|
USADI Dispatch
A weekly Publication of the US Alliance for
Democratic Iran
Volume III, Issue 2
February 15, 2006
Weekly
Commentary
Of
Mullahs, Nukes, and Cartoons
On February 14 1989, Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini, the founder
of Iran’s fundamentalist regime, issued a fatwa against the
British author Salman Rushdie. At the time, the regime having
accepted defeat in the eight-year war with Iraq was engulfed in
internal conflicts and crumbling under domestic and
international pressure.
Khomeini had been forced to "drink from the chalice of poison of
the ceasefire," as he put it, in war he had insisted was a
“divine blessing,” and the gateway to "liberating Jerusalem via
Karbala”.
The death decree against Rushdie was not the only such edict
Khomeini had issued. Several months prior, in summer of 1988, he
authorized the horrific massacre of tens of thousands of
political prisoners. The mass killings brought scant
international scrutiny. It however, caused deep factional schism
and challenge to Khomeini’s role as the Supreme leader when his
designate-successor Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri launched a
devastating political assault on ailing Khomeini by questioning
the massacre of thousands of defenseless prisoners, including
pregnant women.
It was under these circumstances that he issued his infamous
decree against Rushdie. For Khomeini, the Satanic Verses was
another “divine blessing” with which he could re-assert his
diminished ideological authority, bring into line of his
severely shaken ideological base, and shift the focus of restive
populace. The ever-shrewd and diabolically opportunist Khomeini
turned Rushdie’s book into his own Satanic ploy.
Here we go again. Seventeen years later, Khomeini’s heirs find
themselves walking on a more precarious political, ideological,
and diplomatic tightrope. Having purged his allies of the
post-Khomeini era, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has propelled the
Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps to the position of power.
While this has benefited him in the short term, it has
nevertheless undercut his power base within the regime and led
to growing public discontent, reflected in labor strikes,
student sit-ins, and citizen unrest.
Most significant, however, has been the aftermath of the
landmark decision by the Board of Governors of the International
Atomic Energy Agency to report Tehran to the United Nations
Security Council.
Judging by the hasty and desperate measures Tehran took right
after the vote to minimize the domestic fall out, the decision
has dealt one of the most devastating diplomatic blows to the
regime since its inception. It has simply plunged the regime’s
diplomacy machine in chaos as evident by its frantic and
contradictory moves in recent days.
Against this backdrop, after several weeks - if not several
months – of delay, Tehran rulers found the “divine blessing” of
the inflammatory cartoons published in some European
publications.
No doubt, the cartoons were of utter poor taste and insulting to
religious sensitivities of the millions of Muslims around the
world. The mullahs' claims to be a defender of religious
tolerance and Muslims’ sensitivities, however, is a shameless
exercise in demagoguery considering the tens of thousands of
Muslim Iranian dissidents they have executed, imprisoned and
tortured since 1979. Majority of the victims of political
executions in Iran have been the members and supporters of
Iran’s main opposition group, the People’s Mojahedin, the
staunchly anti-fundamentalist Muslim organization.
And let’s not forget that it was Iran’s Intelligence Ministry
which carried out the deadly bombing in Iran’s most revered Shia
shrine in city of Mashad in mid 1990s that left dozens of
worshippers dead or injured.
For Iran rulers the cartoon crisis is a reincarnation of the
Rushdie crisis. They jumped on this band wagon to shift domestic
focus from their recent devastating diplomatic defeat to an
external boogeyman and to give a sense of ideological
empowerment to the paramilitary Bassij forces.
This perverted state-sponsored mob-diplomacy, a skill the
clerical regime has mastered and put into effect time after time
since 1979, was also meant as a warning to the Europeans, which
explains the attacks on some European embassies in Tehran by
Molotov-cocktail throwing government-organized mobs.
Behind this well-choreographed exercise in mob-diplomacy,
however, there is an utterly isolated regime and a renewed
determination by the restive populace bent on challenging it at
every opportunity.
The daring strike by Tehran's bus drivers is a case in point.
Despite the barbaric attempts by the security forces to crush
it, the strike has continued and could well spread to other
sectors. Meanwhile, over the weekend, the Iranian Sufi Muslims
gathered in city of Qom to reclaim their place of worship. They
made a heroic stand which was brutally crushed after hours of
resistance. Hundreds of Sufis have been wounded and arrested by
the plain-cloth agents and security forces. Their property was
set on fire by state-organized mobs. (USADI)
Return to Top
Subscribe to USADI Dispatch
Return to USADI Dispatch
Archives
The US Alliance for Democratic Iran (USADI), is a
US-based, non-profit, independent organization, which promotes
informed policy debate, exchange of ideas, analysis, research
and education to advance a US policy on Iran which will
benefit America’s interests, both at home and in the Middle
East, through supporting Iranian people’s aspirations for
a democratic, secular, and peaceful government, free of tyranny,
fundamentalism, weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism.
USADI supports the Iranian peoples' aspirations
for democracy, peace, human rights, women’s equality,
freedom of expression, separation of church and state,
self-determination, control of land and resources,
cultural integrity, and the right to development and prosperity.
The USADI is not affiliated with any government
agencies, political groups or parties. The USADI administration
is solely responsible for its activities and decisions.
|