Introduction
The Iranian revolution has been smoldering for more than three
years and is by no means over. Americans were first surprised by
the sudden collapse of the Shah, then outraged by the seizure of
the U.S. Embassy and the prolonged captivity of the fifty-two
hostages, and since the release of the hostages, are now
indifferent about Iranian affairs. This attitude is understandable
given America's preoccupation with many pressing national problems
and the confusing, chaotic course of revolutionary politics within
Iran. However, such indifference is ill-advised in view of the
continued importance of this strategic country.
The United States cannot afford to ignore Iran because Iran remains
a critical geopolitical factor in both the global and regional
balance of power. Although it has drifted from the western orbit,
Iran remains the chief barrier between the Soviet Union and the
center of gravity of world oil production -- the oilfields of the
Persian Gulf. Given the relatively large size of its population and
its industrial base, Iran looms large as the dominant power in the
Gulf as long as it maintains its territorial integrity. Nor can the
United States afford to ignore the consequences and by-products of
the Iranian revolution. The overthrow of the Shah and the
subsequent revolutionary ferment has eliminated U.S. influence
within Iran while boosting Moscow's. The revolutionary fervor of
Iran's Shiite Moslems may spill over into neighboring states;
indeed, the Iranian revolutionary regime has actively sought to
export revolution. The vital umbilical coard of petroleum that
stretches from the Persian Gulf to the industrialized West is thus
vulnerable to Iranian subversion of the Gulf's oil-exporting
states. It is similarly vulnerable to disruption from an expansion
of the Iraq-Iran war to the other Arab Gulf states. In short, Iran
is now a volatile revolutionary state fomenting instability in a
region of vital economic and strategic importance to the western
world.
How should the United States handle such a hot geopolitical
potato? Washington's policy should aim at four
goals:
1) it should preserve Iran as a barrier capable of constraining and
restraining the southern thrust of the Soviet empire, that is, it
should not distract the Iranians from the threat to their north or
push them into the Kremlin's arms;
2) it should preserve Western access to Persian Gulf oil in general
and Saudi oil in particular;
3) it should promote the easing of interstate tensions as a means
of fostering stability in the Gulf; as such, a negotiated end to
the war between Iraq and Iran would be in America's interest for it
would reduce the chances of additional oil supply disruptions and
would weaken Soviet leverage over both belligerents.
4) it should deter future acts of terrorism by impressing on the
Iranians and others the cost to Iran of the 444-day hostage crisis;
the hardline Islamic fundamentalists currently controlling Iran are
by and large the same group that obstructed efforts to resolve the
crisis, intent on squeezing as much domestic political benefit from
the confrontation as possible. The United States should seek to
penalize the hardline fundamentalists and withhold any support that
would strengthen their position, at least to the extent that it can
do so without jeopardizing its first three policy goals.
Washington's pursuit of these goals is hampered by a critical lack
of information on Iranian political developments. Therefore, the
first priority is to bolster U.S. information-gathering
capabilities from inside Iran. Iran's revolutionary regime is
currently tilting toward Moscow, something that Washington can do
little to prevent -- in the short run. However, once the eighty-two
year old Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini passes from the scene, the
revolutionary government will be increasingly challenged by
opposition groups eager for outside support. Washington should be
establishing quiet contact with these groups now, encouraging them
to unify their efforts to form an alternative to the repressive
regime that now dominates Iran.
Iran's Revolutionary Politics
The loose ad hoc coalition that forced the Shah into exile was
broad but shallow, consisting of many diverse political and social
groups from all parts of Iran's political spectrum. n1 The
revolutionary coalition was based on a negative consensus -- the
desire to topple the Shah. Beyond this anti-Shah consensus, no
agreement existed on the form that the post-revolutionary
government would take, let alone the policies that it would
implement. Once the initial flush of victory had worn off, the
latent cleavages in the revolutionary movement surfaced, and the
movement dissolved into three rival camps: the Islamic
fundamentalists, the moderate secular nationalists, and the radical
leftists.1
The charismatic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, spiritual leader of
the revolutionary forces, was the sole source of political
legitimacy in the early days of the revolution. Khomeini appointed
Mehdi Bazargan, a prominent liberal nationalist, as Prime Minister
of the provisional government and retired to the holy city of Qom
to distance himself from the fierce factional infighting that began
immediately after the Shah's ouster. As the Faqih, the interpreter
of divine law, Khomeini withdrew from the day-to-day affairs of
government and became a canny practitioner of the art of "leading
from behind" -- discerning and molding a consensus viewpoint on an
issue, them pronouncing it to be official policy. Operating as the
balance wheel of the revolution, Khomeini arbitrated between
contending factions to forestall the splintering of the
revolutionary coalition and preserve his own freedom to
maneuver.
During 1979, Iran became polarized as the revolutionary consensus
dissipated amid a series of disputes over the form of the new
government, the nature of the new constitution, the question of
federalism for Iran's restive minorities, women's rights,
censorship, and the harsh revolutionary justice meted out by
revolutionary tribunals. Bazargan's provisional government found
itself increasingly circumvented, outmaneuvered, and overruled by
the unrestrained excesses of revolutionary committees (komitehs)
that invoked Khomeini's name while arbitrarily intervening in all
aspects of Iranian life. The schism between the religious cum
political komitehs accountable only to Ayatollah Khomeini and the
more moderate secular provisional government grew increasingly wide
and finally led to the fall of the Bazargan regime in November 1979
when it refused to sanction the illegal seizure of the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran.
The collapse of Bazargan and the onset of the hostage crisis
ushered in the second stage of the Iranian revolution. With the
secular moderates discredited and derided for being "soft" on the
United States, the Revolutionary Council seized the reins of
government. The newly formed Islamic Republican Party (IRP), the
political arm of the fundamentalist Islamic clerics, rapidly
developed a hammerlock on Iranian political life. The American
hostages became symbolic pawns in the revolutionary power struggle
as they were incorporated into a traditional Iranian pastime: the
manipulation of foreign powers or nations to influence Iranian
domestic politics.2 The prolonged hostage crisis gave
Islamic fundamentalists considerable domestic political benefits.
The occupied embassy compound served as a lightning rod for protest
that distracted Iranians from festering socail and economic
problems that the mullahs (Islamic clergy) were ill-prepared to
resolve. It rekindled the fires of revolutionary zeal and provided
a menacing external enemy that temporarily reunified the radical
left and the Islamic right, each of which perceived the United
States as a threat to hard-won revolutionary gains.
In January 1980, Abolhassan Bani-Sadr was elected president of
Iran with 75 percent of the vote. He had been Khomeini's chief
lieutenant during his exile in Paris and the leading revolutionary
theoretician in the aftermath of the Shah's overthrow. But
Bani-Sadr proved to be an ineffective leader who failed to
establish a political party or an institutional power base to
enhance his authority. Although a popular figure, he was unable to
translate his personal popularity into real political power. Like
Bazargan, Bani-Sadr constantly clashed with the militant
fundamentalists over where to draw the line between Islam and the
practical requirements of government. Throughout 1980, the IRP,
with a majority of the seats in the Iranian parliament (Majlis),
whittled down Bani-Sadr's powers until he was little more than a
figurehead. They hamstrung his efforts to negotiate a deal to
resolve the hostage crisis and sniped at him for his eagerness to
reach a compromise with the "Great Satan" -- the United States. The
outbreak of the war with Iraq in Fall 1980 gave the beleaguered
president a political breathing spell. He made himself a focal
point for Iranian patriotism by making high profile visits to the
battlefront and castigating the fundamentalists for not trying
harder to resolve the hostage impasse, which had provoked the arms
embargo that hindered the Iranian war effort.
Pressure from the right continued. By Spring 1980, therefore,
Bani-Sadr began seeking political allies on the left. His
flirtation with the radical Islamic socialist Mujaheddin-e-Khalq
(People's Strugglers) and his efforts to cultivate close relations
with the armed forces alarmed Ayatollah Khomeini. When Bani-Sadr
refused to terminate his association with the Mujaheddin, Khomeini
set in motion the final "Bazarganization" of Bani-Sadr. On June 10,
Bani-Sadr was stripped of his post as Commander-in-Chief of the
Iranian armed forces. He went into hiding, was dismissed as
president on June 22, and fled to France in July in the company of
Massoud Rajavi, the leader of the Mujaheddin.
The fall of Bani-Sadr signalled the beginning to the third stage of
the revolution -- the final purge of the secular modernists and a
plunge into clerical fascism. The IRP had successfully mobilized
the ardently religious urban poor and lower middle classes to
squeeze the professional middle class and the liberal
intelligentsia completely out of the revolutionary power structure.
Because there was no longer any middle ground between the radical
left and the Islamic right, political violence between rival
extremist groups became commonplace. A reign of terror began. The
Mujaheddin fought a series of street battles with the Revolutionary
Guards in an effort to spark a popular uprising among the growing
number of people disenchanted with the harsh rule of the IRP.
However, the expected support was not forthcoming either because it
was not there in the first place or because potential opponents of
the regime were intimidated by the ruthless repression that the IRP
brought to bear upon the opposition. The Mujaheddin were apparently
more successful in staging individual acts of terrorism. On June
28, they bombed IRP headquarters killing IRP strongman Ayatollah
Beheshti along with seventy other IRP leaders; in a bombing on
August 30, they killed Bani-Sadr's successor, President Rajai along
with his prime minister, Muhammad Javad Bahonar.
The IRP response to the terrorism of the Mujaheddin was a massive
wave of arrests and summary executions. Over 2,700 suspected
opponents of the regime are believed to have been shot since June
1981, some of them disdainfully wrapped in American flags as if
they were American agents. Bodies often are not released until
weeks after execution to disguise signs of torture, believed to be
widespread. One revolutionary prosecutor ruled that Iranians down
to the age of nine years old could be executed if found guilty of
"crimes against God," a catchall phrase used to describe moral,
criminal, and political offenses. Although the total number of
executions is unknown because the present regime has stopped giving
public notice of them, Amnesty International estimates that over
4,300 people have been executed since Khomeini came to power. This
is many times more than the number executed for political reasons
during the Shah's entire thirty-eight year reign.
Presiding over Iran's reign of terror is President Hojatolislam Ali
Khamenei, elected to office in October 1981 without having made a
single campaign speech. Both Khamenei, the first cleric to hold the
presidency, and new Prime Minister Mir Hussein Moussavi, are IRP
hardliners pledged to resolutely suppress dissident political and
ethnic groups while relentlessly waging war against Iraq. Since
both leaders enjoy only limited public support outside the
fundamentalist camp and neither has demonstrated a willingness or
ability to compromise with centrist groups, the polarization of
Iran's body politic is likely to continue.
Former Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh was arrested in early
April for his alleged participation in an assassination attempt
against Ayatollah Khomeini. Ayatollah Shariatmadari, a moderate
religious leader who is critical of the extensive involvement of
the clergy in politics, was accused of complicity in the
assassination attempt. It is apparent that the IRP hardliners are
seeking to discredit moderate clerical and secular leaders in order
to attain undisputed control of post-Khomeini Iran.
Iran's Foreign Policy
The revolution transformed Iran from a pro-Western bulwark
against communism and an integral part of America's "twin pillar"
strategy in the Gulf, into a virulently anti-Western nonaligned
state. Although Tehran denounces both superpowers and trumpets
Khomeini's slogan "Neither East nor West," the fundamentalists
clearly consider Washington the greater threat to their revolution.
Hence, the United States is the "Great Satan" while the Soviet
Union is referred to as the "Lesser Satan." The cardinal tenet of
Iranian foreign policy vis-a-vis the superpowers is the principle
of "negative equilibrium" (movazen-e manfi) originally espoused by
the anti-Shah nationalist leader, Mohammed Mossadegh in the early
1950s. The aim is to safeguard Iranian independence by preventing
either superpower from establishing hegemony over Iran in the
military, political, economic, or cultural sphere.
In the regional political arena, revolution transformed Iran from a
secular status quo power into an aggressive promoter of radical
change vying for the leadership of the Islamic world. Under
Khomeini, Iran abandoned its tacit alliance with Israel, which Iran
had used as a counterweight to the Arab world, broke relations with
Israel and Egypt, and recognized the PLO.
Ayatollah Khomeini does not see himself as the leader of a nation
but as an inspired spiritual leader of Shiite Islam, a faith that
recognizes no national boundaries. As the self-appointed spiritual
guide of Shiites everywhere, Khomeini has attempted to replace the
loyalty of Shiites to their local regimes with a broader loyalty to
the Shiite clergy in general and the victorious Shiite
revolutionary forces in Iran in particular. Because the Shiites of
the Gulf region generally belong to the lower economic strata and
are treated as second-class citizens by the ruling Sunni regimes,
there exists a wellspring of discontent for Khomeini to tap and
exploit. He already is considered responsible for inciting violent
civil disorders among Shiites in Iraq (55 percent of the Iraqi
population) and among the 250,000 Shiites in Saudi Arabia's eastern
province. Armed political action cells disguised as Shiite study
groups have been uncovered in Kuwait and are believe to be part of
a Gulf-wide arms-smuggling network.
Iran also backed an abortive coup in Bahrein in December 1981
during which seventy Shiite Arabs were arrested for conspiring to
overthrow the ruling al-Khalifa family. Although the Shah withdrew
Iran's claim to Bahrein in 1970 after a U.N.-supervised plebiscite
indicated that the vast majority of the population favored
independence, the revolutionary Islamic Republic has reasserted
Iran's centuries old claim to Bahrein, the island-state often
referred to as Iran's "sixteenth province." In addition to Bahrein,
the emirates of Dubai and Kuwait contain large Shiite minorities,
which may be susceptible to Khomeini's brand of Islamic politics
since many are of Iranian descent and still speak Farsi.
The Arab states of the Persian Gulf reacted in an extremely
defensive manner when confronted with Iranian attempts to export
its revolution. In early 1981, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Bahrein,
Qatar, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates formed the Gulf
Cooperation Council, a collective security arrangement designed to
protect its members from Iranian military and subversive threats.
Saudi Arabia requested AWACS planes from the United States to help
protect its oilfields and worked to improve relations with Iraq to
offset worsening relations with Iran. Iraq's Baathist regime
decided that the best defense against Iran was a good offense.
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein launched a military attack against
Iran in September 1980 designed to: 1) humble the strident Shiite
revolutionaries, if not topple them from power; 2) force Iran to
suspend its destabilization campaign within Iraq as well as the
other Gulf states; 3) redraw the Iraq-Iran border by giving Iraq
full control over the disputed Shatt al-Arab waterway; and 4)
demonstrate the power of the Iraqi military machine and establish
Iraqi military supremacy in the Persian Gulf.
However, the Iraqis clearly underestimated the strength of Iranian
resistance. Although successful in occupying a wide swath of
Iranian territory in the early days of the war, Iraq lacked the
willingness or the ability to deal the Iranians a crushing blow.
The Iraqi generals were chosen on the basis of their political
loyalty, not their military acumen. Iraqi strongman Saddam Hussein,
moreover, was anxious to avoid heavy casualties for fear that his
heavily Shiite army would become demoralized or that his countrymen
would turn against his adventurous undertaking. On the other hand,
militant Shiitism extols martyrdom above all else. The Iranians,
particularly the fanatical Revolutionary Guards, thus were willing
to sacrifice their lives to defend their revolution. During 1981,
the Iranians stopped the Iraqis in their tracks and drove them back
across the Karun River. In late March 1982, a major Iranian
offensive pushed the Iraqis back along a broad front. In 1982, the
Iranians will probably be able to sustain their offensive momentum
and cross the border to carry the war into Iraq. Time appears to be
on their side, given their superior fighting spirit, greater
willingness to bear the costs of a war of attrition, and
three-to-one advantage in terms of population.
Saddam Hussein has shown signs of increasing desperation. He has
offered "unconditional cooperation" with any Iranian opposition
group and has solicited armed volunteers from Jordan and Egypt. To
finance the war, which costs an estimated $1 billion per month,
Hussein has been forced to borrow $12 billion from Saudi Arabia, $6
billion from Kuwait, $4 billion from the United Arab Emirates, and
$2 billion from Qatar. Tentative Iraqi peace feelers have been
adamantly rejected by the Iranians who proclaim their willingness
to fight on until the Iraqis have withdrawn from Iranian territory,
admitted that they were the aggressors, paid reparations of up to
$150 billion and taken back 120,000 refugees of Iranian descent
that they have expelled from Iraq in the last two years. In
mid-June, the Iraqis proclaimed a unilateral cease-fire and
promised to totally withdraw from Iranian territory within ten
days. The Iranians remain unappeased and have stated their
determination to continue the war until Saddan Hussein steps down
or is overthrown. At this point, Iran seems to be on the verge of
inflicting a humiliating defeat on Iraq, thereby assuring its
military primacy in the Persian Gulf for years to come.
The Soviet Union and Iran
The Kremlin had a cool but correct working relationship with the
Shah and did not jump on the revolutionary bandwagon until Fall
1978 when one of its propaganda organs, the National Voice of Iran,
began inflammatory radio broadcasts from inside Soviet territory.
Once the Shah had been ousted, the Soviets downplayed the role and
power of the religious opposition in the revolution and held the
Moslem fundamentalists in low regard except as a temporarily useful
disruptive force. Pravda often referred to the Iranian Islamic
Republic by deleting "Islamic" from its name and contended that the
revolution would not be complete until "progressive" elements had
seized control of the country. The Soviet-controlled Tudeh
communist party criticized the provisional government, Bani-Sadr,
and the Moslem clergy but resisted direct attacks on Ayatollah
Khomeini.
Moscow had little to lose by trying to stay on the right side of
such a militantly anti-American leader. Although Khomeini's vision
of a pan-Islamic theocratic state poses a long-term threat to the
loyalties of the fifty million Moslems under Soviet rule,
Khomeini's activities are a much greater threat to Western
interests in the short term. The USSR was gratified by the
Ayatollah's expulsion of American military advisors, the closure of
American electronic intelligence gathering facilities on the Soviet
border, the end of Iran's role as Persian Gulf "policeman," and the
open toleration of the long outlawed Tudeh party. Khomeini had done
what Moscow never had been able to do -- neutralize the pro-Western
"northern tier" alliance that shielded the Persian Gulf from Soviet
pressure.
In return, the Soviets sought to ingratiate themselves with the
Iranians. During the hostage crisis, they vetoed the U.N. Security
Council resolution calling for sanctions against Iran, offered the
Iranians spare parts and advisors to keep their oil industry going,
and allowed the Iranians extensive transit privileges to circumvent
the economic embargo imposed on them by the U.S. While the Soviets
officially have maintained neutrality in the Iraq-Iran war, they in
effect have tilted to Iran by limiting their arms shipments to Iraq
and sending arms to the Iranians through Syria, Libya, and North
Korea. Approximately 100 Soviet technicians are reportedly helping
to repair Soviet-made tanks captured from the Iraqis.
The Soviet Union has upgraded economic relations with Iran as well.
Bilateral trade in 1981 reached a record $1.2 billion,
approximately 30 percent higher than in 1978, the Shah's last year
in power. About 60 percent of Iran's foreign trade is now with the
Soviet bloc. On February 15, 1982, Iranian Energy Minister Hasan
Ghafurifarad signed a protocol in Moscow for "accelerated" economic
and technical cooperation. The protocol is believed to commit the
Soviets to augmenting the number of their economic advisors in Iran
working on approximately fifty joint industrial projects. The
Iranian Energy Minister's trip to Moscow may also presage the
resumption of Iranian natural gas exports to the Soviet Union
(long-interrupted by a bitter price dispute) and stepped-up
purchases of Iranian oil by Moscow and its Eastern European
satellites.
There are now up to 2,000 Soviet advisors in the country, many of
whom are believed to be working for the KGB. While this is about
the same number as were present in the Shah's last days, it is
feared that the Iranian security forces are no longer willing or
able to monitor the advisors' activities. The Soviets reportedly
also have sent internal security advisors to Iran to strengthen the
Iranian intelligence and security forces. 3 Yet Iranians
traditionally are fearful and suspicious of their Russian neighbors
and would be extremely reluctant to invite them to manage internal
Iranian affairs. With the exception of Poland, probably no country
in the world has had more experience fending off Soviet
imperialism. The Soviets have long manipulated Iranian separatist
movements to weaken Iran's central government. In 1920, they
supported the Gilani uprising of Kuchak Khan and in 1946 they made
an abortive attempt to create puppet regimes in Azerbaijan and
Kurdistan. The Soviet army left northern Iran after World War II
only under heavy American pressure.
The Iranians' almost innate hostility to communism and Soviet
atheism has been inflamed further by the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan. Khomeini repeatedly has denounced the Kremlin for its
intervention but has paid little more than lip service to the
Afghan national cause, particularly in the months since the Soviets
offered Iran help in circumventing the American economic embargo.
Although Iran's people sympathize with the Afghans, Iran's rulers
fear that the one million Afghan refugees inside Iran are potential
American proxies. The Soviets have exploited these fears along with
fears about Pakistan's improved relations with Washington to
enhance their own standing vis-a-vis the IRP.
Soviet-Iranian relations have been strained by the Kremlin's
refusal to accept Iran's unilateral abrogation of the 1921
Soviet-Iranian treaty, an agreement that gives the Soviets the
right to intervene in Iran if any other power should occupy Iran or
use Iran as a base against the U.S.S.R. Moscow's stubborn
insistence that the treaty is still in force is an ominous sign
that it contemplates intervention under some circumstances.
The Soviets currently have deployed 24 divisions, some 200,000 men,
along their 1,600-mile border with Iran. Although the force has
been considerably reinforced since the fall of the Shah, the bulk
of its units are kept ar reduced readiness levels and it would take
several weeks for them to be built up to full strength. An outright
Soviet invasion would be highly unlikely in the foreseeable future,
given the generally satisfactory state of Soviet-Iranian relations,
the fact that the Soviets remain preoccupied with Afghanistan, and
the heavy opposition and high casualty rates that the Soviets could
expect to sustain in a military operation against Iran as long as
the Spirit of martyrdom inspires the Revolutionary Guards. A more
likely scenario is the provision of Soviet Azerbaijani or Turkoman
"volunteers" to aid the Tudeh party in the event of a civil
war.
The current Soviet-Tudeh strategy vis-a-vis Iran is an attempt to
curry favor with Khomeini, ride in his wake, and outlast him in
hopes of being in a position to pick up the pieces when the IRP
regime falls apart. The Soviets need not rely on brute military
strength to work their will in Iran. They can offer carrots in the
form of economic aid and technical assistance or they can brandish
sticks by threatening to support such separatist groups as the
Kurds or to throw their weight behind the Iraqis. Their strong suit
is the mafia-style protection that they can furnish to Tehran --
insurance against internal and external security threats. The
longer Iran's slow-motion civil war drags on, the more tempted the
IRP will be to sign on.
The United States and Iran
Under the Carter Administration, the United States
obsessively searched for moderates in Iran to negotiate with --
first the stillborn Bakhtiar regime, then Bazargan, and finally
Bani-Sadr. By seeking moderates, Washington played into the hands
of the hardline Islamic fundamentalists and allowed them to
manipulate Iran's anti-American backlash as a means of isolating
and discrediting tthe moderates. The open courting of Bazargan's
provisional government also undoubtedly played a role in the
militants' decision to seize the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. Concerned
that the growing detente between the provisional government and
Washington would pave the way for a restoration of American
influence in Iran, the Islamic right took direct action to block
it.
In contrast to the Carter Administration which geared its diplomacy
to Iranian moderates, the incoming Reagan Administration targeted
its public statements for the ears of the hardliners, warning that
negotiations for the release of the hostages would become much
tougher and might be accompanied by military sanctions unless the
matter was resolved quickly. 4 Under the terms of
agreement, the United States was committed to lift all economic and
political sanctions against Iran, waive all damage claims by the
hostages and their families against Iran, assist Iran in recovering
the Shah's wealth, and promise nonintervention in Iranian internal
affairs. Reagan wisely rejected revenge as unworthy of the United
States and held out the prospect of future cooperation with Iran
once a stable government was installed that obeyed international
law.
Iranian-American relations have remained limited to low-level
contacts in the last year. The Swiss Embassy in Tehran looks after
American interest in Iran, and the Algerian Embassy does the same
for Iranian interests in the United States. The claims settlement
tribunal created to facilitate the litigation of commercial claims
between the two countries is bogged down in procedural issues. The
arbitration of disputed claims is scheduled to begin this fall.
Almost 4,000 American claims, totaling roughly $4 billion, have
been filed against Iran.
The Reagan Administration's policy toward Iran seems one of benign
neglect: keeping relations with Iran low-key and low-level in the
hope that time will close the wounds that have marred bilateral
relations. At the same time, the Administration has not gone out of
its way to do favors for the Iranians without a quid pro quo.
Example: in December, Washington blocked a request from an Iranian
concern seeking to purchase arms from an American weapons
manufacturer.
In late April 1982, the United States signed an agreement to buy
1.8 million barrels of Iranian oil for the Strategic Petroleum
Reserve at a cost of $53,120,000. Although the purchase price was a
relative bargain ($29.51 a barrel, or $4.49 less per barrel than
the official OPEC price), the political costs were heavy. Iranian
oil had been excluded from the American market since the onset of
the hostage crisis in November 1979, although the formal ban on
imports of Iranian oil was lifted under the terms of the
U.S.-Iranian agreement that freed the hostages. Friendly Arab Gulf
states were stung by the offhanded manner in which the U.S.
government opened up the American market to Iranian oil at the same
time that they were feeling increasingly threatened by Iran's
aggressive foreign policy. In their eyes, to save a few million
dollars, Washington had turned a blind eye to the anxieties of its
Arab friends and rewarded its uncompromising Iranian antagonists
by, in effect, subsidizing their war with Iraq. If Washington is
still hopeful of salvaging some sort of "strategic consensus" in
the Gulf, this clearly is not the way to go about it.
With the excpetion of the Iranian oil deal, the Reagan
Administration's low-key policy is probably the most realistic
choice since the U.S. lacks any real influence over Tehran. Future
U.S. policy will depend on the outcome of the revolutionary power
struggle now taking place in Iran.
Post-Khomeini Iran
The revolution against the Shah was centered in the cities and any
new Iranian opposition movement must triumph there if it is to
overthrow IRP hardliners. Power in Iran is measured by crowds in
the street. The mullahs have had the upper hand because they
control an extensive network of mosques with which to mobilize the
religious lower classes and they enjoy the backing of the
charismatic Khomeini who can fill the streets at a moment's notice.
There are nonetheless signs that the IRP's base of mass support is
fraying at the edges. Although working class families continue to
look to local mullahs for direction, unhappiness with central
government incompetence and corruption is growing. The urban poor
still revere Khomeini, but the surviving IRP leaders lack such
widespread personal popularity.
Once Khomeini dies, the IRP will lose its major drawing card and
chief source of legitimacy. Khomeini's heir apparent, Ayatollah
Montazeri, posesses neither Khomeini's personal charisma nor his
political acumen. There has been talk about setting up a ruling
council of three to five members that would fill the vacuum created
by Khomeini's departure. This would work in the short run but is
likely to increase factionalization within the IRP over time since
nobody is capable of playing Khomeini's role as the balance wheel
of the revolution.
Khomeini's passing is also likely to expose the rift within the
Shiite religious establishment over the proper role of the clergy
in politics. Shiite leaders affiliated with the religious schools
of Mashad are critical of the deep political involvement of the
activist clergy based at Qom. Several senior ayatollahs, who have
withheld their criticism of the IRP in deference to Khomeini, will
no longer feel constrained once Khomeini is gone. Such high level
religious opposition would be a serious threat to the IRP because
it would erode the moral absolutism that is the chief source of its
strength.
The IRP has also begun to alienate another important segment of
Iranian society -- the bazaaris (urban merchants). These Staunch
Islamic traditionalists provided the financial backing for the
revolutionary forces, but many of them have become disenchanted
because of Iran's deteriorating economic condition and their own
declining economic status. In late 1980, Khomeini attacked the
bazaaris for preferring profits to revolution, and in July 1981,
two prominent bazaaris were executed for anti-state activities.
Widespread dissatisfaction among the bazaaris would be dangerous to
the IRP because the merchants have the organization and financial
resources to help build a potent opposition movement.
Iran was led by three different presidents and four different prime
minsters in 1981. This rapid turnover, especially the impeachment
of Bani-Sadr by the IRP-controlled Majlis, undoubtedly has
undermined the legitimacy of the present rulers. The food
shortages, high unemployment, and rampant inflation give the
opposition exploitable issues that are likely to swell its number.
The IRP's repressive tools -- the Pasdaran (Revolutionary Guard),
Savama (the reincarnation of Savak), and the Hezbollahi (followers
of the Party of God, a loosely organized group of religious urban
poor who disrupt anti-regime demonstrations) -- are currently
strong enough to suppress the opposition. The IRP, however, will
probably become increasingly dependent on the armed forces to back
up its coercive apparatus as well as subdue the Kurds, who have
been fighting the central government on and off since the fall of
the Shah.
The Army was traumatized by its bloody attempts to suppress civil
uprisings in the last months of the Shah's regime and by repeated
purges since the revolution. Troop morale has recently been revived
by the patriotic impulses stirred by the Iraq-Iran war. Gradually
the Army is recovering the unity, autonomy, and prestige necessary
for political intervention. When Iranians tire of the shrill
apocalyptic fervor of the fundamentalist true believers, they may
look to an Iranian "Bonaparte" to restore order. While the Army is
currently preoccupied by the Iraq war, the ambitions of its leaders
eventually may pull it in other directions, particularly if
military leaders are encouraged to enter politics by the bazaaris
or moderate Shiite clerics. Given the wholesale removal of
American-trained military officers, a military coup would probably
not result in a Western-type secular government but in an Islamic
military regime.
The chief threat to the IRP now is the Mujaheddin, a seasoned,
tightly knit group denounced as "Islamic-Marxist" by the Shah and
as "hypocrites" by Khomeini. Formed in 1965, the Mujaheddin profess
an egalitarianism derived from a radical reinterpretation of Islam.
Although socialist, the Mujaheddin's strong nationalism puts it at
odds with Moscow. Dual Islamic and revolutionary credentials make
the Mujaheddin the only leftist group with mass support. The bulk
of its membership is drawn from the educated middle-class youth,
although it also has a following among the industrial workers and
young military officers.
The Mujaheddin functioned as a loyal opposition until the June 1981
ouster of Bani-Sadr when they went underground and tried to trigger
a mass uprising against the IRP. They have suffered heavy losses in
the last six months and their second in command, Musa Khiyabani,
was killed by the Revolutionary Guard in early February. Yet their
well-armed 10,000 to 20,000 members continue to mount bloody
hit-and-run attacks on the IRP. In October 1981, Mujaheddin leader
Massoud Rajavi and former President Bani-Sadr formed a government
in exile in Paris called the National Council of Resistance. The
Mujaheddin will undoubtedly remain a force in Iran for some time;
it is questionable, however, whether they will be able to expand
their base of support as the universities, their natural recruiting
grounds, have been closed since the April 1980 "cultural
revolution."
The other radical leftist groups have become inconsequential. The
Fedaye-e Khalq, a secular Marxist organization, splintered in June
1980 into a majority faction, which parrots the Tudeh party, and a
minority faction, which has all but merged with the Mujaheddin. The
small Maoist Peykar organization is an increasingly isolated clique
dying a slow death.
The Iranian exile community is also factionalized. Up to sixty
political organizations exist among the half million Iranian
expatriates living in the United States and Europe. The exile
groups remain bitterly divided and their chief assets -- their
connections with the Iranian armed forces -- have been severely
eroded by purges. The National Iranian Resistance Movement led by
former Prime Minister Bakhtiar and the Iranian Salvation Movement
led by General Gholam Ali Oveissi have been discredited within Iran
by their ties to Iraq. The paramilitary Azadegan ("Free Man")
organization led by General Bahram Aryana has demonstrated a talent
for symbolic operations such as the hijacking of an Iranian gunboat
in France, but has little political support within Iran. The Shah's
son Reza Pahlavi, has virtually no support within Iran and is
unlikely to return to Iran as Shah. Admiral Madani, a nationalist
with both anti-Shah and anti-Khomeini credentials, is reportedly
organizing a small paramilitary force in eastern Turkey and has
perhaps the best long-term political prospects of all exiled
political figures. However, he is severely handicapped by his
collaboration with Khomeini in the early days of the revolution.
Moreover, in the short term he, like the others, will not be a
factor where it counts the most -- on the streets of Iran's
cities.
While these groups compete with each other in open opposition to
Khomeini, the Tudeh party is obsequiously echoing the IRP line and
biding its time. The IRP detests the Tudeh but recognizes it as a
useful anti-American ally. Moreover, the Tudeh has apparently
infiltrated the Mujaheddin and has cooperated with the IRP to
eliminate them. At the same time, the Tudeh is believed to have
infiltrated the government bureaucracy and perhaps even the IRP
itself. As Iran's economic situation deteriorates, Iran's politics
are likely to become increasingly dominated by economic problems
that the IRP is ill-equipped to solve. At some point the Tudeh is
likely to break ranks with the IRP (if it is not purged by the IRP
first) and try to mobilize the growing army of the unemployed in a
bid for power. Although the Tudeh has historically been reviled by
most Iranians for its close ties to Moscow, its ranks may be
swelled by a bandwagon effect if Iranians should become resigned to
a Tudeh-Soviet victory.
Conclusion
The Iranian revolution has passed through three stages -- the
ouster of the Shah, the ouster of Bazargan, and the ouster of
Bani-Sadr. Ayatollah Khomeini's departure from the political scene
will usher in the fourth stage by considerably undermining the
popularity and legitimacy of the IRP regime. Although the United
States and Iran are natural allies with a common interest in
preserving Iranian independence and territorial integrity, the IRP
sees the U.S. as a cultural threat to traditional Iranian values
and as a political threat to its own power. Mutually beneficial
relations with Iran will be possible only after the IRP hardliners
have been replaced by a more pragmatic set of leaders. U.S.
relations, therefore, should not be restored fully with Iran until
the IRP has been squeezed out of power. To restore full bilateral
relations any sooner would only invite another embassy
seizure.
As long as Tehran insists on fomenting revolution in neighboring
countries, the United States must forego the purchase of Iranian
oil. In time of worldwide oil glut, Americans should not be
subsidizing Iranian revolutionary plots any more than they should
be subsidizing Libyan support for international terrorism.
The United States should keep open lines of communication with the
many Iranian political groups working to overthrow the IRP.
Washington should not openly endorse any of them, however, for that
would only fatally handicap them in Iranian domestic politics where
anti-Americanism is de rigueur. While the exile groups are
vociferous and well-financed, they are by and large out of the
action. The groups with the best chance of replacing the IRP are
inside Iran -- the Mujaheddin, armed forces, Tudeh and shattered
secular moderates. Washington should make it clear to these groups,
and to the wavering bazaaris and clerical moderates, that the U.S.
could live with and support a truly non-aligned Islamic Iran but
not a pro-Soviet Iran. By letting the Iranian opposition know that
the American door is still open to them, the United States would
minimize their willingness to cooperate with Moscow and its Tudeh
surrogates.
Washington should not openly work to undermine the IRP. This would
only discredit the opposition and nudge the IRP into a more
intimate embrace with the Soviets. Instead, the U.S. should wait
patiently for Iranian opposition groups to build up their strength
and encourage them to unite to pool their resources. In the
meantime, the United States should strengthen its covert
information-gathering capabilities concerning Iran, particularly in
regard to Soviet activities within the country. Washington is
currently overly dependent on information supplied by Iranian exile
groups, who have their own vested interests. Until a clearer
picture emerges of conditions inside the country, American moves to
erode the powerbase of the IRP are likely to be
counter-productive.
Washington should maintain its neutral position vis-a-vis the
Iran-Iraq war. Saddam Hussein is no friend of the West and does not
merit any assistance from Washington. His downfall is increasingly
likely, and any effort to postpone it would serve only to prolong
the war, raise Iran's diplomatic asking price for peace, and
strengthen Soviet-Iranian military cooperation. Given the Soviet
Union's abandonment of Iraq in pursuit of a more promising
relationship with Iran, Saddam Hussein's successors in Baghdad
could be expected to seek increased Western economic and technical
support and perhaps reestablish diplomatic relations with the
United States, broken during the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. Washington
should strive to shield its Arab friends in the Gulf from Iranian
aggression but should leave Saddam Hussein to fend for himself.
Hussein's fate would then serve as an object lesson to other Middle
Eastern regimes and reinforce the lessons learned by Siad Barre of
Somalia, Mohammed Daoud and Hafizollah Amin of Afghanistan: those
that make a pact with the Kremlin are likely to be discarded by the
Soviets at a moment's notice when they are no longer useful.
Finally, U.S. policy toward Iran must be conceived in the context
of East-West relations as well as regional considerations.
Washington should clearly signal Moscow that, despite the poor
state of U.S.-Iranian relations, the U.S. remains strongly
committed to Iran's independence and territorial integrity. Without
such a signal, Moscow could misjudge dangerously the American
reaction to Soviet adventurism in Iran in the 1980s in much the
same manner that it misjudged the American reaction to its Korean
gambit in 1950. An unambiguous American commitment to prevent
Iran's falling into the Soviet zone of control would go far to
deter Soviet intervention, constrain Soviet options, and encourage
Iranian anti-communist forces.
Nothing written here is to be construed as necessarily reflecting
the views of The Heritage Foundation or as an attempt to aid or
hinder the passage of any bill before Congress.
Endnotes
1 For a more detailed analysis of the Iranian revolution, see James Phillips, "The Iranian Revolution: Long Term Implications," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 89, June 15, 1979.
2 For a more detailed analysis of the hostage crisis, see James Phillips, "Iran, the United States and the Hostages: After 300 Days," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder No. 126, August 29, 1980.
3 See "Big Brother Moves In," Time Magazine, November 23, 1981, p. 44.
4 President Bani-Sadr later admitted that the hostages were eventually freed primarily "out of fear of Reagan." Interview with Bani-Sadr, SAIS Review, Winter 1981-82, p. 9.