02/12/07 "ICH"
-- --
Recent
media reports about Iran suggest that
President Ahmadinejad has run slightly afoul of
the clerics in that country's Council of
Guardians. Most specifically, the Imam Khamenei
has publicly criticized the president's
statements about Iran's nuclear program and his
government's failure to stop inflation in Iran.
Khamenei, for those who don't know, is the
Supreme Leader of Iran, which means that, he
reviews every political decision made by the
Iranian legislature and the president according
to the Koran and its interpretations. He has
issued a fatwa that states the production,
stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons was
forbidden under Islam. He has also supported the
economic subsidies of basic goods and shelter
and free medical care for all Iranians--two
programs currently existing in Iran This support
stems from the Koran's teaching that those who
can afford it must pay zakat to help the poor,
although the institutionalization of it through
Tehran could be considered part of the Islamic
government's successful attempts to remove
leftists and their thought from the
revolutionary regime by renaming their programs
and then killing the left.
Like
those that exist in any country, there are those
in Iran's ruling elites who would like to see
all subsidies ended, with Iran incorporating
itself into the neoliberal model of economic
Darwinism. In other words, those with the money
and connections would reap great profits while
the poor and working people would suffer. The
former president Rafsanjani is one of these men,
so it seems ironic that he would be in favor
with Khamenei if Khamenei is to be believed.
Rafsanjani, for those who don't know, was part
of the original troika of clerics (along with
Ayatollah Khomeini and Mohammed Husseni Buheshi)
that forced the left and the moderates out of
the revolution and established a dictatorship of
the clerics. According to the revolution's first
president Bani Sadr and the US Ambassador
William Sullivan, the dictatorship was, at the
very least, encouraged by the US Embassy in
Iran, who preferred a military/clerical junta to
a left-leaning democratic state. The army's
unpopularity made its participation impossible,
so the clerics replaced it with the
Revolutionary Guard. That dictatorship exists
today, albeit in a different form, with the
primary difference being that laws are passed by
representatives but are subject to the review of
the clerics. Some of these men were also
involved with the Shah's government and the arms
deals made with Ronald Reagan that were the
cause of Irangate. Rafsanjani is acknowledged to
have hidden away millions of dollars worth of
Iran's monies in bank accounts around the world
while the people of Iran dealt with the
rationing of their basic goods. His number one
motivation seems to be money and the power it
provides.
If
the government is so bad, one might ask, then
what's wrong with the US trying to overthrow it?
Besides the obvious-- that preemptive war is
both illegal and immoral, there is the example
of Iraq. As any informed reader must know, that
attempt by Washington to overthrow a strongman
and replace it with a different government id a
failure. This is due in part because Washington
never really planned to allow democracy to
flourish there, but it is also related to the
refusal of the Iraqi people to accept
occupation. No matter what the United States
does in that country, it is bound to fail for
exactly that reason.
Assuming the Iranian
experience to be different is folly. After all,
if there is one sentiment that seems prevalent
among Iranians it is their determination to
refuse foreign domination. It is arguably this
determination that created a situation the
mullahs could manipulate to take power in the
early 1980s when the attack by the Iraqi army of
Saddam Hussein diverted monies and attention
away from the internal needs of the people. This
line of reasoning points to invasions by foreign
powers during the French and Russian revolutions
as the reason for their fall into dictatorship.
Furthermore, some even argue that the mullahs
kept the war with Iraq going in order to
consolidate their power. At the time Washington
was supporting Baghdad while it was also sending
illegal arms shipments to Tehran. In short, the
war served the interests of Washington more than
it served either country.
A
recent tactic from Washington as it seeks to
motivate the people of the US for another war in
the Middle East is its claim that Iran is arming
the various insurgent groups fighting US troops
in Iraq. The people pushing this story
(specifically Lt. Gen. Raymond Odierno) have
even gone so far as to tell the press that the
US military has traced the serial numbers found
on some captured weapons back to Iran. Now, even
if this were true, there is more than one
possible explanation for these serial numbers.
The one that springs first to mind is that SCIRI,
an Iraqi party supported by the United States
since before the invasion with a militia known
as the Badr Brigades that was trained in Iran,
has many of these such weapons. Consequently, it
is quite possible that the weaponry supposedly
captured by US troops and traced back to Iran
was stolen from the Badr Brigades. Other
possible explanations could be that the rumored
weapons don't even exist, were bought on the
black market, or were planted by anti-Iranian
forces in Iraq or US intelligence. In short,
this claim rings as hollow as the yellow cake
uranium claims made by the White House as it
lied the US into war with Iraq. On the other
hand, if it is true to some degree, that
wouldn't be unusual. After all, even the US
insurgency against the British was funded by the
French.
As I
write, indications are that there are US Special
Forces engaged in operations in Iran. Rumors
name the province of Khuzestan as the locale for
these operations. They are probably being helped
by various exiles who are either current or
former members of organizations that believe the
ends justify the means and are therefore willing
to help the enemy in Washington to overthrow the
mullahs. A
similar scenario existed when the US
overthrew the popular Iranian leader Mossadegh
in 1953. Various clerics waffled between support
of the US coup and the popular government.
According to the coup's architect Kermit
Roosevelt, it was the loss of support of
Khomeini's mentor, the cleric Ayatollah Kashani,
that created the necessary power shift to allow
the US coup to go forward. Some accounts state
that the ayatollah withdrew his support from
Mossadegh because of his fear that Mossadegh was
a communist (a fear stirred up by CIA personnel)
and others allow that a substantial amount of
CIA money was provided to the cleric's accounts
for the poor and other social services. Either
way, it was US manipulation that precipitated
the shift. Another interesting aspect of the
1953 coup was that the US had special forces
operatives operating in southern Iran
(Khuzestan) at least a year before the actual
coup.
It is
curious that Washington would want to ramp up
the rhetoric against Iran now, when US forces
are tired and thin. The only reason that makes
sense is that the Cheney-Bush plan to remake the
Middle East before they leave office is still in
place, and any war on Iran must begin soon.
Since Washington's attempts to scare the world
into sanctioning and attacking Iran over its
nuclear program seems to be going nowhere, then
the news stories concerning Iran's involvement
in Iraq and the arrests of Iranian officials may
very well be an alternative attempt to convince
Congress that war on Iran is necessary. One
thing is clear--Washington is not interested in
a democratic Iran After all, if it were, it
would not have made the deals it did with the
clerics back in the 1980s and neither would it
have supported Iraq in the Iran -Iraq war, since
the effect of both of these efforts was the
consolidation of the clerical dictatorship's
power. Any US attack on Iran would probably
consolidate that power even more or install a US
client regime in Tehran, with neither result
being very positive for the aspirations of the
Iranian people, who have yet to see the
democratic hopes of their revolution fulfilled.
Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way the Wind
Blew:A History of the Weather Underground. His
novel Short Order Frame Up is forthcoming from
Mainstay Press. He currently lives in
Asheville, NC.