http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/953/op1.htm

25 June - 1 July 2009
Issue No. 953
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875


An alternative reading

Azmi Bishara examines the causes and ramifications of post-election unrest in 
Iran 

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Iran does not just have an authoritarian system of government, it has a 
totalitarian one. It is powerful, highly centralised, with sophisticated 
administrative and control systems, and it applies an ideology that claims to 
have answers for everything and that seeks to permeate all aspects of life. 
Instead of a political party and youth organisations, it relies on mass 
organisations, such as the Basij, that blend security with ideology and even 
with the benefit of broad sectors of the populace. It also depends on a broad 
and well-organised network of mullahs and on a politicised security agency and 
Revolutionary Guard. However, it differs from other totalitarian systems in two 
definitive ways.

Firstly, no other totalitarian system has incorporated such a high degree 
constitutionally codified democratic competition in the ruling order and in its 
ideology. Political competition is systematised in the form of regularly held 
elections in which rivals espouse different platforms within the framework of 
the agreed upon rules of the game, just as do political parties within 
capitalist frameworks. The difference between Democrats and Republicans in the 
US is not much greater than that between reformists and conservatives in Iran. 
Of course, these trends in Iran are not actual political parties, but then 
neither are the Republicans and Democrats, at least not in the conventional 
European sense. They are more in the nature of electoral leagues. 

The second difference between Iranian totalitarianism and other totalitarian 
systems is that the official ideology that permeates institutions of 
government, the public sphere and the educational and other formative systems 
as the primary definer of identity and shaper of moral and ethical conduct is a 
real religion embraced by the vast majority of the people. It is not an atheist 
or secular religion, such as is officially espoused in communist or fascist 
systems and which is only believed by a clique of apparatchiks whose faith 
quickly becomes a form of vested interest and is rarely passed on to their 
children. In Iran a religious doctrine is the state ideology, the clerical 
hierarchy defines and anchors the state hierarchy, and the lower echelons of 
the clergy are the intermediaries between the people and the ruling ideology.

These important distinctions are what give the Iranian system a dynamism and 
vitality that did not exist in Europe's communist or fascist totalitarian 
systems, even though this system emerged in an "oriental" society that was less 
technologically advanced than the European ones and coalesced outside the 
context of European modernism and modernisation that the other systems drew on.

China's ruling party, even in its most open and relaxed phase, sanctions far 
less political diversity than we have seen in Iran, not only in the form of 
systematised political rivalries but also in the form of sometimes brutal 
criticism of the regime, the president and the government. Such tolerance of 
political diversity was also unheard of in the former Soviet Union and in other 
totalitarian systems. Looking at Iran from the perspective of its degree of 
democratic competition, tolerance of criticism and peaceful rotation of 
authority in accordance with set rules, it is much closer to the pluralistic 
democracies in the West than to a dictatorial regime. On the other hand, its 
imposition of an all encompassing ideology, and its attempt to use this to 
control all aspects of people's public and personal lives, sets it radically 
apart from Western societies where people's personal lives are regulated 
through the permeation of market mechanisms into the private individual realm 
and the permeation of the media into family life. There is an imposed ideology 
in the US, often referred to as the "American way of life," but it leaves broad 
scope for the private sphere and individual freedoms, including the freedom of 
religion, even if it strongly influences this sphere through consumer market 
mechanisms and the media, which sometimes pose challenges to individual 
freedom. There is no point here in bringing up the scope of individual or 
democratic freedoms in Arab authoritarian regimes, dynastic and nepotistic 
systems incapable of producing either a totalitarian or democratic order, apart 
from to note the malicious glee some Arabs are displaying in response to events 
in Iran rather than examining what is happening in their own countries which, 
one would think, they might suppose more important. 

The reformist uprising has arisen within the framework of the Iranian 
establishment and the accepted rules and principles of the Islamic Republic. 
The criticisms levelled at the regime on the part of a broad swath of youth who 
have joined the reformists, especially those from middle class backgrounds who 
are more in contact with the rest of the world, are reminiscent of the 
grievances aired by the young in Eastern Europe, who held that their regimes 
deprived them of their individual and personal freedoms, the freedom to choose 
their way of life and the Western consumer lifestyle. Of course, as usual, some 
of these claims are true, others are spread by Western media and some stem from 
general discontent and a search for new meaning in the modes of political 
expression. 

While not dismissing or belittling such criticism, it is important to bear in 
mind that these people are not the majority of young people but rather the 
majority of young people from a particular class. Iran is not a socialist 
system: there are distinct class gaps, as well as strong intersections between 
wealth and power, between power and position in the clerical hierarchy, and 
between wealth and position in the clerical hierarchy (with instances of 
convergence of power, position and wealth in one and the same person). 
Differing intersections work to create diverse political and intellectual 
trends and moods. Most of the youth from the poor sectors of society support 
Ahmadinejad, just as the poor support Chavez in Venezuela. Remember that 
Ahmadinejad's in 2005 was a protest vote, mostly on the part of the young, 
against corrupt conservatives, not just against the reformists. Remember, too, 
that some reformists are people of principle, fighters for their beliefs, 
whether or not they took part in the revolution, whereas others in the 
reformist camp are combining their defence of freedoms with the defence of 
corruption. (The Arab world abounds in people who combine the defence of 
economic privileges with the defence of civil liberties. They make up the class 
of neo-liberals that is distinguished by being neither liberal nor democratic). 

The mood among those who think that their votes carry more weight qualitatively 
than the numerically greater votes of the poor, and who may actually believe 
that they represent the majority because they form the majority in their own 
parts of town even if they are the minority in the country, has an arrogant, 
classist edge. Obviously, it is not a very democratic attitude because as 
sincerely leftist as it may appear, its liberalness is offset by its underlying 
elitism. We have met this mood on many occasions. Out of sympathy for the young 
involved in protest politics some intellectuals (I refer to myself, here, at 
least) have softened in their duty towards the young. Several years ago in a 
certain Arab capital, tens of thousands of young people took to the streets 
chanting slogans for democracy and against sectarianism, at which point 
intellectual gurus lured them into cheering militia leaders, sectarian chiefs 
and war criminals as though they were cultural heroes because they were "with 
us" and "against them". Soon the kids were swept up into racist outpourings 
against other sects as they all recoiled into their own sectarian mind- sets, 
in spite of the jeans, the long hair, headbands, and all the other trappings of 
open-minded progressives that attracted newspapers run by middle aged editors 
nostalgic for their own student activist days. The intellectual must keep a 
critical distance if he is to perform his duty towards the young and encourage 
them towards critical liberationist outlooks and open their eyes to prejudice, 
myth, illusion and other reactionary traps. 

If you want to criticise the electoral system in Iran you should look first at 
the Guardian Council and the numerous conditions it insists candidates must 
meet in order to ensure their commitment to the principles of the Islamic 
Republic. You should also consider the constitutional amendments of 1989 which 
abolished the position of prime minister and gave his powers to the president, 
only to transfer presidential powers to the supreme guide, who thus combined 
temporal powers with spiritual and juridical authority, a metamorphosis of the 
concept of clerical rule. Now that is a subject to submit to the critical lens 
and it merits criticism. But this is not where the candidates were coming from. 
All the political parties, leaders and forces that entered the elections 
accepted, or claimed to accept, the ground rules. And it is foolish to leap 
from criticising the ground rules to claiming that the last elections were 
rigged, unlike the nine presidential elections that preceded it. 

Since the 2005 elections the Iranian reform movement has grown weaker and more 
fragmented, not stronger. The results it obtained came as a surprise to those 
who know Iran. How could it have resurfaced from the ashes so powerfully after 
its disintegration in the Khatami era and the repression of its remnants in the 
universities and elsewhere afterwards? Certainly the recent elections put it 
back on the map, though not as it once stood, but rather as an ally of a broad 
spectrum of conservatives. The expectations regarding the power of the reform 
trend were not founded upon public opinion polls, they were created by the 
Western and non-Western media opposed to Ahmadinejad, who has ruffled so many 
feathers at international conferences and diplomatic salons. Ahmadinejad's 
populist rhetoric has come as a boon to racist Western policies towards the 
Arabs, Muslims and easterners in general. The certificate of exoneration he has 
handed Europe for the holocaust is catastrophic in every sense. But Ahmadinejad 
has also shocked the West with a set of correct principles that challenge the 
colonialist legacy and that are rarely uttered now that everyone has been tamed 
to the axioms of Western racist arrogance.

Ahmadinejad is less a representative of Iranian conservatives than a rebel 
against them from within their own establishment. He has lashed out against 
them, including corrupt clergy, using the principles of the Islamic revolution 
as his weapons. He is a conservative of the fundamentalist stripe and wants to 
restore the revolution to its youthful vigour and gleam. He probably reminds 
Mousavi of his own youth. This is why his populist rhetoric is more powerful 
than the reformists' rhetoric. He harks back to Khomeini, and his personal 
austerity appeals to the broad masses of the poor. He distributes oil revenues 
among the poor and reaches out to them as a way to compensate for the failure 
of his economic policies, and his personal probity makes up for his failure to 
seriously fight corruption. His foreign policies succeeded in reviving national 
pride by making Iran a central player in the international arena after Iran's 
international weight had taken a plunge when Khatami (a true reformist) had 
begun to soften towards the West. 

There were no supporters of any Arab regime or any fundamentalist movement in 
the Arab world among the protesters who took to the streets in Tehran. 
Therefore, the thrill that overcame some of our Arab brothers had less to do 
with political ideology than with a kind of malicious glee. The possible 
alternatives in Iran are:

- A financially corrupt ruling elite, epitomised by Rafsanjani, that is more 
pragmatic in international affairs and against which Ahmadinejad rebelled in 
the last elections. 

- A reformist-conservative alliance within the framework of the ruling 
establishment under which corrupt conservatives would rely on such figures as 
Mousavi and Khatami in order to regain popularity and weaken the hold of the 
supreme guide. This alliance would be more pragmatic in its foreign relations, 
head towards dialogue with the new US administration, and strike up an 
accommodation with the West in exchange for international recognition of the 
Islamic Republic and its regional role. (Incidentally, for the purpose of the 
alliance, the conservatives would concede to some of the reformists' demands, 
but as is the rule in the storm-tossed seas of transitional periods in 
revolutionary orders, this will prove an ephemeral phase after which the 
reformists will once again lose the initiative).

- The third alternative I will call metaphorically the "Western" one. The 
overthrow of the entire order, along the lines of what happened in Eastern 
Europe, is what broad segments of the illegal opposition inside Iran and abroad 
are praying for. For the young men and women from well-to-do north Tehran this 
alternative has been packaged as liberal civil rights, consumerist lifestyle, 
freedom in how to act and dress, and other such notions that attract young 
people, that even attracted the sons and daughters of the apparatchiks in 
Russia and Eastern Europe. The majority of middle and upper class youth did not 
so much vote for Mousavi as they voted against Ahmadinejad. Still, in Iran, 
this third alternative will have to pass through the second one first. Unlike 
the communist regimes the regime in Iran will not collapse in one go.

The Iranian regime will survive the current crisis using the instruments 
mentioned earlier. However, it will have to address an important question. Will 
it heed the lessons from this experience, seize the reform banners from the 
corrupt and ally with the reformist left against the pseudo reformist right? Or 
will it rely on repression alone, justifying this on the grounds of Western 
meddling? The last option is a recipe for future and, perhaps, more intense and 
tragic turmoil. 


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