http://www.zmag.org/znet/viewArticle/21948

The Tragedy of the Left's Discourse on Iran
July 10, 2009 By Saeed Rahnema


The electoral coup and the subsequent uprising and suppression of the
revolting voters in Iran have prompted all sorts of analyses in Western
media from both the Right and the Left. The Right, mostly inspired by the
neo-con ideology and reactionary perspectives, dreams of the re-creation of
the Shah's Iran, looks for pro-American/pro-Israeli allies among the
disgruntled Iranian public, and seeks an Eastern European type velvet
revolution. As there is very little substance to these analyses, they are
hardly worth much critical review; and one cannot expect them to try to
understand the complexities of Iranian politics and society.

As for the Left in the West, confusions abound. The progressive left, from
the beginning openly supported the Iranian civil society movement. ZNet,
Campaign for Peace and Democracy, Bullet, and some other media provided
sound analysis to help others understand the complexities of the Iranian
situation (see, for example, here). Some intellectuals signed petitions
along with their Iranian counterparts, while others chose to remain silent.
But disturbingly, like in the situations in Gaza or Lebanon, where Hamas and
Hezbollah uncritically became champions of anti-imperialism, for some other
people on the left, Ahmadinejad has become a champion because of his
seemingly firm rhetoric against Israel and the US. Based on a crude class
analysis, he is also directly or indirectly praised by some for his supposed
campaign against the rich and imagined support of the working poor. These
analyses also undermine the genuine movement within the vibrant Iranian
civil society, and denigrate their demands for democracy, and political and
individual freedoms as middle class concerns, instigated by western
propaganda (a view shared by Khamenei, Ahmadinejad and his supporters).

*MRZine and Islamists*

The most bizarre case is the on-line journal MRZine, the offshoot of Monthly
Review, which in some instances even publicized the propaganda of the Basij
(Islamic militia) hooligans and criminals. The website has given ample room
to pro-Islamist contributors; while they can hardly be considered to be on
the left, their words are appreciated by the leftists editing the site. One
writer claims that the battle in Iran is about "welfare reform and private
property rights," and that Ahmadinejad "has enraged the managerial class,"
as he is "the least enthusiastic about neo-liberal reforms demanded by
Iran's corporate interests," and that he is under attack by "Iran's fiscal
conservative candidates." The author conveniently fails to mention that
there are also much "corporate interests" controlled by Ahmadinejad's
friends and allies in the Islamic Guards and his conservative cleric
supporters, and that he has staunchly followed "privatization" policies by
handing over state holdings to his cronies.

During the 1979 revolution, the late Tudeh Party, under the direction of the
Soviet Union, was unsuccessfully digging deep and looking hard for
"non-capitalists" among the Islamic regime's elements to follow a
"non-capitalist path" and a "socialist orientation." Now it seems that
MRZine magazine is beginning a new excavation for such a breed among
Islamists, not understanding that all factions of the Islamic regime have
always been staunch capitalists.

*Azmi Bishara's imagined Iran*

In "Iran: An Alternative Reading" (reproduced in MRZine), Azmi Bishara
argues that Iran's totalitarian system of government differs from other
totalitarian systems in two definitive ways: Firstly, it has incorporated
"such a high degree [of] constitutionally codified democratic competition in
the ruling order and its ideology." Bishara does not explain however that
these "competitions" are just for the insider Islamists, and all others,
including moderate Muslims or the wide spectrum of secular liberals and the
left are excluded by the anti-democratic institutions within the regime.

The second differentiation Bishara makes is that "... the official ideology
that permeates institutions of government ... is a real religion embraced by
the vast majority of the people." He is right if he means the majority of
Iranians are Muslim and Shi'i, but it is wrong to assume that all are
religious and share the same obscurantist fundamentalist version as those in
power. He also fails to recognize the existence of a large number of secular
people in Iran, one of the highest percentages among Muslim-majority
countries.

He praises "such tolerance of political diversity," "tolerance of
criticism," and "peaceful rotation of authority" in Iran. One wonders if our
prominent Palestinian politician is writing about an imaginary Iran, or the
real one. Could it be that Bishara has not heard of the massacres of
thousands of political prisoners, chain killings of intellectuals, and
silencing of the most able and progressive voices in the country? Doesn't he
know that a non-elected 12-member conservative body (The Guardianship
Council) only allows a few trusted individuals to run for President or the
Parliament, and that the real 'authority,' the Supreme Leader, does not
rotate, and is selected by an all-Mullah Assembly of Experts for life? The
unelected Leader leads the suppressive apparatuses of the state, and since
1993 has created his own "Special Guards of Velayat" (NOPO) for quick
suppressive operations. So much for tolerance and democracy.

Bishara undermines the genuine massive reform movement and claims that
"expectations regarding the power of the reform trend ... were created by
Western and non-Western media opposed to Ahmadinejad...." Had Bishara done
his homework, he would have learned about the massive campaigns led by large
number of womens' organizations, the youth, teachers and select groups of
workers. He warns us of "elitism" and of having an "arrogant classist edge,"
and implicitly dismisses these movements of "middle class backgrounds" and
claims that "these people are not the majority of young people but rather
the majority of young people from a particular class." It is unclear on what
basis he makes the assertion that most of the youth from poor sectors of the
society support Ahmadinejad.

*James Petras' message: freedom is not "vital"!*

One of the most shocking pieces is by the renowned controversial Left writer
and academic, James Petras. In his piece "Iranian Elections: 'The Stolen
Elections' Hoax," Petras conclusively denies any wrongdoings in the Iranian
elections and confidently goes into the detail of the demographics of some
small Iranian towns, with no credibility or expertise in the subject.

The abundant facts pointing to massive electoral fraud speak for themselves,
so I will not waste time refuting his evidence and 'sources,' but will
rather focus on his analysis. The most stunning aspect of the Petras piece
is the total absence of any sympathy for all the brave women, youth,
teachers, civil servants and workers who have been so vigorously campaigning
for democracy, human rights, and political freedoms, risking their lives by
spontaneously pouring into the streets when they realized they were cheated.
Instead we see sporadic references to "comfortable upper class enclave,"
"well-dressed and fluent in English" youth, etc. Women are not mentioned
even once, nor is there any recognition of their amazing struggle against
the most obscurantist policies such as stoning, polygamy, and legal gender
discriminations. Neither is there any reference to trade union activists,
writers, and artists, many of whom are in jail.

Instead, the emphasis is on crude class analysis: "[t]he demography of
voting reveals a real class polarization pitting high income, free market
oriented capitalist individuals against working class, low income, community
based supporters of a 'moral economy' in which usury and profiteering are
limited by religious precepts." Petras could not be more misguided and
misleading. Of course this would fit well within the perceived traditional
class conflict paradigm (with an added touch of imagined Islamic
economics!). However, the reality is far more complex. The Ayatollahs on
both sides are "market-oriented capitalists," so are the leaders of the
Islamic Guards, who run industries, control trade monopolies, and are major
land developers. There are also workers on both sides. Failed economic
policies, the rising 30% inflation rate, growing unemployment and the
suppression of trade unions turned many workers against Ahmadinejad. The
communiqués of Workers of Iran Khodrow (auto industry) against the
government's heavy-handed tactics, the long strikes and confrontations of
the workers of Tehran Public Transport and the participation of workers in
the post-election revolts, are all examples of opposition to Ahmadinejad by
workers. It would also be simplistic to talk of the Islamists' 'moral
economy,' when both sides have been involved in embezzlement and corruption,
much of which was exposed during the debates fiasco in which they exposed
each other.

On the basis of his limited understanding of the situation, Petras declares
that "[t]he scale of the opposition's electoral deficit should tell us how
out of touch it is with its own people's vital concerns." Firstly, like many
others he cannot distinguish among different groups and categories of this
"opposition," and worse, is telling Iranian women, youth, union activists,
intellectuals and artists, that their demands and "concerns" for political
and individual freedoms, human rights, democracy, gender equity and labour
rights are not "vital." It seems he's telling the Iranian left: rofagha
(comrades), if you are being tortured and rotting in prisons, your books are
burned and you are expelled from your profession, don't worry, because the
"working class" is receiving subsidies and handouts from the government!
Professor Petras and those like him would not be as forgiving if their own
freedoms and privileges were at issue.

The left has historically been rooted in solidarity with progressive
movements, women's rights and rights for unions and its voice has been first
and foremost a call for freedom. The voices that we hear today from part of
the Left are tragically reactionary. Siding with religious fundamentalists
with the wrong assumptions that they are anti-imperialists and
anti-capitalists, is aligning with the most reactionary forces of history.
This is a reactionary left, different from the progressive left which has
always been on the side of the forces of progress.

*Zizek also misses an important point*

In a much admired and distributed piece, Slavoj Zizek, the prominent voice
of the new left, refers to versions of events in Iran. Zizek explains that
"Moussavi supporters... see their activity as the repetition of the 1979
Khomeini revolution, as the return to its roots, the undoing of the
revolution's later corruption." He adds "[w]e are dealing with a genuine
popular uprising of the deceived partisans of the Khomeini revolution,"
"'the return of the repressed' of the Khomeini revolution."

Zizek does not differentiate between the "partisans of Khomeini" during the
1979 revolution, and the non-religious, secular elements, both liberals and
Left, who actually started the revolution and in the absence of other
alternatives, accepted Khomeini's leadership. Lack of recognition of this
reality, that sometimes draws us to despair, is a big mistake. Along the
same line, Zizek, wrongly attributes all of today's movement to support for
Moussavi: "Moussavi ... stands for the genuine resuscitation of the popular
dream which sustained the Khomeini revolution." On this basis he concludes
that "the 1979 Khomeini revolution cannot be reduced to a hard line Islamist
takeover." To substantiate his point, Zizek refers to the "incredible
effervescence of the first year of the revolution...." In fact much of the
'effervescence' of the first year, or before the hostage taking at the
American Embassy, was because of the actions of the non-partisans of
Khomeini; from the workers councils movement, to confrontations of Fedais
and other left organizations in Kurdistan and in Gonbad, to the women's and
university-based movements. It was a period when Khomeini and his supporters
had not consolidated their power. After the hostage crisis and beginning of
the Iran-Iraq war "the Islam establishment" took over.

All these draws Zizek to conclude that "what this means is that there is
genuine liberating potential in Islam." Zizek does not recognize that
Moussavi is a conservative Islamist, and this "liberating potential" can
hardly be applied to him. For sure, there exists a new breed of Muslim
intellectuals, the likes of Mohamad Shabestari, Mohsen Kadivar, Reza
Alijani, and Hassan Eshkevari, who believe in the separation of religion and
state, and can be the champions of such liberating potentials, but
definitely not the likes of Khomeini and Moussavi.

There is no doubt that the Iranian 1979 revolution is an unfinished business
and its main demands for democracy and political freedoms, and social equity
have remained unfulfilled. But these were not Khomeini's demands, in the
same manner that not all today's demands are those of Moussavi.

What is happening in Iran is a spontaneous, ingenious and independent revolt
by a people frustrated with thirty years of obscurantist tyrannical
religious rule, triggered by electoral fraud but rooted in more substantial
demands. Much to the dismay of the clerical regime and their supporters
inside and outside the country, the ever expanding Iranian civil society
brilliantly seized the moment of the election to take strong steps forward.
They have no illusions about the Islamist regime, or about their own
capabilities. Their strategy is to gradually and non-violently replace the
Islamic regime and its hegemony with a secular democratic one. This is a
hugely significant, delicate and protracted confrontation. It is essential
that they get the wide-ranging effective support from the left in the West
so that they don't fall prey to the misleading conception of the left not
having concerns for democracy and civil liberties.

*Saeed Rahnema is Professor of Political Science at York University, Canada*

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