Iran's (So Far) Revolution-less Struggle
by William Pfaff
Iranian Theocracy Under Scrutiny
Iran's cosmopolitan and liberal middle classes and its students are making a revolutionary bid without intending a revolution.
The Islamic Republic is not in danger. At least not now.
Few think that the demonstrations in Tehran, and now in other Iranian cities, can produce a change in regime.
The government's police power, and that of the Revolutionary Guards, with the support of the farming and working-class population that believes it has a defender in Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, make that convincing.
What is being challenged is the reactionary social and political form the Iranian system has assumed under Ahmadinejad and the most conservative clerics. The Islamic state itself is not, or at least not yet, in real danger.
This is a peculiarly modern "revolution," where the call is not to overturn the Islamic system but for young people, and not only the young, to have a private life and speak freely to their companions, to play popular music and freely see and make movies -- for girls to let their hair escape from under the veil and wear a touch of cosmetics.
It might be called a pre-political revolt.
The countries this kind of revolt will eventually affect most, after Iran, will be Saudi Arabia and the other Muslim countries that are at the same time rich and repressive, and suffer hypocritical male ruling elites.
The increasingly bizarre Col. Muammar Gaddafi of Libya visited Italy last week, accompanied by his bodyguard of Amazons. He asked to speak on women's rights to an audience of a hundred prominent Italian women. The audience was assembled and the Colonel said that it was absurd that in some Muslim countries women had to ask the chief of state for the right to drive a car. He said that's something "their husbands or brothers should decide" -- and seemed taken aback by the wave of laughter that followed.
Can you be an observant Muslim woman and drive a car, or wear cosmetics, or work outside the home?
There are observant Christian and Jewish woman, and Muslim women as well, who do this in the Western or Westernized countries. But Israel has thousands of strictly observant Orthodox Jewish women who accept a role not unlike that of Muslim women. Nuns have always played a vital role in the Catholic church, although they at least rule their own convents and ways of life. This is a deep cultural matter, and an individual choice of life -- so long as it is not arbitrarily, and forcibly, imposed.
There are two revolutions impending in the Muslim world and while they run on parallel trajectories they have to be distinguished from one another
One is the social revolution of modernization, peculiarly difficult and potentially traumatic in Muslim societies where, unlike in the secular or Christian West, no distinction is considered possible between religious and civil law and norms.
In Islam, there has never been the equivalent of independent church and state, each with its own recognized legitimacy. Islamic sharia law is universal.
The other revolution is the political revolution of representative government to replace theocracy, as in Iran, or theocratic monarchy, as in Saudi Arabia, the Gulf States and Morocco.
This is even more difficult, for exactly the same reason.
Representative government has been regarded as un-Islamic. In Islamic countries, it has been advocated by Marxists, or by consciously secular reformers, like Ataturk in Turkey, or the leaders of the secular Baath parties of Iraq and Syria, meant to be representative but ending up in dictatorship; or by the Arab socialist regimes like that of Nasser in Egypt in the 1950s, also a dictatorship.
Lebanon has been the only democracy in the Arab Middle East, functioning within a strict and mutually agreed sectarian division of public offices (now under great stress).
One wonders to what extent the young people on the streets of Tehran this week are conscious of just what they do want from a new government. They would undoubtedly be happy with a vote recount that gave them Mir Hussein Mousavi as president, and if possible an end to the morality police who patrol in search of symptoms of modernity to stamp out. But if they got this, they would find that it was not enough. That there are far more difficult problems ahead.
The Machiavellian rule on revolutions is to throttle them in the cradle, which is what the regime in Iran would like to do. The regime undoubtedly understands that while the Iranians are not war-like, with no history of aggressive war, they are a revolutionary people.
Popular demonstrations and uprisings forced the Shah out twice -- once to be restored to power by the CIA in the 1950s, and again in 1979, when he had to be flown out of the country by the United States. The Ayatollah Khomeini flew in to replace him, promoted by the power of tape-recorded sermons passed hand to hand by the young people of another generation, stifled by another repressive regime.
Iran Elections
Iran: Death to Election Fraud
by Rick Steves
Last year, while in Iran producing a documentary for public television, I observed freedom-loving people patiently making do under a repressive regime. Today, the relatively peaceful Iran I experienced is in turmoil.
Iran Election Mess Is Just a Reflection of Global Human Failings
by Louis René Beres
Today's dramatic Iranian instability is more a specific symptom of general civilizational fragility than an isolated disease. Beneath the surface, all world politics readily reveals a distinctly common disorder. This is the incapacity of human beings to find both meaning and identity as individuals, within themselves.
Iran Election Twitters In a Revolution
by Mary Kate Cary
It was a battle to show who could best harness the only real news source on the ground -- the new social media -- to report fast, accurate, and insightful information. Cable and network news lost both the battle and the war. Two of the journalists who won were Andrew Sullivan, a political blogger for the old-line magazine Atlantic Monthly, and Nico Pitney of the younger Huffington Post. Sullivan and Pitney looked at the gold mine of information sitting on the new social media platform and, with two staffers, jumped in. Sullivan and his staff cut and pasted the most interesting, useful, and profound tweets into a document he called "Live-Tweeting the Revolution," updated every few minutes.
Iranian Protests a Direct Challenge to Khamenei
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"Flexing muscle on the streets after the election is not right," warned Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in the days before the bloodshed. "If they don't stop, the consequences of the chaos would be their responsibility." Those consequences included casualties that resulted from the worst upheaval in Tehran in 30 years, as well as mass arrests last week, with more than 600 protesters jailed ...
President Obama's Iran News Conference
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For the first time in a long time, the president was challenged about his positions on Iran, health care and his "occasional" smoking. This may be due to the heavy criticism the media have been getting from commentators who have accused them of not doing their jobs with coverage that has bordered on the worshipful.
As Iranians Revolt, Their Government Reveals True Self
by William Pfaff
The truly significant result of the suppressed Iranian revolt is that the most important Islamist radical movement in the contemporary world has demonstrated that it has become a brutally repressive dictatorship whose leaders rig elections and beat down clear popular demands for a true election count or repeat of the election itself.
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by William Pfaff
An important change is evident in what since Samuel Huntington's time has been mistakenly identified and manipulated as a war between Muslim and Western civilizations.
Iran's (So Far) Revolution-less Struggle
by William Pfaff
Iran's cosmopolitan and liberal middle classes and its students are making a revolutionary bid without intending a revolution. Few think that the demonstrations in Tehran, and now in other Iranian cities, can produce a change in regime.
Hungary 1956, Iran 2009
by Paul Greenberg
Liberty is not something that can be rationed; one freedom leads to another. Iran's demagogue-in-chief understands that old truth, which is why he is so determined to crush this peaceful revolution in today's Iran. All the odds are in favor of his doing just that, but Mahmoud Ahmedinejad has already lost something far more important than Iran's presidency; he has lost legitimacy.
Iran Elections: The Silent Revolution
by Paul Greenberg
This is something new: a Silent Revolution. The huge throng that marched through the Iranian capital last Monday spoke nary a word, Theirs was a silent vigil for a liberty not so much lost as never gained, from Shah to Ayatollah. Meanwhile, the White House and President Obama practiced its own form of silence. Things have changed since a president of the United States could be counted on to at least voice a protest when another people are cowed.
Iranian Regime Change Is for Iranians to Decide
by Mary Sanchez
I find Iran's government structure of vaguely democratic elections and Islamic theocracy almost incomprehensible. However, if Iran's government needs reform, it is Iran's people that must make that case -- and they are, very eloquently and tragically even with their lives. The last thing Iranian reformers and protesters need is to be painted as agents of the Great Satan.
The 'Neda Moment' Shows Promise of Social Networking
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Maybe you were there when Neda died. If you were, you saw a tragedy, of course, a 26-year-old Iranian protester gunned down in the streets. But I am convinced you also saw the future -- a profound change in the way you and I will henceforth comprehend the world.
Obama's Iran Policy Is a Bomb
by Jonah Goldberg
Here is the one immutable fact of Barack Obama's foreign policy agenda as it relates to Iran: It's over. If the forces of reform and democracy win, Obama's plan to negotiate with the regime is moot, for the regime will be gone.
Obama's Choice Is Not to Choose on Iran
by Jonah Goldberg
Stop measuring the success of your diplomacy with Iran by the degree to which the grinning, hate-filled stooge of a clerical junta will "temper" his rhetoric about the pressing need to destroy Israel and slow his ineluctable pursuit of nuclear weapons.
Iran's Crisis of Legitimacy
Ramin Jahanbegloo - Global Viewpoint
Increasingly, Iran's divine sovereignty has been less about religion than about political theology. As for the popular sovereignty, it has found its due place in social networks and political action of Iranian civil society
Iran Must Void Elections to Restore Peace on Streets
Shirin Ebadi - Global Viewpoint
People's dissatisfaction with the results does not concern the present elections alone: Many objections were made four years ago when Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was first elected president. Ahmadinejad's most important position until then had been mayor of Tehran. He was, however, supported by Basij and Ayatollah Khamenei, the Islamic Republic's leader for life. Ahmadinejad's four years of presidency resulted in people's great dissatisfaction.
Will Iran Look More Like Turkey, or Turkey Like Iran
Nathan Gardels - Global Viewpoint
The effort to forge new forms of non-Western modernity in the Muslim world has pushed Iran into bloody civil strife while Turkey swirls with persistent rumors of military plots against the Islamist-rooted government. The great historical question is whether, at the end of the day, Iran will look more like Turkey, or Turkey like Iran
