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OVERVIEW
The Islamic Uprising
in Iran a quarter of a century ago is too important and too special
for Muslims to simply watch it wander from its original and true
course. We remember all too clearly the impact this breakthrough
had on Muslims everywhere. For the first time in modern history,
Muslims had risen against a corrupt government and its imperialist
and zionist sponsors, and were able to take control of their own
country, and begin to show the rest of us how things should be done.
Of course, the road
forward was not likely to be smooth. The sponsors of the Pahlavi
regime could not be expected to sit and watch a people shape their
own future on the basis of their Islamic faith and commitment. Throughout
the last 25 years, America and Israel have been working to bring
the Islamic government in Iran to its knees, with the support of
their Western allies, Iran’s pro-Western neighbours and even supporters
within Iran. Iran’s borders amount to some 8,000 kilometers; American
troops are now based across six thousand kilometers of this border.
This grim scenario has been gradually built over 25 years, and has
passed almost unnoticed by most Muslims, and even most Iranians.
There has never been any cessation of hostilities between the followers
of the line of Imam Khomeini (r.a.), who refuse to compromise when
it comes to the independence and sovereignty of the Islamic state,
and the numerous other interests wanting to shape the state on their
terms.
Part of our object
in this new column is to look at some of the gaps that have developed
since the passing of Imam Khomeini (r.a.), many of which
are rooted in earlier events, and how these gaps have caused serious
problems about which we can no longer remain silent. But before
we walk into this sensitive area, one point needs to be made absolutely
clear. This is that none of the points we make are intended to express
any criticism of Imam Sayyid Ali Khamenei, the successor to Imam
Khomeini (r.a.) as Rahbar of the Islamic State. Many of the
points we make will be highlighting natural processes in the evolution
of post-Revolutionary state and society. Others will indeed involve
criticism of errors and failures in Iran, mainly on the part of
those who have been responsible for aspects of Iranian government
and policy at the executive level. It was inevitable that such errors
and failures should emerge over a quarter of a century in an unprecedented
and highly-pressured historical situation; unfortunately they have
contributed greatly to what many now see as the Islamic experiment’s
current stagnation.
Sometimes frank statements
of truth can be bitter pills to swallow; we hope no-one will consider
this column to be too bitter a pill. We say what we say only to
express our honest understanding of the issues. If we are correct,
we appeal earnestly to Allah to accept our humble words to our humble
readers. If not, we request Allah’s forgiveness and correction from
anyone able to do so; without, we hope, descending into personal
issues or hidden agendas. Ameen.
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The
extent of the danger that the US poses to Islamic Iran
"The tiger is a dangerous
animal." This sentence is simple, self-explanatory and straightforward.
Any adult - or even a child beyond a very simple stage of development
- understands what this statement means and knows to steer well clear
of tigers. However, insert different nouns in the same very simple sentence
- "the government of the United States is a shaytani buzurg
(a giant Satan)", for example - and somehow the clarity of meaning
disappears, at least for many leaders in the Islamic movement and politicians
and officials in the Islamic State of Iran. Many of the ministers, leaders,
bureaucrats, technocrats, decision-makers and opinion-formers who have
risen to positions of authority and influence in Islamic Iran, as well
as the ever-eager "pro-democracy" headmen in certain parts
of the global Islamic movement, are suddenly conducting their political
affairs as though the US were no longer a shaytani buzurg. The
clear lens through which the late Imam Khomeini (ra) viewed the
state of the modern world seems to have become clouded somewhat with
the passing of time since his death in 1989.
The American regime in Washington provides daily reminders of its status
as shaytani buzurg in this world, in defiance of all the wishful
thinking of burned-out former revolutionaries and pseudo-Islamists.
It is not difficult to confirm Washington's shaytani status by
its own words and deeds. First, we keep hearing a loud voice in Washington
telling us that oil-rich Islamic Iran is the number-one sponsor of terrorism
in the world. They also say that Iran is hell-bent on producing nuclear
weapons. President Bush and his circle of advisers constantly repeat
the mantra that a nuclear weapon in the hands of terrorists (they mean
the Islamic movement and State) is the greatest threat possible threat
to US national security. In fact, any informed observer would know that
if the Ummah were to acquire nuclear technology, it would act first
and foremost as a deterrent to zionist Israel. But considering that
Tel Aviv and Washington are virtually indistinguishable in their objectives,
we begin to understand what the neo-cons mean.
The shaytani buzurg distracts attention from its war-mongering with
seemingly common-sense overtures and initiatives. These political gestures
fool the naive into thinking that the US is reasonable, honest and sincere
in its concerns about Iran's nuclear progress. Hence its working through
the European trio of Britain, France,and Germany to neutralize Iran's
nuclear project. And if that does not work, the US wants to take Iran
to the UN Security Council. As an alternative to these threatening moves,
the US also offers Iran the prospect and benefits of improved international
relations, such as the lifting of US sanctions, if it cooperates with
the US plans. Vice-president Dick Cheney has publicly suggested that
the US lift sanctions against Iran.
The cat-and-mouse diplomacy between Tehran's naive negotiators on one
side and the sophisticated, double-speaking European diplomats on the
other is of no practical political value to the warmongers in the Pentagon
and on Capitol Hill. These hawks are, when it comes to Iran, more like
attacking dogs. For the time being they are partially satisfied with
US sanctions on Iran, but their hunger is growing and once unleashed
they will be as ferocious as pit-bulls or Dobermanns.
In the meantime, the US scheme is to lull the Iranian negotiators into
a false sense of security. This can be done by offering them significant
incentives while also marshalling an international alliance against
Iran through a diplomatic campaign, centered around the UN Security
Council, that may enable the US to force the Europeans, the Japanese,
and even China to join in its sanctions on Iran.
The reason that the US is determined to make Iranian officials understand
that their nuclear program has to shut down is the perceived threat
to Israel's national security. Iran is also expected to withdraw itself
from the global Islamic movement. Israel and the US cannot live with
an Islamic pulse in Lebanon, Iraq or even Afghanistan, because officials
in Tel Aviv and Washington think there is an Iranian hand meddling in
all these regions. In other words all the US is asking Tehran to do
is pull out of the global Islamic movement, and instead become a part
of the West-dominated international order that the Islamic movement
is determined to destroy, and the rewards will be phenomenal: relations
between Tehran and Washington will be normalized. The US will then release
to Iran the phenomenal billions of dollars in frozen assets that have
been held hostage since the Islamic Revolution, and, in its promotion
of capitalism and free market activities, will encourage new trade and
investment flow. What is more, to ensure no one can still suspect Iran
of being an international pariah, the mighty US will even allow a remodeled
Iran to become a member of the World Trade Organization! And for those
who think that Iran is still getting a bad deal the US will guarantee
Iranian access to civilian nuclear power. How, as a salesman might say,
about that?
That, in a nutshell, is the US's broad plan to emasculate Iran and neutralize
the Islamic movement. This is a stage in history when the political
moment in Iran demands the emergence either of a diplomatic Mu'awiyah
or a principled 'Ali. The question of which it will be - and this is
not a Sunni-Shi'a issue - is what remains for the Muslim people of the
Islamic Republic, who have already made such massive sacrifices for
the Revolution and the global Ummah, to decide.
At the same time as the US is pursuing this diplomatic and political
front, it was leaked to the media some time ago that US and Israeli
commandos have been involved in covert operations inside Iran. Although
Iranian officials indignantly denied that such a thing was possible,
it is not difficult to imagine it actually happening. The fact that
Seymour Hersh, a reputable American journalist, comes up with these
claims suggests either that they are true or that some in the US would
like people to think that they are in order to put more pressure of
a different kind on Iranian officials. It is by no means impossible
for the neo-cons in the shaytani buzurg to have let the re-election
of George W. Bush go to their heads; they may actually think that they
have a mandate to enlarge their war on terrorism, this time against
Iran. Bush's cheering crowds are not the American workers who have been
laid off, nor the farmers who are no longer able to pay back their loans,
nor the college graduate who is now more likely to find a blue-collar
job than a white-collar job - the ordinary people in America suffering
while Bush serves the interests of big capital; and big capital may
well welcome another expensive military adventure.
The daydreaming diplomats in the Islamic state and movement should remember
that sources at the Pentagon report that Bush has advised his secretary
of defense, Donald Rumsfeld, that his key foreign-policy objective in
his second term is to change the governments in Damascus and in Tehran.
Washington's intelligence services are now in overdrive to rationalize
such a policy. In his state of the union address in January, Bush declared
solidarity with those Iranians who are opposed to the ayatullahs and
apparently demanding US support in their drive for freedom. It is undeniable
that there is a rift between some of Iran's leaders and their people;
and whose fault is that?
It is difficult to understand why the phrase shaytani buzurg,
which is such an apt description of the Washington administration, has
fallen out of use. It is incredible that, at a time of intense and aggressive
American operations against the Islamic state and the Islamic movement,
the phrase no longer features in the political language of our time.
Apologies are due to the humble soul of the late Imam Khomeini for the
deviation of Islamic-movement leaders and gullible Iranian officials
since his passing. The only reassurance is that there remain many within
the Islamic movement, and of the oppressed of the world, Muslim and
potentially Muslim, who continue to understand exactly what he meant
when he so succinctly characterized the United States as the shaytani
buzurg of our time.
Abu Dharr.
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