Extract from ContExploration.net
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extract document nr |
8019 |
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local link |
http://contexploration.net/extracts/8019.htm |
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remote link |
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/18390
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title |
Soldiers of the Hidden
Imam |
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date published |
November 3, 2005 |
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author |
Timothy Garton Ash |
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source |
New York Review of Books |
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further reading from
author |
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Soldiers of the Hidden Imam
Volume 52, Number
17
By Timothy Garton Ash
Carved high in the
towering rock of Naqsh-e Rostam, gazing out across the desert, are the tombs of
the great Persian emperors from two and a half millennia ago: Darius, Xerxes,
Artaxerxes. Lower down the cliff face of this imperial
"What happened
to Valerian?" I asked my Iranian companion.
"Oh, he was
killed, of course."
1.
Early this autumn,
as today's Iranian rulers defied the new
At a rooftop
restaurant in the wondrous city of
I also got a taste
of life behind the high garden walls of the houses of the middle and upper
class, where the hijab immediately comes off and opinions are scathingly
contemptuous of the aging revolutionary Islamic zeal of the country's new
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Within minutes of my arrival at one such house,
bikini-clad women were teasingly inviting me to come naked into the swimming
pool, while the men offered me a drink from a bottle marked "Ethanol 98%
proof."
These encounters
illustrated a trait, apparently of long pedigree, to which my Iranian
interlocutors constantly drew my attention: the contrast between what Iranians
say outside and what they say inside those high walls. Double-talk as a way of
life. I have never been in a country where so many people told me I should not
believe what people said. (Taken strictly, a self-defeating proposition.) Again
and again they pointed to the Shiite custom of taghiye, by which
believers are entitled to lie in defense of their faith. Today's nonbelievers
have their own taghiye.
Iranians also
warned me that theirs is a country rich in superstition— sometimes conveyed by
very modern means. In the middle of a
Amid this wild
medley of ancient and modern, I sought answers to one crucial question: How
might
2.
The political
system of the Islamic Republic of Iran is at once fiendishly complex and
extremely simple. Most of the Iranians I met preferred to stress the
complexity. The country has at least two governments at any one time: a
semi-democratic formal state structure, now headed by President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, and a religious-ideological command structure headed by the
Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. There are numerous shifting formal and
informal power centers, including political parties in parliament, ministries,
rich religious foun- dations, the Revolutionary Guards, and the
multimillion-man Basij militia, whose mobilization helped Ahmadinejad to get
elected. There are also backroom ethnic or regional mafias, and numerous
competing intelligence, security, and police agencies—eighteen of them
according to one recent count. No wonder Iranian political scientists reach for
terms like "polyarchy," "elective oligarchy,"
"semi-democracy," or "neopatrimonialism."
Yet the longer I
was there, the more strongly I felt that the essence of this regime remains
quite simple. At its core, the Islamic Republic is still an ideological
dictatorship. Its central organizing principle can be summarized in four
sentences: (1) There is only one God and Muhammad is his Prophet. (2) God knows
best what is good for men and women. (3) The Islamic clergy, and especially the
most learned among them, the jurists qualified to interpret Islamic law, know
best what God wants. (4) In case of dispute among learned jurists, the Supreme
Leader decides.
This is the system
which its inventor, Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, justified by radically
reinterpreting the Islamic concept of velayat-e faqih, usually
translated as the Guardianship of the Jurist. This system is not Islam; it is
Khomeinism. It would not exist without that one old man, whose grim portrait
still stares out at you everywhere in
I visited his
childhood home in the provincial market town of Khomein— ayatollahs generally
take an honorific name from their home town, so Khomeini means "of
Khomein." It's a substantial, rather handsome, yellow-brick house, with
the traditional outer and inner courtyards, and an inscription celebrating the
"birthplace of the Sun of Khomein." His father was murdered when he
was four months old, his mother died when he was fifteen, and he was given over
to the theological schools that trained him to be a cleric. If even one of his
parents had lived, might this have been a different story? Outside, a billboard
describes him, justly enough, as "the revivor of religious government in
[the] contemporary world."
Khomeini was both
the Lenin and the Stalin of Iran's Islamic revolution. The system he created has
some similarities with a communist party-state. In Khomeinism, the Guardianship
of the Jurist is an all-embracing political principle that is the functional
equivalent of communism's Leading Role of the Party. Here, too, you have
parallel hierarchies of ideological and state power, with the former always
ultimately trumping the latter. The Islamic Republic's ideological half is
almost entirely undemocratic: the Supreme Leader is assisted by a Guardian
Council, an Islamic judiciary, and an Assembly of Experts. All of them are
dominated by conservative clerics. The state institutions are more democratic,
with a genuine if limited competition for power. However, the Guardian Council
arbitrarily disqualifies thousands of would-be candidates for parliament, the
regime controls the all-important state television channels, and security
forces like the Basij militia can both mobilize and intimidate voters, so one
cannot seriously talk of free and fair elections.
As in communist
party-states, there is intense factional struggle, which Western observers
sometimes mistake for pluralism. Unlike in communist party-states, factions
actually appeal to voters to strengthen their position. Thus Ahmadinejad
successfully presented himself to voters as a kind of plain man's puritan
outsider to the system, yet he is now wholly of it, working closely with
Khamenei and the Guardian Council. His rival in the second-round presidential
runoff, former president Hashemi Rafsanjani, was discredited as being too much
part of the resented group of mullahs in control: "A stick would have won
against Rafsanjani," an Iranian politician told me. Rafsanjani now
tactically criticizes Ahmedinejad's Islamic revolutionary– style speech to the
United Nations as being undiplomatic. Yet he himself remains head of the
powerful Expediency Council, which mediates between the undemocratic
ideological hierarchy and the semi-democratic parliament. It was Rafsanjani who
this summer declared that "the system [nazam] has decided" on
the resumption of uranium reprocessing. When leaders use that specific term nazam,
"the system," everyone knows they mean the ideological command
hierarchy right up to the Supreme Leader—God's representative on earth.
In a communist
party-state, the party line was to be found in the pages of Pravda or Neues
Deutschland. In the Islamic mullah-state, the "imam line" is
handed down through Friday prayers, two sessions of which I attended, first at
the gorgeous Pattern-of-the-World mosque in Esfahan and, the next week, in a
closely policed compound at
3.
How can such a
regime be transformed, or, as many still prefer to say, reformed? I heard the
word "reform" innumerable times as I traveled around
I was impressed by
the liveliness of this debate. While many Iranians are clearly fed up with
Islam being stuffed down their throats as a state religion, I found no sense
that Islamic ideology is a dead issue, as, for example, communist ideology had
become a dead issue in
"So you're a
neoconservative!" I teased him.
Oh no, he replied,
the American neoconservatives don't properly understand Leo Strauss.
I could see at
once, even before I had the full article translated for me, what a conservative
Iranian mullah would find to admire in Strauss: the insistence that there is a
single truth in a classic text, and that the intentions of the author (e.g.,
God, in the case of the Koran) are best interpreted by a neo-Platonic
intellectual vanguard (for the Koran, the Islamic jurists whose ranks Rezvani
aspires to join). Yet this Wolfowitz of Qom was immediately contradicted by
others at the table, citing Islamic modernists such as Abdolkarim Soroush who
maintain that Islam is compatible with a secular state.
Back in
A few years ago,
Kadivar took the bold step of arguing that the Guardianship of the Jurist has
no sound basis in the Koran or mainstream Islamic thought, and is incompatible
with the essence of a true republic. He also questioned the Islamic rectitude
of condemning people (e.g., Salman Rushdie) to death in their absence, and
suggested in a newspaper interview that today's
So that's what the
regime's cheerleaders mean when they chant at Friday prayers, "Down with
the enemies of the Guardianship of the Jurist!" Direct criticism of the
Guardianship of the Jurist, and of the "sultanic" rule of the Supreme
Leader, is also the unforgivable offense of the country's most prominent
political prisoner, the journalist Akbar Ganji—once, like Kadivar, an
enthusiastic supporter of the Islamic revolution.[*]
I quoted to Kadivar
the observation of the Polish philosopher Leszek Kolakowski, himself a former
communist revisionist, that the idea of democratic communism is like fried
snowballs. "Exactly!" cried Kadivar. Democratic Khomeinism is like
fried snowballs.
That is
emphatically denied by another group, also known as "Islamic
reformists," who used to be Kadivar's comrades in the revolution. What we
might call "in-system" reformers have been in government for the last
eight years, under the state president Mo-hammad Khatami. Their hope was
precisely that they could reform and partially democratize the Islamic
Republic, while leaving unchallenged the central pillars of Khomeinism. They
failed. Many people who supported President Khatami and his fellow reformists
in the late 1990s told me they are bitterly disappointed.
I talked to one of
the in-system reformers' most influential strategists, Saeed Hajjarian, a
former head of counterintelligence who in 2000 was shot through the neck,
probably by an assassin from a competing secret service connected to the
Revolutionary Guards. We met in his spartan, neon-lit office-cum-sickroom in a
dreary, stale-smelling, unmarked building, which turned out to belong to the
intelligence service of the state presidency. On his bare office wall was an
image of Ayatollah Khomeini—Imam Khomeini, as he is officially called in the
Islamic Republic—hovering miraculously above his own tomb. On the desk below
was a large pile of photocopied articles from Western academic journals,
analyzing transitions to democracy.
Perhaps only in
4.
That skepticism is
shared by the outspoken journalist Emadeddin Baghi, a former Islamic reformist
who was jailed for more than two years because of his critical writing. Sitting
in the neat, modern office of the nongovernmental organization that he has
founded for the defense of prisoners' rights, Baghi, a dark-bearded, courteous
man in early middle age, told me that what is needed now is not reform from
above, within the mullah-state—as Hajjarian still ad- vocates—but organization
from below, in civil society. I was reminded of Central European dissidents
after the failure of the Prague Spring and Dubcek's "socialism with a
human face." Like them, Baghi believes that the way forward is not
ideological revisionism or in-system reform—former President Khatami's failed
Khomeinism with a human face—but people organizing themselves in society
independently of the state.
Although I found
his general argument convincing, it struck me that Baghi, who still has a
one-year suspended prison sentence hanging over his head, was talking about
very modest attempts at social organization. He said plainly that such efforts
should be confined to what the mullah-state would not find politically
threatening. He knows very well that even prominent activists like himself and,
more recently, close colleagues of the Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi
can be lcoked up at any moment. And he knows that critical journals and
newspapers are often simply shut down, as his own newspaper was.
Almost everyone I
have mentioned thus far—from top officials of the current regime like President
Ahmadinejad, through critics such as Hajjarian, Kadivar, and Baghi, to
political prisoners like Akbar Ganji—was once an active participant in the
Islamic revolution. They are the children of the revolution. However, there are
also many secular leftists and liberals who opposed the Shah but never
participated in the Islamic revolution, and now work in NGOs, in publishing, in
the universities, or in cultural life, including the country's often
electrifying moviemakers. One secular liberal especially well known in the West
is Dr. Ramin Jahanbegloo, the author of a book of conversations with Isaiah
Yet whether secular
or Islamic, the room for maneuver of those working in what they like to call
"civil society" is quite limited. All NGOs, for example, have to be
officially registered, and their permits renewed each year. Galley proofs of
books have to be submitted for censorship by the Ministry for Culture and
Islamic Guidance, and the censored pages must then be typeset again so that
readers cannot tell where something has been excised. Universities are tightly
controlled. Theoretical discussion of the merits of democracy is possible;
practical criticism of the Guardianship of the Jurist is definitely not.
The very fact that
the system has several centers of power adds an extra element of uncertainty.
For example, I talked to one dissident student who was released by the official
state security service only to be rearrested a few months later by the
Revolutionary Guards. No one knows exactly where the limits are. As a result,
there is both a remarkable freedom of intellectual debate and a permanent
undercurrent of fear.
For someone who has
studied the ways post-totalitarian or authoritarian dictatorships, whether in
Europe, Latin America, or South Africa, have gradually become less oppressive
states, and eventually democracies, the main question about Iran is therefore
this: What forces inside its society might help to increase peaceful social
pressure for gradual regime change?
Industrial workers
in
What of the rich,
Westernized business leaders? The ones I talked to are witheringly critical of
the regime in private, but dependent on it for their businesses. Some have
formed commercial partnerships with leading mullahs. They would probably be
willing to support an opposition movement at the moment of decisive change,
like the oligarchs in
Meanwhile, the
regime has major assets for preserving its power. With oil at more than $60 a
barrel as I write, its oil revenues have within six months covered the entire
state budget for the current accounting year. The government can generously
subsidize basic foodstuffs—bread, tea, sugar, rice— and keep the price of fuel
extremely low for the country's manic drivers. When I was there, gasoline cost
an astonishing thirty-five cents a gallon. A quarter of the workforce are state
employees, dependent on the authorities for their jobs. The numerous security
services are well provided for. Less than thirty years after an initially
peaceful revolution that turned violent and oppressive, most people old enough
to remember have little appetite for another revolution. And if the
What, then, has
this regime to fear? Only one thing, I conclude, but that a very big one: its own
young people, the grandchildren of the revolution.
5.
To turn these young
people into good Islamic citizens, the mullahs opened a nationwide network of
new universities, called the Islamic Free University, complementing the
existing ones. According to the Iranian statistical yearbook for 1382 (i.e.,
2003– 2004), there are some two million students currently enrolled in higher
education across
So now you see them
everywhere, these "soldiers of the hidden imam," talking on their
cell phones or flirting in the parks, the girls' hijabs a diaphanous pink or
green, pushed well back to reveal some alluring curls of hair, while their
rolled-up jeans deliberately show bare ankles above smart, pointed leather
shoes. In the cities, the supposedly figure-concealing long black jackets that
were previously required have often been replaced by skimpy, figure-hugging
white or pink versions. In a teahouse under the arches of a seventeenth-century
brick bridge in Esfahan, I met a beautiful young woman, heavily made up and
wearing perfume, who was flaunting a good four inches of bare calf above ankles
decorated with costume pearl bracelets. Yes, she giggled, there's a rumor that
under the new government they'll be introducing a fine of 25,000 tomans (about
$27) for each centimeter of exposed flesh—but she didn't care. Even in the
provincial birthplace of the Sun of Khomein, young women were wearing Western-style
jeans and shoes under their close-fitting jackets.
The clothes worn by
men have a less familiar symbolic language. A law student came to see me
dressed in a dark suit and tie. At first, I thought he must be a young fogey;
but I could not have been more wrong. Because the regime's regulation dress for
men is strictly tie-less (as was President Ahmadinejad when he addressed the
UN), to wear a suit and tie is a mark of brave nonconformity. Another student,
who had been imprisoned several times for dissident activity, told me, "The
tie is a sign of protest!"
Often, their
protest takes unpolitical forms. Many want to emigrate and join the millions of
Iranians already living abroad. I was repeatedly told of this generation's
hedonism; of wild parties behind the high walls of apartment buildings in
prosperous north
Yet for long and
memorable hours I met with many serious-minded, impressive young people, most
of them well informed about their own country and keen to improve it. They can
learn a lot from the local press, if they read carefully. They listen to
Western radio stations (the BBC's Persian service or the US-backed Radio
Farda), and they watch satellite television, which, though officially
prohibited, is accessible to an estimated one in four Iranians. They use the
Internet very inventively. Some politically or morally suspect Web sites are
blocked on Iranian servers—that of the dissenting Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali
Montazeri (montazeri.com), for example, or, rather curiously, that of the
The regime has
spent twenty-five years trying to make these young Iranians deeply pro-Islamic,
anti-American, anti-Western, and anti-Israeli. As a result, most of them are
resentful of Islam (at least in its current, state-imposed form), rather
pro-American, and have a friendly curiosity about
These 45 million
young people are the best hope there is of peaceful regime change in the
Islamic Republic of Iran. Their "soft power" could be more effective
than forty-five divisions of the US Marines. One positive legacy of the eight
years of Khatami's reformist presidency is that this generation has grown up
with less fear than its predecessors. The students at
The potential of what I came to think of as Young Persia is huge. These young Iranians are educated, angry, disillusioned, impatient, and when they leave college most of them will not find jobs appropriate to their training. Given time and the right external circumstances, they could take the lead in exerting the kind of organized social pressure that would allow —and require—the advocates of reform, even of transformation, to gain the upper hand inside the dual state.
The United States
would, however, be making a huge mistake if it concluded that these young
Iranians are automatic allies of the West—and, so to speak, soldiers of the
thirteenth imam. Their political attitudes toward the West are complex, often
deeply confused, and volatile. Unlike in neighboring
What of
"I love George
Bush," said one thoughtful and well-educated young woman, as we sat in the
Tehran Kentucky Chicken restaurant, "but I would hate him if he bombed my
country." She would oppose even a significant tightening of economic
sanctions on those grounds. A perceptive local analyst reinforced the point. Who
or what, he asked, could give this regime renewed popular support, especially
among the young? "Only the United States!"
If, however, Europe
and the United States can avoid that trap; if whatever we do to slow down the
nucleariza-tion of Iran does not end up merely slowing down the democratization
of Iran; and if, at the same time, we can find policies that help the gradual
social emancipation and eventual self-liberation of Young Persia, then the long-term
prospects are good. The Islamic revolution, like the French and Russian
revolutions before it, has been busy devouring its own children. One day, its
grandchildren will devour the revolution.
—October 6, 2005
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