The
“American problem” facing the leaders of Islamic Iran
In
some parts of Iran there
is an "American problem." The so-called "upper classes"
of Iranian society are infatuated with everything American, and that
infatuation trickles down to the ‘lower classes', who then either
succumb to the American temptation or resist it. Fortunately for the
Revolution, most of them resist it and the "American dream"
remains the ambition of northern Tehranis who are far from the typical
Iranian. However, the daydreamers have disproportionate influence
because they have a lot of money. It is interesting to compare the
pro-American tendencies in Iran (which
alone among Muslim countries has managed to expel American influence
and establish an Islamic government) with the anti-American feeling
among the ordinary Muslims of other Muslim countries, where governments
are staunchly anti-Islamic and pro-American, and there appears little
prospect of the establishment of an Islamic government any time soon.
The puppy love that some Iranians show for America can be seen in the typical consumer who looks for American products
in the bazaar (or even in Dubai) and takes pride in having purchased an American-made item.
Then
we have a generation of young people in high schools and colleges
in Iran who
are hooked on American fashions. They spend hours glued to the latest
fashion shows via satellite reception and fashion magazines, and so
have developed a western taste for clothes, cosmetics and appearances.
And then we have the foolish and usually extravagant passion or love
or admiration for the US among
the children of many of the ulama. Yes, you read that right, the children
of Iran's ulama;
they, too, are not immune from this Americanitis. This is not a blanket
statement, of course; there are also ulama in Islamic Iran with honorable
families and revolutionary children. The point is that a wave of nostalgia
for the US is part of public life in Iran; there
is a furtive preference for things American. And when someone asks
these Iranians: Do you really feel deep affection for America?
They will almost immediately give the answer: we like the American
people; we do not like the American government. We should ask these
people: and does that mean you like the African Americans, the Latino
Americans, the underclass Americans, and the minority Americans who
pretty much resemble the oppressed people in your suburbs and countryside?
From here on it becomes very difficult for these Iranians who are
caught up in the American tide to swim through their undeveloped,
insufficiently understood and analysed ,feelings
about America.
The
government of the US, most
accurately characterized by Imam Khomeini (ra) as the shaytani buzurg
of our time, has made deep inroads into the Iranian psychology. We
do not say this to show how successful the US is; on the contrary, all of this is going to come back to haunt the
US and its policy makers. We say this as a fair reading of reality and
an impartial analysis of the facts on the ground. For almost a decade,
the regime in Washington has been instructing and encouraging its officials and institutions
to target the
public mind in Iran. They have found ample assistance among the Iranian elites of the
Shah's time who moved en masse to California and other
parts of the US after the fall of their leader and the end of their privileged and
parasitical existence in Iran. The result has been a proliferation of Persian-language
satellite television stations beaming their pro-American and anti-Islamic
propaganda into the Islamic Republic. Night and day, day in and day
out, Iranians are confronted with nationalist Iranians, cultural Persians,
secular academics and increasingly traditionalist and anti-Revolutionary
Shi‘i ulama pushing their various anti-Revolutionary, and explicitly
or effectively pro-American, message without intermission.
All
of this is taking place despite an almost universal hatred of the
US government,
elites and policies among all the underclasses of the world, and particularly
the Muslim ones. Those of our Iranian brothers who have been drifting
away from their Islamic character should know that there is a "third
world" underclass in the United States, which shares the contempt for the US establishment
felt by other ordinary people around the world. The pictures of the impact of Hurricane Katrina
should have corrected the rosy image that some simple-minded foreigners,
Iranians included, have of America,
and replaced it with a more accurate image of an elitist, racist and
classist America
that does not even care for the poor and needy among its own people,
let alone anywhere else in the world.
Thus
far it is possible to understand the tug-of-war between propaganda
and people. What is more and more difficult to understand is the passive
acceptance that the regime in Washington has secured
from the Islamic establishment in Iran. There is a marked
difference between the image of America
during Imam Khomeini's time and the image of America
in Iran today. In Iraq, the US regime is making preparations to try Saddam Husein in a kangaroo court.
The tyrant and war-criminal will be put on trial, accused of some
domestic killings, and then executed. The whole story of his service
to the US in launching
his war of aggression against the Islamic state of Iran 25
years ago will be buried with him, if the American government has
its way. That war, for those who have Hollywood-type short-term memories,
cost the Muslims of Iran and Iraq more than a million casualties,
and inflicted immense and continuing suffering on millions of others
maimed, handicapped and disabled. If there was any justice, Saddam
Husein should be put on trial, with due process of law, for each and
every one of his crimes, so that the pro-Americans from Najaf to Karbala, and from Qum to Qazvin, can understand what the US is really
all about. On this issue, however, there is a resounding silence from
the diplomatic corps of the Islamic Republic. This is an insult and
denigration of the shuhada'.
The
other issue is the American-sponsored rule of what we are told is
to be a future democratic Iraq. Already,
Iraq is becoming reminiscent of Lebanon
during the Kissinger-inspired and US-sponsored civil war of the 1970s
and 1980s. This Iraq is already oozing with sectarianism and foaming with nationalism.
The American plan to dismember Iraq can
be discerned in that the US and western media refer to the components
of the Iraqi people: the Sunni Arabs, the Shi‘is, and the Kurds. Well,
are not the Shi‘is Arabs? And are not the Kurds Sunnis? But
woe to any eye that can see through the American scheme. Why
are the "Sunni Arabs" described by two words and the other
two segments of the Iraqi population described by only one each? And
would it not be an advantage for Sunni Arabs to bridge the gap between
Sunni Kurds, who have no relationship to Shi‘i Arabs? The "Sunni
Arabs" are Sunnis like the Kurds and they are Arabs like the
Shi‘is. Therefore, in the absence of any sectarian master-plan, the
Sunni Arabs should be the middle ground, the common denominator, and
hold the balance of power in today's Iraq. But
the politics of today's Iraq is dominated by the agendas of the Washington regime,
with all the malevolence and manipulative skills and experiences of
the notorious Henry Kissinger. Thus, sectarian strife is already clearly
emerging in an American-destabilized Iraq.
Saddam
Husein and his henchmen were roundly condemned because they were serving
American agendas, because they were carrying out American orders.
For that they deserve to be known as traitors in the history of the
Ummah. On precisely the same basis, we must also condemn Iraq's current
government, with its many officials coming and going, for all they
have done is replace the Ba'athist regime with their own type of secondhand
and subservient government to the master in the White House. Saddam
Hussein is no more a Sunni than the Shah of Iran was a Shi‘i; and
the current hodge-podge of Iraqi rulers, both Sunnis and Shi‘is, are
no more Sunni or Shi‘i than either Saddam and the late Pahlavi.
It
will take a de-Americanized populace in both Iran and Iraq to realize
that satellite-beamed TV programmes and satellite-launched missiles
are serving the same purpose: to establish American hegemony and neo-imperialism
over two crucial countries in the heart of the Muslim world, to ensure
a secure supply of oil for their capitalist elites and security for
the cancerous state of zionism implanted in the heart of the Arab-Islamic
world in
Tel Aviv. It may be asking too much to expect the Iranian man of the
street to understand this and resist this agenda; but it is the least
we should expect from the authorities of the Islamic State that they
understand these dangers, counter them in their policies, and do everything
possible to expose them to the Iranians being fed a diet of Western
cultural poison.