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Views » November 24, 2003

The Selective Solidarity of the Left

By Danny Postel

We must distinguish our progressive criticisms from Washington’s hollow and self-serving ones.
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In Tehran since 1999, government vigilantes have stormed a student dormitory brandishing clubs and thrashing students with chains. They have tossed one student out of a window to his death. During such raids, helicopters hover overhead, elite units of anti-riot police gather and plainclothes Intelligence Ministry agents buzz around on motorbikes. Plainclothes security officers routinely detainstudent radicals at gunpoint.

Why are American progressives by and large silent about the situation in Iran today?

How many American progressives knew who Shirin Ebadi was before she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last month? Almost no one. By the same token, how many of us knew who Rigoberta Menchú was before she won the prize in 1992? Many, if not most of us: We’d seen her speak, read her autobiography, or simply had come to know her story by osmosis in activist circles.

Consider the number of Guatemalan solidarity groups that have come onto the scene over the years. How many American progressives, at some point between the early ’80s and the signing of the Peace Accords in 1996, were involved, at one level or another, in solidarity work around Guatemala? Tons of us. Why the difference?

What is going on in Iran doesn’t lend itself to the kind of analytical prism through which progressives made sense of Central America during the high tide of our solidarity activism, the Reagan years. In Central America, military juntas and death squads, in concert with feudal elites and corporate oligarchs, were running the show with the active support of the United States. In a nutshell, a bloodbath of imperial domination, rapacious exploitation, scorched earth terror, and mass murder—in which the United States was complicit from top to bottom.

But what happens when people are struggling against tyranny and repression that is not being perpetrated by the United States or its proxies and when—to take the case of Iran today—the regime in question is a sworn enemy of the United States.

Let’s face it: It’s just plain uncomfortable for progressives to say anything that sounds like it could also come out of the mouth of George Bush or Paul Wolfowitz.

Jeremy Brecher argues in Foreign Policy in Focus, however, that “failure to defend human rights in such circumstances only plays into the hands of the Bush juggernaut.” Progressives must, he contends, be known as “people whose fundamental solidarity is not with one or another government but with all people who are struggling for liberation from oppression.”

We should not allow Washington’s rhetoric to have a silencing effect on us. To do so, in effect, is to let Bush and Wolfowitz do our thinking for us. Rather than accept the Bush administration’s pronouncements at face value, why not unmask them for the opportunistic propaganda they are? Why not point out that despite its rhetoric, the administration couldn’t care less about democracy and human rights? Whatever the rhetoric about supporting the student movement, the reality is, as Brecher puts it, that the administration sees Iran as “a critical source of oil and a powerful country that currently threatens—but could support—both U.S. and Israeli interests.” “Encouraging the student revolt,” he points out, “is done in the interest of Washington’s agenda, which can not be accurately described as seeking freedom, independence, and self-determination for the people of Iran.”

We must distinguish our progressive criticisms of the Islamic republic from Washington’s hollow and self-serving ones.

The picture gets further complicated, and the left gets further flummoxed, over the role of the United Sates in the Iranian context. The memory of the 1953 U.S.-sponsored coup against the democratically elected government of Mohammad Mossadegh burns furiously in the minds of many Iranians to this day. The problem is that denunciations of the American empire today are the rhetorical dominion of the right, not the left. It’s the reactionary clergy, not the student movement, that wields the idiom of anti-imperialism.

Regime hard-liners “legitimate their suppression of the students,” Brecher points out, “as necessary to guard against ‘foreign forces.’” Indeed, the mullahs denounced the awarding of the Nobel Prize to Shirin Ebadi as “the result of the cultural hegemony of Western civilization,” a tool “intended to serve the interests of colonialism and the decadent world.” This kind of talk can throw off the ideological compasses of many progressives.

In contrast, for the students, feminists, human rights activists and dissidents agitating for pluralism and democracy in Iran today, opposition to U.S. imperialism is not the central issue. “The student movement’s principal demand,” as Brecher notes, is “to eliminate the power of the self-perpetuating theocratic elite over the Iranian government.”

A simple stance of “hands off Iran” is not what those struggling for change in Iran need from progressives around the world. Of course we should be steadfast in opposing any U.S. military intervention in Iran—that’s the easy part. But it’s not the end of the discussion. As Ziba Mir-Hosseini of the University of London puts it, Iran is in “a state at war with itself.” Progressives everywhere should take sides in that war and actively support the forces of democracy, feminism, pluralism, human rights and freedom of expression.
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Danny Postel is a writer based in Chicago and is Communications Coordinator of Interfaith Worker Justice. He is the author of Reading Legitimation Crisis in Tehran: Iran and the Future of Liberalism (Prickly Paradigm Press) and is a member of the editorial boards of The Common Review and Logos. His website is at www.postelservice.com

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  • Reader Comments

    Postel hits the nail on the head: it is simply too uncomfortable for too many to utter anything that might come from the mouths of Bush, Wolfowitz et al. Worse, when people do, as Christopher Hitchens did, they’re castigated as neo-con wannabes.
    I wish things were cut and dried in this world, but that’s a fantasy more durable than my crush on Cameron Diaz. Of course we must take care to offer more in our criticisms than the drivel the GOP-led ruling class does, but we must not succumb to the temptation to refrain from criticizing those who deserve it because “Amerikkka”—-what a misnomer—doesn’t like them. When the only people who lampoon Islam (not just criticize it, any idiot can do that) are class clowns like Bill Maher, you can just see the “Islam Rocks!!” T-shirts coming.
    While we’re being honest, let me offer this: our discomfort with criticizing Islam to the extent we do Christianity comes from a desire not to be seen as racist. Get over it; if it’s a religion of peace, then my ass chews gum.

    Posted by Doug P on Nov 26, 2003 at 2:06 AM

    It is important that progressives get involved on issues regarding Iran. There are a lot of creative ways of dealing with Iran and helping Iran’s democratic movement, which none is discussed now and practiced by this administration.

    For example, instead of pushing for blank sanction on Iran that exists now, a clever sanction can be applied where trade under 1 million dollor by private companies in Iran with the US be allowed. This can strengthen Iranian middle class which makes backbone of democratic movements. Or many progressive professors can travel to Iran to participate in scientific conferences and meanwhile change the attitude the minority in Iran that still has a negative view of Americans.

    Lots of other positive things can be done and progressives who have a better understanding of how democracy works can come up with them not the people who are in charge. The only thing they know is confrontational solutions for every problem, which evidently hasn’t worked on Iran for past 25 years and Cuba for the past 50 years.

    Posted by Mehdi Y. on Nov 27, 2003 at 2:31 AM

    The reason the repression in Iran is not getting the energy that repression in Central America got is not discomfort but the lack of concrete connection.  We had direct links to the US supplied Guatemalan military boot on the neck of the Guatemalan people.  An effective solidarity campaign would require a clear linkage that we can use to pressure those providing support to the repressive regime, and Postel fails completely to identify such connections.

    We need to build awareness and dispel illusions of our own and of others, but, again, I’ve seen considerable coverage of the repression of students and others in Iran in the mainstream press.  It’s not a covered-up issue that needs a campaign by the left to make information available.

    These are the reasons we have and should continue to put more of our effort into US supported bad guys that into US opposed bad guys.

    Posted by Dave Parks on Nov 27, 2003 at 5:31 AM

    Progressives should be speaking out in favor of the students who are seeking greater freedom under the theocratic regime in Iran.  However, we are in a tough position, as Americans, to speak with moral clarity about the need for democratic reform in Iran, since (as the author points out) the American CIA engineered the overthrow of Mossadegh in 1953, which led directly to the Islamic revolution in 1979 that deposed the shah.  One could even argue that this act of espionage inflamed and precipitated the rise of radical Islamic militants throughout the Middle East, that culminated in the devastating attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon.  In other words, we created the hell we are now living in.

    Posted by Stephen Kriz on Dec 9, 2003 at 5:50 PM

    I’m glad Stephen Kriz agrees with me that progressives ought to be speaking out in support of the student movement in Iran. And I agree with him they we’re in a “tough position” as Americans, given our government’s nefarious role in undermining democracy in Iran. But recognizing this tension should not keep us from acting in solidarity with our progressive counterparts in Iran today. By that logic, American progressives wouldn’t have supported the forces for progressive change in Guatemala, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Chile, East Timor, or myriad other countries, since the U.S. government has visited incalcuable suffering on those socieites, too. But we *did* mobilize around those cases—just as we should in the case of Iran today. Yes, we’re Americans, but we’re also internationalists and humanists, whatever our national citizenship.

    Posted by Danny Postel on Dec 10, 2003 at 1:55 AM
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Appeared in the December 22, 2003 Issue
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