http://www.eurasiareview.com/irans-pan-islamic-vision-analysis-2-03062011/



Friday, June 03, 2011


Iran’s Pan-Islamic Vision - Analysis


Written by: MEI <http://www.eurasiareview.com/author/mei/>

June 3, 2011

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By Alex Vatanka

At a time of unprecedented popular unrest in Arab states of the Middle East,
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei stated in a February 21, 2011
speech that two simple remedies are required to solve the problems that
afflict the contemporary Islamic World. According to Khamenei, “unity among
Muslim [states]” and “the weakening of America” are the two necessary
steps that all Muslims must take to secure a “bright” future for the umma
or the worldwide Muslim Nation.

 <http://www.eurasiareview.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Iran.jpg> Iran

Iran

Indeed, Iranian officials routinely claim that the “unification of the
ranks of Muslims against the enemies of Islam…has been one of the most
important goals of the Islamic Republic of Iran.” In recent years, however,
the Islamic Republic’s efforts to extend its message of Islamic solidarity
have increased markedly. In 2008 - a year that was officially declared the
“Year of Islamic Unity” in Iran - the organizers of the annual Islamic
unity conference in Tehran published a charter and a set of guiding
principles that outline the spirit of Islamic cooperation to which Tehran
aspires. The document goes into specific detail about ways bring an end to
sectarian divisions in the Muslim nation. For example, it urges Muslims from
different sects to avoid “name-calling and declaring each other as
unbelievers” and further adds that “ascribing innovation to other Muslims
must be avoided.”

For all its sloganeering about vahdat, or pan-Islamic unity, much of the
drive behind Tehran’s pan-Islamic outreach is first and foremost political,
and it is undertaken with a view toward enhancing Iran’s geopolitical
position. This occurs in the context of the Iranian regime’s ambitions to
become the leader of the Islamic World, a goal hindered by the Persian and
Shia characteristics of the Islamic Republic.

In the Iranian understanding of the realities of the Middle East and the
Islamic World, no state is more determined to undermine Tehran’s goals and
delegitimize its Islamist credentials than Saudi Arabia. Countering the
House of Saud and the legitimacy the religious Wahhabi establishment gives
to the monarchy’s rule have become top priorities for Iranian foreign
policy.

Claims that Wahhabism is a foreign-made conspiracy against the Muslim Nation
are not limited to fringe elements among the Iranian Shia clergy. Senior
Shia figures regularly and strongly condemn all things Wahhabi and depict
the sect as “contemptible” and deliberately “planted” in the midst of
the umma by the West to create a rift among Muslims. At their core, such
denunciations by Iranian clergy are in fact a reaction to the anti-Shia
positions of the Wahhabi establishment, which has included the issuing of
anti-Shia fatwas or insulting Shia clergy such as Iraq’s Grand Ayatollah
Ali Sistani. But Iranian anti-Wahhabism also clearly reflects the rivalries
between Tehran and Riyadh as they seek to advance their competing interests
among various Muslim populations in the Middle East and beyond.

Indeed, Iran’s anti-Wahabbism stems as much from the diametrical positions
that Tehran and Riyadh hold regarding most regional political competitions,
such as their support for opposing parties (e.g., Hamas versus Fatah or
Hezbollah versus the “March 14″ movement in Lebanon), as from its stated
ideal of Islamic unity. But the gap between the Shia hierocracy and the
Wahhabi leadership is also due to fundamental differences of a religious
nature between Shiism and Wahhabi teachings. As a consequence, Iranian
officials have focused their efforts to present Wahhabism as an aberration
to the rest of the Sunni world and to maintain that genuine reconciliation
with Sunnis is both desired and possible.

There can be little doubt that these Iranian efforts to present Shiism in a
favorable light to Sunnis are spurred on by the important linkages and
alliances that Tehran has formed with Islamist movements that are rooted in
Sunnism such as Palestinian Hamas, elements of the Egyptian Muslim
Brotherhood, and Turkey’s ruling AKP. Since the beginning of 2011, Tehran’
s outreach has also been driven by the popular unrest that has swept through
the Arab world on an unprecedented scale. Tehran views this unrest as an
opportunity to work through its Sunni allies to further extend its influence
among Sunni Arabs.

In propagating its message of Islamic unity and anti-Western struggle, Iran
has consistently sought to avoid issuing any statements that might be
interpreted as sectarian, as this could be counterproductive to its larger
agenda. However, this policy position has been severely tested since
mid-March 2011, when the ruling Sunni Khalifa government of Bahrain, backed
by the Saudi Arabian military, began a crackdown against mainly Shia
protesters. Iranian discourse began to openly express sympathies along
sectarian lines but without taking on a stridently anti-Sunni tone. However,
Iran’s anti-Saudi and anti-Wahhabi message has remained as strong as ever,
and Tehran has accused Riyadh of pursuing a bloody crackdown against the
Bahraini Shia.

Meanwhile, a top Iranian priority in this information operation has been to
assert that the Saudi military’s deployment to Bahrain began only after
Washington’s consent had been secured. This has been meant to underscore
Iran’s larger claims that a Saudi-American axis operates throughout the
region to defend the interests of extra-regional powers and at the expense
of repressed local Muslim populations.

>From the moment the Tunisian Revolution toppled President Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali, rejuvenated Iranian public relations efforts aimed at reaching out
to the Muslim Brotherhood, particularly in Egypt, were set in motion. Shaykh
Yusuf al-Qaradawi, arguably the most influential Muslim Brother, was hailed
as a praiseworthy revolutionary while the likes of Mohammad El Baradei and
Omar Suleiman were repudiated as Western lackeys.

Despite its initial enthusiasm for Qaradawi during the Egyptian Revolution,
Tehran was soon taken aback by the Egyptian cleric’s position on the
Bahraini protests. After Qaradawi purportedly urged a crackdown on the
mainly Shia protesters in Bahrain, he was mildly denounced by Iranian
officials for holding “discriminatory” viewpoints. The episode again
demonstrates that Iranian officials have conveniently misjudged the strength
of anti-Shia sentiments that exist even among mainstream (non-Wahabbi) Sunni
personalities.

Iran’s brisk support for the Muslim Brotherhood and its careful efforts to
minimize any sectarian tensions reflect the view from Tehran that the Middle
East is a historic crossroads and that Iran can be a major beneficiary of
this regional power transformation so long as it does not let its
adversaries cast the state as predominantly Persian or Shia power.
Accordingly, Tehran has pursued a campaign of emphasizing pan-Islamic values
while downplaying sectarian differences and presented American policies in
the region as essentially “anti-Islamic.”

This basic anti-American message aimed at the wider Islamic world has been
propagated by the Islamic Republic since 1979. Thus far, it has had limited
traction with the majority of Arab governments. This is largely because
Washington remains a critical strategic partner for most states in the
Middle East. Tehran understands that its weak cross-sectarian and
pan-Islamist record and credentials must be coupled with an anti-Americanism
message in order for its regional renewal policy to be persuasive, at least
amongst those Arab states experiencing turbulence and where power outcomes
are still to be decided.

*A longer version of this article was first published in Volume 11 of
Current Trends in Islamist Ideology.

Alex Vatanka is a scholar at the Middle East Institute and a senior fellow
at the US Air Force Special Operations School. Assertions and opinions in
this Policy Insight are solely those of the above-mentioned author(s) and do
not necessarily reflect the views of the Middle East Institute, which
expressly does not take positions on Middle East policy.

About the author:

MEI <http://www.eurasiareview.com/author/mei/>

Founded in 1946, the Middle East Institute is the oldest Washington-based
institution dedicated solely to the study of the Middle East. Its founders,
scholar George Camp Keiser and former US Secretary of State Christian
Herter, laid out a simple mandate: “to increase knowledge of the Middle
East among the citizens of the United States and to promote a better
understanding between the people of these two areas.”





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