The Battle for Iran

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The Battle for Iran

By Nader Hashemi

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20100201/hashemi

This article appeared in the February 1, 2010 edition of The Nation.

Are we witnessing the final days of the Islamic Republic of Iran? Judging
from mainstream press coverage, it certainly seems so. Reacting to the
street protests that rocked Iran after the death of the dissident Grand
Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri in late December, veteran Iran observer
Robin Wright asked whether "it is time to start wondering out loud whether
Iran's uprising could become one of those Berlin Wall moments." While this
is a tempting thought, given its implications for US-Iran relations, an
obituary for the Islamic Republic is premature. What is required now is less
of a projection of our own biases and preferences onto Iranian politics and
instead a more sober analysis of the internal balance of power and the
strengths and weaknesses of the regime and its domestic opposition.
There is little doubt that Iran's clerical oligarchy has been severely
stunned and badly bruised by events following the disputed June election.
The regime has suffered a huge blow to its legitimacy, and its management of
the crisis has made matters worse. At the elite and societal level,
unprecedented dissent and opposition have emerged as a confused regime
increases state-sanctioned violence and begins a slow drift toward hard
authoritarianism/semi-totalitarianism. However, despite this body blow, we
are still a long way from witnessing the demise of the Islamic Republic.
Iran is a rentier state, which means it pays its bills by the sale of oil
rather than through taxation. This gives the regime a significant degree of
autonomy from society and immunizes it from societal pressure. This system
also fuels an extensive patron-client network that allows the regime to buy
the allegiance of millions of people whose livelihood is tied to its
survival. The regime also retains ideological support in rural and poorer
areas of the country, where more pious segments of the population are
dependent on state-controlled media, with limited access to the Internet or
satellite TV.

Furthermore, there exists a loyal group of hard-core devotees who have
internalized the regime's core propaganda line, to wit: recent street
protests are foreign-funded and orchestrated; Iran's domestic problems are
caused by the machinations of the United States and Israel; and Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei is God's representative on earth. Exact figures on the
size of this core group of ideological supporters are difficult to
ascertain, but they are substantial in number, and many are willing to lay
down their lives for the Supreme Leader if called upon.

Finally, the Islamic Republic retains solid control of key institutions that
pertain to the use of violence, the administration of justice and economic
production. There is little evidence that this control has weakened.
However, there are deep divisions among conservatives, many of whom despise
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for his economic mismanagement and reckless
foreign policy. Moderate conservatives are also upset at the severity of the
human rights crackdown, and a recent parliamentary investigation has blamed
the notorious public prosecutor Saeed Mortazavi for overseeing the abuse of
detainees at Kahrizak prison. He might be sacrificed in a gesture to the
opposition, but given his close ties to the Supreme Leader, this is far from
certain.

The Green opposition draws its support from Iran's sizable middle and
educated classes, with overwhelming support among intellectuals, students,
women's groups and especially youth, who constitute two-thirds of the
population. While the opposition emerged as a broad and loose coalition
angered by a stolen election, it has steadily grown and expanded its class
and geographical base and, most important, its political demands.
Ahmadinejad's "coup d'état government" (as it is called by the opposition)
is no longer the target of the protests; the Supreme Leader and clerical
authoritarianism are. The relationship between the leadership and its
supporters is tenuous and evolving. Protests are organized at the grassroots
level without any coordination from above, and it remains to be seen if the
Green Movement can maintain its discipline in the streets as the regime
intensifies its crackdown. After the late December protests, there was
considerable concern that people were engaging in random acts of violence,
tarnishing a nonviolent movement and giving the regime an excuse to crack
down. In an open letter in early January, the veteran opposition leader
Ezzatollah Sahabi spoke to this point, warning the opposition about the
dangers of a slide into "radicalism and violence."

The Green Movement's biggest asset is that it has already won an
overwhelming ideological victory against the regime. In the realm of
political ideas, the battle is over and Iran's clerical oligarchs know
it--liberal democratic ideas have triumphed. Today the guardians of the
Islamic Republic cannot tolerate an open debate or exchange of ideas about
events of the past six months or more broadly about Iran's human rights and
political record over the past thirty years. Nothing terrifies this regime
more. An abstract public discussion about Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's
theory of political rule, velayat-e faqih (the rule of the Islamic jurist),
or even a consideration of the merits of democracy and secularism can land
Iranians in prison. Censorship of newspapers, jamming of satellite
television, blocking of Internet sites and, most revealing, the mass arrest
of almost every leading Iranian pro-democracy and human rights activist,
many of them journalists, speaks to the extreme paranoia of the Islamic
Republic and its desire to prevent its citizens from getting access to
information and dissenting points of view. Among Iranian expatriates, a
public defense of clerical rule in Iran is unthinkable, not because the
meeting would be disrupted (as sometimes happens) but because support for
the clerical status quo in Iran is marginal when free debate is allowed.
The roots of this important ideological victory can be traced to the rise of
the reform movement in the 1990s. It was during this period that Iranian
political culture experienced a transformation, primarily because of the
work of the country's religious intellectuals. The basic principles of
liberal democracy and an indigenous understanding of "Islamic secularism"
emerged and sank deep roots. This phenomenon underpins and informs the Green
Movement today and has been recently chronicled in two excellent books,
Mehran Kamrava's Iran's Intellectual Revolution and Farhang Rajaee's
Islamism and Modernism: The Changing Discourse in Iran.

The struggle in Iran is akin to a boxing match between a slow-footed,
unintelligent and arrogant heavyweight and a more agile, sophisticated and
increasingly confident lightweight. The global audience overwhelmingly
favors the underdog. Round One is over, and the weaker opponent has defied
the odds not only by surviving; the lightweight has demonstrated prowess by
striking several important blows that have disoriented and shaken the
confidence of its more powerful adversary. Round Two has only just begun,
and this championship bout is far from over.

Nader Hashemi teaches Middle East and Islamic politics at the Josef Korbel
School of International Studies at the University of Denver. He is the
author of Islam, Secularism and Liberal Democracy: Toward a Democratic
Theory for Muslim Societies (Oxford).


 

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