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Date: Mon, 15 Jun 2009 14:40:14 -0500
To: oiio...@hotmail.com
From: nore...@stratfor.com
Subject: Geopolitical Weekly : Western Misconceptions Meet Iranian Reality













 





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Western Misconceptions Meet Iranian Reality

June 15, 2009










By George Friedman



Related Link

The Geopolitics of Iran: Holding the Center of a Mountain Fortress


Related Special Topic Page

The Iranian Presidential Elections
In 1979, when we were still young and starry-eyed, a revolution took place in 
Iran. When I asked experts what would happen, they divided into two camps.

The first group of Iran experts argued that the Shah of Iran would certainly 
survive, that the unrest was simply a cyclical event readily manageable by his 
security, and that the Iranian people were united behind the Iranian monarch’s 
modernization program. These experts developed this view by talking to the same 
Iranian officials and businessmen they had been talking to for years — Iranians 
who had grown wealthy and powerful under the shah and who spoke English, since 
Iran experts frequently didn’t speak Farsi all that well.

The second group of Iran experts regarded the shah as a repressive brute, and 
saw the revolution as aimed at liberalizing the country. Their sources were the 
professionals and academics who supported the uprising — Iranians who knew what 
former Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini believed, but didn’t think he 
had much popular support. They thought the revolution would result in an 
increase in human rights and liberty. The experts in this group spoke even less 
Farsi than the those in the first group. 

Misreading Sentiment in Iran
Limited to information on Iran from English-speaking opponents of the regime, 
both groups of Iran experts got a very misleading vision of where the 
revolution was heading — because the Iranian revolution was not brought about 
by the people who spoke English. It was made by merchants in city bazaars, by 
rural peasants, by the clergy — people Americans didn’t speak to because they 
couldn’t. This demographic was unsure of the virtues of modernization and not 
at all clear on the virtues of liberalism. From the time they were born, its 
members knew the virtue of Islam, and that the Iranian state must be an Islamic 
state.

Americans and Europeans have been misreading Iran for 30 years. Even after the 
shah fell, the myth has survived that a mass movement of people exists 
demanding liberalization — a movement that if encouraged by the West eventually 
would form a majority and rule the country. We call this outlook “iPod 
liberalism,” the idea that anyone who listens to rock ‘n’ roll on an iPod, 
writes blogs and knows what it means to Twitter must be an enthusiastic 
supporter of Western liberalism. Even more significantly, this outlook fails to 
recognize that iPod owners represent a small minority in Iran — a country that 
is poor, pious and content on the whole with the revolution forged 30 years 
ago. 

There are undoubtedly people who want to liberalize the Iranian regime. They 
are to be found among the professional classes in Tehran, as well as among 
students. Many speak English, making them accessible to the touring 
journalists, diplomats and intelligence people who pass through. They are the 
ones who can speak to Westerners, and they are the ones willing to speak to 
Westerners. And these people give Westerners a wildly distorted view of Iran. 
They can create the impression that a fantastic liberalization is at hand — but 
not when you realize that iPod-owning Anglophones are not exactly the majority 
in Iran. 

Last Friday, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was re-elected with about 
two-thirds of the vote. Supporters of his opponent, both inside and outside 
Iran, were stunned. A poll revealed that former Iranian Prime Minister Mir 
Hossein Mousavi was beating Ahmadinejad. It is, of course, interesting to 
meditate on how you could conduct a poll in a country where phones are not 
universal, and making a call once you have found a phone can be a trial. A poll 
therefore would probably reach people who had phones and lived in Tehran and 
other urban areas. Among those, Mousavi probably did win. But outside Tehran, 
and beyond persons easy to poll, the numbers turned out quite different.

Some still charge that Ahmadinejad cheated. That is certainly a possibility, 
but it is difficult to see how he could have stolen the election by such a 
large margin. Doing so would have required the involvement of an incredible 
number of people, and would have risked creating numbers that quite plainly did 
not jibe with sentiment in each precinct. Widespread fraud would mean that 
Ahmadinejad manufactured numbers in Tehran without any regard for the vote. But 
he has many powerful enemies who would quickly have spotted this and would have 
called him on it. Mousavi still insists he was robbed, and we must remain open 
to the possibility that he was, although it is hard to see the mechanics of 
this.

Ahmadinejad’s Popularity
It also misses a crucial point: Ahmadinejad enjoys widespread popularity. He 
doesn’t speak to the issues that matter to the urban professionals, namely, the 
economy and liberalization. But Ahmadinejad speaks to three fundamental issues 
that accord with the rest of the country.

First, Ahmadinejad speaks of piety. Among vast swathes of Iranian society, the 
willingness to speak unaffectedly about religion is crucial. Though it may be 
difficult for Americans and Europeans to believe, there are people in the world 
to whom economic progress is not of the essence; people who want to maintain 
their communities as they are and live the way their grandparents lived. These 
are people who see modernization — whether from the shah or Mousavi — as 
unattractive. They forgive Ahmadinejad his economic failures.

Second, Ahmadinejad speaks of corruption. There is a sense in the countryside 
that the ayatollahs — who enjoy enormous wealth and power, and often have 
lifestyles that reflect this — have corrupted the Islamic Revolution. 
Ahmadinejad is disliked by many of the religious elite precisely because he has 
systematically raised the corruption issue, which resonates in the countryside.

Third, Ahmadinejad is a spokesman for Iranian national security, a tremendously 
popular stance. It must always be remembered that Iran fought a war with Iraq 
in the 1980s that lasted eight years, cost untold lives and suffering, and 
effectively ended in its defeat. Iranians, particularly the poor, experienced 
this war on an intimate level. They fought in the war, and lost husbands and 
sons in it. As in other countries, memories of a lost war don’t necessarily 
delegitimize the regime. Rather, they can generate hopes for a resurgent Iran, 
thus validating the sacrifices made in that war — something Ahmadinejad taps 
into. By arguing that Iran should not back down but become a major power, he 
speaks to the veterans and their families, who want something positive to 
emerge from all their sacrifices in the war. 

Perhaps the greatest factor in Ahmadinejad’s favor is that Mousavi spoke for 
the better districts of Tehran — something akin to running a U.S. presidential 
election as a spokesman for Georgetown and the Lower East Side. Such a base 
will get you hammered, and Mousavi got hammered. Fraud or not, Ahmadinejad won 
and he won significantly. That he won is not the mystery; the mystery is why 
others thought he wouldn’t win. 

For a time on Friday, it seemed that Mousavi might be able to call for an 
uprising in Tehran. But the moment passed when Ahmadinejad’s security forces on 
motorcycles intervened. And that leaves the West with its worst-case scenario: 
a democratically elected anti-liberal. 

Western democracies assume that publics will elect liberals who will protect 
their rights. In reality, it’s a more complicated world. Hitler is the classic 
example of someone who came to power constitutionally, and then preceded to gut 
the constitution. Similarly, Ahmadinejad’s victory is a triumph of both 
democracy and repression. 

The Road Ahead: More of the Same
The question now is what will happen next. Internally, we can expect 
Ahmadinejad to consolidate his position under the cover of anti-corruption. He 
wants to clean up the ayatollahs, many of whom are his enemies. He will need 
the support of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This election has 
made Ahmadinejad a powerful president, perhaps the most powerful in Iran since 
the revolution. Ahmadinejad does not want to challenge Khamenei, and we suspect 
that Khamenei will not want to challenge Ahmadinejad. A forced marriage is 
emerging, one which may place many other religious leaders in a difficult 
position. 

Certainly, hopes that a new political leadership would cut back on Iran’s 
nuclear program have been dashed. The champion of that program has won, in part 
because he championed the program. We still see Iran as far from developing a 
deliverable nuclear weapon, but certainly the Obama administration’s hopes that 
Ahmadinejad would either be replaced — or at least weakened and forced to be 
more conciliatory — have been crushed. Interestingly, Ahmadinejad sent 
congratulations to U.S. President Barack Obama on his inauguration. We would 
expect Obama to reciprocate under his opening policy, which U.S. Vice President 
Joe Biden appears to have affirmed, assuming he was speaking for Obama. Once 
the vote fraud issue settles, we will have a better idea of whether Obama’s 
policies will continue. (We expect they will.) 

What we have now are two presidents in a politically secure position, something 
that normally forms a basis for negotiations. The problem is that it is not 
clear what the Iranians are prepared to negotiate on, nor is it clear what the 
Americans are prepared to give the Iranians to induce them to negotiate. Iran 
wants greater influence in Iraq and its role as a regional leader acknowledged, 
something the United States doesn’t want to give them. The United States wants 
an end to the Iranian nuclear program, which Iran doesn’t want to give. 

On the surface, this would seem to open the door for an attack on Iran’s 
nuclear facilities. Former U.S. President George W. Bush did not — and Obama 
does not — have any appetite for such an attack. Both presidents blocked the 
Israelis from attacking, assuming the Israelis ever actually wanted to attack. 

For the moment, the election appears to have frozen the status quo in place. 
Neither the United States nor Iran seem prepared to move significantly, and 
there are no third parties that want to get involved in the issue beyond the 
occasional European diplomatic mission or Russian threat to sell something to 
Iran. In the end, this shows what we have long known: This game is locked in 
place, and goes on.


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