|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
Iran: political crisis overshadows presidential campaign
By Justus Leicht
31 May 2001
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email
The campaign for the election of the Iranian president has
begun with the vote set to take place on June 8. On May 4, just
two days before the expiry of the date for applications and following
months of hesitation, the current president and cleric Mohamed
Khatami, who has a reputation as a liberal reformer,
declared he was prepared to run for a second term. His victory
is regarded as certain. But it is also certain that his victory
will do little to achieve stabilisation of Iran and the regionin
fact quite the opposite is the case.
A total of 800 people applied as candidates for Iran's highest
state position in the Islamic republic. According to the official
state doctrine Velayet-e-Faqih (Rule of the Religious
Jurists), real power lies in the hands of the state's religious
leader, Ali Khamenei, and organs such as the Council of Guardians.
This conservative body, dominated by religious figures, has allowed
just 10 candidates to stand in the election. Aside from Khatami,
the remaining candidates are all regarded as more or less conservative.
The disqualification of Ebrahim Asgharzadeh, a city councillor
from Teheran, led to outbursts of anger. In 1979, Asgharzadeh
was one of the radical students who occupied the American embassy
after the overthrow of the Shah's regime. He now wears a suit
and is a declared admirer of Khatami, while at the same time criticising
the latter's concessions to his right-wing opponents. With support
from a section of Iranian students, he had been regarded as Khatami's
most serious rival.
Also notable in the list of candidates was the absence of any
women, although a number of conservative women had put themselves
up as candidates. The interpretation of a relevant passage in
the Iranian constitution allowing women to take part in the elections
proved to be controversial. On the other hand, Ali Shamkhani,
a rear admiral and former officer of the Revolutionary Guard (a
right-wing militia group) and current defence minister in Khatami's
government, has been allowed to stand. It is 20 years since a
leading military figure has stood for the office and his nomination
indicates the significance of the security forces for the regime.
Ali Fallahian, the former head of the secret police who is
held responsible for the deaths of over 100 opposition intellectuals
and politicians in the '90s, has also been accepted as a candidate.
Mohsen Rezai, a former commander of the Revolutionary Guard and
current secretary of the Expediency Council, surprisingly withdrew
his candidacy. In past months Rezai had sharply attacked Khatami
from the right and warned him against participating in the elections
with political slogans (for the liberalisation of
the system). Khatami is said to have held a conciliatory meeting
with Rezai at the end of April.
The manner in which Khatami announced his candidacy was symptomatic
of his political position and that of his reform forces.
This is particularly true when one draws parallels with his first
campaign four years ago. In 1997, hardly anyone predicted victory
for the man, who following his downfall as minister of culture
at the beginning of the '90s was then appointed head of the national
library. His characteristic smile became well known under circumstances
where poker-faced grimness characterised political figures since
the days of Khomeini and the overthrow of the Shah. Khatami's
parliament (Majlis), however, was dominated by less friendly conservative
hard-liners.
In the meantime, and following parliamentary elections a year
ago, Khatami supporters have a majority of over two-thirds in
the Majlis. Most of the factions and organisations of the reformers
have announced their support for Khatami and assured him that
they will not stand in his way when he seeks to put together his
government. As opposed to four years ago, a clear, if not decisive
victory for Khatami in the forthcoming elections seems certain.
The right wing still have to officially agree on their own rival
candidate.
This time around, however, the president is no longer smiling.
In a short campaign speech his voice broke several times and he
was even reduced to tears as he explained: I would have
preferred to have served the nation in another function.
He then went on: Four years ago I came with clear ideas.
I have had some successes, but a heavy price has been paid for
our success.... Many people were hurt and many people are in a
compromised position. He once again complained about the
limited power of the president and said that the realisation of
further democracy faces great obstacles ... both from within
and from outside the system. As a result, he said, in the
future there would also be more hardships and troubles.
To put matters more bluntly, the political balance sheet of
four years of Khatami rule has been disastrous. Following his
initial coming to office, dozens of liberal newspapers appeared
overnight. In April of last year, however, Khatami declared that
these newspapers were bases for the enemy. Since then
the conservative-dominated courts have banned more than 30 publications.
At the beginning of March the international journalists organisation
Reporters without Borders listed 13 imprisoned journalists and
stated that Iran is the biggest jailer of journalists in
the Middle East.
Last summer Khamenei refused at short notice to allow any discussion
in parliament over changes to the press laws and, with a few grumbles,
the parliament has held to the ban. Apart from a few vague phrases,
Khatami has said nothing more on the issue. This has not prevented
reform newspapers that have not been banned from calling
for Khatami's re-election and presenting his political record
in an uncritical light.
Khatami had also promised to solve the serial killings
of intellectuals carried out during the rule of his predecessor
Hashemi Rafsanjani. This year a few low-ranking secret service
agents were convicted, but since then the file has been closed.
Akbar Ganji, one of the journalists active in uncovering details
of the murderswho found links between the murderers and
Rafsanjani and his head of secret police, Ali Fallahianwas
sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for taking part in a conference
in Berlin. In a surprise decision two weeks ago he was acquitted
by an appeals court, but he faces further charges because of articles
he has written. Rafsanjani is chairman of the influential Expediency
Council. With his nomination for the presidency endorsed by the
council of guardians, Rafsanjani has been effectively given a
clean bill of healthmorally and legally.
Supporters and followers, even personal friends and advisors
to Khatami, have been locked up, threatened and beaten up by right-wing
opponents. Some, like Said Hajirian, have been the victims of
assassination attempts. Some students and workers who occasionally
took to the streets with pictures of Hajirian have been locked
up, tortured or even killed by right-wing militias and security
forces. Khatami has not lifted a finger to help themquite
the contrary. During mass protests in July 1999, July 2000 and
February of this yearwhich were savagely repressedhe
sided quite openly with the state and accused the demonstrators
of being provocateurs or traitors to Islam.
He used similar phrases to describe the student organisation Office
to Strengthen Unity, which despite these attacks is still calling
for a vote for Khatami in the upcoming elections.
Lagging support for Khatami
It now appears that both a section of students and the population
at large are becoming disappointed with Khatami. Even in the loyal
and moderate reformist student organisation Office to Strengthen
Unity, following a vigorous debate there was only a narrow majority
in favour of supporting Khatami. Other student organisations have
refused to support Khatami and have made clear their intention
to boycott the elections.
The general mood is also made clear by reports from Iran in
the western media, which generally favours Khatami. Interviews
carried out by Agence France Presse in Teheran on the day Khatami
announced his candidacy demonstrated little enthusiasm: Abdol-Reza
Shahla, a taxi driver, stated, Well, who else is there to
vote for?' and If there are any other candidates, I don't
know anything about them.' Solmoz, a nursing student, said: Four
years ago I voted for Khatami, his words have found a way into
the hearts of the people,' she said. I know the students
will vote for him, but I won'the has no power.'
The Washington Post reported at the beginning of the
election campaign, on May 19: In interviews, many youths
said that while they support the reform movement, they did not
plan to vote in next month's election because, with conservatives
vetoing most of the elected government's liberalization efforts,
it was pointless. If that sentiment is widespread, it could be
bad news both for Khatami, who wants a large turnout to renew
his mandate for change, and for the conservatives, who fear that
a low turnout could threaten the legitimacy of the Islamic regime.
In an analysis of the election by the British BBC on May 4,
reporter Tarik Kafala referred to the collaboration between Khatami
and Khamenei and warned: Whatever their differences, Mr.
Khatami and Mr. Khamenei, are both dedicated to protecting Iran's
Islamic republic.
The two men may have different views on the direction
that Iran should take, but in many ways they need each other to
achieve their goals.
Both Mr. Khamenei and Mr. Khatami are concerned by the
radicalisation on both ends of the spectrum, and the potential
for political violence which is often close to the surface in
Iran.
Because of his 1997 election victory, and his continuing
popularity, Mr. Khatami is the Iranian politician with the strongest
claim to having a popular mandate.
There are clear signs that Mr. Khamenei understands this,
and is unwilling to allow Mr. Khatami, a popular elected leader,
to be undermined too far.
The danger is that Iranians who feel their democratically
expressed will is being treated with contempt will in turn start
treating the institutions and authority of the state with contempt.
It is not surprising, therefore, that Khatami recently called
for massive participation in the vote. Whether this
will take place is questionable. According to press reports the
election has begun slowly and quietly. The reformers
seek a broad mobilisation and at the same time want to avoid a
confrontation with the hard-liners. But Khatami's economic and
social programme is hostile to the interests of the broad masses.
His five-year plan envisages an opening up of Iran to international
capital, as well as deregulation and privatisation. For the first
time, private banks have begun to emerge. And just a short time
ago the Iranian parliament passed a law facilitating foreign investment
in the country. Such measures can only lead to increased unemployment
and poverty for the Iranian people.
The opening up of the economy also threatens the privileges
of the conservative bazaar merchants and clergy who control a
vast business empire in the form of institutions, and thereby
influence a substantial segment of the national economy. Up until
now it was possible for both sides to come to a compromise. This
was linked, however, to the high price of oil and the relatively
favourable position of the Iranian economy.
For the reformers, political liberalisation and
democratic measures are ultimately a means of strengthening the
Islamic Republic. As a consequence, these forces are unable and
unwilling to seriously defend the democratic rights under attack
by the government. This is the source of the apparent strength
of the conservative hard-liners, who in fact represent a small
minority in Iran, but are able to pressure the opposition and
terrorise the population as they see fit.
Just a few days after the announcement of Khatami's candidacy,
another newspaper was banned and 400 Internet cafes in Teheran
were closed without warning.
Repression of the Liberation Movement
Ali Afshari, a leader of the Office to Strengthen Unity, appeared
on state-owned television last week with a confession which he
had been clearly pressed to make. He confessed to being part of
a conspiracy aimed at undermining the regime and in this context
to have established relations with the so-called Liberation Movement.
The Liberation Movement itself has been the victim of repression
in recent months. Over 60 of its members, including its leader,
were arrested and accused of espionage, subversive activities
and other crimes. The actions of the regime against this organisation
are an indication of extreme fear and nervousness. The Liberation
Movement was formed in 1953, following the putsch by the Shah
and his army (stage-managed by the CIA) against the elected government
led by the bourgeois nationalist Mohamed Mossadeg and his party,
the National Front. The putsch was successful because instead
of appealing to the people Mossadeg turned to sections of the
army and the Iranian Stalinists, the Tudeh party. The Stalinists,
in turn, did not seek to mobilise the working class against the
coup d'état independently from Mossadeg. Most of the Islamic
clergy supported the Shah.
This is why Mehdi Bazargan, a collaborator of Mossadeg, came
to the conclusion that in future the nationalists should work
together with the clergy. He founded the Liberation Movement on
this perspective. In 1979 Bazargan was able to push through his
line among the bourgeoisie nationalists and became for a short
time the first head of government under the mullahs after the
overthrow of the Shah. The Liberation Movement was tolerated by
the Islamic regime as a symbol of reconciliation between Islamic
fundamentalism and bourgeois nationalism. By suddenly suppressing
it, the regime has made it clear that it will not give up power
peacefully.
Foreign policy manoeuvres
The military operations against the Peoples Mujahedin, which
operate from Iraq, have the same significance. According to the
Peoples Mujahedin and the Iraqi government, on April 18 Iran fired
more than 50 Scud missiles at Iraqi territory, killing and wounding
several Iraqi civilians. Since the war between these two states
ended in 1988 there has been no comparable military provocation.
In Afghanistan this month 10 people were killed when a bomb
exploded in a mosque. Among the dead was an Iranian religious
dissident and cleric, who belonged to the Islamic minority of
Sunnites. The Taliban accused Iran of being responsible for the
attack. Various reports in the media claimed that Iran had increased
its support for the Northern Alliance, who are opposing the Taliban
in the Afghani civil war.
In the meantime, Iran has improved its relations with the various
conservative, pro-western regimes and sheikhdoms in the Gulf region.
It has signed a security treaty with Saudi Arabia to fight
crime and terrorism. Kuwait has officially apologised for
supporting Iraq during the war in the '80s and even the United
Arab Emirates, with whom Iran is bitterly squabbling over the
sovereignty of several islands, has wished Khatami success in
his campaign. Egypt has also shown clear interest in improving
political relations with Iran.
The background to these moves is the Palestinian intifada
and the growing tensions in the Middle East, as a consequence
of the offensive by Israel. This is destabilising the pro-western
Arab regimes and strengthening the Islamic groups, many of whom
collaborate with Iran. The Iranian regime, especially the hard-liners,
have always used radical terminology, taking a pose against Israel.
They are attempting to utilise the current situation to divert
the Iranian population from the repression at home while at the
same time strengthening its regional influence.
This is why Iran remains under heavy pressure from the US.
Initially it was expected that the new Bush administration, having
close ties to the oil industry, would lift the economic sanctions
imposed on Iran. So far the European and Asian companies, which
are extensively involved in Iran, are those who have benefited
from the existing policy of sanctions. American companieswhich,
according to the Financial Times, comprise more than 600
and are amalgamated in the umbrella organisation USA Engageare
conducting intensive lobbying to lift the Iran-Libya Sanctions
Act. The issue of possibly extending sanctions is currently being
debated in the US Congress and will be decided in August.
While within the Congress and the CIA strong resistance against
lifting the economic sanctions remains, the Bush administration
has so far kept a low profile on the matter. One of the preconditions
Washington demands from Teheran before lifting the sanctions is
that Iran cease supporting terrorism. Till now Iran
has responded by referring to the American support for Israeli
state terrorism.
The case of Iraq has been handled differently from that of
Israel. The US has apparentlywithout successattempted
to gain active Iranian support for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein
by the pro-American umbrella organisation, the Iraqi National
Congress (INC). The majority of the Iraqi population are Shiite
Moslems. The pro-Iranian Supreme Council for the Iranian Revolution
in Iraq (SCIRI) is the most important Shiite opposition organisation
and has allegedly carried out numerous assassinations against
the regime. According to Arab and American sources, the leadership
of this organisation has already made clear that it is interested
in collaboration, but this line faces strong opposition within
the SCIRI itself.
On April 23, the American broadcasting station Radio Free Europe
reported: Another intermediary in Washington's contacts
with the SCIRI is Iraqi National Congress leader Ahmad Chalabi.
Chalabi's March visit to Tehran reportedly failed to yield the
desired resultspermission to open an INC office in Tehran
and establishment of a safe pocket' for the opposition in
southern Iraq. INC spokesman Sharif Ali Bin Al-Hussein told Radio
Free Iraq recently that the discussions are continuing.
See Also:
Germany seeks to normalise
relations with Iran
[27 February 2001]
Appeals Court upholds
guilty verdict in show trial against Iranian Jews
[23 September 2000]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |