Party's over
Islamic Republic - the great 'national-socialist' experiment in the
Middle East
July 18, 2002
The Iranian
The history of the Middle East over the last century has been dominated by
the two main political movements of nationalism and socialism. These two movements
have on occasions overlapped each other, but generally they have followed different
agenda and have relied on distinct social classes with specific interests and aspirations.
In Iran too, ever since of the Constitutional Revolution of 1906, the two trends
have been present in the political scene. Then came the 1979 revolution - a mass
uprising against the monarchy and its western supporters. A new phenomenon was entering
the Iranian politics, and a form of 'national socialist' movement came into existence.
Welcome to the Islamic Republic...
The history of the Middle East over the last century has been dominated by the two
main political movements of nationalism and socialism. These two movements have on
occasions overlapped each other, but generally they have followed different agenda
and have relied on distinct social classes with specific interests and aspirations.
The nationalist groups were mainly concerned with liberation from foreign dominance,
characterized by western powers that had directly or indirectly colonized this part
of the world before or after the First World War. The driving forces behind these
movements were the merchant classes who spearheaded the drive against the foreign
interests (mainly British) in the area. They were also instrumental in constitutional
movements, which sought to limit the absolute power of the monarchy and establish
a parliamentary system of government.
The socialist groups were historically newer phenomena. They relied naturally on
the working class, and came into existence as a political force only after the October
Revolution in Russia, and sought to follow the version of Marxism as portrayed by
the then Soviet Union. Though many socialist groups took part in the liberation movements
against the west alongside the nationalists, they differed mainly when the interests
of the Soviet Union were concerned. This put them often on the collision course with
nationalist forces, with disastrous consequences for them, for the nationalists,
for the liberation movements, and for the interests of the society at large.
In Iran, ever since of the Constitutional Revolution of 1906, the two trends have
been present in the political scene. However, the socialist movement came into prominence
in the 1940's and early 50's when a nationalist coalition led by Dr. Mossaddegh managed
to mount an effective campaign against the British interests and to nationalize the
oil industry. These were the golden days of Iranian politics: nationalists leading
a historical campaign against the mighty British empire in the Middle East; and socialists
creating the most powerful mass party of the working class in the area, in the form
of the Tudeh Party.
Alas, the good old days could not last long. The Tudeh Party tended to look to Moscow,
rather than at the interests of the working class, for its policies. The nationalists
lost much of their public support, partly because of the severe economic sanction
engineered by the British, and partly as a result of the local clergy coming out
against them. The external meddling from both the west and the Soviet Union, combined
with internal unrest, prepared the ground for a joint British-American sponsored
coup in 1953 that overthrew Mossaddegh's government and handed over the Iranian politics
to the Americans for the next quarter of century.
During this period, both nationalist and socialist movements were suppressed and
driven underground or beyond the Iranian borders. The frustration felt by many younger
generations of both camps led to the formation of new and more radical groups, with
some resorting to armed struggle as a substitute for mass mobilization. The new socialist
groups would also distance themselves from the Soviet block and adopt more independent
policies.
Then came the 1979 revolution - a mass uprising against the monarchy and its western
supporters. Both the nationalist and socialist tendencies took part in the revolution.
But the power was won by a new force that tried to outdo them both. A new phenomenon
was entering the Iranian politics. A form of 'national-socialist' movement came into
existence. Welcome to the Islamic Republic.
This was not the first time in the Middle East that movements purporting to be both
nationalist and socialist had come to power. The Nasserists in Egypt had tried the
idea. Then the Ba'thists in Syria and Iraq, and especially in the latter, followed
it with more zest and conviction.
These new movements had some of the characteristics and hallmarks of by now the classical
national-socialist movement of Germany between the two wars. They would appeal to
all classes by portraying themselves to be both super-nationalist and at the
same time ardent socialist. And they would sometimes follow extreme policies in support
of both claims. Now, the Islamic Republic was to take this phenomenon to its perfection.
Externally, it would clash with almost any power in the area, and assert its ambition
to export its revolution beyond the Iranian borders. And internally, it embarked
on the most widespread confiscation of the assets of the upper class and wealthy
supporters of the old regime, all in the interests of "the meek".
The two-pronged policy was very successful in mobilization of the masses and in marginalizing
the traditional nationalist and socialist movements. Ayatollah Khomeini was going
to establish a true independent, corruption-free and powerful state for the Iranian
nation. He would also provide housing for all, and give free water and electricity
to all poor people. A new generation of idealists, most of them young and religiously
charged, gathered around the new Leader ready to sacrifice themselves for the good
of the country and the new independent, anti-imperialist, champion-of-the-poor Islamic
system.
Indeed, the new regime also managed to elicit the support of most of the traditional
political groups. Both the nationalist and socialist movements, with few exceptions,
would come to the support of the new regime based on their own analysis. The nationalists
would form the government in the first year of the new regime. The socialists, though
never given a chance to share power, nevertheless supported its "anti-imperialist"
stands and mass confiscation of assets. The two camps would oppose each other, but
not that much worried where the new regime was heading.
As with the Nazi Germany, the new Islamic regime had to find both internal and external
enemies for all the ills of the society, and at the same time to create a notion
of super national identity for the Iranian people in order to support its expansionist
policies. The Nazis used the idea of race to formulate their philosophy. The Islamic
Republic had the Islamic notion of ummeh to play the same role. Though the
notion of ummeh (a relic of the Islamic empire in its heydays under the early caliphs)
was anathema to the concept of nationhood for many Iranians, it did nevertheless
serve the purpose it was employed for: as a vehicle both to 'refine' the nation and
identify the "pure" Iranians and at the same time to put Iran at the center
of a much bigger entity far exceeding its existing geographical borders.
Internally, non-Moslems (and even non-Shi'ite Moslems) were identified
as second-class citizens, with Jews and most explicitly the Bahais as the cause of
some of the miseries of the Iranian people. This led to systematic persecution of
these minorities. In the case of Bahais, a policy of extermination was followed,
leading to hundreds of executions and large-scale measures aimed particularly at
reducing their numbers through social exclusion and depravation. Of course, as with
the Nazi's experience, the Bahais were not the only minority to suffer under the
Islamic regime. Once started with one group, it would soon be extended to almost
any 'undesirable' social group, from other religious or national minorities, to political
groups, to secular intellectuals - and to women, the largest single social group
to be brutally suppressed under the Islamic regime.
Externally, the regime had already identified the two super powers of the day, plus
Britain and Israel, as its enemies. This was a popular policy among the population
at large, and would in part appeal to most of the nationalist and socialist groups
too. Taking of the American embassy and its personnel as hostages in 1979 was to
prove the regime's anti-imperialist credentials, especially amongst the pro-Moscow
socialist organizations. However, the regime also had the duty to export its revolution
throughout the Islamic world. A wave of official campaign against the corrupt leaders
of the neighboring countries started. And for very understandable reasons, Iraq with
its large Shi'ite population was more than any other country at the receiving end
of this propaganda.
The Islamists in power saw Iraq as the most appropriate first stage in their ambition
to create an Islamic ummeh nation. Months of provocation did the job, and
Iraq embarked on a pre-emptive strike, thus starting a devastating war that was to
last 8 years long. The Islamic regime welcomed the war as a divine blessing. It regarded
it as a godsend opportunity to follow its ambition of creating the great Islamic
state.
The fact that the war for the Islamic regime was not merely a defensive one was made
clear in several ways. The war was waged as a religious campaign against enemies
of Islam and not on enemies of Iran. It was a war of "liberation", not
of Iranian territories, but of Iraq's holy cities. Time ad time again, this was proclaimed
in the official propaganda, in communiqués, and in the drives to mobilize
volunteers for the war. The "liberation" of Iraqi cities was regarded,
in spite of all the proclamations to the contrary, as more important than helping
the Palestinians in their fight against Israel. Indeed, when Ayatollah Khomeini was
once asked to help the Hezbollah fighters in Lebanon, he declined to help and replied
that the route to Jerusalem passes through Karbala (a holy city in Iraq).
Then two years after the war had started, the Iranian forces managed to push Iraqis
back into their own territory. Iraq was also in a weak position ready to agree generous
compensation terms (with backing from Saudi Arabia and other rich Arab states in
the Persian Gulf) for the damage and destruction it had caused. However, the Islamic
regime insisted on the continuation of the war, and over the next six full years
sent hundreds of thousands of volunteers and conscripts to the battlefield, most
of them to their certain death. Thousands upon thousands of under age youngsters
would be sent to run over the minefields to clear them for the advancing army - with
the promise of eternal bliss in the heaven for the kids and their parents in exchange
for their martyrdom in the course of "liberation" of holy cities in Iraq.
The war situation would naturally call for national
unity, with all the political forces coming together to defend the motherland. But
it also provided the convenient cover for the Islamic regime to pursue its other,
internal, design: to eliminate all other political forces inside the country, not
only politically but literally in physical terms too.
And so, as soon as the Islamic regime established itself and needed no more help
from traditional nationalists or socialists, it embarked on one of the bloodiest
campaigns in the recent Middle East history to eliminate all these groups. Though
political suppression was nothing new in Iran as elsewhere in the area, this was
the first time that they were being physically wiped out. Thousands and thousands
of opposition figures and sympathizers were rounded up and summarily executed over
the years.
The final act of these large-scale massacres were to occur in 1988, soon after the
Islamic regime came to the realization that its adventurous foreign policies have
been in vein: 8 years of war with over a million casualties and billions of damages
have resulted in no victory. Ayatollah Khomeini had to swallow the poison, as he
put it himself, and accept a humiliating ceasefire. However, he had no reason to
accept defeat at the internal front - so he ordered the mass execution of all remaining
political prisoners throughout Iran. The order was carried out dutifully, and over
the next few weeks several thousand political prisoners were again physically eliminated.
Only after this final act, the great Leader could die peacefully in his bed.
Of all the legacies of Khomeini's ten-year rule, his act of mutilation of the Iranian
politics may have more long lasting effect. A decade after his death, a reform movement
has been gathering pace in Iran. The main elements of this movement consist of young
revolutionaries who were mesmerized by the great Leader at the time, and were at
the forefront of his campaigns in the early years after the revolution. They were
ready to follow orders - whatever the order. May of them were actually involved in
carrying out the persecution policies of Khomeini. They had been promised heaven
on earth, and they were ready to sacrifice themselves and anybody else necessary
to make it happen. In the course of achieving this end, any means was legitimate
if sanctioned by the great Leader.
Now, they found many of those dreams were hollow. Power is concentrated in the hand
of a new elite. Corruption is rampant. Poverty is on the increase. Unemployment affects
the new generation very badly. Crime and addiction is widespread. A society battered
socially, economically and politically. Full-scale nationalizations and confiscations
of assets after the revolution have resulted in the creation of colossal conglomerates
outside public control and a readily available source of embezzlement for the army
of state officials and the ruling clergy. Two decades of Islamic government has only
managed to take the society further away from the modern world and into the middle
ages - with women downgraded to less than half a man, and barbaric punishments of
public executions, amputations, whipping and stoning to death becoming routine.
In other words, the great national-socialism project of Imam Khomeini has meant almost
noting but poverty, destruction, war, corruption, massacres, discrimination, crime,
violence, human miseries and social disintegration. The exceptions being few advances
here or there, such as high literacy rate amongst women or a large increase in higher
education intakes.
So the reformists are calling for change. But to what? Democracy is the buzzword.
This of course is a great aim for a society deprived of basic political freedom over
a very long time. But that seems also to be the ultimate aim for most of the reformists.
There is a dearth of ideas of "what else?" in political, social or economic
terms. With the demise of Soviet Union and the rise of political right at the international
level, the reform movement in Iran too is finding no way to turn but to the right.
The catastrophic outcome of Khomeini's "socialist policies", which was
characterized by mass nationalization and confiscation of property and assets, has
proved to many that socialism is doomed. And persistent anti-American rhetoric of
the Islamic regime has infatuated the younger generation with anything American -
from its laissez faire capitalism, to Hollywood culture, and to its right
wing politics.
The physical elimination of political forces during
the 10-year reign of Khomeini has deprived Iran of its political traditions, and
had severed the historical link between the new generation of activists with their
political and ideological ancestors. The political landscape of Iran is barren with
only a few green-shoots of recovery appearing here and there.
The days of the national-socialist regime of the Islamic Republic may be numbered.
But its legacy in political and social terms would take much, much, longer to disappear.
This is an expanded version of a talk given at the "Nationalism and Socialism
in the Middle East" session of the week-long series of seminars and debates
organized at University of London under the title of "Marxism 2002",
7-13 July 2002.
Author
Hossein Bagher Zadeh is a human rights activist and commentator on Iranian political
and human rights issues.
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