Operation Iranian Freedom
by Tariq Ali
(http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20030818&c=1&s=ali)
In Washington, the hawks and vultures are beginning to gaze at Iran
with greed-filled eyes. The British attack dog is barking and straining
at the leash. And the Israeli ambassador to the United States has helpfully
suggested that the onward march of the American Empire should not be
brought to a premature halt in Baghdad. Teheran beckons, and then there
is always Damascus. The only argument summoned by the blood-mottled
"doves" is that the occupation of Iraq should be sufficient
to bring the Iranian mullahs to heel. Naturally, this latter view does
not satisfy the would-be Shah or his followers in Los Angeles. The Young
Pretender is appearing regularly on the BBC and CNN these days, desperate
to please and a bit too eager to mimic his father and grandfather. Might
the empire put him back on the Peacock Throne? And, if so, how long
would he last?
Neither party appears to be aware of all the recent traumas suffered
by Iran or the fact that this is a nation and a people with a historical
memory, something its poets have helped to preserve. But Iran has not
forgotten that it was the United States and Britain that utilized king
and cleric to bring about the regime change fifty years ago that destroyed
Iran's fledgling democracy.
When Ahmad Shamlu--the most gifted of modern Iranian poets--died in
2000, more than 100,000 people, young and old, marched in dignified
columns behind his funeral cortege while crowds lined the pavements
to sing his poetry and emphasize that hope was still alive. At various
times Shamlu, whose life mirrored the ups and downs of Iranian politics,
had described his country as "a land where no birds sing, where
spring never comes...a prison so huge that the soul weeps tears of shame
at its own impotence."
It was not always thus. There were short periods in the history of
twentieth-century Iran when breakthroughs appeared possible. On each
occasion the mass movements for change were either usurped or defeated.
The Constitutional Revolution of 1906-11 shook the corrupt and degenerate
Qajar dynasty, whose kings had virtually sold the country to the tobacco
and oil interests of the British Empire. A parliament (Majlis) came
into existence. It was accompanied in some regions by a peasant revolt
against tax collectors and landlords, the only indigenous mainstay of
the monarchy. Pro-democracy newspapers appeared, and Iranian intellectuals
began to relish the modernist breezes blowing from Paris and Petrograd.
Their relations with the clerics, some of whom had supported the constitutional
upheaval, became increasingly tense. The court exploited these divisions
and after a few years monarchist landlords, courtiers and state bureaucrats
effectively sidelined the revolutionary democrats in the Majlis.
Not everything remained the same, however. In 1910, a young mullah
named Ahmad Kasravi observed Halley's comet from the roof of his house
in Tabriz. He was seduced by the "star with a tail." His curious
mind did not rest till he had understood the mysteries of the universe
and embraced "godless science." Kasravi decided to enter the
citadel of reason. His celebrated books and essays were carefully constructed
polemics against ignorance and the Shiite orthodoxy that encouraged
it. His plea for wide-ranging reforms (including rights for women) angered
the clerics. The mullahs accused him of heresy and apostasy, and in
1946 he was brought to trial for "slandering Islam," but his
detractors did not wait for the verdict. He was shot dead in open court,
an early martyr in the struggle against obscurantism.
The Shah and his British advisers had crushed the Constitutional Revolution,
but the death agony of the dynasty could not be long postponed. The
last Shah of the Qajar dynasty was soon removed by a military coup led
by Reza Khan, a semiliterate officer of an old Cossack regiment, which
had been created by czarist Russia and officered by Russians to protect
the Qajar ruler and Russian interests. Following the 1917 revolution,
the regiment lost its officers, who were replaced by locals. In 1921
the Soviet government denounced the "tyrannical policy" of
the czars, canceled the Persian debt and renounced all concessions and
extraterritorial privileges that had been accorded to the ancien régime.
These unilateral renunciations highlighted the imperial depredations
of the British and encouraged nationalism even inside the old Cossack
regiment. That same year Reza Khan marched his troops to Teheran and
took control. He was appointed minister of war. Four years later, he
ordered the Majlis to abolish the Qajar dynasty.
Reza had been inspired by the example of Kemal Atatürk in Turkey,
who had foiled imperial designs and created a modern, independent state.
But whereas Atatürk had abolished the Caliphate and declared Turkey
a republic, his Persian impersonator, prone to flattery and corruption,
had himself crowned king, with the hearty approval of the British. His
halfhearted reforms were at best partial solutions that did little to
alter the basically oppressive system. Reza antagonized the mullahs--who
were sometimes publicly flogged--as well as the modernists. Like many
dictators, he could read a subversive, antigovernment message in the
most innocent of texts. Democratization was actively discouraged.
It was Reza's wartime fondness for the Third Reich (the country's name
was changed from Persia to Iran on the suggestion of the embassy in
Berlin, since Iran was "the birthplace of the Aryan race")
that led to his downfall. Not unreasonably, the British found this inconvenient.
In 1941 they dumped Reza Khan and sent him into exile. His incompetent
and weak-minded son, Mohammad Reza, was put on the throne. The new boy-Shah
never forgot what had been done to his father. He learned the lesson
that the key to a satrap's success lay in never crossing swords with
his patron.
The wartime occupation of Iran by Britain and the Soviet Union and
their rivalry had created the space for the emergence of currents old
and new: secular democratic nationalism and pro-Soviet Communism. The
nationalists recalled the Constitutional Revolution and favored the
immediate withdrawal of all the occupying armies and genuine political
and economic independence for their country. Their leader, Mohammad
Mossadegh, had, despite his birth (he was the son of a Qajar princess),
always refused to do the bidding of the court. He resisted Reza Shah's
autocracy, refusing to serve him in any capacity and suffering the consequences.
Now, after the war, he fought for the independence of his country. For
him this meant the withdrawal of Soviet troops from Iranian Azerbaijan
and the nationalization of the British-owned Anglo-Iranian Oil Company.
The Communists of the Tudeh Party, for their part, while strongly opposed
to the British presence, saw no contradiction between this and their
blind defense of Soviet interests. Mossadegh alone stood for Iran, and
many Tudeh members and supporters were compelled to back him. The political
zigzags this entailed weakened the party's support in the population
as a whole and its credibility among nationalist intellectuals. Despite
this, the Tudeh Party continued to attract some of the finest intellectuals
in Iran to its ranks.
Stephen Kinzer's new book, All the Shah's Men, is an ode to Mossadegh,
the blue-blooded politician whose integrity, coupled with his dedication
to the political and economic sovereignty of his country, won him the
support of his people--especially the poor in town and country--and
the enmity of two powers, the decaying British Empire and its upstart
American rival and replacement. Not that the two shared common economic
interests. As early as 1943, Secretary of State Cordell Hull was writing
to Roosevelt that apart from the "humanitarian" reasons to
counterbalance Soviet and British influence in the region, there was
a "more directly selfish point of view," which meant that
"no great power be established on the Persian Gulf opposite the
American petroleum development in Saudi Arabia."
Accordingly, US military missions began to arrive in Iran from 1942
onward. The aim was clear: to transform Iran's ragtag army into a tough
instrument that could defend imperial interests in the region. But there
were two major imperial powers, and as British dependence on the United
States grew with every passing month of the war, they had little option
but to agree to the ever-increasing US presence that had penetrated
Kurdistan and Azerbaijan as early as 1943.
Then, as now, rivalries between competing government departments in
Washington sometimes hampered the overall project, but it was obvious
to London that the United States would one day dominate Iran. (The single
best account of US-Iranian relations remains James Bill's The Eagle
and the Lion: The Tragedy of American-Iranian Relations, which should
be required reading for Foggy Bottom.)
Mossadegh's stubborn nationalism ignited a mass mobilization that led
to the flight of a frightened ruler in 1953 and the nationalization
of an oil industry whose workers were treated like slaves. Kinzer (a
longtime reporter for the New York Times) quotes an Israeli manager
who worked alongside Iranian workers at the Abadan oil refinery and
wrote in the Jerusalem Post:
They lived during the seven hot months of the year under the trees....
In winter these masses moved into big halls, built by the company, housing
up to 3,000-4,000 people without walls of partition between them. Each
family occupied the space of a blanket. There were no lavatories....
In debates with British colleagues we often tried to show them the mistake
they were making in treating the Persians the way they did. The answer
was usually: "We English have had hundreds of years of experience
on how to treat the Natives. Socialism is all right back home, but out
here you have to be the master."
Labour imperialism has a long pedigree, even though these days socialism
isn't all right even back home and there is, of course, a new master.
Labour Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison was determined to topple Mossadegh,
but he was out of his depth. He assumed that gunboats and gurkhas would
do the trick, but Harry Truman vetoed the adventure. His ambassador
sent a dispatch arguing that Mossadegh "has the backing of 95 to
98 percent of the people of this country. It is utter folly to try to
push him out."
It was only after the victory of Dwight Eisenhower that an agenda of
permanent counterrevolution (the predecessor of the current National
Security Strategy) was implemented by the Brothers Dulles, and only
then did Operation Ajax get under way. The secular democracy instituted
by Mossadegh's National Front was destabilized by British and American
intelligence operatives. Kinzer has carefully reconstructed the entire
operation, paying great attention to the details and the personalities
of the principals. Much of what he writes was well established many
years ago. What is remarkable is that nobody now bothers to deny what
took place, leading one to ask whether it will be fifty years before
we are told that both Bush and Blair knew perfectly well that Iraq did
not possess any weapons of mass destruction. At one point Kinzer is
mildly critical of Mossadegh for not appreciating American fears of
the Soviet threat and reacting accordingly. This goes against the grain
of the book. Mossadegh's argument in his own defense before the Shah's
kangaroo court (quoted approvingly by Kinzer) invalidates any other
justification: "My only crime is that I nationalized the Iranian
oil industry and removed from this land the network of colonialism and
the political and economic influence of the greatest empire on earth."
That is why the 1953 CIA coup put the Shah (who had fled to Rome) back
on the throne. After his return he began a policy of systematic persecution
of liberals, nationalists and Communists. His secret police, SAVAK,
devised new forms of torture, and opposition politics was criminalized.
A mass migration of sad and depressed intellectuals fled the country
to organize resistance from Europe and North America. Inside Iran only
the doors of the mosque remained open. Gradually the mosque became the
only arena where opposition to the Shah could be discussed and organized.
US backing for the Shah's dictatorship was complete, and even moderate
oppositionists now became extremely hostile to Washington. In 1970,
the poet Firaydun Tunakabuni expressed a near-universal view in Memoirs
of a Crowded City:
If I were a cartoonist, I would sketch the American in complete military
uniform. He has one of his heavy, hobnailed boots on the back of Latin
America while the other boot stands on the back of Southeast Asia. His
left hand has a black man by the throat....
When the storm finally arose and swept aside the Shah, it was the ayatollahs
who took control. They had profited from the vacuum created in 1953.
The clerical dictatorship that Khomeini imposed on his country turned
out to be every bit as repressive as that of the Shah. The anti-imperialism
of the mullahs was always the anti-imperialism of fools. The vision
they offered was blurred from the beginning. The differences between
Baathist and clerical repression are instructive. Although Saddam crushed
all political opposition (liberal, Communist and especially religious),
he did not interfere with the everyday life of Iraqis. During the past
quarter-century, bars, discotheques and theaters sprouted all over Baghdad.
The mullahs attempted to control every aspect of life. The religious
police kept a permanent watch on young people, punishing infringements
with fines, floggings or prison. This blanket cultural oppression turned
large numbers of young people against the regime. Today there is a genuine
hatred of the mullahs on the part of a majority of the population (60
percent of whom are under 25 years old), which has known only clerical
rule.
Experience, the best of teachers, has educated the people of Iran.
Not even all-powerful ayatollahs can override the laws of biology. If
left alone the Iranians will get rid of their bearded oppressors in
their own way and in their own time. It might even be the dawn of an
Islamic Reformation. Certainly the vibrancy of the country's filmmakers
and the clandestine poems and texts that are being circulated are an
indication of the change that lies ahead. If the Bush/Cheney/Rumsfeld
team decides to speed up the process, it's all but certain to create
a giant mess that will only strengthen the most backward elements in
the country. The interests of the empire rarely coincide with those
of the people it is intending to "liberate," especially when
the people know that one reason they are in a mess is because of what
the empire did in its own interests fifty years ago.