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Some Observations on the Iranian Presidential Election and Its Aftermath

by: Phil Wilayto, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. How has the move toward privatization in Iran's industry affected the popularity of so-called reformist former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi? (Photo: Morteza Nikoubazi / Reuters)

    As the world watches, massive demonstrations in Iran - some say the largest since the 1979 Revolution - are denouncing the results of the June 12 presidential election. Official announcements that incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad garnered nearly 63 percent of the vote are being met with cries of "fraud" by supporters of his principal challenger, former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi.

    While there's still time to rationally look at the elections, I'd like to offer a few observations.

    The dominant view among Western commentators, as well as some progressive members of the Iranian diaspora, is that Mousavi is a "reformer" who favors loosening restrictions on civil liberties within Iran, while being more open to a less hostile relationship with the West. Ahmadinejad, on the other hand, is described as a "hardliner" who demagogically appeals to the poor, while making deliberately provocative statements about the United States and Israel in order to bolster his standing in the Islamic world.

    In my opinion, both of the above characterizations are superficial. The fundamental contradiction between the two leading candidates has to do with their respective bases of support and, more importantly, their different approaches to the economy.

    Ahmadinejad, himself born into rural poverty, clearly has the support of the poorer classes, especially in the countryside where nearly half the population lives. Why? In part because he pays attention to them, makes sure they receive some benefits from the government and treats them and their religious views and traditions with respect. Mousavi, on the other hand, the son of an urban merchant, clearly appeals more to the urban middle classes, especially the college-educated youth. This being so, why would anyone be surprised that Ahmadinejad carried the vote by a clear majority? Are there now more yuppies in Iran than poor people?

    Why is there so little discussion of the issue of class in this election? Is it because so many professional and semi-professional commentators on Iran are themselves from the same class as Mousavi's supporters, and so instinctively identify with them? Myself, I'm a worker, and a former union organizer. When I watched the videos and viewed the photos of the pro-Mousavi rallies in Tehran and other cities, I didn't feel elated - I felt a chill. To me, this didn't look like a liberal reform movement, it felt like a movement whose real target is a government that exercises a "preferential option for the poor," to use the words of Christian liberation theology.

    How about the economy?

    A big issue in Iran - virtually never discussed in the US media - is how to interpret Article 44 of the country's constitution. That article states that the economy must consist of three sectors: state-owned, cooperative and private, and that "all large-scale and mother industries" are to be entirely owned by the state. This includes the oil and gas industries, which provide the government with the majority of its revenue. This is what enables the government, in partnership with the large charity foundations, to fund the vast social safety net that allows the country's poor to live much better lives than they did under the US-installed Shah.

    In 2004, Article 44 was amended to allow for some privatization. Just how much and how swiftly that process should proceed is a fundamental dividing line in Iranian politics. Mousavi has promised to speed up the privatization process. And when he first announced he would run for the presidency, he called for moving away from an "alms-based " economy (PressTV, 4/13/09), an obvious reference to Ahmadinejad's policies of providing services and benefits to the poor.

    In addition to their different class bases and approaches to the economy, Ahmadinejad presents an uncompromising front against the West, and especially against the US government. This is a source of great national pride and has produced some positive results. For example, President Obama has now actually admitted, at least in part, that it was the US that in 1953 overthrew the democratically elected government of Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh.

    The whole idea that tossing Ahmadinejad out of office would make it easier to change US policy toward Iran is, in my opinion, very naive. Was Dr. Mossadegh a crazy demagogue? No, but he did lead the movement to nationalize Iran's oil industry. If Mousavi, as president, were to strongly state that he would refuse to consider any surrender of Iran's sovereign right to develop nuclear power for peaceful energy purposes, that he would continue to support the resistance organizations Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza, that he would continue to try and increase Iran's political role in the Middle East and that he would defend state ownership of the oil and gas industries, would the Western media portray him as a reasonable man?

    Further, there's the nature of Mousavi's election campaign. Obama called it a "robust" debate, which it certainly was, and a good refutation of the lie that Iran has no democracy. But it is also a political movement, one capable of drawing large crowds out into the streets, ready to engage in street battles with the president's supporters and now the police.

    Is it possible that the US government, its military and its 16 intelligence agencies are piously standing on the sidelines of this developing conflict, respecting Iran's right to work out its internal differences on its own? Could we expect that approach from the same government that still maintains its own 30-year sanctions against Iran, is responsible for three sets of UN-imposed sanctions, annually spends $70 to 90 million to fund "dissident" organizations within Iran and, according to the respected investigative reporter Seymour Hersh, actually has US military personnel on the ground within Iran, supporting terrorist organizations like the Jundallah and trying to foment armed rebellions against the government?

    The point has been made that US neocons were hoping for an Ahmadinejad victory, on the theory that he makes a convenient target for Iran-bashers. But the neocons are no longer in power in Washington. They got voted out of office and are back to writing position papers for right-wing think tanks. We now have a "pragmatic" administration, one that would like to first dialog with the countries it seeks to control.

    I think what is important to realize is that Washington wasn't just hoping for a "reform" candidate to win the election - it's been hoping for an anti-government movement that looks to the West for its political and economic inspiration. Mousavi backer and former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani is a free-market advocate and businessman whom Forbes magazine includes in its list of the world's richest people. Does Rafsanjani identify with or seek to speak for the poor? Does Mousavi?

    What kind of Iran are the Mousavi forces really hoping to create? And why is Washington - whose preference for "democracy" is trumped every time by its insatiable appetite for raw materials, cheap labor, new markets and endless profits - so sympathetic to the "reform" movements in Iran and in every other country whose people have nationalized its own resources?

    Would Iran be better off with a president who, instead of qualifying everything he says about the Holocaust, just came out directly and said, "Look, there's no question that millions of Jewish people were murdered in a campaign of genocide, but how does that justify creating a Jewish state on land that is the ancestral home of the Palestinians?" That would certainly make the job of anti-war activists much easier - and if you look hard enough, you can find something close to those words in Ahmadinejad's statements.

    But it wouldn't be enough. The US government and its complementary news media would just find another hook on which to hang their demonization of Iran and its government.

    The days ahead promise to be challenging ones for all those who oppose war, sanctions and interference in the internal affairs of the Islamic Republic of Iran. As we pursue that work, it would be good not to get caught up in what is sure to be a tsunami of criticism of a government trying to resolve a crisis that in all likelihood is not entirely homegrown.

  

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Phil Wilayto is the editor of The Virginia Defender newspaper and author of "In Defense of Iran: Notes from a US Peace Delegation's Journey through the Islamic Republic." He can be reached at: DefendersFJE@hotmail.com.

Comments

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This is a most refreshing

This is a most refreshing article after reading "news" media reports which tend to trivialize the needs and aspirations of a majority in every country we know of - and that is the poor, the under-served, under-educated underfed, underpaid, the vulnerable. In all these respects, the United States, Britain, Europe, India, China, Russia, Japan and all the rest are extreme examples of the worst way to govern. I hope the Iranian people will prevail in their demands for government which is alive to their real needs.

I second the notion of the

I second the notion of the first post, very refreshing. I cannot commend the Iranian Govt firing into a group of people, yet I will not even attempt to justify vandalism just because one doesn't get their way. It is very obvious to me who the media in this country wanted to win, and the reasons are likewise very obvious. But there was no rerun of the election in Florida in 2000, and the Supreme Court placed Bush into the White House, yet I heard no complaints from other nations. American solipsism, we gotta get over that.

This article is missing the

This article is missing the point. America has no business telling Iran who their leader should be. Which leader would be "better" for us doesn't figure into supporting people who are currently the victims of civil rights offenses. Most educated people already know there are problems with both Mousavi and Ahmadinejad. This isn't about how the media is characterizing the candidates. This is about how no one deserves to have their government openly lie to them about the results of an election, first, and second, and most importantly, no one deserves to be censored or *killed* for speaking their mind. Americans have had their fair share of demanding recounts. It's not about which side wins. It's about the fact that when we demanded recounts, people didn't come into our homes and murder us.

Iran's suppression of the

Iran's suppression of the media is reason enough to support the demonstrators.

Several points. Mousavi was

Several points. Mousavi was a favorite of Khomeni and served as head of the Revolutiona Guards. He is very much part of this Establishment. Rasfanjani is also. He was a major figure in the revolution/ Also, Iranian sources confirm that almost seventy five percent of Iranians live in cities. Mr. Walayto does a disservice to the students who are demonstrating and risking not only their careers but their lives. I wish young people all over the world were emulating them, demanding not to be lied to by their governments. I have no doubt that CIA has people on the ground in Iran. It is an insidious organization. But I don''t think they are behind the mass demostrations against the government. The best way to get them out of their is for the anti-government forces to succeed. They don't want to be puppets of the United States.

While it is important to

While it is important to explore the different class interests that the Almadinejad and Mousavi forces represent, it is equally important to consider the fact that it is un-elected religious fundamentalist with sometimes medieval perspectives on women and human rights, who control Iran's government. These religious fundamentalists seek to keep women in an extremely subservient role, while similarly oppressing the younger generation, those under 30, who makes up some 70% of the Iranian voters. There are working class as well as middle class youth participating in the movement to contest the election results. One wonders how someone like Hugo Chavez would react if the Catholic church hierarchy in Venezuela had the power to decide who could run in Venezuelan elections, what the country's foreign policy would be, and had total control over its military forces. This is the realty in Iran. As long as the Mullahs can decide who gets to run for election, there is no real democracy there, just as there is no real democracy in the United States, where a handful of wealthy corporate campaign donors really decide who will be permitted to run for election. Only those who can amass millions of dollars in campaign funds can run for its major political offices. There are thus many different class and cultural forces in play in the current Iranian rebellion over the election results, forces which go by beyond the election results and the personalties involved. In this fluid situation, a simplistic class analysis does not tell anywhere near the whole story, nor can it predict its end.

Thank you. This is the first

Thank you. This is the first major media article in years that shows understanding of the Irani point of view. Most of the American media ignores, or is ignorant of, the work of Kermit Roosevelt and the CIA in destabilizing the Mossadegh government and replacing it with the Shah's tyrannical rule. So, our people have the racist and "Christian" image of a bunch of irrational Arabs who "hate us because we're free" They are not Arabs, they don't hate us, and they would like to be free of western powers which are interested only in the price of oil royalties and control of the oil fields. I despair of any of this article's truths turning up in the national media But thanks to Truthout

Really? Honestly? This

Really? Honestly? This article is worse than the PETA's complaint about Obama's fly swatting. Granted the MSM has been a bit too rah-rah-rah on the Green Reformation but that doesn't give new media license to start tilting at windmills. "As we pursue that work, it would be good not to get caught up in what is sure to be a tsunami of criticism of a government trying to resolve a crisis that in all likelihood is not entirely homegrown" Really? Please. Who's the Amerocentric paternalist now? U.S. the source of hundreds of thousands of people getting riled up because their election was turned into a farce by a theocratic loon who for a decade has been rolling back their freedoms and consolidating power. The neo-con-artists are bad enough going around seeing the U.S. as the source of all good in the world but its almost as bad to spend your days and nights going around seething about how America as the root of all the disquiet in the world. I agree with you, some perspective is required, but I dare say sir that you may be the one most in need of it.

Justina you nailed it . The

Justina you nailed it . The hyp0crcisy of the US media championing 0ne side or the other in Iran after the debacle of the US 2000 election (and 2004) is absurd. The US Congress is proving how corrupt it is during the debates about health care "reform" whilst excluding a discussion of Single-Payer Health Care. Jailing those who brought up the need for Single-Payer discussions at the Senate discussions highlights the corruption/sale of Congress to the highest bidder (health care and insurance lobbyists). When did democracy effectively disappear from the US? Follow the money.

You're so right - the media

You're so right - the media has characterized these two in rather superficial ways. Reminds me very much of the 2000 US Presidential elections ... except for the mass protests. There were a few protests here, but way too few participated, and the media blacked it out. I believe there is some latent racism/homophobia in the way the media covers (or covers up) these kinds of protests. (i.e., "civilized" white people have battles in courtrooms, and we don't want to see them acting up or protesting injustice).

Your article ignores all the

Your article ignores all the claimed evidence of voting fraud, the grotesque human rights abuses, and particularly for women, and the imposition of midieval religious authority. Not to mention, your rationalization of purely fascist and antisemitic demagoguery (yeah, sure, it would have been better if Hitler phrased things a little differently? Not so long ago, either ...). You also ignore how, historically, demagogues manipulate working class voters in service of far right wing aims, not progressive left. Hey, Joe Plumber spoke for the working guy, too, right? I think the students and demonstrators in this case are the ones on the side of progress and change. And don't forget women need jobs, too.

Calling the Kettle Black.

Calling the Kettle Black.

Interesting enough, Iran has

Interesting enough, Iran has gained the heart and the support of most American people. I personally never thought I would be in favor of anything that came out of Iran with all the hate mongering and labeling all Americans as the enemy. But, as it is, watching this younger generation fight for basic freedoms and putting their lives in jeopardy to show the rest of the world the atrocities that are going on because they disagreed with an election that was obviously tampered with I stand corrected. You cannot count millions of votes in a few hours. This dispute is entirely from within Iran itself and the US nor UK or anyone else is telling you who to put in office. But as I have seen that my views were one sided I hope that you will see that not all Americans are enemies. While I don't understand all of your traditions and beliefs, I respect them as I would hope you would respect mine. When a country bans free speech and harms or kills the people because they can, something seems fundamentally wrong. Just my opinion but I support the protest cause for a fair election without having to fear for your life.

Most mainstream analyses

Most mainstream analyses may well ignore class issues, but this one ignores gender. It seems clear that a large majority of Iranian women supported Mousavi over gender issues--and women are a majority in Iran. Then too, Iran's economy has been doing badly and the urban working class seems to have turned against Ahmadinejad. I'm getting tired of leftists who seem to assume that anybody who opposes the US government must be on the right side--don't they remember Saddam, Milosevitch, Stalin and Hitler? They were enemies of the US government but they weren't heads of regimes that any self-respecting leftist should ever support.

For one thing, the fact

For one thing, the fact that you hardly address at all the allegations of election fraud in your article shows the level of respect you hold for democracy. Secondly, IRANIANS ARE DYING IN THE STREETS AS WE SPEAK. To attribute this movement to CIA propaganda is absurd. It's clear Mousavi and Rafsanjani have ties to the western business world, but to overlook the oppression of the Iranian people by a fundamentalist regime that IS CURRENTLY DISAPPEARING PEOPLE ON A DAILY BASIS is absolutely hearltless. Democracy is about paying attention to the desires of the people, not the affairs of the elites. And in this case, the Iranian people have spoken pretty clearly and decisively about what they think about this election.

Regime change in Iran? (and

Regime change in Iran? (and why is our government spending our tax dollars on destabilizing and toppling Iran?) Regime change was tried in 1953--CIA overthrew democratically elected Mosaddeq government. We didn't like that the Iranians nationalized their oil. Installed our man, the Shah, he being a despot, he was overthrown by the people now in charge. It seems oil is a big thing there-and here. Me, I'd stay out of there and let the Iranians settle it.

I appreciate your unique

I appreciate your unique analysis. My point is, despite how US media may portray the Iranian election fallout, our official policy as far as I can tell is one of noninvolvement. You even admit that Obama has acknowledged past US transgressions in Iranian foreign policy. What indicators are there that the US is interfering in any official way ? News analysis and speculation is hardly foreign policy. I admire the Iranians who are in the streets protesting, it appeals to something patriotic in me. They obviously believe in their candidate and have conviction that there was foul play. Unfortunately, I think Ahmedinijad will be the Iranian leader for the next four years. And I see no evidence that Americans can or will attempt to change that. So I think accusations of our own impropriety in this affair our unfounded. We have the right to speculate in our media, just as Iranians have the right to protest in the streets.

I'll say this for the other

I'll say this for the other corrupt government's of the world: At least they don't pretend to be something they're not.

You sound very much like a

You sound very much like a neo-con wanting us to get involved. UIn the long run, that would be to our detriment.

Amen Phil! Thank you for

Amen Phil! Thank you for this unique and non-reactionary perspective that speaks to what the real influences are---u.s. supporters and media, and all the liberal upper and middle class iranians, iranian-americans backed by the free market and universalist ideals of 'plato's ghost'. A class analysis that has been ignored and deliberately overlooked in favour of privatization and the same ol' neo-liberalist policies that ALWAYS disregards and marginalizes the poor.

Thank you for an informative

Thank you for an informative article. With the CIA providing, according to Pakistan, 40-400 million dollars to incite a revolution in Iran, it is highly likely that the USA was involved. It should also be noted that Twitter canceled shutting down their service for maintenance at the request of the state department, Why? Also during the Republican and Democratic conventions, Americans were rounded up, arrested, assaulted in much the same manner as in Iran. Also there was little to no coverage of the Peace Movement demonstrations in the USA. And now suddenly the media has become interested in non-violent demonstrations in a country most Americans could not locate on a map of the world. The media is not interested in covering the nonviolent demonstrations in Burma (Myanmar), perhaps because they allow our lapdog UK to continue their oil business? Why the sudden interest in a country which America has vilified for the last 30+ years: This is the real question which is not being covered.

The most important part of

The most important part of election was 85% of people voted. That is a miracle. Second all candidates were establishment supporters. Even 2 candidates who got 1% $ 2% votes got full equal time and space in coverage. Last all effort were made to satisfy Mousavi and tell him to take legal route but he had different idea which failed. As Dr Ahmadinejad says Irans democracy is the best in world. I recommend you to look deep into how it works and it may be useful for USA.