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Edition 13 Volume 9 - May 12, 2011

Iran and the Arab revolutionary wave

Arab spring, Persian winter--for the moment  - Ali Alfoneh
No regional regime is immune to their impact, not even the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The ideological challenge for Iranian democrats  - Nader Hashemi
The emergence of the Green Movement is nearly identical to recent protests in the Arab world.

A very mixed blessing for Iran  - Meir Litvak
The preoccupation of the world with the Arab spring enables Iran to advance its nuclear plans unhindered.

Iran's Islamic vision of the Arab uprising  - Sadegh Zibakalam
In particular, events in Syria have created a serious stumbling block for Iranian leaders.


Arab spring, Persian winter--for the moment
 Ali Alfoneh

It is still too early to tell whether the waves of change sweeping over the shores of North Africa and the Middle East will erode the foundations of autocracy or, conversely, whether they will merely substitute secular authoritarianism with Islamist totalitarianism. It is clear, however, that no regional regime is immune to their impact, not even the Islamic Republic of Iran, the self-proclaimed vanguard of the permanent world revolution.

Iran's pro-democracy movement, the Green Movement, prides itself on having ignited the Arab upheavals by staging large-scale demonstrations in Iran in the wake of the fraudulent June 12, 2009 presidential election. The Arab upheavals, in turn and to some degree, revived the Iranian opposition at a time when the regime's suppression of the opposition seemed total. On February 6, Hojjat al-Eslam Mehdi Karrubi and Mir-Hossein Mousavi, the leaders of the Green Movement, in a joint letter asked the Interior Ministry for a permit to demonstrate "in solidarity with popular movements of the region, especially the liberation-seeking revolts of the people of Tunisia and Egypt."

Not surprisingly, the permit was denied, and the two opposition leaders, together with former president Mohammed Khatami, were put under house arrest. Ignoring the demonstration ban, the opposition rallied on February 14 and March 1 with calls for Supreme Leader Ali Khamene'i to follow in the footsteps of the Tunisian and Egyptian dictators: "Mubarak, Ben Ali, it is now the turn of Seyyed Ali [Khamene'i]", "Khamene'i, Mubarak, congratulations with your marriage!" and "Whether those in Iran with motorcycles, or those in Cairo with camels, death to the dictators!"

However, the regime in Tehran had learned valuable lessons from the post-presidential election anti-regime demonstrations. The Intelligence Ministry unleashed a new round of arrests of protest organizers who had not been detained during earlier demonstrations. In affected neighborhoods, the cell phone network was cut off and the speed of the Internet was reduced to a bare minimum, which further restricted communications with the outside world. Apart from this, coordination in containing the protests between law enforcement forces, the Basij Resistance Force, the Revolutionary Guards, and vigilante organizations was far more synchronized than during earlier demonstrations.

Leaders of the Green Movement, on the other hand, do not seem to have learned any lessons. As the opposition in the Arab world mobilizes the public for street protests, Karrubi and Mousavi ask the Interior Ministry for a "demonstration permit". As the opposition in the Arab world urges the demonstrators to remain in the streets, Karrubi and Mousavi urge the demonstrators to go home. As the opposition in the Arab world calls for overthrow of the dictators, Karrubi and Mousavi continue to talk of reforming the regime within the framework of the constitution. As the Arab opposition calls for democracy, Karrubi and Mousavi call for a return to the "era of the Imam," referring to Grand Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini's reign of terror in the 1980s. In this light, it is hardly surprising that the Arab opposition has proved much more successful than the Iranian opposition.

The waves of change are indeed sweeping across the shores of the Middle East and North Africa. However, the Islamist regime in Iran is better geared to suppressing internal dissent than other regional autocracies and, therefore, has better prospects of surviving the crisis--for now at least. But as long as the regime is unwilling or incapable of allowing Iranians to become masters of their own destinies by liberalizing the Iranian political system, the results may be increased repression and the surfacing of more radical opposition movements inside Iran.-Published 12/05/2011 © bitterlemons-international.org


Ali Alfoneh is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute.


The ideological challenge for Iranian democrats
 Nader Hashemi

The trigger event that launched the Arab democratic uprisings of 2011 can be traced back to the small Tunisian town of Sidi Bouzid. It was here that Muhammad Bouazizi, a poor street peddler, engaged in act of self-immolation after being humiliated and brutalized by a policewoman. His death sparked a series of democratic revolts that have swept across the Arab world, radically altering the political landscape and shaking the foundations of Middle Eastern authoritarian rule. An argument can be made, however, that Iran, not Tunisia, is the geographic home where the true origins of the "Arab spring" are located.

In the summer of 2009, after a stolen presidential election, Iran's pro-democracy Green Movement was born. It shook the Islamic Republic to its core and, according to a senior commander of the Revolutionary Guards, the movement posed a greater threat to regime stability and political order than Saddam Hussein's invasion of Iran and the subsequent Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988).

The emergence of the Green Movement is nearly identical to recent protests in the Arab world, especially when measured by its core constituency, its fundamental grievances, its modus operandi and its political aspirations. Similar to Tunisia and Egypt, the birth of these movements and the street protests that ensued were both unprecedented and unexpected. These movements were leaderless and protests were organized by small groups of internet-savvy young people frustrated with their bleak economic prospects and rejecting their repressive political contexts. The protesters in the Iranian and Arab street were non-ideological in terms of political ideology; their core demands were simply for democracy and dignity and they were uniformly committed to a strategy of non-violent resistance. But why did the pro-democracy movement in Iran fail, despite its earlier manifestation, while similar movements in Tunisia and Egypt were successful?

There are no simple answers to this question. Each country has its own internal story and there are different social conditions that bolster authoritarianism in countries across the Middle East, notwithstanding the broad structural similarities that produced the current wave of pro-democracy movements. I would like to identify two ways in which the case of Iran is dissimilar to the Arab world, thus posing unique challenges for democrat forces moving forward.

Iranian democrats have to overcome two distinct ideological challenges that their counterparts in Tunisia and Egypt did not have to face. These challenges have allowed the Iranian regime to retain a level of support among a deeply loyal core constituency (about 20 percent), forcing the Green Movement to incorporate this reality into their struggle with Iran's clerical oligarchy. I am referring specifically to the theme of "Islamic authenticity" and the theme of "anti-imperialism".

The Islamic Republic claims to be the embodiment of Islamic purity on earth. In a religious society such as Iran, the regime manipulates popular sentiment, especially among the poor and the pious, through massive state propaganda, by arguing that the Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, is God's representative on earth. Rejecting his authority is portrayed as a moral sin and according to a leading clerical hawk, Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, disobeying Khamenei is equivalent to "apostasy from God". Thus, the use and manipulation of religion to preserve political power is a key weapon in the arsenal of the Iranian regime that it wields to retain power.

Secondly, there is the theme of anti-imperialism. The Islamic Republic claims to be the vanguard state opposing western imperialism in the region while supporting the rights of the oppressed Muslim masses. Within Iran, the regime claims to be champions of Iran's territorial integrity and sovereignty who are protecting the country from the evil machinations of the Great Satan (USA) and the Little Satan (Israel), who are blamed for all of Iran's political and economic problems. The Green Movement is subsequently portrayed by the Iranian regime as an agent of these foreign powers. While most of society rejects these claims, a small minority buys into this regime's propaganda. Moreover, this argument has resonance internally, in part due to Iran's troubled past with western powers (recall the 1953 CIA coup) and the current debate over the nuclear question that the regime portrays as American bullying of Iran.

In short, religious authenticity and anti-imperialism are two pillars that shape contemporary Muslim identity. They are powerful weapons that can influence public opinion. Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali could not utilize these themes to retain power for obvious reasons. Both men were military leaders with weak religious credentials who justified their rule in the name of secular Arab nationalism, not Islam. Moreover, their close alliance with the West implicated them in struggle against western intervention in the region.

The struggle for democracy in Iran is far from over. While the pre-conditions for democracy exist and recent events in the Arab world help shine a spotlight on all authoritarian regimes in the Middle East, it important to appreciate how each country in the region is unique. In the case of the Islamic Republic, the ideological challenges--while distinct--are certainly not insurmountable.-Published 12/5/2011 © bitterlemons-international.org


Nader Hashemi teaches Middle East and Islamic Politics at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver. He is the co-editor of "The People Reloaded: The Green Movement and the Struggle for Iran's Future" (Melville House, 2011).


A very mixed blessing for Iran
 Meir Litvak

The "Arab spring" offers Iran opportunities to advance its aspirations for regional leadership. But in the longer term it may also confront Iran with serious challenges. As Iran claims the leadership of the anti-Israel camp in the region, its fortunes are of great importance from an Israeli point of view.

The fall of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who feared Iran's hegemonic aspirations, weakens the Arab "pro-settlement" or pro-western camp that also includes Saudi Arabia, Jordan and some smaller Gulf states, and enhances the "resistance camp" led by Iran together with Syria, Hizballah and Hamas. In addition, Mubarak's fall and that of Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in Tunisia will enable the Islamists to become major political actors in both countries. Unlike radical Salafis or Saudi Wahhabis, the Egyptian Muslim Brothers regard Iran favorably in view of their shared animosity towards Israel and the United States. Likewise, public opinion in Egypt and possibly other Arab countries is friendlier towards Iran than that of their rulers, and its growing influence on Arab governments will benefit Iran. The apparent thaw in Egyptian-Iranian relations and public pressure to downgrade if not abrogate Egypt's peace treaty with Israel are both positive dividends for Iran.

Iran could also benefit from continued erosion in the status of the US, its major ideological and political foe, following the demise of major US allies in the region and due to emerging US tension with the Saudis, who resent America's conduct towards Mubarak.

The preoccupation of the world community with the Arab spring enables Iran to advance its nuclear plans unhindered. Significantly, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei interpreted NATO's attacks in Libya as proof of Gaddafi's mistake in giving up his nuclear option in 2003. Khamenei's interpretation implies Iranian resolve to continue with efforts to acquire nuclear capabilities in order to thwart future threats by the West. Rising oil prices, partly due to events in Libya, provide Iran with additional revenue of several billion dollars. These funds enable the Iranian regime to overcome some of the effects of the international sanctions imposed upon it because of its nuclear policy, but also to increase domestic spending necessary to placate potential public discontent. The diversion of international media attention has also enabled Iran to increase its repression against the domestic opposition, ranging from the incarceration of opposition leaders Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karrubi to executing over 80 people in January 2011 alone.

A corollary benefit for Iran from the world's focus on the Arab spring is the breathing space afforded to Hizballah, Iran's crucial ally in Lebanon, from the investigation of the murder of former prime minister Rafiq Hariri. This respite spares Iran both political embarrassment and the dilemma of how to react should Hizballah be implicated in the murder. In addition, the diversion has eased the replacement of the pro-American Saad Hariri cabinet by one backed by Hizballah.

Not surprisingly, Iranian leaders have expressed their delight at evolving regional realities, describing them as an Islamic awakening inspired by Iran's 1979 revolution and as an "irreparable failure for the American and the Zionist regimes". Iranian leaders have predicted the birth of a new Islamic Middle East without Israel in which "Iran's pivotal role" would be "undeniable." President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad went further in claiming, "we are in the middle of a world revolution" managed by the Twelfth Imam (the Shiite messiah).

Concurrently, the Arab spring also poses problems for Iran. The Shiite uprising in Bahrain alarmed all other Arab Gulf countries over the prospects of a newly emergent Shiite-dominated state allied with Iran in their midst. The result is a deepening of both Arab-Iranian tension and Sunni-Shiite animosity in the Gulf, with sharp mutual recriminations. While Iran had previously sought to build a common Muslim front under its leadership that would unite Sunnis and Shiites as well as Iranians and Arabs in opposition to the West and Israel, events in Bahrain have undermined these efforts and may push Arab Gulf states closer to the US despite their disappointment with American policies in recent months.

An even greater challenge to Iran's regional aspirations is the turmoil in Syria, Iran's strategic partner since 1979. This crisis has already prompted attacks by Sunni circles against the Alawites in Syria, further exacerbating regional Sunni-Shiite tensions. Considering its tacit support for the Assad regime's 1982 bloody suppression of the Hamma Islamist rebellion, Iran probably fears that a future non-Alawite regime in Syria may be far less friendly than Assad's. Therefore the continued weakening, let alone possible downfall, of the Assad regime may seriously undermine the unity and effectiveness of the Iranian-led "resistance camp," erode Iran's capability of aiding Hizballah and weaken potential Iranian leverage over Israel.

Finally, a blow to the Syrian regime may embolden the demoralized and disorganized Iranian opposition to act. Here, Iran's concerns are manifested in charges against western and "Zionist" conspiracies instigating the uprising in Syria, but also by increased repression at home. Overall then, while initially the Arab spring appeared as a blessing for Iran, as time passes, shadows and challenges emerge as well, with important ramifications for all countries in the region.-Published 12/5/2011 © bitterlemons-international.org


Meir Litvak is associate professor at the Department of Middle Eastern History and director of the Center for Iranian Studies at Tel Aviv University.


Iran's Islamic vision of the Arab uprising
 Sadegh Zibakalam

The reaction of Islamic Iran, and particularly its leaders, to the events in the Arab world has broadly gone unnoticed outside Iran. This issue becomes all the more important given the democratic nature of the Arab revolutionary movement on the one hand, and the fact that the movement is slowly approaching Syria, the arch strategic ally of Islamic Iran in the region, on the other.

As far as Iranian leaders are concerned, the struggle in the Arab world is inspired by the Islamic revolution and the Islamic struggle against the "arrogant powers" (meaning the United States, the European powers and Israel). The movements in Egypt, Tunisia, Yemen, Algeria, Bahrain and the rest of the Arab countries are led by the Muslim masses. These movements are religiously oriented; they aim to overthrow the pro-western regimes of these countries and to replace them with radical, anti-western Islamic regimes similar to that in Iran. Pictures of street prayers and women in Islamic scarf are frequently published in Iran's state-controlled media to prove the Islamic nature of the Arab world upheavals. So are photos of Arab demonstrators carrying pictures of Iranian leaders, to provide further proof of the revolutionary Islamic orientation of the "Arab spring".

Given the anti-western and particularly anti-American posture of the Iranian regime, the Arab spring is also described as being anti-western and anti-American. Anyone listening to the Iranian media and Iranian leaders and who does not have access to independent media, would have no option but to conclude that the Arab revolt will produce revolutionary regimes similar, if not identical, to the Iranian regime.

That being the case, the West in general and the US in particular, according to the Iranian media, are desperately trying to derail these movements from their "revolutionary objectives". Statements and comments attributed to western, US and Israeli leaders, officials and newspapers are frequently reported by the Iranian media to demonstrate the West's acknowledgement that the Arab uprising is influenced by the Iranian revolution while at the same time reflecting western fear of Iranian influence in the Arab world.

There is no mention of the democratic nature of the current Arab upheaval. The fact that these movements are against despotism and dictatorship is completely absent in official Iranian coverage. Nor, for that matter, is there any mention of the other democratic aspirations of the Arab masses: freedom of the press, freedom of thought, rule of law, freedom of expression, free elections, the release of political prisoners and similar demands.

In particular, events in Syria have created a serious stumbling block for Iranian leaders. The revolution there has in effect poured cold water on much of the Iranian propaganda contention that the Arab upheavals are anti-western. The Syrian regime is anti-American, anti-western, pro-Hamas as well as pro-Hizballah and, most important of all as far as Tehran is concerned, forms part of the "resistance alliance". Yet the uprising in "revolutionary Syria" is far more ferocious than in Egypt or Tunisia. The dilemma has been resolved by simply not reporting any of the events in that country. There is very limited coverage in the more independent newspapers, but the government press and Iranian Radio and TV do not mention anything about Syria. Only a few Iranian academics have raised the Syrian regime's atrocities and have drawn parallels with those of the Saudis and Bahrainis.

Apropos, and in contrast to the news blackout on Syria, there is a continuous media bombardment concerning the suppression of Bahraini Shiites by the Sunni al-Khalifa regime, backed by Saudi and Emirates forces. Iranian newspapers are full of reports of atrocities perpetrated by Saudi, Bahraini and Emirates forces against the innocent Bahraini people. There are daily "fatwa" by Iranian religious leaders condemning the Saudi leaders as "infidels" for their crimes in Bahrain.

Another dilemma with which the Arab spring has confronted Iranian leaders is in Libya. Close cooperation between NATO forces and the Libyan people has poured yet more cold water on the Iranian regime's interpretation of the Arab spring. While not mentioning this anti-Gaddafi cooperation, Tehran has accused the West of deliberately trying to save Gaddafi by prolonging its military operation. Many state-run media have declared that had NATO leaders desired to overthrow Gaddafi, they could have done so in much the same way they overthrew Saddam Hussein in 2003. Instead, the West wants to keep Gaddafi in power, but as a weak leader. This enables it to penetrate Libya and control its huge gas and oil resources. Once again, there is no mention of the social issues involved in the Libyan crisis.

In short, as far as Islamic Iran is concerned, the main point of the Arab spring is neither democracy nor human rights. Rather, it is about creating Islamic states similar to Iran on the one hand, and securing Middle East energy resources--a strategy that Iran argues will of course not succeed--on the other.-Published 12/5/2011 © bitterlemons-international.org


Sadegh Zibakalam is professor of political science at Tehran University.




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