[Quote

State television prominently broadcast the threats of a leading conservative
cleric, Haeri Shirazi, who declared that protesters should be killed on the
spot rather than jailed. "When they are arrested, it is bad; when they are
captured, it is bad," he said. "Do not make victims out of them."

Shirazi claimed that killing protesters "is sanctioned by obedience to Allah
and the prophet and is handed down to the Supreme Leader. When it is
sanctioned by such a power, there is no need to go through the government
powers." Coming amid a widening scandal over the torture and murder of
prisoners detained in earlier protests, the blood-curdling speech couldn't
be clearer.

The opposition leader Mousavi countered by accusing Shirazi of calling for
civil war. That appears to be accurate, as the regime closes ranks around
the upper reaches of the Re
Unquote]

http://socialistworker.org/2010/01/06/new-phase-in-iran-struggle

<http://socialistworker.org/2010/01/06/new-phase-in-iran-struggle>
ANALYSIS: LEE SUSTAR

A new phase in Iran's struggle

Lee Sustar looks at the impact of Iran's recent protests and street battles.

January 6, 2010

IRAN'S POLITICAL crisis has intensified in the wake of protests following
the death of dissident cleric Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri last
month.

The social base of the opposition demonstrations has grown, and the clashes
are deepening the fault lines in Iran's ruling establishment, which appeared
in June when right-wing President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad resorted to fraud to
claim a reelection victory over challenger Mir Hussein Mousavi.

Protests culminated on December 27, the Shia Islam holy day of Ashura, when
seven people were killed, hundreds injured and hundreds more arrested. The
demonstrations began a week earlier to mark Montazeri's death, and follow
big student protests on December 7, a traditional day of demonstrations
marking the 1953 killing of three students, which this year served as an
opportunity to protest Ahmadinejad and the regime.

Particularly alarming for Ahmadinejad were scenes of groups of Iran's
Revolutionary Guard being trapped and disarmed by protesters, who then
flashed the "V" for victory sign.

With the Revolutionary Guard--Iran's most elite military force--proving less
than reliable in carrying out repression, the regime has increasingly relied
on the basij, a paramilitary force tied to networks of conservative mosques.

Central to the crackdown is Ansar-e-Hezbollah, a smaller but more
fascist-type force that has been implicated in the murder of reformist
politicians, and which specializes in attacks on protesters. Some 500 Ansar
thugs wielding machetes and knives carried out an attack on university
students December 31 in the city of Mashhad. Eight students were
hospitalized and many others wounded by knife attacks.

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

THE REGIME signaled that even more vicious repression awaits the opposition
when it next takes to the streets.

State television prominently broadcast the threats of a leading conservative
cleric, Haeri Shirazi, who declared that protesters should be killed on the
spot rather than jailed. "When they are arrested, it is bad; when they are
captured, it is bad," he said. "Do not make victims out of them."

Shirazi claimed that killing protesters "is sanctioned by obedience to Allah
and the prophet and is handed down to the Supreme Leader. When it is
sanctioned by such a power, there is no need to go through the government
powers." Coming amid a widening scandal over the torture and murder of
prisoners detained in earlier protests, the blood-curdling speech couldn't
be clearer.

The opposition leader Mousavi countered by accusing Shirazi of calling for
civil war. That appears to be accurate, as the regime closes ranks around
the upper reaches of the Revolutionary Guard--Ahmadinejad's base--as well as
the most reactionary clerics surrounding Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei.

This has posed a dilemma for Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, the
former president, who had backed Mousavi in the June election. Rafsanjani--a
powerful, conservative figure who is both a major capitalist and head of the
clerical-dominated Expediency Council--has no interest in the movement
becoming radicalized and spreading deeper into the working class.

Yet his wealth and influence are also threatened by the clique around
Ahmadinejad, which has used the Revolutionary Guard as a launching pad for
vast business networks and political clout. (To take one recent example, the
Revolutionary Guard in November won a $2.5 billion government contract to
build a rail network to a seaport.)

At the same time, Ajmadinejad, after using the recent spike in oil prices
for populist handouts, is trying to use his tighter grip over the economy to
try to maintain a popular base amid economic crisis and a growing opposition
movement, even while removing price subsidies on staple goods. As academic
Nader Habibi wrote <http://www.payvand.com/news/09/nov/1137.html> [1]:

In addition to expanding the economic reach of the [Revolutionary Guard],
the ruling faction is also trying to increase its ability to distribute
economic resources by enhancing its discretionary control over the proposed
income support program. During recent parliamentary debates about
replacement of current price subsidies with direct income subsidies,
President Ahmadinejad has campaigned hard to make sure that the president's
office will have discretionary control over the additional incomes of public
enterprises after the removal of price subsidies on goods and services that
they sell to the public.

Critics are concerned that the president will use this privilege to
distribute the cash and income subsidies in a fashion to enhance his
political base and deny benefits to households that might be sympathetic to
the post-election protest movement.

In response, Rafsanjani, along with Majlis (parliament) Speaker Ali
Larijani, are trying to create a center-right alternative to Ahmadinejad,
criticizing protesters for going too far, but also opposing the regime's
worst repression. "The question is whether Rafsanjani is more afraid of the
military apparatus or the masses," said S. Sepheri, who visited Iran during
the election crisis. "That's also Larijani's dilemma."

In the past, Sepheri said, differences in the Iranian ruling class and the
political establishment would have been aired out in the majlis, resulting
in a deal being made or an intervention by Khamenei, as was the case during
the reformist presidency of Mohammad Khatami from 1997-2005. "But with the
stolen election, that social contract broke," Sepheri said. "Now those
fights are happening in the streets."

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

WHILE THE regime is determined to crush the opposition, protesters have
shown increasing tactical skill and boldness in building blockades, and
disarming the basij militias and burning their trademark motorcycles.

At the same time, the protests in Tehran have drawn increasing numbers from
working-class neighborhoods, signaling a broadening of the movement's social
base. While the opposition was always far broader than the middle-class,
student-dominated movement portrayed by Ahmadinejad's domestic and
international supporters, workers have yet to enter the struggle as a class
with the kind of strikes and other economic actions that erupted in Iran in
2004-2006.

That may be changing--or at least, the regime fears it might be. In
November, two trade unionists in Iranian Kurdistan, Pedram Nasrollahi and
Farzad Ahmadi, were arrested. A couple weeks later, Mansour Osanloo, the
jailed Tehran bus drivers' union leader, was fired from his job.

Even without widespread workers' action, the radicalization of the movement
has forced Mousavi to walk a tightrope. On the one hand, he has stated he
isn't afraid to die--and his nephew, Ali Mousavi, was among those killed
December 27. Yet Mousavi also released a set of proposals for a dialogue
with the government--a move that some opposition activists see as a
concession. Others see Mousavi's initiative as an effort to expose the
government as an emerging police state that's unable to tolerate any
opposition.

But the questions for the opposition movement go far beyond whether to agree
with this or that tactic pursued by Mousavi.

A former prime minister during the Iran-Iraq war of the 1980s, Mousavi is
himself a central figure in the political establishment. He represents a
layer of politicians from an older generation who wish to see Iran pursue an
economic policy geared more to national development, rather than
Ahmadinejad's privatization schemes that benefit his small ruling circle.

But Mousavi isn't interested in seeing the emergence of an independent
working-class movement. In fact, it was Mousavi's government in the 1980s
that repressed the left and brought the workers' movement under state
control.

What happens next is impossible to predict. Ahmadinejad may be preparing for
some sort of martial law. But the opposition hasn't been cowed by the
repression it has faced so far. On the contrary, the bloodshed, arrests and
torture have only strengthened the determination of protesters. The struggle
is bound to continue--and intensify.

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

Material on this Web site is licensed by SocialistWorker.org, under a Creative
Commons (by-nc-nd 3.0) <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0> [2]
license, except for articles that are republished with permission. Readers
are welcome to share and use material belonging to this site for
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   1. [1] 
http://www.payvand.com/news/09/nov/1137.html<http://www.payvand.com/news/09/nov/1137.html>
   2. [2] 
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0>

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