Columbia Journalism Review, September/October 2006

Know Thine Enemy

By Bill Berkeley

On a reporting trip to Iran in the spring of 2004, I visited the
northeastern city of Mashhad. It's an important pilgrimage destination
for Shiite Muslims, a sprawling, low-slung metropolis that fans out
from a central plaza built around the gold-domed shrine of the Imam
Reza. Imam Reza is believed to have hailed from the family of the
prophet Mohammad. He was designated the eighth of the twelve sacred
imams of the Shi'a faith, and is the only one buried in Iran. Hundreds
of thousands of devout Shiites from across south Asia and the Arab
world make pilgrimages to Mashhad each year to worship inside this
splendid compound of aqua-tiled spires and arches, luminous
chandeliers, and gushing fountains under two glittering domes.

My own experience of Mashhad was memorable for a different reason: it
raised fresh doubts about the significance of religious orthodoxy in
the Islamic Republic.

My driver in Mashhad was an amiable, bearded man named Ali, whose
enviable ability to shirk traffic rules and park in no-parking zones
was soon explained by his membership in the Basij militia, the
hard-line paramilitary force that serves as one of the main coercive
arms of the ruling mullahs. Like many Basiji, Ali, who is from a poor
and devout family in the hinterland far from Tehran, had joined the
Basij as a sixteen-year-old and gone off to fight in the Iran-Iraq
war. The Basiji achieved notoriety in the war for their massive
human-wave attacks and suicidal mine-sweeping operations, in which
tens of thousands perished. Ali himself was wounded by shrapnel.

After eight years of brutal fighting and incessant clerical
exhortations about the inevitable triumph of the armies of God, Iran's
war with Iraq ended without achieving any of its declared objectives.
For many veterans like Ali, there was a ready explanation for this
disastrous turn of events. It was not the inadequacy of Iran's
military planning or the miscalculations of its commanders. Rather,
Ali told me, it was the West's cynical machinations that had turned
the tide of battle. Ali reminded me that the Reagan administration,
eager to block revolutionary Iran from defeating Iraq and spreading
its influence across the Persian Gulf, helped arm Saddam Hussein and
provided him with satellite reconnaissance of Iranian troop positions.
Ali and many of his comrades would remain forever suspicious of
America, and steadfast supporters of the ruling mullahs.

For all that, Ali, like so many Iranians I'd met, was eager to invite
an American into his home. And so one evening Ali's wife and daughter
served me a scrumptious traditional lamb stew known as abgusht. After
a dessert of peeled cucumbers and tangerines, we shared a water pipe,
known as a hookah, and talked into the night. When it was time to
leave, Layli, Ali's lovely thirteen-year-old daughter, eagerly pressed
upon me a delicate silver necklace — a gift for my own daughter back
in New York.

On the strength of this warm experience of cross-cultural bonding,
over lunch the following day I put a sensitive question to Ali that
I'd wanted to ask all along. "Ali," I said, "do you think these ruling
mullahs are genuinely religious people?" Or did he think, as many
Iranians I'd spoken to had told me, that they are just using religion
as an instrument of power?

Ali listened carefully as the question was translated. A small smile
crossed his lips. But he said nothing. He simply let the question
pass.

After lunch, we repaired to a teashop across the street. I put the
question to him a second time. "Ali," I said, "You didn't answer my
question. Do you think these mullahs are genuinely motivated by
religious piety?"

Again Ali listened carefully as the question was translated. Again a
smile crossed his lips. And again he said nothing.

I've reported enough from abroad to know not to generalize too much
from a single interview with an opinionated driver — a classic error
of foreign correspondence. But it struck me as significant that this
avowed supporter of the regime, deeply suspicious of America, was
unwilling to defend the religious bona fides of the ruling clerics —
the core of the regime's ideology and a central pillar of its
legitimacy — in response to a question from an American journalist.

I had grown accustomed to middle-class elites back in north Tehran
vehemently mocking the religious pretensions of the ruling mullahs.
But a Basiji in conservative Mashhad? Surely he would vouch for the
clerics. Ali's disinclination to do so seemed to suggest just how
cynical even the regime's most trusted allies had long since become —
and how illusory its mask of religious orthodoxy really was. It fit
into an impression I had that was reinforced in scores of subsequent
interviews with Iranians across a broad spectrum, left and right, high
and low.

My encounter with Ali was typical of Iran: surprising, paradoxical,
counterintuitive, and both gratifying and humbling for an American
reporter whose memory of cold-war intrigue was short and whose
assumptions about the so-called Islamic Republic turned out to be
inadequate. Those assumptions would be all the more confounded a year
later, when Ali and his Basiji confederates played a key role in
electing one of their own, the fiery Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, as president
— apparently in protest against their sponsors among the mullahs as
much as in support of them.

Ahmadinejad's election surprised nearly everyone, not least the
American journalists who covered it. In the fifteen months since then
— a time of escalating tensions over Iran's nuclear program, of ever
more belligerent rhetoric from Washington, Tehran, and Jerusalem, of
growing Iranian influence in American-occupied Iraq, and of fighting
in Lebanon and Gaza between Israel and Iran's allies, Hezbollah and
Hamas — there has been a blizzard of U.S. media coverage of this
avowed Islamic theocracy. But how well do we really know Iran? And how
well are the American media helping us to understand it?

FULL TEXT:
<http://www.cjr.org/issues/2006/5/Berkeley.asp>

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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