Subject: Iran in Crisis
From: "KAMAL L IBRAHIM"
<kli2@copticdigest.com>
Date: Wed, 24 Jul 2002 00:06:33 -0400
by Daniel Pipes
New York Post
July 23, 2002
<http://www.danielpipes.org/article/435>http://www.danielpipes.org/article/435
http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/53098.htm
Militant Islam is on the ascendant almost everywhere around
the globe -
except in the nation that has experienced it longest and
knows it best. In
Iran, it is on the defensive and perhaps in retreat.
This situation has vast potential consequences. It derives
from the fact
that (putting aside the exceptional case of Saudi Arabia),
militant Islam
first attained power in Iran in 1979, when Ayatollah
Khomeini overthrew the
shah. Twenty-three years later, Khomeini's aggressive,
totalitarian project
has left Iranians deeply disillusioned and longing for a
return to normal life.
The population wants freedom from a regime that bullies them
personally,
tyrannizes them politically, depresses them economically and
isolates them
culturally. As in Afghanistan under the Taliban, suffering
the ravages of
militant Islam means (Rob Sobhani of Georgetown University
notes) that
Iranians now "know evil when they see it up
close."
On an almost daily basis, Iranians manifest their wish to be
free by
skirmishing in newspapers, student dormitories, football
stadiums and
elsewhere. Most remarkably, disillusion has reached the
ruling elite
itself, as manifested earlier this month in a scathing
letter of
resignation published by Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri.
This nearly 90-year-old stalwart of the establishment had a
part in
overthrowing the shah, helped establish the regime's intolerance
and
occupied the position of Friday prayer leader (roughly
equivalent to a
bishop) in the historic city of Isfahan.
But now he's had enough.
He resigned because, as he poetically put it, he saw
"the flowers of virtue
being crushed and values and spirituality on the
decline" by those who
"sharpen the teeth of the crocodile of power."
More specifically, he found
the Islamic Republic spawned "crookedness, negligence,
weakness, poverty
and indigence."
Taheri's resignation was timed to coincide with large
anti-regime
demonstrations which lead to the arrest of more than 140
protesters. He
then won the endorsement of nearly half of the deputies in
Iran's parliament.
These and other indications of support prompted a highly
unusual statement
from President Bush advising that Iran's "government
should listen" to its
people. This declaration in turn nearly panicked the
government, which then
compelled Taheri to issue another statement, somewhat
softening his critique.
All this has several implications.
* Iran's future: As a rule of thumb, when the apple of a
regime's eye turns
against it, the government is vulnerable. Taheri's rejection
of the Islamic
Republic is roughly analogous to the situation in Poland two
decades ago,
when the workers of that supposed "worker's
paradise" rejected the
Communist state that claimed to benefit them.
The Islamic Republic is not near collapse, for the rulers
are ready to kill
as many Iranians as it takes to keep power. Still, that much
of the
population - and even some of the leadership - despises the
current
authority means that regime change is just a matter of time.
* Democracy: By virtue of getting more or less what they
wanted in 1979
(i.e., no shah), the Iranian population realized that it had
control over
and responsibility over its destiny.
This development, unknown among Arabic-speaking populations,
has led to
something quite profound and wondrous: a maturation of the
Iranian body
politic. It has looked at its choices and thumpingly comes
down in favor of
democracy and a cautious foreign policy.
The contrast between the maturity of Iranian politics and
the puerile
quality of Arab politics could hardly be greater. Yes, both
are dominated
by tyrannical regimes, but Iranians can see their way out of
the darkness.
It is conceivable that before too long, the apparently
disastrous Iranian
revolution of 1978-79 will be looked back on as the
inadvertent start of
something wholesome and necessary.
* Islam: Iranians have apparently begun a process of
seriously thinking
about Islam of the sort that must precede that religion's
developing into a
moderate and anti-militant influence.
Only Muslims who have suffered from the full debilitation
inflicted by
militant Islam over a period of decades, it seems, are
immune to the charms
of this totalitarianism and prepared to take on the
challenge of finding an
alternative vision to it.
In all, Iran finds itself in the wholly unaccustomed role of
providing
glimmers of good news to the outside world. The militant
Islamic nightmare
is far from over, but in that country, at least, the end is
in sight.