From: *Travis*
Date: Fri, Jun 26, 2009
Subject:  Global Muslim Theocracy Movement is Worried?






 Very doubtful.

Why?  The left and the media are in the tank for them.

B

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184920348&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull


The global Muslim theocracy movement is worried
Jun. 24, 2009
Oliver Javanpour , THE JERUSALEM POST

The past two weeks have been an eye-opener for a lot of people, including
Arab and Muslim communities around the world. While most Middle East
analysts and those familiar with Iranian politics knew that the Iranian
theocracy did not enjoy the support of the country's 70 million people, this
was news to many in the West. In fact, Iranians are more westernized, in
their values and lifestyle, than we might think from viewing most news
stories about Iran. The majority of Iranians have far different values from
those ruling them at gunpoint.

The global impact of the Iranian rejection of theocracy on Muslim activism
has started to be noticed. There is a sense of confusion and despair among
many recipients of Iranian government funding around the world. The links
between Iran and the movements it supports will become more visible as its
beneficiaries try to find their place in the chaos. In fact, while
uncorroborated like most news coming out of Iran now, we've even heard about
a brief appearance of Lebanese Hizbullah and Palestinian Hamas on the
streets of Teheran and Mashhad. It is understandable that at any given time
there will be groups belonging to Hizbullah and Hamas training in Iran, but
it was rather unusual to hear of their deployment and willingness to fight
the people of Iran in the streets of their cities. People there actually try
to chat up the police and Basij Militia to see whether they even speak
Farsi.

Muslim theocrats observing one of their main supporters in this holy
movement being challenged must be unsettling in a culture not used to such
actions. That the majority of Iran's population is questioning the theocracy
and the sense of fairness of the supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei puts the
livelihood of some commentators in question. For example when CNN reports
that Abdel Bari Atwan, editor of the London-based Al-Quds Al-Arabi, a
pan-Arab newspaper, defending the actions of the Iranian government and
blaming the democracy seekers in Iran, the reason probably lies in
self-preservation.

Iran spends billions of dollars in different regions for various causes.
Iran is the second-largest source of funds in the world, exceeded only by
Saudi Arabia, for Islamic causes. From Somalia to Lebanon's Hizbullah, from
Hamas to the Egyptian Shiite movement, Iranian support - whether through
direct funding or military and training - will be jeopardized if the
theocrats are unseated. So would Iran's support as a major donor to various
proactive Muslim organizations in Europe, North America, and South America.
The Iranian government's role in supporting, training and facilitating the
Sudanese Holocaust in Darfur is significant, with only the Chinese playing a
larger role.

So when Abdel Bari Atwan expresses his dismay with Mir Moussavi and millions
of Iranians who are no longer interested in being ruled at gunpoint by
Ayatollah Khamenei and President Ahmadinejad, it is a telling sign that the
global theocracy movement is worried and distressed.

THE HISTORY of the Iranian government's support for exporting Muslim
ideology and activism goes back to the early '80s, when it contributed
financially to Iranian foreign students funds in different countries in
return for wearing the hijab. Then they became savvy and provided funding
and moral support for other organizations across the globe. Today, there are
private Muslim schools in North America and Europe that wouldn't exist if it
were not for direct or indirect monetary assistance from the Iranian
government. The number of organizations receiving funding and support from
Iranians is probably in the hundreds, if not the thousands.

It is certain that those groups and organizations that might expect their
funding to be in danger would start lobbying various governments to turn a
blind eye to events in Iran. Whether Western politicians have any stomach
for this type of lobbying at this point is another topic of discussion.
Indeed the global Muslim theocracy movement is in danger at the hands of the
Iranian people not only financially, but also in terms of the legitimacy of
theocracy as a political system.

It is too early to say what the long-term impact will be, but it is certain
that there has been at least a negative psychological impact on the
legitimacy of theocracy as a result of the Iranian protests. There may be
those who will try to spin the story and claim that the people of Iran still
support theocracy and their beef is only with the election and Ahmadinejad.
One can say with certainty that for the first few days the Iranian people
tried to manage this evolution leaving some wiggle room for the supreme
leader Ayatollah Khamenei. But as of last Friday the gloves were off. With
Ayatollah Khamenei showing no restraint, people started chanting "death to
Khamenei", a sign of the realization that they could even go further and let
the world know what they really want: the abolition of theocracy in Iran.

Whether the brave people of Iran are successful in their aspirations to live
without theocratic rule is unknown. However, it can be said with certainty
that their efforts have changed the face of the theocracy movement not only
within Iran, but also globally.

*The writer is a public policy, and international relations consultant in
Ottawa, Canada.* This article can also be read at http://www.jpost.com
/servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184920348&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull<http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184920348&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull>
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Article<http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1245184920348&pagename=JPArticle%2FShowFull>]



One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or
else shut up. -- Arthur Koestler

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