Sunday, Jul. 23, 2006
Meanwhile, The View From Inside Iran
Hizballah may be Tehran's client, but Iranians aren't buying the
propaganda By AZADEH MOAVENI

Parvin Heydari, an Iranian mother of two, was flipping back and forth
between the nightly news and Oprah when a bulletin on an Iranian state
channel caught her attention. It urged Iranians to boycott what it
called "Zionist products," including those made by Pepsi, Nestlé and
Calvin Klein, and warned that profits from such products "are
converted into bullets piercing the chests of Lebanese and Palestinian
children." As evidence, the voice-over intoned, "Pepsi stands for 'pay
each penny to save Israel.'" Heydari says she changed the channel, as
she has no intention of crossing Nestlé's Nesquik off her shopping
list. "Lebanon has nothing to do with us," she says. "We should mind
our own business and concentrate on policies that are good for our
economy, and our kids."

To many observers in the Western world, Hizballah, the Lebanese 
guerrilla group battling Israel, is a mere puppet of Iran. Some are
convinced that Hizballah triggered the crisis on Tehran's orders to
divert world attention away from Iran's controversial nuclear plans.
But client states are not necessarily as docile as one might think.
Just as Israel sometimes takes actions that surprise (and even
displease) the U.S., Hizballah does things Iran has neither ordered up
nor necessarily approves of.

It's impossible to know the precise origins of the current crisis in
Lebanon, but since it erupted two weeks ago, the mood in Tehran has
swung between indifference--the fighting rarely makes the headlines--
and resentment over Iran's longstanding sponsorship of Hizballah.
True, there have been officially sponsored rallies declaring support
for Hizballah, whose leaders pledge religious allegiance to Iran's
Supreme Leader, Ayatullah Ali Khamenei. But the emotional support for
Hizballah common throughout the Arab world is largely absent here.

Iranians like Heydari believe that their country, ethnically and
linguistically Persian, should stay out of the Arabs' fight with
Israel and focus on improving living standards at home. "I don't think
it's right to support them when our own people are hungry," says
Mohammad Reza Afshari, 23, a mechanic who works two jobs yet still
cannot afford to move out or attend college. The shop where he works
abuts a vast mural depicting a female suicide bomber with a baby in
her arms, accompanied by the words I LOVE MOTHERHOOD, BUT I 
LOVE
MARTYRDOM MORE. Frustration with such propaganda underpins young
people's reactions to the conflict. "Where are the Arabs?" asks
Afshari angrily. "They're sitting around, while we're risking our
position in the world."

It's not only ordinary Iranians who are worried about what the Middle
East explosion means for Iran. Even as state infomercials order
Iranians to boycott soft drinks, officials in Tehran--pragmatists and
conservatives alike--concur that the conflict is bad news for the
Iranian regime because it exacerbates the West's image of Tehran as a
regional troublemaker. Rather than helpfully distracting attention
from Iran, as many have charged, the conflict "undermines Iran's
position," says a university professor close to senior Iranian
officials.

The thorny nuclear negotiations with the West are likely to become
even trickier. The delay in efforts to enforce a cease-fire in Lebanon
is inflaming divisions within the Iranian regime on how to respond to
the U.S.-backed package of incentives offered to Tehran in June.
Before the crisis erupted, the momentum seemed to favor advocates of a
pragmatic, positive response. But now the radicals are using the
U.S.-backed Israeli campaign in Lebanon to push their case for a tough
line. As an adviser to a senior conservative ayatullah puts it, "This
has strengthened the hand of those who argue, 'If this happened to us,
the only thing that would save us is a nuclear deterrent.'"

In the low-rent neighborhood of Tehran Pars, patrons at a café talk of
how to balance faith with the politics of aiding Islamic militant
groups. Mehdi Sedaghat, 27, a clothing-store clerk, speaks between
bites of his bologna sandwich. "It's our religious duty to aid Muslims
who are being killed," says Sedaghat, whose car bears a sticker on the
rear window that reads INSURED BY IMAM REZA (Shi'ite Islam's revered
figure). "But reality is reality, and we can't afford it." He quotes a
Persian proverb: "If the lantern is needed at home, donating it to the
mosque is haram [forbidden]."



Copyright © 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. 
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