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Why Iran’s Islamic Republic has not collapsed
#InsideIran

Shahir Shahidsaless

Tuesday 20 October 2015 10:19 UTC

Islamic Republic; Iran revolution; IRGC; Ayatollah Khomeini
Show comments
Iran_AFP.jpg

Why, despite intensive efforts by internal and external forces, hasn’t the Iranian system collapsed? There are five explanations

Since its inception in 1979, the Islamic Republic’s nezam (establishment) has without interruption faced internal and external threats, some of them existential. These threats have included an eight-year war during the Iraqi invasion, Kurdish armed insurgency, coup plots - the government barely escaped the Nojeh coup in 1980 - massive popular uprisings and foreign subversive efforts.

The 1979 seizure of the American embassy in Tehran and the emergence of the hostage crisis prompted the United States’ doctrine of “regime change” toward Iran. To that end, the US relied on a combination of, among other policies, supporting Iraq during perhaps the bloodiest Middle East war of the 20th century, subversion policies, draconian sanctions, covert operations and support of militant groups. Some aspects of sanctions imposed on Iran were unprecedented in modern history.

In order to incite internal opposition in Iran, the New York Times reported that the US would support and finance “Iranian exile networks in and out of Iran and an exile radio station that broadcast propaganda about Iran's government”.

Domestically, the Iranian government has faced armed struggles by militant and ethnic groups - primarily the Kurds - and two major popular uprisings, one in 1999 and the other in 2009. The latter, which marked the emergence of the civil Green Movement, was considered by Mohammad Ali (Aziz) Jafari, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), “a threat way more dangerous than the eight-year war”.

In the aftermath of the 2009 upheavals, then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said: “Behind the scenes, we were doing a lot… We were doing a lot to really empower the protestors without getting in the way.”

So why then, despite intensive efforts by internal and external forces, hasn’t the system collapsed? There are five explanations.

First: Repression
The opposition assert that repression, intimidation and harsh prison sentences have maintained the system. As a glaring example they refer to the forceful suppression of the 2009 mass demonstrations. Many were arrested and received long jail sentences, and the two leaders of the movement have been under house arrest since 2010.

Against this theory, some point to the Shah regime, which was toppled by the 1979 revolution, and the East European communist regimes, both of which used similar tactics yet could not quash revolts. Each of them used brute force but nevertheless fell. Yet this has not happened in Iran. So there must be other factors involved in holding the system up, they argue.

Second: Lack of any popular alternative
In the last 37 years, no opposition leader or political current that has sought to overthrow the regime, either inside or outside of Iran, has gained significant popularity among the opposition within Iran. Charisma, of course, is a major factor that none of the opposition leaders benefited from. But more importantly, they all sought to mobilise people against the government by calling for freedom and social and political liberties.

Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the Iranian revolution, mobilised the masses by focusing on social justice and by defending the barefooted, the mostazafin. Yes, “freedom” was one of the central slogans of the Iranian revolution, but not the only one. For better or worse, masses viewed the “Islamic” system as a system that would fulfill every aspect of social justice in its broad meaning, including economic. Central to Ayatollah Khomeini’s discourse was defending kookh’neshinan (those who live in very poor accommodations) against kakh’neshinan (those who live in palaces).

The calls for social and political freedom can absorb the middle- and upper-middle class urbanites, but these classes are hardly prepared to make dangerous and enduring sacrifices, especially when their opponents are ready to use brute force and are prepared to make sacrifices for their religious beliefs.

As an example, the Green Movement failed to make economic demands, suggesting that its social base was the middle- and upper-middle class. The movement was not seeking justice for the disadvantaged and the poor. Such a movement can only go so far.

Third: No patron-client relationship with foreign powers
The Iranian regime has been able to thwart foreign dominance. This was one of the major fronts of a quarrel between the former Shah of Iran and the opposition, who argued that the Shah was an American puppet. Some among the modern opposition resort to conspiracy theories to reject this characteristic of the Iranian establishment, but none have presented convincing evidence in support of their claims nor have they been able to explain the reason behind the imposition of crippling sanctions on Iran by the United States.

Fourth: The election mechanism
Elections in Iran appear as a mechanism for the populace to impose their will against the establishment’s, despite the obvious restrictions such as the vetting of candidates by the Guardian Council. The elections of 1997 and 2013 are glaring examples. Against all predictions by Western experts, two moderates, Mohammad Khatami and Hassan Rouhani, were elected in a landslide victory.

Fifth: Grassroots supporters
What preserves the staying power of the system is its grassroots supporters, the conservative Shias. No transparent polling is available to provide an accurate figure of those who are opposed to the regime and those who support it. However, after the 2009 disputed elections that resulted in the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who at the time represented the conservative camp, Ken Ballen, the president of Terror Free Tomorrow: The Center for Public Opinion, which studies attitudes toward extremism, and Patrick Doherty, of the New America Foundation, wrote in the Washington Post: “While Western news reports from Tehran in the days leading up to the voting portrayed an Iranian public enthusiastic about Ahmadinejad's principal opponent, Mir Hossein Mousavi, our scientific sampling from across all 30 of Iran's provinces showed Ahmadinejad well ahead.”

Regardless of which camp has the majority, the reality is that Iranian society is fragmented between the forces of tradition (conservatives) and modernity (liberal Muslims and secularists). It is also a reality that both factions are large and cannot be ignored. The conservatives support the system wholeheartedly and consistently, partly because of their religious beliefs and partly because they enjoy advantages that their opponents do not. They are considered khodi, or insider, by the system, while the rest are considered nakhodi, or outsider. These social forces are present at all levels of society from governmental offices, to schools, to universities, to industrial complexes.

In the case of any upheaval by their opposing camp, they, especially the youth vigilante groups, counter by using force as well as large demonstrations. They obviously have the support of the security apparatus, the IRGC and the police. This force is the main element in the staying power of the Islamic Republic.

Simply put, the role of Islam in the mobilisation of the people in Iran should not be underestimated. As a testament to this fact, this video of Ashura, a solemn day of mourning the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, Shias’ third Imam, in 680 AD, shows mourning across the country in 2013.

- Shahir Shahidsaless is a political analyst and freelance journalist writing primarily about Iranian domestic and foreign affairs. He is also the co-author of “Iran and the United States: An Insider’s View on the Failed Past and the Road to Peace”. Follow him on Twitter @SShahidSaless

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Photo: A handout picture released by the official website of the Centre for Preserving and Publishing the Works of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shows him (L) gesturing to Iran's Revolutionary Guards commander General Mohammad Ali Jafari (R) during a visit to the Imam Hussein Military College in Tehran on 20 May, 2015 (AFP/HO/KHAMENEI.IR).

Read more:
- See more at: Why Iran’s Islamic Republic has not collapsed | Middle East Eye
 
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Why Iran’s Islamic Republic has not collapsed
#InsideIran

Shahir Shahidsaless

Tuesday 20 October 2015 10:19 UTC

Islamic Republic; Iran revolution; IRGC; Ayatollah Khomeini
Show comments
Iran_AFP.jpg

Why, despite intensive efforts by internal and external forces, hasn’t the Iranian system collapsed? There are five explanations

Since its inception in 1979, the Islamic Republic’s nezam (establishment) has without interruption faced internal and external threats, some of them existential. These threats have included an eight-year war during the Iraqi invasion, Kurdish armed insurgency, coup plots - the government barely escaped the Nojeh coup in 1980 - massive popular uprisings and foreign subversive efforts.

The 1979 seizure of the American embassy in Tehran and the emergence of the hostage crisis prompted the United States’ doctrine of “regime change” toward Iran. To that end, the US relied on a combination of, among other policies, supporting Iraq during perhaps the bloodiest Middle East war of the 20th century, subversion policies, draconian sanctions, covert operations and support of militant groups. Some aspects of sanctions imposed on Iran were unprecedented in modern history.

In order to incite internal opposition in Iran, the New York Times reported that the US would support and finance “Iranian exile networks in and out of Iran and an exile radio station that broadcast propaganda about Iran's government”.

Domestically, the Iranian government has faced armed struggles by militant and ethnic groups - primarily the Kurds - and two major popular uprisings, one in 1999 and the other in 2009. The latter, which marked the emergence of the civil Green Movement, was considered by Mohammad Ali (Aziz) Jafari, the commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), “a threat way more dangerous than the eight-year war”.

In the aftermath of the 2009 upheavals, then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said: “Behind the scenes, we were doing a lot… We were doing a lot to really empower the protestors without getting in the way.”

So why then, despite intensive efforts by internal and external forces, hasn’t the system collapsed? There are five explanations.

First: Repression
The opposition assert that repression, intimidation and harsh prison sentences have maintained the system. As a glaring example they refer to the forceful suppression of the 2009 mass demonstrations. Many were arrested and received long jail sentences, and the two leaders of the movement have been under house arrest since 2010.

Against this theory, some point to the Shah regime, which was toppled by the 1979 revolution, and the East European communist regimes, both of which used similar tactics yet could not quash revolts. Each of them used brute force but nevertheless fell. Yet this has not happened in Iran. So there must be other factors involved in holding the system up, they argue.

Second: Lack of any popular alternative
In the last 37 years, no opposition leader or political current that has sought to overthrow the regime, either inside or outside of Iran, has gained significant popularity among the opposition within Iran. Charisma, of course, is a major factor that none of the opposition leaders benefited from. But more importantly, they all sought to mobilise people against the government by calling for freedom and social and political liberties.

Ayatollah Khomeini, the leader of the Iranian revolution, mobilised the masses by focusing on social justice and by defending the barefooted, the mostazafin. Yes, “freedom” was one of the central slogans of the Iranian revolution, but not the only one. For better or worse, masses viewed the “Islamic” system as a system that would fulfill every aspect of social justice in its broad meaning, including economic. Central to Ayatollah Khomeini’s discourse was defending kookh’neshinan (those who live in very poor accommodations) against kakh’neshinan (those who live in palaces).

The calls for social and political freedom can absorb the middle- and upper-middle class urbanites, but these classes are hardly prepared to make dangerous and enduring sacrifices, especially when their opponents are ready to use brute force and are prepared to make sacrifices for their religious beliefs.

As an example, the Green Movement failed to make economic demands, suggesting that its social base was the middle- and upper-middle class. The movement was not seeking justice for the disadvantaged and the poor. Such a movement can only go so far.

Third: No patron-client relationship with foreign powers
The Iranian regime has been able to thwart foreign dominance. This was one of the major fronts of a quarrel between the former Shah of Iran and the opposition, who argued that the Shah was an American puppet. Some among the modern opposition resort to conspiracy theories to reject this characteristic of the Iranian establishment, but none have presented convincing evidence in support of their claims nor have they been able to explain the reason behind the imposition of crippling sanctions on Iran by the United States.

Fourth: The election mechanism
Elections in Iran appear as a mechanism for the populace to impose their will against the establishment’s, despite the obvious restrictions such as the vetting of candidates by the Guardian Council. The elections of 1997 and 2013 are glaring examples. Against all predictions by Western experts, two moderates, Mohammad Khatami and Hassan Rouhani, were elected in a landslide victory.

Fifth: Grassroots supporters
What preserves the staying power of the system is its grassroots supporters, the conservative Shias. No transparent polling is available to provide an accurate figure of those who are opposed to the regime and those who support it. However, after the 2009 disputed elections that resulted in the victory of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who at the time represented the conservative camp, Ken Ballen, the president of Terror Free Tomorrow: The Center for Public Opinion, which studies attitudes toward extremism, and Patrick Doherty, of the New America Foundation, wrote in the Washington Post: “While Western news reports from Tehran in the days leading up to the voting portrayed an Iranian public enthusiastic about Ahmadinejad's principal opponent, Mir Hossein Mousavi, our scientific sampling from across all 30 of Iran's provinces showed Ahmadinejad well ahead.”

Regardless of which camp has the majority, the reality is that Iranian society is fragmented between the forces of tradition (conservatives) and modernity (liberal Muslims and secularists). It is also a reality that both factions are large and cannot be ignored. The conservatives support the system wholeheartedly and consistently, partly because of their religious beliefs and partly because they enjoy advantages that their opponents do not. They are considered khodi, or insider, by the system, while the rest are considered nakhodi, or outsider. These social forces are present at all levels of society from governmental offices, to schools, to universities, to industrial complexes.

In the case of any upheaval by their opposing camp, they, especially the youth vigilante groups, counter by using force as well as large demonstrations. They obviously have the support of the security apparatus, the IRGC and the police. This force is the main element in the staying power of the Islamic Republic.

Simply put, the role of Islam in the mobilisation of the people in Iran should not be underestimated. As a testament to this fact, this video of Ashura, a solemn day of mourning the martyrdom of Imam Hussein, Shias’ third Imam, in 680 AD, shows mourning across the country in 2013.

- Shahir Shahidsaless is a political analyst and freelance journalist writing primarily about Iranian domestic and foreign affairs. He is also the co-author of “Iran and the United States: An Insider’s View on the Failed Past and the Road to Peace”. Follow him on Twitter @SShahidSaless

The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.

Photo: A handout picture released by the official website of the Centre for Preserving and Publishing the Works of Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei shows him (L) gesturing to Iran's Revolutionary Guards commander General Mohammad Ali Jafari (R) during a visit to the Imam Hussein Military College in Tehran on 20 May, 2015 (AFP/HO/KHAMENEI.IR).

Read more:
- See more at: Why Iran’s Islamic Republic has not collapsed | Middle East Eye
Answer is not above entirely:
1- Fascist system adheres to Iron Fist. Make a referendum and see what the masses want! If it is the lame Velayate Faghih or not!
2- Opposition of the IR regime is lame and infiltrated and do not have a clear ideology unlike the regime itself. Democracy or any progressive system does not have enough push to change the system ideologically.
3- The answer Iranians are now targeting is teh one which has less damage and that is evolution. If we can conver the Monkey Jannati to human at lower cost or have him dead naturally in few years and replaced by a human one and gradually change that or if able to sideline IRGC with better economical deals and if sideline the influence of regime with vibrant NGOs doing a good job and attracting people then the Fascist factions of the regime will change internally and have no choice. But the alternatives should be real and transparent and the effects seen by majority even those attracted to the regime.
4- Having a regime change in mind in the sense ME is used to is not anymore in Iran's best interest and the opposition that believes in that would not succeed unless regime heads do stupid international mistake which types like Zarif will prevent. The word collapse is out of the question. What scares the regime and Khameneie and he reacted to it last week, is exactly what happening and that is western influence by more relations.

If Iran can change itself by the help of NGO and non violent movements which have grass root support then the change is equivalent to collapse and is irreversible. Meanwhile if this change comes without having negative effect on the economy and security of Iranian people is the best.

That is what average Iranians and their pragmatic approach has done historically through out the ages when under siege form Moghuls or Mullahs! Interestingly all start with M and are brutal!
 
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May be they see what is happening to their neighbours who are following royal dictators or having Arab springs and then the current Iran regime looks much better.
 
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Anyone who wants a 'revolution' for Iran today is beyond stupid and certainly, many people, including a vast majority of IR opposition groups (not those minority with loud voice and media sitting in Los Angeles and Europe), but the silent majority in opposition groups know very well that going for a revolution is not a solution. What we need is a revolution in how we work, how we manage our country and gradually letting the country find its true path and the system to improve itself. It even may take another lifetime, but it's worth it and the reason is obvious.

Even during 2009 protests, no one even mentioned a revolution in first weeks and only after a minority (foreign spy agencies are certainly involved and no, I don't believe any conspiracy theories) started going violent and deviating from the core path of green movement (which was simply about peacefully protesting Ahmadinejad election, for right or wrong), millions of people backed off and green movement died, not by Islamic Republic, but by very people who were supporting it, otherwise, Islamic Republic would have never been able to stop it if millions of people insisted on pursuing a violent path. I think that's a good thing. We need to raise awareness even more than this. 2009 was a good test, but there are people, countries out there who wish to see nothing except destruction of Iran and hopefully, they will pull that wish to their grave.
 
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It's only because of the size of a city like Tehran that the Iranian regime has yet to collapse
 
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I don't know the history of Iran adequately to comment anything here but any power which want to emerge as pre-eminence have to contend with the concept of legitimacy. It is very fundamental.

One quick way to earn it is by establishing yourself in the pecking order among the neighbours firmly. That means you have to walk away victorious in any knife-fight. Iran I suppose was able to quickly repulse the Iraq incursion and gained grounds post 1982. That had a big impact in adding to it's "legitimacy"

This concept of legitimacy may sound ephemeral at first glance but the discourse have been argued in many forms both in the east and western philosophies and writings with the same conclusion.
 
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They step in Syria soon they will ......
Lovely grammar bro.

Can you wahabis do anything right? Even writing is hard for you guys. Wiping your *** must be a daily challenge.

As for the "they step in Syria" comment, well, "they step" in Syria a long time ago. I don't think it's our fight tbh, but I ain't complaining all that much. Seeing your cousin abdul get a barrel bomb drilled in his *** brings daily joy into my life.

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Iran's regime has survived for many reasons, a few of which were covered in OP's article. The lack of alternatives, the lack of political education among Iranians, our elders and older generation being religious, the regime ruling with an iron fist like every other dictatorship etc...

But one thing is obvious: dictatorships are built on shaky foundations. They either collapse or they quickly patch up the foundation with an injection of concrete many years after building the hypothetical structure. China had to patch up the foundation while most other dictatorships came crashing down. This isn't an opinion, it's an eventuality based on evidence from the past century. The only one that's managed to survive has been North Korea and the measures they've taken to do so are unarguably extreme by anyone's measure. So extreme that no one else can even duplicate it. So in essence they either evolve into better and better versions of themselves over and over or come crashing down and evolve over night.

Crashing and evolving over night isn't ideal. It creates chaos, but unless the dictatorships evolves on its own, that's always an eventuality. China would have had many more Tiananmen Square episodes had they not evolved.
 
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