Monday, June 22, 2009

Iran:


Here's my take on what's going on in the Islamic Republic.


As I see it, what you and the world are witnessing is a game of multidimensional chess, with various forces pulling this way and that. Fundamentally, there are four forces operating within Iran:


1) The clerical supporters of the regime. Led by, of course, Ayatollah Khameni. These are fairly radical to very radical folks that truly believe in the religious destiny of the regime, and the odd (to western ears) tenants of Shia Islam. These folks are willing to countenance a totalitarian state if need be to preserve a regime they largely believe in. There is also some genuine popular support for the Islamic nature of the regime, albeit less than a few weeks ago....


2) The military/paramilitary supporters of the regime. Their most public face is President Ahmadinejad who won the Presidency (fair and square, by Iranian rules and standards, which include required approval from the regime to run for president!) four years ago, and has been declared the "winner" amidst such controversy recently.


#s 1 and 2 are in a pretty strong coalition. Should this coalition break down, a revolution is quite likely.


3) Clerical opponents of the regime. It is of course simplistic to simply label them opponents, but right now, at a time of maximum uncertainty, these people are calling the recent election fraudulent. Since Khameni has repeatedly said otherwise, and threw down the gauntlet in a defiant fist-banging, and somewhat threatening speech on Friday, it is fair to call these clerics opponents. The most visible person representing this faction, by far, is former president Rafsanjani. He is currently the Chairman of the Assembly of Experts, a fairly important behind-the scenes body which, among other things, elects the Supreme Leader. There are several Grand Ayatollahs that also fit within this description, many of whom have far superior religious credentials to Khameni.


The most interesting aspect of the the current Iranian crisis (and a crisis it is!) is that there is such a public split amongst clerical elements within the regime. Previous disagreements, with a few odd exceptions, have been papered over, and in the past, such as 1999, when there were visible splits within the regime, the Supreme Leader put his foot down, and everyone basically jumped back in line. This time, not so much.


Another key thing to keep in mind as the Iran situation unfolds. Rafsanjani was once a crucial supporter of Supreme Leader Khameni, and was the key person involved in elevating him to that status when former Ayatollah Khomeni died in 1989. He has been rumored, however, to have turned somewhat on his former protege, and acted within the Iranian government to maneuver against Kahmeni. Rafsanjani was once considered a moderate, and compared to Kahmeni and Ahmadinejad he really is. He does NOT believe in the overthrow of the regime or (god-forbid from his perspective) western democracy. He does, however, think the regime has led the country into a ditch . He apparently opposes the harsher clerical controls over people's daily lives, and has been a critic of the economic decisions made by recent governments, especially that of Ahmadinejad. His focus is on economics.


4) Pro Civil society (and in some cases far less anti-western than the regime, or even pro-Western democracy in rare cases). This group is represented by former President Khatami and to a lesser extent, of course, "defeated" presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi and many of the masses in the streets. Mousavi was perhaps better described really as an internal critic of the regime than some anti-regime outsider. However, he has recently stated that he is willing to "be a martyr," which paints him more as a regime opponent.

In order to run for president, you must be approved by the Guardian Council, a body appointed by the Supreme Leader of and 6 jurisits. These are crucial pillars of the regime, and not about to let a real rabble rouser run for the somewhat important job of president. I say somewhat important, because ultimate power rests with the Supreme Leader.


My take is that a lot of the public is unsure about whether they truly support a full overthrow of the regime. Many would probably blanch at the violence and uncertainty this would entail. They are united, however, in their loathing of the manner in which Ahmadinejad and his ilk have run the Iranian economy into the ground. Remember when oil prices were sky high? You'd think Iran, with the 3rd largest amount of proven oil reserves (Saudi Arabia, Canada, Iran, Iraq) would have had a rip roaring economy. Not so much! Instead, Ahmadinejad's blatant misrule has left the Iranian economy in a sad state. Kahmeni has obviously lost some influence in the eyes of the Iranian people.


In addition, Ahmadinejad is blamed by people in this group for foreign policy misadventures. Not that these people like Israel, by a damn long shot. Many are, however, neutral to slightly favorable about the US. But what they DO think is that Ahmadinejad has brought a world of negative attention onto Iran with his various diatribes, and that this has done no good and some harm to these people's day-to-day lives.

Predicting what will happen next is a fool's errand. But make no mistake; the regime is clearly threatened, and could fall, with Kahmeni likely winding up in exile in Iraq. More likely, unfortunately, is a Tianenmen like crackdown, where Kahmeni calls out the army for real, kills a few hundred or more, and makes crystal clear that its all over, time to pack up and go home. I fear this outcome greatly.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well Dan,

There are two questions I have. One is how long can the protests in the street continue in the face of even a mild Basiji crackdown?

Secondly, to what extent will the internal divisions amongst the Iranian governing elites continue once the public protests go away?

Something to think about.

Justin

Anonymous said...

Very well written piece Dan,

I especially like the conservative approach towards what the Iranian people seem to be shooting for. An all out revolutionary overthrow of the clerical regime, while not impossible, doesn't seem too likely.

To take a shot at answering J's questions:

1) Not long, unless things get REALLY hairy, and the revolution is on for real. Unlikely.
2) They won't go away, but you would expect the governing elites to get their various disagreements off the front page of the NYT.
Probably there will be real pressure to start providing some more sensible economic governance, but that will be unsexy.

Andrew

Daniel N said...

I agree with Andrew on both counts. Mass street protests, with some repression falling fall short of Tianenman is an inherently unstable situation in a repressive regime. It happened in the US during the civil rights movement, but despite appearances at the time, our regime was fully stable in broad outline. Iran's is less so, and Kahmeni simply won't keep tolerating it if he has the tools to stop it. And it appears that he does.

I strongly agree with Andrew on the second question Justin raises. If these protests are quelled, Kahmeni/Ahmedinajad will be feeling their oats, and not in a great mood to compromise with internal dissenters. However, economic loosening up may well be one area they can agree on. But, like Andrew says, unsexy.