http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/1000/op23.htm

 27 May - 2 June 2010
Issue No. 1000
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Trotsky, neoliberalism and other anomalies

Few things are as sad to see as reactionary libertarians attempting to hijack 
popular movements against oppression, writes Hamid Dabashi* 

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They say when León Trotsky was about to sign the peace treaty between Russia 
and Germany at the end of World War I at Brest-Litovsk he wrote to his comrade 
Lenin and said that during the signing ceremony he was required to wear formal 
dress, and wondered how he could do so as a militant Marxist. "You go there and 
sign that treaty even if you have to go butt-naked," was the apocryphal 
response from Lenin. 

I was recently reminded of that (factual or fictional) story and the frivolous 
paradox it posits when a conservative outlet in the United States called the 
Cato Institute gave, of all things, its "Milton Friedman Award for Advancing 
Liberty" to the prominent Iranian dissident Akbar Ganji. Ganji, knowing only 
too well my position on such venues and yet quite anxious not to get implicated 
in the politics of the Cato Institute and its Milton Friedman Award, invited me 
and my wife, among a handful of other trusted friends, to join him and his wife 
on this occasion in Washington DC for the award ceremony. To assure me -- not 
that I needed assurance -- of what he was going to say during his acceptance 
speech, he even shared with me the text of his speech. In that speech, which he 
asked me to translate into English for official release, he did not beat around 
the bush. 

In no uncertain terms, Ganji denounced the United States in his official speech 
for its atrocious history around the globe, and more specifically for its 
support for dictatorial regimes. "When we look at the history of the last 
century," he said, "we see that Western countries, led by the United States, 
have brought dictatorial regimes to power and have consistently supported 
them." He then went around the globe and pointedly singled out US support for 
Augusto Pinochet, Milton Friedman's bosom buddy, as a case in point. "Between 
1962 and 1975," Ganji told the august gathering on 13 May 2010 in the 
Washington Hilton Hotel, "some 38 military coups were masterminded, one of the 
most famous of which was that of General Augusto Pinochet of Chile, who in 
collaboration with the American government toppled the democratically elected 
government of Salvador Allende in 1973." The audience, led by the keynote 
speaker, the prominent conservative pundit George Will, just sat there, chewed 
on their dessert, and politely nodded their heads. "This was not news for us in 
Iran," Ganji drove home, "for two decades earlier we had experienced the 
military coup sponsored and engineered by the American and British governments 
against the government of Mohamed Mosaddegh." 

There must have been some 900 top notch American conservatives in that ballroom 
listening to Akbar Ganji telling them how "the United States and the Western 
world reaped the first fruit of their own deeds with the Islamic Revolution in 
1979, and today they face fully grown and powerful trees of violent 
fundamentalism, and of course they must remember their own share in planting 
these trees with shame." Coffee cups on such occasions have a bizarre habit of 
suddenly getting cold and even frosty. As Nader Hashemi, Ganji's trusted 
friend, read through the English translation of the speech, and as Ganji and 
his wife stood behind him on stage with sombre and stoic faces, sporting their 
green shawl and scarf, a spreading silence overcame the ballroom. All natural 
noise was sucked out of the air. You could scarcely breathe. I caught a glimpse 
of George Will at the adjacent table. His boyish face had lost its calculated 
confidence. 

Ganji was not merely historical. He drove fast into the heart of Washington's 
most recent atrocities, in particular the invited Cato guests' favourite 
president, George W Bush: "Entirely oblivious of the complications of Middle 
Eastern politics, President George W Bush and Prime Minister Tony Blair were 
under the impression that by invading a country and occupying it they can bring 
democracy to it. In Afghanistan and Iraq all such delusions went up in flames 
and burnt out in smoke." He was carefully carving a path through the thicket of 
endemic atrocities that had interwoven the branches and leaves of globalised 
imperialism and Islamist theocracy and was running -- as if on a yellow brick 
road -- home on it. 

As Edward H Crane, founder and president of the Cato Institute, and his guests 
sat there politely and listened, Akbar Ganji remained relentless: "The 
one-sided support of the United States for Israel has exacerbated this 
situation. The gushing wound of Palestine is the most appropriate site for the 
worsening of the infection of fundamentalism." If the Cato gathering thought 
they had heard enough by now, they had another thing coming: "Please allow me 
now to turn to another American policy in the region regarding nuclear armament 
that is equally conducive to a fertile ground for fundamentalism. American 
policies in this regard are at best predicated on double standards. Entirely 
disregarding Israel's massive stockpile of nuclear weapons, the United States 
is single-mindedly fixated on the Islamic Republic and preventing it from 
becoming a nuclear power." 

As for those cons and/or neocons in Washington who were pushing for a military 
strike against Iran, Ganji had a few words to say too. "The point," he made it 
clear, "is not merely that Iran should not be invaded militarily. The point is 
that even talking of a military strike, especially when predicated on the 
nuclear issue, is beneficial to the fundamentalists who rule Iran and as such 
detrimental to the democratic movement in our country, and especially 
beneficial to those fundamentalists who thrive on the persistence of such 
double standards." Sitting in the audience was Leo Melamed, chairman emeritus 
of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and CEO of Melamed & Associates, Inc, a 
global consulting enterprise. To him and the rest of the black-tie dinner 
gathering, Ganji went on to denounce the idea of economic sanctions too, for, 
he explained, "it will ipso facto add to the pain and suffering of the working 
and middle class; and as such it will not only deprive the Green Movement of 
its strongest supporters but will in fact alter the social agenda of people 
altogether, and the struggle for daily sustenance, and to make ends meet, will 
replace the struggle for liberty." 

What Akbar Ganji took away from that Cato event was not just $500,000 to help 
him fight the tyranny he is determined to dismantle. He looked Washington 
straight in the eyes and gave it a litany of the horrors it has perpetrated 
upon the world -- and some 900 conservative Washingtonians just sat there and 
listened. There was just no way to run or turn away and pretend you were not 
listening. But what did the Cato Institute get from this transaction? The 
immoral, bankrupt, and outright criminal disposition of a mode of economic and 
social thinking and practice that comfortably and even naturally placed the 
late Milton Friedman in the company of a murderous dictator like Augusto 
Pinochet now looks around the globe like a hungry shark smelling the fresh 
blood of emerging liberation movements to distort and claim for its own, in 
systemic disregard for human decency. 

The story of Akbar Ganji -- from the battlefields of what turned out violently 
to become an Islamic revolution, to the Revolutionary Guards, to political 
dissidents in the dungeons of the Islamic Republic to the Cato Institute's 
Milton Friedman Award -- is the story of the initial trust, subsequent 
betrayal, and ultimate defiant will of a people in, of, and against a religious 
tyranny. Born and raised in a poor and pious family, Ganji joined the ranks of 
the Islamist revolutionaries at a very young age, and joined force with the 
triumphant Revolutionary Guards of the Islamic Republic. From revolting against 
a corrupt power, the young revolutionary soon realised he was sliding into the 
traps of another corrupt power. Soon he broke ranks with the Islamic Republic, 
became a diligent investigative journalist, exposed its criminal atrocities, 
and served some seven years of his life in its dungeons, and finally went on a 
80-day long hunger strike that took him to the brink of death and back.

After his release from jail in 2006, it took Akbar Ganji a while to find his 
bearings in his new habitat, initially in Europe and subsequently the United 
States. He had his nativist period, laser-beaming on the atrocities of the 
Islamic Republic without any evident sign of seeing their organic links to even 
more atrocious horrors around the globe. In his rush to touch base with leading 
American intellectual icons without any cultivated connection to their politics 
or ideas, he had his share of falls into the traps of native informers and 
expatriate comprador intellectuals who managed to abuse him to push forward 
their own agendas. His story, however, is also the story of the gradual but 
organic transmutation of a nativist cause into a global context, first and 
foremost by trusting his own activist instincts and also by relying on the 
advice of a few close and trusted friends that he has known for a long time 
since his days in Iran. 

Without achieving and coming to terms with that global context, the legitimate 
cause of dissidents from Vaclav Havel to Akbar Ganji becomes easy prey for 
morally bankrupt and intellectually defunct projects in the United States, 
preying on other peoples' legitimate causes to lend legitimacy to themselves. 
But this necessary caution is not a one shot operation. It demands and exacts 
constant vigilance. In solidarity with the democratic movement in Iran, people 
like Akbar Ganji are always in danger of being co-opted by those who think by 
throwing half a million dollars at a dissident or a cause they can buy or at 
least confuse or distort it. The Green Movement is already a suspicious 
appearance on the global scene and among progressive forces and observers, and 
rightly so. The potential and actual abuses of the Green Movement as an 
open-ended civil rights uprising is -- and will continue to be -- a clear and 
present danger. Duplicitous American politicians and equally opportunist 
expatriate reformists are determined to reduce this multi-layered, variegated, 
and above all open-ended, movement to a figment of their own very limited 
imaginations. 

Be that as it may, something at the core of this civil rights movement remains 
healthy and robust, legitimate and liberating, grassroots and democratic; a 
free and floating signifier in dire need for alternative takes on the shade of 
green we see shimmering in the air. To stay the course, there will never be a 
more accurate barometer for the veracity of the Green Movement than for it to 
remain in uncompromising solidarity with liberation movements around the globe, 
and constitutionally committed to the protection of the working class and 
disenfranchised communities at home and aboard. There are no national interests 
outside regional interests, and the interests of the Green Movement are as much 
charged against totalitarian fanaticism from within as against predatory 
imperialism from without. 

On the evening of 13 May 2010, my wife and I sat at the same table with Akbar 
Ganji, his wife, and his other trusted friends, listening to some of the vilest 
defences of the unbridled greed at the heart of globalised capitalism that 
causes unfathomable misery around the globe. We did not blend in well. Ganji 
had done well for the cause he championed that night with his green shawl, and 
evidently there must have been those in the Cato Institute who perhaps even 
regreted their choice altogether. Linking the Green Movement to all other 
regional and global liberation movements, and against predatory imperialism and 
the neoliberal economics it violently imposes around the globe, is the only way 
we may hope to mark this seminal event of our time. Keeping Ganji company, just 
like Trotsky at Brest-Litovsk, we were sticking our necks out in the beehive of 
free market ball- rooming in Washington DC, and doing the little we could to 
help keep a focus on the fragility of the precious water lily that is growing 
on the sinking swamp the Cato Institute calls "Advancing Liberty".

* The writer is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and 
Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.

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