The February parliamentary elections in Iran have
caused great relief to the US and other imperialist powers. After 21 years of
strict Islamic practices the Islamic revolution has proved itself unable to
solve the basic problems of Iranian society. With hopes belied the Iranian
masses, which once looked up to the clergy as saviours from the evils and terror
of the Shah’s regime, have again started looking for an alternative. Khomeini’s
religio-political concepts built up a regime which proved no less repressive
than that of the Shah’s and the people experienced rampant corruption,
despotism, high cost of living, forced feudal customs, unemployment and
merciless exploitation at the hands of those who promised a heaven in the name
of religion. The people’s 21 years sojourn into ‘heaven’ has proved that
hell did not end with the demise of the Shah, it continued inspite Khomeini’s
"glorious revolution." Their urge for change continues, and amidst this
unrest the February elections have been held once again promising them
"freedom" and a "decent" way of life arousing great hopes among them,
but nevertheless, again concealing a great fraud.
Exploiting Classes’
Answer To The Question of Change
Inspite of tragedies and farces history continues
to repeat itself. Society has an unending appetite for change. People rise up
time and again in an urge to change their living conditions while the exploiting
classes use all means at their disposal to mislead the people to their own
advantage.
The Shah had been kicked out by the people because
he was responsible for the mass scale plunder of Iranian oil wealth by the
British, American and French imperialists who had benefited to the tune of
hundreds of billions of dollars. Iran had become one of the most ruthless
regimes in the service of imperialism, spending billions of dollars on only one
of its armed wings — the intelligence agency, SAVAK, which was responsible for
liquidating thousands of Shah’s opponents over the years. Iran under the Shah
had become an open enemy of Arab nationalism and a friend of Zionist Israel and
apartheid South Africa; and above all because the Shah was the pusher of
degenerated western values and culture on the vast Iranian masses who were
reeling under poverty and unemployment inspite of enormous national income from
the oil industry. The Shah and about forty elite families in Iran controlled all
the sources of power, with the Shah assuming the powers of a despot inspite of
the existence of a parliament. The people rose up against his regime and he had
to flee to save himself from the wrath of the people.
The Shia clergy, which represented the trading
class had traditionally been against Shah’s despotism and centralisation of
powers in a single person. It assumed leadership of the mass upsurge, promised
people an end to the monarchy and demanded to hand over power to their
representative under a theological state. As the US had been the closest ally
and staunch backer of the Shah, the clergy too had its own hatred towards the
US. The interests coincided and the political Islamic revolution overthrew the
Shah.
Now, after twenty-one years, the people have
discovered that the promised heaven was a tragic illusion and the clergy has
betrayed them. The discontent among the people has forced a cleavage in the
clerics who know that with the passage of time it will become impossible to
control the people’s rebellions. An indication of this has already been given by
the huge student revolts of July 1999. It has resulted in two different
approaches, between the two factions of the ruling theologians. One, headed by
President Khatami, wants certain hard social restrictions to go, and to effect
political changes in the set-up to bring the supreme religious authority under
the jurisdiction of law by making parliament the supreme authority in law making
and by freeing the judiciary from the control of the mullahs. Khatami does not
challenge the concept of "divine origin of the political power" but wants
to give it a bourgeois parliamentary colour by saying that this power "should
be exercised on behalf of the people by their elected representative." He is
being termed by the world imperialist media as a "reformer". The other
faction wants to continue the system with the same old principles enunciated by
Imam Khomeini.
Both the factions, however, are one when it comes
to control of the revolting people, with only a tactical difference. The
so-called reformists want to allow protests as far as they do not turn violent
or go against the very foundations of the present exploitative system, while the
other advocates open suppression from the very outset.
The students’ rebellion in Tehran and other cities
in July 1999 brought out that both the factions are equally reactionary and for
resorting to oppressive measures. Khatami, who had first supported the peaceful
student protests in order to use it as a lever in his struggle against his
opponents, turned against them when the student rebellion spread and turned
violent. This happened after the murderous assault by the police on them. The
student rebellion had spread to a number of cities and a growing number of
ordinary people came out in open support to them. Many were arrested, injured
and four of the students were sentenced to death by the Islamic revolutionary
court. Khatami, at this stage, condemned the rebellious students and ordered the
police to stop the students rebellion with a heavy hand.
Although, both the camps of clerics are one when it
comes to continuing the exploitative system, yet they are engaged in a growing
battle on how to run the economic and social affairs of the country. Having
failed in leading the Iranian masses to build a self-reliant economy which can
withstand the imperialist onslaught and their sanctions, they have no option
left but to yield to imperialist pressure. In fact, they did not have a clear
understanding on how to organise the Iranian economy after the demise of the
Shah. Anti-Americanism did not lead to anti-imperialism as they were bereft of a
revolutionary ideology. Nationalisation of major sectors of the economy after
the 1979 revolution was not meant to make a clear break from imperialist
exploitation and imperialism, rather it was meant to dismantle the economic base
of elite families while retaining its exploitative character. Moreover, the most
important sector of the economy i.e., oil, was natioanlised in April 1980 only
after diplomatic relations with the US had broken off due to the embassy
occupation crisis in Tehran.
Khomeini himself was not averse to having close
economic ties with the US, and both the states had cooperation in the sensitive
field of exchanging secret information concerning Libya, Iraq, PLO, the Soviet
Union and the Tudeh Party (revisionist CP) of Iran. Khomeini did not intend to
confiscate imperialist capital and demolish imperialist interests inspite of the
anti-US rhetoric and strong anti-imperialist sentiments of the working class and
the youth and students. The situation for both the US and Iranian administration
went out of control when revolutionary guards refused to lift the seize
of the US embassy leading to a total break of political and economic ties. Huge
amounts of Iranian assets were frozen in the US banks, sanctions were enforced,
and Iraq was instigated to attack Iran leading to an 8 year long war. The
Iranian economy went into shambles and the rulers were hard pressed, with petro-dollar
income reduced drastically.
As leaders of the Islamic revolution had no
alternative model for Iran’s economic development cracks appeared in the
leadership after the death of Imam Khomeini in 1989. A debate around the
question of the opening up to the West started growing in a concealed manner on
a number of issues, enhancing this rift. The anti-US clerics, who are termed in
the world bourgeois press as conservatives, are not anti-imperialist at heart.
They want to open up to the non-US imperialist states of the European Union,
Russia and even Australia. Both the factions want to integrate the Iranian
economy in the world imperialists system. There was no policy difference between
the two factions on signing the CTBT and WTO. The so-called reformists want
closer links with US imperialism.
The rift between the two has yet to enter into a
decisive phase. The coming into power of Mohammed Khatami in the 1997
presidential elections was a big victory for the "reformist" clerics.
Soon after coming to power Khatami initiated cultural exchanges with the US.
Sports contact was encouraged and tourism was given a start. Khatami also
sounded the US that it could do business with Iran by opening an oil pipeline
which may connect Central Asia with the Persian Gulf. Khatami moved cautiously
and step by step.
The Feb. 2000 elections were considered a great
battle between the two factions and it was keenly watched throughout the
imperialist capitals. The students rebellion in July 1999 (and the arrest and
trial of Abdollah Nouri) was sought to be converted into a trialof strength
between the two factions. Though in both the cases Khatami had to suffer
set-backs, as far as the events were concerned, he was highly successful
politically in highlighting the need for opening up in the name of freedom, "democratisation"
of the Islamic system and "independence" of the judiciary.
The landslide victory of the Khatami faction is an
indication of the extent of people’s resentment of the clergy. But it also is a
method to diffuse people’s discontent into safe electoral channels. Now Islamic
Iran may be ready to do business with the "Satan". Khatami’s social
reforms, conceals his real intentions of opening out the Iranian economy to the
imperialist sharks.
The West is happy that the Iranian veil is being
lifted up. It could mean billions of dollars and new friends in a land, which
was once closed by "obscurantist" forces. "Good old days" may be here again, of
course, now without the monarch! After the election results the US has lifted
the trade embargo over Iran. Hundreds of billions of dollars, which are frozen,
in US banks will be negotiated in future if Khatami succeeds in finally
defeating the "conservative" forces.
The West is jubilant that the Iranian clergy has
come of age, that bourgeoisie democracy has thrown it back into the imperialist
lap. The West is jubilant that the clerics have fallen apart and have conceded
defeat and a strong bastion of the Islamic Revolution is nearing its collapse.
It sees a Gorbachev in the person of Khatami who is intelligently and cautiously
pulling down another anti-west fortress.
But !
For the Iranian working class and vast sections of
the peasant masses and working people the question of a real anti-imperialist
anti-feudal revolution remains to be solved. All these sections of people taken
together constitute the Iranian nation and this is the overwhelming majority of
the Iranian population. It stands to gain nothing from the so-called reforms and
the reformists, while the rulers and the classes they represent will be able to
earn billions as commissions. The older generation which was young at the time
of the 1979 Islamic revolution feels betrayed, as their hopes for a better
future have been belied. The present young generation has a lot of lessons to
draw from its predecessor, which made numerous sacrifices and waged a relentless
struggle against a repressive regime. The ruler’s answer to the problems of
Iranian society is no answer at all. One set of exploiters was replaced by
another set of exploiters in 1979 in the name of freedom and liberation from
repression. The same vicious circle is being repeated again with new slogans.
History is being repeated again as yet an other farce. The people of Iran must
utilise the increased freedom achieved through the struggles, in order to deepen
the movement, and build a powerful anti-imperialist, anti-feudal struggle —
targeting the compradors as well.
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