The Coming Iranian Class Wars
Rosa Faiz
The particular shape of the
ruling classes in Iran has, for the past one thousand
and one years at least, consisted of two major
components. In Iran they are referred to as the
‘Shah’ and the 'Shaykh'; the King and
the Cleric.
For those less familiar with the history of Iran,
it is instructive to know that the clergy were a most
integral part of the ruling classes all the way until
1920s, when the founder of the Pahlavi Dynasty,
Reza Shah, summarily stripped the mullahs of
almost all their social institutions of
power.
From that point on the clergy had to stay content
with running the mosques for the most part. Even large
land holdings of the organized clergy were
confiscated.
As Reza Shah’s liking grew for Germans, who
built the first railway system in Iran, his
occupancy of the Peacock Throne eventually became too
intolerable for the British and the Soviets, who
jointly invaded Iran in 1941; the British occupying
the southern regions and the Soviets occupying the
northern regions. So, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi had to
watch his father sent to exile, and was himself
installed as the king.
Seeing how his father had been hated and feared
so fiercely, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi decided to at least
start out as a nicer, gentler Pahlavi King, and so,
“To assure the public that the dictatorship
would not be re-imposed, the new shah granted amnesty
to all political prisoners,… and decreed a
return of ecclesiastical lands to the religious
foundations,...” (Abrahamian). 1
In time, there would shortly come a big turn to
the right, big crackdowns would follow, and a huge new
wave of dissidents would be created, consisting mostly
of the communist sympathizers of the Tudeh
Party and the left-nationalist supporters of the
National Front led by Dr.Mohammad Mossadegh.
So, for the most part, the second King of the
Pahlavi ‘dynasty’ set his priorities in
line with the Cold War-dictated aims and goals of his
enablers in the West, and participated wholeheartedly
in pursuing the leftists and making them into public
enemy number one.
A most telling episode of a Pahlavi-era union
between the Shah and the Shaykh, harkening back to the
good old days when the two ruled harmoniously
together, came in the wake of the social struggles of
1951-1953, which pit different factions of Iranian
bourgeoisie against each other: the
monarchist-comprador bourgeoisie and the feudal
landowners against the nationalist factions, led by
Mossadegh, the Prime Minister who successfully
nationalized the Iranian oil industry. The struggle
between these two factions naturally opened up the
political arena to a wider participation on the part
of other segments of society with other political
inclinations, most significantly other
nationalist-democrats as well as leftists.
It is instructive to see how Khomeini’s
mentor, Ayatollah Kashani, acted in the fight between
the nationalist and the comprador (i.e. imperialist
lackey) factions of the Iranian bourgeoisie. At the
height of the struggle, Ayatollah Kashani, a leading
clergy of that time, openly sided with the absolutist
monarch, inciting his followers to oppose Mossadegh,
who, according to Ayatollah Kashani, was clearly a
communist/atheist lover; which he was not.
We must take a slight detour here, in connection
with the coup organized by the CIA to overthrow
Mossadegh, a pleasing event not only to the
monarchist-comprador factions, but also the clergy.
The point of the detour being to show how thoroughly
the imperialists plan when it comes to clearly marking
their strategic friends and their strategic enemies.
According to documents released by the National
Security Archives, in June 2004, there were plans
drawn up by the CIA in late 1952, early 1953 to train
and arm a guerilla army in southern Iran, as a
contingency backup in case of the failure of Operation
AJAX, which was the covert coup carried out by the CIA
and the British intelligence, in August 1953, securing
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi’s installment as an
absolute monarch servile to the U.K. and the U.S.
interests.
At the time the coup organizers were planning,
one point of anxiety was the possibility of failure;
in which case, they calculated, the communists (Tudeh
Party), utilizing their popularity and influence among
the rank and file of the National Front
(Mossadegh’s party), plus using their own
sizable social support, would gain the upper hand and
seize some or all state power. For this contingency,
the coup organizers needed a guerilla army (death
squads) that would literally target communists.
Although this back-up plan was eventually shelved (the
coup was successful enough), it served as a clear
prototype for what the U.S. later did in Guatemala,
the Bay of Pigs invasion, the Contras attacks against
Nicaragua, and other death squads funded, trained and
sustained in Central America throughout the 1980s.
Kermit Roosevelt, the operations-manager for
Operation AJAX, in his book, Counter Coup: The
Struggle for the Control of Iran, recounts that after
the completion of the coup, and as he was giving his
oral report to John Foster Dulles, he noticed
something eerie, “Despite his posture [leaning
back in his chair], he was anything but sleepy. His
eyes were gleaming; he seemed to be purring like a
giant cat. Clearly, he was not only enjoying what he
was hearing, but my instincts told me that he was
planning as well.” And sure enough,
“Within weeks I was offered command of a
Guatemalan undertaking already in preparation …
,” (Counter Coup, p. 209-210).
Then Came the White Revolution
So, the relations between the Shah and Shaykh
were somewhat smoothed out during the reign of our
second Pahlavi so-called king. Until, that is, the
White Revolution, which was a package of social
reforms instigated by the Kennedy administration and
implemented by Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Chief among
these reforms was a land redistribution law, as well
as laws recognizing suffrage for women, along with
other measures such as health and education corps to
be sent to all rural areas of Iran. These reform
measures either took the mullahs’ and their
traditional social allies’ lands, which alone
caused extreme alarm, or else cut into areas such as
education in rural areas where they had enjoyed a de
facto position of hegemony. The mullahs were also
voicing a loud opposition to those parts of the
reforms that gave women some rights previously denied
them.
So, by modernizing the performance of all social
functions that the clergy might have had a traditional
role in, the White Revolution would codify into law
the cutting of the hands of the clergy from essential
spheres of social control outside the actual running
of the mosques. Naturally, the mullahs were not going
to take this sitting down, and though a sizeable
segment manning the state-sponsored mosques dared not
enter the fray, others such as Ayatollah Khomeini did
come out in open rebellion against the so-called White
Revolution.
As a result of this package of reforms,
therefore, large sections of the traditional classes
(the feudal landlords, as well as significant segments
of the clergy) became the enemies of the state. The
enemies of the monarchist bourgeois state, therefore,
consisted not only of those on the left, but also of
those solidly on the reactionary side of the fence.
And strange as it may sound, the Iranian
bourgeois ‘liberals’ have historically
been able to work with both factions of the ruling
classes, whether the immediate rulers came in the
uniforms of the monarchists or the robes of the
clergy, or a combination of both. And this, better
than anything else, proves the incapacity of the
Iranian liberals for consistency and adherence to
their own supposed ideals when it comes to two of the
most fundamental cornerstones of bourgeois liberalism:
1) commitment to the separation of religion from
governance (an absolute minimum), neglected by the
‘liberals’ who comfortably work inside the
clerical regime; and 2) commitment to democracy,
neglected by the ‘liberals’ who find it
unproblematic to work with the monarchists.
So, in effect, any true nationalist, or any true
liberal in Iran has no place left to go, politically
speaking, but to the socialists!! It is only a
socialist program that can satisfy the most basic
social demands of both the liberal and democratic
segments of the so-called middle classes (the
professional class), as well as liberate the rest of
the working classes in Iran.
The Next Round of History
The monarchists who are now lining up again for
another ride on Uncle Sam’s Magic Bus Ride, have
adopted a new slogan, a ‘democratic’ one
in which, the Newly Improved Reza Pahlavi, has been
espousing a funny neo-monarchist slogan: I want to be
the King of all Iranians! Implying, inadvertently of
course, that his father was a bit of a despot who
chose to be the king of only a few!!
It is more-than-slightly embarrassing, of course,
to enunciate such a position at all. Does not every
king worthy of the title take it for granted that he
is the king of all his subjects?
We must repeat that with or without the
imperialist invasion by the US-British-Israeli axis,
the liberation of the Iranian peoples of all
nationalities remains in our own hands.
As such, those of us the people of Iran who will
yield neither to the Shah nor to the Shaykh, will have
to make an unambiguous stance:
Anybody who, for the purpose of taking the state
power, is collaborating with the imperialists
including U.S., U.K. or Israeli colonialists, you
are a traitor to the country, and as such, a pimp who
is selling the future of generations of your fellow
country men and women, for the price of a temporary
taste of political power; meaning, you have earned
yourselves an eternal entry into the large ledger of
historical traitors to community, and will forever be
placed in Lower Hell, on the ninth circle to be exact,
on the lake of ice called Cocytus, on the inner circle
Antenora, where the Traitors to Their Country are
housed, if Dante’s map constructed from his
memory, after his journey with Virgil, is to be
trusted. 2
Weapons of Mass Destruction or not, next on the
agenda for another century of barbarity is if and when
and how to attack Iran. The ‘if’ relates
to whether or not the imperialists can get
‘their man’ at the helm of the power in
Iran. That man is said to be Akbar Rafsanjani, aka
Akbar shah. He is well known to have very cordial
relations with institutions such as the World Bank and
the IMF, and is the author of a
‘privatization’ plan very popular with
Western investors. He is known as a
‘pragmatist’ for very good reasons. And if
the imperialists can subjugate a nation and make it
crawl, by finding compliant national leaders who like
to live on their knees and beg for dependency, then
why go through all the mess of a war to get what they
want?
But, again, imperialists are thorough. All
contingencies must be accounted for and a plan A and a
plan B for all such contingencies must be drawn up.
Times are strange indeed. There are some
Iranians, who would like to lend a hand
to occupying rapists. Such Iranians both inside
and outside Iran are rubbing their miserable and
well-manicured hands together, salivating over the
prospects of the rewards for being a U.S. poodle
dog. Count in this group Reza Pahlavi and his
allies.
There are other types of Iranians, too, some of
whom we can safely and accurately call fools, who
think that the U.S. will fire a few shots allowing
them to storm the streets and overthrow the tyrannical
regime, and once the Iranian tyrants are overthrown,
the U.S. tyrants too will go back home, only to send
postcards from afar. These Iranian, much like
first-time gangsters, with shaky fingers, filled with
nervous adrenaline, can’t wait to get some
action going.
Then there are, of course, those Iranians inside
and outside Iran who constitute the business classes,
and they are nervous too. But only to a degree. They
are mostly busy counting these days. Counting their
assets, that is. They are also counting the
possibilities, and counting the costs of each
possibility.
Not least, we have the Iranian tyrants running
the state apparatuses, who are very nervous right now.
They know that their particular political leaning,
religious orientation, or actual plans or possible
actions are not at issue, and that is why they are
very nervous. Because they know very well how they got
to be the current rulers in the first place: Like the
Pahlavis, they are
imperialist assisted too with an expiration
date!
Yet, in all their nervousness, the current
tyrants are uplifted as well. Partly because they can
once again puff up their chests, brandish their armor,
get the public to tighten up their lips and shut up,
and sing macho songs of war in defense of "Dear
Islam." Back in 1980, when Iraq invaded Iran,
Khomeini is well known to have called it a blessing,
for it provided the perfect opportunity for him to
advocate a march all the way to Basra, Najaf, Karbala,
and Baghdad, and beyond that, to Jerusalem, to bring
about a more powerful Islamic Republic (he may yet
achieve this posthumously thanks to the Yanks).
Expansionism was writ large into the spirit of
Khomeini’s designs, and here was a genuine
chance for actual international gains. In the cause of
heavens what matter that people die in unimaginable
numbers?
Does this not sound like the ‘moral’
calculations espoused by the Bush administration? The
two are made for each other, and in fact are from the
same cloth. And both are taking all of us for a
vicious ride.
The other reason for the more frequent smiles on
the mullahs’ faces these days is more sinister,
and involves the same calculative immorality that
gives Bush and his gangster fellows their biggest
satisfaction. Some of the more adventurous indeed
calculate:
About 70 million people live in Iran. Most people
simply wish to be left alone and not harassed,
therefore a politically unknown factor. We do know,
however, that about 15-20% of the population is
solidly with the regime; as in, their status,
privileges, petty-powers and income -- hence
physical and social survival -- depends on this
theocratic state apparatus. A further 10-15% may also
be bought or coerced into cooperation through a
carefully designed regime of carrots and sticks.
So, what does that come to? To about 10 million
people whose lives physically and socially depend on
the existence of this regime; no mere conscripts. And
then, there is also the regular army. So, as pertains
to the mere quantitative side of things, on top of all
the military equipment, the Iranian regime can count
on at least a few million hardcore supporters to
cushion the blows dealt by Uncle Sam. For the mullahs
therefore the question is very crude yet basic: How
many millions of its citizens is Uncle Sam willing to
stake on this bet?
And it will be a bet. No guarantees for anybody.
Some Iranian mullahs may look even gleefully at
the American soldiers in Iraq trembling at the thought
of another patrol, another foray into the chaotic hell
that they themselves (at the order of their superiors)
have created. They see the American soldiers already
fatigued, breaking down at the mere thought of going
back to Iraq for another tour of duty, or even for
another day. The adventurous see this and think,
“Bring it on then! We’ll make things into
such a hell that they will wish they had never left
their mama’s home!”
And the truly scary part is that the U.S.
administration of George Bush and his gang of
high-stake rapists count on this kind of thinking.
Hence the open talk of attacks on Iran, which have
only been toned down while waiting for the election
results. And hence the handy leaks for Seymour
Hersh’s article, The Coming Wars: What the
Pentagon Can Now Do in Secret, in The New Yorker (Jan
24, 2005), which constituted the opening salvo in the
psychological phase of the ‘Iranian
campaign’.
Should the US imperial planners fail to get their
man in the seat of power, we can expect an attack on
Iran, either directly by the U.S. or, as Vice
President, Dick Cheney, has remarked, “Israelis
might well decide to act first and let the rest of the
world worry about cleaning up the diplomatic mess
afterwards.” Or is the U.S. trying to convince
Pakistan to start a war with Iran,
‘inviting’ the Americans to fight along
with them?
Oh, the possibilities! The possibilities and
their cost-benefit studies must be delectable to
consider and mull over!
The Possibilities not Endless
In the fog of the current ‘war on
terror’ it is easy to forget that Khomeini, the
cunning master politician that he was, knowing the
imperialists’ liking for abundance of
possibilities, benefited from the favors rendered him
by imperialists, who, in turn, saw in Khomeini a great
anti-communist like they would not see too frequently,
a person whom Zbigniew Brzezinski called a
‘strategic ally’. 3
This should not come as a surprise in view of the
historical landscape of the Iranian ruling
classes’ particular components as shown above.
The mullahs, in their latest occupancy of what they
consider their rightful place in the seat of power
have been extremely helpful to the imperialists, by
wiping out at least two generations’ worth of
leftist achievements in Iran, sending an entire social
movement into exile, into jails, or executed in
thousands.
In spite of all the belligerent talk by the Bush
and his Gang against the Iranian Islamic regime,
pursuing all alternatives is a must-follow element of
the proven protocols of the U.S. ruling classes.
And so it is that in following protocol, the
imperialists’ choice among the mullahs for
Iranian President, Rafsanjani, is getting a lot of
positive media attention in the Western capitals,
especially in Washington, DC. Item: as reported in
Al-Sharq al-Awsat of Feb 24, 2005, Rafsanjani had
communicated with the White House, as well as with
European and Arab leaders, to seek out their views on
the possibility of his running for president. And
consider, if you will, International Crisis Group, a
Soros/CIA front, which, before Rafsanjani even
announced his candidacy, was calling for him to run
for president, and has been advertising for him
ever since.
The Iraqi population in general and the Iraqi
resistance in particular continue to consider the
presence in their country of some 160,000 foreign
soldiers and paid mercenaries, who do not take their
orders from Iraqis, as nothing but a foreign
occupation. Their resistance is only likely to
continue and grow.
One option open to an aggressor wielding
substantial military superiority coupled with moral
and ethical bankruptcy has historically been to widen
the conflict. Should the need arise at any point, the
necessary pretexts will be manufactured as required,
and the rape-n-plunder show will continue leaving its
blood-drenched trail in our neighborhood.
Considering that the ruling classes in the U.S.
are confronting very little opposition of any
significance, they can strategize with relative ease
of mind. And as messy as the occupation and its
reality might be, the business of the occupation seems
to have been a profitable production. Simply look at
the graft racked up by merely three US companies;
Bechtel, Carlyle Group, and, Dick Cheney’s
current benefactor (he has millions in stocks),
Halliburton. And for the foreseeable future, the
looting will remain sweet. The non-handover of
authority to the "elected" government,
includes a series of edicts, one hundred in total,
signed by Paul Bremer and (until a new constitution
arrives) still standing that, among other things, give
U.S. soldiers and military contractors immunity from
Iraqi laws, provide for 100% repatriation of profits,
and cap the taxes at 15% (Ibrahim Warde, Le Monde
Diplomatique, May 2004, English edition). So, lacking
a willing Islamist servile leader taking the helms in
Iran, an eventual military attack will be fully
activated as the track to follow.
* * *
Many lessons can and should be
learned from the U.S. general elections of 2004; in
particular from the political behavior of some on the
U.S. left who advocated voting for the lesser of two
evils, i.e. the Democrat presidential candidate, in a
race in which both candidates were pro-war. A key
lesson is that radical democrats, socialists and left
social democrats must create their own autonomous
political institutions.
As long as we stay minimalist and attend only to
the minimum necessities, and as long as we do not
create the necessary political structures to channel
people’s demands, most people who could
otherwise be in our camp will in fact very easily fall
for the sweet talk handed out by the Democratic Party
USA, or, in the context of Iran, fall for a
"moderate" or a "reformist"
mullah, or a "pragmatist leader" all of whom
will present themselves as the only alternative to the
status quo, or, conversely, as the only alternative to
doing nothing. It is not for no reason that the
corporate- or state-owned media all over the world
work so hard to turn citizens into well-behaved,
TV-conditioned participants when acting politically,
merely casting ballots and returning home joyously,
feeling good that they delivered on all the democratic
duties required of them. In short, no matter how many
books we may have read or even written about the
futility of supporting “reform” movements
that in reality buttress the existing order, the world
will not change for the better unless we on the left
act collectively and consciously in the interests of
the working classes, the oppressed, and the poor.
In the case of Iran, it is therefore the duty of
leftists to insist on a social order and governance
that represents and reinforces the true will of the
people, who are the true source of all sovereignty,
and the only legitimating base for any state. As
progressives in Iran and the leftists worldwide, we
must recognize and expose Rafsanjani as the face of
U.S./U.K. intervention in Iran. It is wise to note
that the same Belgian court which reviewed the cases
brought against "pragmatists" such as
Pinochet and Henry Kissinger, has reviewed a
similar case against Rafsanjani. To support a
reactionary system in the name of anti-imperialism is
as naive as Reza Shah's support for the Germans which
ultimately compromised Iran's independence for more
than thirty years. As Samir Amin has
characterized it, Islamic Fundamentalism is the
‘Dream of the Past’, something highly
appreciated by the CIA as a ready-to-use weapon
against the progressive forces of the Muslim
countries. 4
We demand that imperialists stay out of our
country, and allow us to settle our accounts with the
barbaric regime that is choking us and keeping us all
down, to the ultimate delight of the imperialists. An
imperialist power that has some thousand of nuclear
warheads at the ready, and who daily uses
uranium-enriched munitions in Iraq and Afghanistan,
thereby exposing all the biological life of the region
to radioactive poisoning for the next four billion
years (half life of uranium), has no moral authority
espousing concern over the offensive capabilities of a
nation whose military budget is a mere drop in the
ocean that represents the U.S. military expenditure,
and who is completely surrounded by the U.S. military
presence.
We further demand that the Islamic Republic
regime respect the safety and health of the Iranian
people and cease its pursuing of nuclear plans
for the foreseeable future, until a government is
established that exhibits thoroughness of modus
operandi. In a country where the government cannot,
yet, publicly account for the serial killings of the
most prominent intellectuals and writers; in a country
where thousands of political prisoners have vanished
without any culpability; in a country where the
government manifestly lacks any accountability for its
methods and means when it comes to providing for its
people (except when it comes to pursuing, terrorizing
and killing dissidents); in a resourceful country that
almost half of the population lives in poverty, the
government that has thus thoroughly proven its
incompetence has no right exposing the public to the
enormously poisonous hazards of activities as
dangerous as nuclear activities.
And for those who believe mistakenly, or advocate
maliciously, that nuclear activities bring
prosperity, prestige and respect, they need only look
at two examples: the case of Chernobyl nuclear
accident and the deserted, ghost communities that
spread in all directions from it today; and the case
of Pakistan, a country that in spite of its nuclear
weaponry is still a slave to the designs of the
imperialists.
Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, known to some in
Iran as Akbar Shah, and
Reza ‘Everybody’s’ Shah are in
fact the two faces of the same coin that constitutes
the Iranian ruling classes, with one twist; Akbar Shah
is also a U.S.-approved alternative to
their junior Pahlavi.
Rosa Faiz is an independent writer, researcher and analyst.
Notes:
1 Ervand Abrahamian, Iran Between Two
Revolutions, Princeton, 1982.
2 For map, see,
Dante, The Divine Comedy, Vol. 1: Inferno, trans. Mark
Musa, Penguin, 1971 Indiana University Press edition,
p. 352.
3 In an
excellent 1991 article, titled, Iran: Unholy
Alliances, Holy Terror, in CAQ # 37, an impressive
inventory is listed of favors exchanged between both
the U.S. and the Israelis with Iran’s Islamic
Republic. This, just in case the mere mention of the
phrase ‘Iran-Contra Affair’ is not enough
to jog the memory of the reader regarding such behind
the scenes collaborations between Khomeini’s
regime and the imperialists.
4 Samir Amin,
Political Islam, CAQ # 71.