by KARIM SADJADPOUR
Karim Sadjadpour, an associate at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the author of
"Reading Khamenei: The Worldview of Iran's Most Powerful Leader."
How has Iranian society changed over the 35 years since the
revolution?
Demographically, Iran is a much different society than it was 35
years ago. Its population has grown from around 35 million in 1979 to
approximately 75 million today. Before the revolution Iranians were a
predominantly rural people (around 55 percent), while three decades later a
large majority of Iranians (more than 70 percent) are urban dwellers.
Visitors to Iran are often struck by the society's many
dichotomies: Female education and literacy rates have increased dramatically since
1979, but women's rights have been curtailed.
The median age of Iranian society is 27, but the median age of the
country's powerful political players--including the Supreme Leader, Guardian
Council and Assembly of Experts--is well over 70.
Before the revolution, a secular autocracy presided over a largely
traditional population, while today a religious autocracy rules over an
increasingly secularized polity. (According to one oft-told joke, "Before
the revolution people used to drink outside their homes and pray inside their
homes; after the revolution people pray outside and drink inside.")
Thirty-three years ago Iranian society was steeped in
revolutionary fervor. Today it suffers from revolutionary fatigue. This is one
reason, among many, why Iran's 2009 uprising did not have the same durability
as thepopular uprisings which have unsettled
and unseated numerous Arab dictatorships. People may aspire for revolutionary
ends, but there's no romanticism about, and limited appetite for, revolutionary
means.
How has the political climate changed?
The story of the Iranian revolution and its aftermath was perhaps
most incisively articulated by reformist thinker Mostafa Tajzadeh, who's
currently in prison. Before the revolution, Tajzadeh said, Iranians enjoyed all
types of freedoms save for political freedom, which the revolution was meant to
rectify. After the revolution, Iranians not only failed to attain political
freedom, but they lost other freedoms in the process.
In some ways the political climate in Iran has come full circle
over the last 35 years. In the first decade of the revolution there was a cult
of personality around the revolution's father, Ayatollah Khomeini, whose word
was considered sacrosanct.
After Khomeini's death in 1989, there was a two-decade struggle between
pragmatic forces that believed the Islamic Republic needed to evolve with the
times, and revolutionary purists, led by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
who believed that compromising on revolutionary ideals could unravel the entire
system, just as perestroika did the Soviet Union.
Khamenei patiently but decisively prevailed, and in recent years
his followers have attempted to create for him a similar cult of personality.
Given his inferior clerical credentials, however, he has sought legitimacy in
the military barracks more than the mosques.
Indeed perhaps the biggest difference over the past three decades
has been the rise of the Revolutionary Guards as a political and economic
force. The Islamic Republic is increasingly a military autocracy cloaked in clerical
garb.
What is Iran's standing in the international community today?
Iran's international standing has also come full circle. The
combination of the revolution, the hostage-taking of U.S. diplomats, and the
eight-year war with Iraq turned Iran into an isolated pariah state for much of
the 1980s.
After Khomeini's death and the end of the war, under Presidents
Rafsanjani and then Khatami, Iran made it a priority to reconstruct its
war-torn economy and repair its foreign relations.
Over the last several years, a multitude of factors--Ahmadinejad's
bellicosity, the regime's brutal suppression of peaceful protesters, and the
Obama administration's unprecedented but unreciprocated attempts at
engagement--have in many ways returned Iran to relative isolation. To make
matters worse, its only consistent ally since
1979, the Assad regime in Syria, is on the verge of collapse.
In a recent BBC survey of 27
countries, including non-Western countries such as China, Nigeria, and the
Philippines, Iran was "the most negatively viewed of all countries
rated," including North Korea. Iran had only a 16 percent favorability
rating.
This is a sore point for many Iranians, who are fiercely proud,
nationalistic and aspire to play an important role on the global stage.
What is the state of Iran's economy compared with 35 years ago?
The Iranian economy remains heavily oil-dependent, but decreased
domestic production (due to an aging oil infrastructure, sanctions, and limited
foreign investment) and increased domestic energy consumption (due to a
population boom) have meant that Iran's oil exports have gone from 5m barrels
in 1978 to a bit more than 2m barrels per day in 2012.
Given growing energy demand from countries like China and India,
coupled with political risk in the Middle East, the Iranian economy has
benefited from an unprecedented oil windfall.
According to some estimates, of the approximately $1 trillion in
total oil income Iran has earned over the last century, a remarkable 60 percent
was earned since the election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2005.
Despite this natural wealth, the economy remains the Islamic
Republic's Achilles heel, and people complain incessantly about the country's
rampant inflation and unemployment, as well as endemic mismanagement and
corruption.
Putting aside economic facts and figures, on an anecdotal level
the sense of economic dismay among many Iranians has been heightened in recent
years when visiting their thriving neighbors Turkey and Dubai, whom they have
historically viewed with a degree of cultural superiority.
What is the state of Iranian ideology today?
I would argue that there are three remaining symbolic pillars of
Iran's revolutionary ideology: "Death to America," "Death to
Israel," and the veil, or hejab, which symbolizes
Islamic piety.
These three pillars have in a way metastasized. They've become an
inextricable part of the regime's identity and are likely to remain so as long
as Ayatollah Khamenei remains Supreme
Leader.
On a societal level, however, the utopian revolutionary ideology
of 1979 has produced widespread disillusionment three decades later. Many
analysts in Tehran liken it to the last decade of the Soviet Union, when few
true believers remained, even among regime insiders.
In contrast to Mikhail Gorbachev, however, Iran's leadership
apparently is still prepared to use widespread and sustained repression rather
than relinquish power.
As the late George Kennan once wrote about the Soviet Union,
Iran's lack of ideological legitimacy has necessitated coercive legitimacy:
"Let it be stressed again that subjectively these men
probably did not seek absolutism for its own sake. They doubtless believed--and
found it easy to believe--that they alone knew what was good for society and
that they would accomplish that good once their power was secure and
unchallengeable. But in seeking that security of their own rule they were
prepared to recognize no restrictions, either of God or man, on the character
of their methods. And until such time as that security might be achieved, they
placed far down on their scale of operational priorities the comforts and
happiness of the peoples entrusted to their care."
In terms of how Iranian ideology resonates abroad, the young
Iranian scholar Mohammad Tabaar put it
best when he said, "There was a time when Iran would rely on its
revolutionary ideology to project power. Today, Iran uses its power to project
ideology." In other words, as witnessed over the last year in the Arab
world, Iran has increasingly few constituents in the Arab and Muslim world who
wish to import their ideology. Instead Tehran has had to struggle to export it,
increasingly via force and intimidation.
This article is presented by Tehran Bureau, the U.S. Institute of
Peace, and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars as part of the
Iran project at iranprimer.usip.org.
Read more: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2012/02/comment-iran-then-and-35-years-after-the-revoltion.html#ixzz2sPgsBAxa
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