his way of dressing and talking, his
anti-imperialist positions and his relentless enmity toward the US and
Israel, presents himself as a revolutionary and a friend to the poor.

It seems, however, that many Iranians remain unimpressed by Ahmadinejad's
rhetoric. More than anything, they are troubled by the suppression of human
freedoms, the cruel subjugation of women, and the imposition of Islamic
fundamentalism as a way of life. If we add the economic backwardness of Iran
and the religious bureaucracy's control of its oil revenues, we get a
ticking bomb. When the regime uses terror against the Iranian people, this
will only speed the moment of explosion.

For the fact is that thirty years since the ousting of the Shah, the Iranian
Islamic Republic has not succeeded in providing its people with a decent
life. Ahmadinejad plumes himself with the feathers of the poor, but the
location of those who vote for him shows Iran's failure to propel its
society beyond the poverty line. According to the meager information we
have, it was the urban population – the focus of economic and cultural power
in every modern society – that voted against Ahmadinejad. The poor, living
in remote villages throughout the country, may form the electoral majority,
but their contribution toward building the society is small. What's more,
where there is no freedom of assembly and the regime is all-powerful,
nothing is easier than to buy the loyalty of those who live on charity.

The Iranian protest movement is not a foreign import. Nor does it resemble
elitist, reactionary protest movements like the orange revolution in
Ukraine. Iran's green movement reflects an authentic will to change an
oppressive regime that has impeded the country's economic, social and
cultural development. But this movement has a problem. It lacks leadership.
Mousavi has been a channel, to be sure, for expressing revulsion from the
regime, but he cannot encompass the unorganized currents that have now begun
to flow. For this reason the regime will succeed, temporarily, in
suppressing the demonstrations and imposing its will on the people.

Yet the green movement will prove to be a landmark. The division within the
regime between the reformists and the conservatives did not first emerge as
a result of the demonstrations: rather, it made them possible. That division
has existed ever since the death of Khomeini in 1989. It was expressed in
the election of reformist candidate Muhammad Khatami to two terms, from 1997
until 2005. But Khatami disappointed his constituents. Against the
determined opposition of the Supreme Authority, Ali Khamenei, he failed to
implement the reforms he'd promised: to eliminate corruption and bring more
democracy.

Within the religious establishment there is division between Khamenei and
Hashemi Rafsanjani, one of Iran's wealthiest persons, who is considered an
important religious authority. Rafsanjani is influenced by the
disappointment of the people, especially the urban middle class. By
continuing to alienate them, he knows, Khamenei courts disaster. Rafsanjani
holds that the government must express the will of the classes that
constitute the society's economic and cultural base. The conservatives, on
the other hand, see any departure from religious law as dangerously
corrosive.

All the democratic forces in Iran, including the Communist Party (which is
underground), called on the people to support Mousavi in the recent
elections. They accurately gauged the mood of the masses: that behind
Mousavi a broad movement has gathered, whose strategic aim is to topple the
totalitarian regime. This internal division opens a new horizon for the
Iranian people after thirty years of arrests and assassinations directed
against the leaders and parties that deposed the Shah. Iranians may hope at
last to rebuild their parties and trade unions toward the creation of a
democratic Iran.

The hesitant support of US President Barack Obama, the cynical
pronouncements of Israeli PM Binyamin Netanyahu (who broadcasts his shock at
the firing on protesters in far-off Tehran but never in nearby Bil'in), the
crocodile tears of the Shah's son in Washington – need not mislead us. The
Iranian people has no wish to sit again on Uncle Sam's lap, lining up
against the Arab world. The Iranian people has no wish to exchange the
present dictator for a new Shah. The Iranian opposition knows what
colonialism means. It sees what goes on in the occupied Palestinian
territories. It sees what globalization has wrought among the peoples of the
world. It will not move backward. Its whole will is to bring the Iranians,
schooled in struggle and disappointment, as a free people into the family of
peoples.

The revolution of 1979 against the Shah was never intended to usher in a
Shiite dictatorship, but the Ayatollahs co-opted it. The lesson has been
learned, and the new Iranian movement will know how to guard basic rights
and freedoms.

There is a direct connection between what is happening in Iran and what is
happening in the US. Until recently, who dreamed that Americans would elect
an Afro-American president? The Obama Effect reverberates through the Middle
East. He has overthrown the Bush policy, which created abysmal hatred
against America – a hatred well exploited by the Iranian regime and its
allies.

We should bear in mind, though, that Obama was not elected to make peace in
our region, rather to rescue America from the worst economic crisis in
eighty years. The American people seeks liberation from the free-market
fundamentalism of the neo-cons, while the Iranian people seeks liberation
from religious fundamentalism. The concurrence of these two movements is no
coincidence. One process feeds the other and is fed in return. George W.
Bush used Iran to frighten Americans, while Ahmadinejad used Bush's America
to strengthen his hold on Iranians. Now both societies have exhausted their
political-economic systems. Obama's election expresses the American will for
change, and the outcome of the Iranian election brings hundreds of thousands
into the streets. In America the crisis is more purely economic. In Iran it
is political and economic. Yet these two very different processes, in two
very different societies, belong nonetheless to the same historical moment:
it is a moment of systemic change, with societies converging toward
democracy and social justice.

The events in Iran are not foreign imports, just as the events in America
are anchored in deep internal change. The world is going through a process
that will alter an entire system, where predatory capitalism has lived in
friction with an Islamic fundamentalism bent on correcting "the evils of the
West." It is not just the free-market system that has reached a dead end.
The Islamic "resistance" too has exhausted itself, in Lebanon and Palestine
as well as Iran. Events in Iran send shock waves through all the Arab
regimes that deny basic rights to their citizens. Iranian women are an
example for Arab women, and Iranian workers are an example for Arab workers
whose right to form unions is denied. This is the real "Iranian bomb."
Israel must fear it, and America too – for Obama is counting on the old
alliances with Arab dictators. The development of this "bomb" will take
time, no doubt, but Netanyahu, Ehud Barak and Tzippi Livni ought to read the
writing on the wall: the years of the Occupation are numbered; it will
become increasingly anachronistic as Arab masses take to the streets,
challenging their regimes in the name of democracy and human rights. Thirty
years ago the Iranian revolution changed the face of the Middle East toward
fundamentalism. Today, on the streets of Tehran, appear the first glimmers
of real democracy.





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