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Smoke Signals from Teheran to the Pasig River

smokesignals

6/23/2009: Iranian Clerics Join Protests, Karroubi Joins the Fray

Reformist opposition candidate Karroubi joins the fray.

The “assaults, beatings and murder of innocent people” were committed by plain-clothed security forces, not by demonstrators as the Iranian media would like its audiences to believe, Karroubi said in an open letter addressed to Ezattollah Zarghami, which was posted on Karroubi’s Web site.

“You know well that those who support Mr. Ahmadinejad’s government today are promoters of fanatic and Taliban-like Islam,” Karroubi said.

Iranian clerics are also joining the protests

CNN reports that on his Web site, Grand Ayatollah Hussein Ali Montazeri described government efforts to crackdown on the protests as threatening the legitimacy of the Islamic Republic because it was no longer representing all the people.

Moussavi ally and former president Mohammad Khatami also said in a statement that to “protest in a civil manner… is the definite right of the people and all must respect that.”

The Iranian clerics are now stepping up to the plate as protests seemingly dwindle.

What’s not being told is that the protests would have been larger. What’s not being shown on the media is the Ahmadinejad administration’s actions of  preventing buses from other cities to enter Tehran for fear that the buses carry more protesters (sounds familiar?). Political analyst Karim Sadjadpour of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace provides an in-depth view on NPR’s Fresh Air.

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6/22/2009: Ahmadinejad and Khamenei’s Empire Strikes Back

This post takes off from a previous blog on Iran’s Summer of Discontent. The situation seems to be heading towards an end game sooner than expected. Highly influential open source intelligence organization Stratfor makes the case for a Tiananmen-style end game.

In his article The Iranian Election and the Revolution Test, Stratfor CEO, George Friedman writes:

Successful revolutions have three phases. First, a strategically located single or limited segment of society begins vocally to express resentment, asserting itself in the streets of a major city, usually the capital. This segment is joined by other segments in the city and by segments elsewhere as the demonstration spreads to other cities and becomes more assertive, disruptive and potentially violent. As resistance to the regime spreads, the regime deploys its military and security forces. These forces, drawn from resisting social segments and isolated from the rest of society, turn on the regime, and stop following the regime’s orders. This is what happened to the Shah of Iran in 1979; it is also what happened in Russia in 1917 or in Romania in 1989.
Revolutions fail when no one joins the initial segment, meaning the initial demonstrators are the ones who find themselves socially isolated. When the demonstrations do not spread to other cities, the demonstrations either peter out or the regime brings in the security and military forces — who remain loyal to the regime and frequently personally hostile to the demonstrators — and use force to suppress the rising to the extent necessary. This is what happened in Tiananmen Square in China: The students who rose up were not joined by others. Military forces who were not only loyal to the regime but hostile to the students were brought in, and the students were crushed.

A Question of Support

This is also what happened in Iran this week. The global media, obsessively focused on the initial demonstrators — who were supporters of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s opponents — failed to notice that while large, the demonstrations primarily consisted of the same type of people demonstrating. Amid the breathless reporting on the demonstrations, reporters failed to notice that the uprising was not spreading to other classes and to other areas. In constantly interviewing English-speaking demonstrators, they failed to note just how many of the demonstrators spoke English and had smartphones. The media thus did not recognize these as the signs of a failing revolution.

Later, when Ayatollah Ali Khamenei spoke Friday and called out the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, they failed to understand that the troops — definitely not drawn from what we might call the “Twittering classes,” would remain loyal to the regime for ideological and social reasons. The troops had about as much sympathy for the demonstrators as a small-town boy from Alabama might have for a Harvard postdoc. Failing to understand the social tensions in Iran, the reporters deluded themselves into thinking they were witnessing a general uprising. But this was not St. Petersburg in 1917 or Bucharest in 1989 — it was Tiananmen Square.

In the global discussion last week outside Iran, there was a great deal of confusion about basic facts. For example, it is said that the urban-rural distinction in Iran is not critical any longer because according to the United Nations, 68 percent of Iranians are urbanized. This is an important point because it implies Iran is homogeneous and the demonstrators representative of the country. The problem is the Iranian definition of urban — and this is quite common around the world — includes very small communities (some with only a few thousand people) as “urban.” But the social difference between someone living in a town with 10,000 people and someone living in Tehran is the difference between someone living in Bastrop, Texas and someone living in New York. We can assure you that that difference is not only vast, but that most of the good people of Bastrop and the fine people of New York would probably not see the world the same way. The failure to understand the dramatic diversity of Iranian society led observers to assume that students at Iran’s elite university somehow spoke for the rest of the country.

Tehran proper has about 8 million inhabitants; its suburbs bring it to about 13 million people out of Iran’s total population of 70.5 million. Tehran accounts for about 20 percent of Iran, but as we know, the cab driver and the construction worker are not socially linked to students at elite universities. There are six cities with populations between 1 million and 2.4 million people and 11 with populations of about 500,000. Including Tehran proper, 15.5 million people live in cities with more than 1 million and 19.7 million in cities greater than 500,000. Iran has 80 cities with more than 100,000. But given that Waco, Texas, has more than 100,000 people, inferences of social similarities between cities with 100,000 and 5 million are tenuous. And with metro Oklahoma City having more than a million people, it becomes plain that urbanization has many faces.

Winning the Election With or Without Fraud

We continue to believe two things: that vote fraud occurred, and that Ahmadinejad likely would have won without it. Very little direct evidence has emerged to establish vote fraud, but several things seem suspect.

For example, the speed of the vote count has been taken as a sign of fraud, as it should have been impossible to count votes that fast. The polls originally were to have closed at 7 p.m. local time, but voting hours were extended until 10 p.m. because of the number of voters in line. By 11:45 p.m. about 20 percent of the vote had been counted. By 5:20 a.m. the next day, with almost all votes counted, the election commission declared Ahmadinejad the winner. The vote count thus took about seven hours. (Remember there were no senators, congressmen, city council members or school board members being counted — just the presidential race.) Intriguingly, this is about the same time in took in 2005, though reformists that claimed fraud back then did not stress the counting time in their allegations.

The counting mechanism is simple: Iran has 47,000 voting stations, plus 14,000 roaming stations that travel from tiny village to tiny village, staying there for a short time before moving on. That creates 61,000 ballot boxes designed to receive roughly the same number of votes. That would mean that each station would have been counting about 500 ballots, or about 70 votes per hour. With counting beginning at 10 p.m., concluding seven hours later does not necessarily indicate fraud or anything else. The Iranian presidential election system is designed for simplicity: one race to count in one time zone, and all counting beginning at the same time in all regions, we would expect the numbers to come in a somewhat linear fashion as rural and urban voting patterns would balance each other out — explaining why voting percentages didn’t change much during the night.

It has been pointed out that some of the candidates didn’t even carry their own provinces or districts. We remember that Al Gore didn’t carry Tennessee in 2000. We also remember Ralph Nader, who also didn’t carry his home precinct in part because people didn’t want to spend their vote on someone unlikely to win — an effect probably felt by the two smaller candidates in the Iranian election.

That Mousavi didn’t carry his own province is more interesting. Flynt Leverett and Hillary Mann Leverett writing in Politico make some interesting points on this. As an ethnic Azeri, it was assumed that Mousavi would carry his Azeri-named and -dominated home province. But they also point out that Ahmadinejad also speaks Azeri, and made multiple campaign appearances in the district. They also point out that Khamenei is Azeri. In sum, winning that district was by no means certain for Mousavi, so losing it does not automatically signal fraud. It raised suspicions, but by no means was a smoking gun.

We do not doubt that fraud occurred during Iranian election. For example, 99.4 percent of potential voters voted in Mazandaran province, a mostly secular area home to the shah’s family. Ahmadinejad carried the province by a 2.2 to 1 ratio. That is one heck of a turnout and level of support for a province that lost everything when the mullahs took over 30 years ago. But even if you take all of the suspect cases and added them together, it would not have changed the outcome. The fact is that Ahmadinejad’s vote in 2009 was extremely close to his victory percentage in 2005. And while the Western media portrayed Ahmadinejad’s performance in the presidential debates ahead of the election as dismal, embarrassing and indicative of an imminent electoral defeat, many Iranians who viewed those debates — including some of the most hardcore Mousavi supporters — acknowledge that Ahmadinejad outperformed his opponents by a landslide.

Mousavi persuasively detailed his fraud claims Sunday, and they have yet to be rebutted. But if his claims of the extent of fraud were true, the protests should have spread rapidly by social segment and geography to the millions of people who even the central government asserts voted for him. Certainly, Mousavi supporters believed they would win the election based in part on highly flawed polls, and when they didn’t, they assumed they were robbed and took to the streets.

But critically, the protesters were not joined by any of the millions whose votes the protesters alleged were stolen. In a complete hijacking of the election by some 13 million votes by an extremely unpopular candidate, we would have expected to see the core of Mousavi’s supporters joined by others who had been disenfranchised. On last Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, when the demonstrations were at their height, the millions of Mousavi voters should have made their appearance. They didn’t. We might assume that the security apparatus intimidated some, but surely more than just the Tehran professional and student classes posses civic courage. While appearing large, the demonstrations actually comprised a small fraction of society.

Tensions Among the Political Elite

All of this not to say there are not tremendous tensions within the Iranian political elite. That no revolution broke out does not mean there isn’t a crisis in the political elite, particularly among the clerics. But that crisis does not cut the way Western common sense would have it. Many of Iran’s religious leaders see Ahmadinejad as hostile to their interests, as threatening their financial prerogatives, and as taking international risks they don’t want to take. Ahmadinejad’s political popularity in fact rests on his populist hostility to what he sees as the corruption of the clerics and their families and his strong stand on Iranian national security issues.

The clerics are divided among themselves, but many wanted to see Ahmadinejad lose to protect their own interests. Khamenei, the supreme leader, faced a difficult choice last Friday. He could demand a major recount or even new elections, or he could validate what happened. Khamenei speaks for a sizable chunk of the ruling elite, but also has had to rule by consensus among both clerical and non-clerical forces. Many powerful clerics like Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani wanted Khamenei to reverse the election, and we suspect Khamenei wished he could have found a way to do it. But as the defender of the regime, he was afraid to. Mousavi supporters’ demonstrations would have been nothing compared to the firestorm among Ahmadinejad supporters — both voters and the security forces — had their candidate been denied. Khamenei wasn’t going to flirt with disaster, so he endorsed the outcome.

The Western media misunderstood this because they didn’t understand that Ahmadinejad does not speak for the clerics but against them, that many of the clerics were working for his defeat, and that Ahmadinejad has enormous pull in the country’s security apparatus. The reason Western media missed this is because they bought into the concept of the stolen election, therefore failing to see Ahmadinejad’s support and the widespread dissatisfaction with the old clerical elite. The Western media simply didn’t understand that the most traditional and pious segments of Iranian society support Ahmadinejad because he opposes the old ruling elite. Instead, they assumed this was like Prague or Budapest in 1989, with a broad-based uprising in favor of liberalism against an unpopular regime.

Tehran in 2009, however, was a struggle between two main factions, both of which supported the Islamic republic as it was. There were the clerics, who have dominated the regime since 1979 and had grown wealthy in the process. And there was Ahmadinejad, who felt the ruling clerical elite had betrayed the revolution with their personal excesses. And there also was the small faction the BBC and CNN kept focusing on — the demonstrators in the streets who want to dramatically liberalize the Islamic republic. This faction never stood a chance of taking power, whether by election or revolution. The two main factions used the third smaller faction in various ways, however. Ahmadinejad used it to make his case that the clerics who supported them, like Rafsanjani, would risk the revolution and play into the hands of the Americans and British to protect their own wealth. Meanwhile, Rafsanjani argued behind the scenes that the unrest was the tip of the iceberg, and that Ahmadinejad had to be replaced. Khamenei, an astute politician, examined the data and supported Ahmadinejad.

Now, as we saw after Tiananmen Square, we will see a reshuffling among the elite. Those who backed Mousavi will be on the defensive. By contrast, those who supported Ahmadinejad are in a powerful position. There is a massive crisis in the elite, but this crisis has nothing to do with liberalization: It has to do with power and prerogatives among the elite. Having been forced by the election and Khamenei to live with Ahmadinejad, some will make deals while some will fight — but Ahmadinejad is well-positioned to win this battle.

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Is Teheran indeed on the way to becoming the new Tiananmen? It may or it may not as these things have a way of turning out. Regime change may not have been achieved but the cracks in the power structure are stark.

The similarity of the results of the Iranian summer and Philippines’ EDSA III endgame is obvious. Political power is still a game between the political elite (trapos and oligarchs/clerics) and the electorate select between factions of the elite.

The relevance of learning from the Iranian experience becomes more striking as the Philippines approaches another electoral cycle. The suppression tactics are familiar. While bloodshed has not been filmed in the Philippines, the effects of midnight abductions, “zoning”, hamleting, “salvaging”, paramilitary volunteers, military/police brutality, have the same chilling and repugnant effect.

Perhaps, not as dramatic as the Iranian experience, but on the long term, the cumulative body count is probably even higher and as bloody. Iran clamps on its media, but, they do get to live, are able to try to publish and fight again another day. In the Philippines, media practitioners, unionists, peasants not in the graces of the powers that be have a habit of disappearing unceremoniously and violently. Pinoy blood is as red as Iranian blood.

Of Trial Balloons and Smoke Signals

The Philippine political elite has a habit of sending trial balloons to gauge the public’s response to agenda driven by self-interest but passed off as being for the greater good. This is further sweetened by patronage, which later on is “reimbursed” many times over. At times, carrots are offered. At times, threats of using the stick are used. A veritable arsenal of smokes and mirrors are presented.

Woe to an undiscerning public, it will not stand a chance, UNLESS, a conscious effort is made to wade through the muck and get down to the meat or the lack of it. A transformation from being undiscerning to one of conscious and constant re-evaluation will help level the playing field. Failure to do so will lead the Philippines to the same familiar worn-out unproductive path of bankruptcy and stagnation.

The Philippine 2010 elections can once again, turn out to be an intramural between the political elite where voters are made to choose between evil and less evil – but evil nonetheless.

Seeing Through the Smokes and Mirrors

The public can undertake programs that truly deliver the goods. Politicians are a means to an end, and they are only one of the many means available. There are other avenues for achieving prosperity and stability in our communities – and it can start with individuals creatively working together for a common cause to improve education, health, and the environment. Discernment and cohesion however will not be served on a silver platter; we have to actively seek it as a nation.

At the very least, the journey has gone beyond the first step. We can choose to be fearful of the future or we can choose to be confident knowing we helped create the future by acting on it today. We can take the road that leads to Tiananmen and Teheran or we can choose otherwise.

We need not stick to smokes and mirrors in the digital age. The public can select, support, campaign for, raise funds for, and evangelize for candidates with the push of a button and the click of a mouse not just during elections but also in between elections.

What is clear though (to me anyway) is that, this time around - it’s not just the current administration that is sending out trial balloons and smoke signals – Filipinos are watching and clicking away.

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Comments

  1. Joe America says:

    View from the sidelines: I think the pressure on Ms. Arrroyo and other top leaders favoring a smooth 2010 transition will grow and grow and grow as opinion leaders ring in. An attempted “legal coup” by Ms. Arroyo would be too obvious, too blatantly wrong, to gather a sustained following. Nor will a hurried re-write of the Constitution to rush-rush recast the form of government occur; it is also blatantly wrong. I don’t think Iran-style, violence-provoking protests will be needed. I think Ms. Arroyo is at her wits end, as evidenced by her tantrum a couple of weeks ago that provoked the ill-mannered rush-rush 1109 resolution. Perhaps it is wrong to think of Ms. Arroyo is in control, even now.

    Joe

    • BongV BongV says:

      Joe:

      Gloria appears isolated at the moment, but she is still holding the reins of government, therefore, she and her allies are still in control of government.

      Will still wait and see. WHAT ELSE her administration will pull out of its bag of tricks.

      Oftentimes, it’s not the administration that bears watching I have seen people with short memories vote for Marcos cronies, then wonder why the plunder goes on unabated. Ahmadinejads come to power in the Philippines by the force of the DE group’s vote, despite admonition from opinion leaders.

    • Bencard says:

      you really have a fetish on our president, don’t you joe? and you think she’s “at her wits end”, huh? where did you get the information that she had a “tantrum”? the president is the president for another full year. can’t she exercised her authority over her subordinates without being bad-mouthed by an interloper? why would there be any need for her to be “pressured” to follow a “smooth transition” in 2010? and who, pray tell, is “in control” now, the abu sayyaf?

      • Joe America says:

        Bencard. Answers, in order: No. I don’t know. Newspaper quote from House leader; do you get the Inquirer there? No, she is in charge of the country that ranks among the worst in the world in corruption, near the end of her term of office; I defended her for three years and she (and her hubby) have done nothing but embarrass me; and you are a long term interloper. For the good of the Philippines and the people who want stability. The forces of good.

        Joe

      • Bencard says:

        and who do you think you are “defending” them? what can you do beyond joining the cacophony of voices for or against her? embarrass you, how? do you think they would worry at all that an alien is not pleased by their actions, or by what other outsiders are saying about them?

      • Joe America says:

        Ben,

        Juices, you are full of questions. We disagree. Leave it at that. I am done with the answers.

        Joe

  2. Bencard says:

    bongv, has there been any report of alleged salvaging, disappearance, harassment, “hamletting”, zoning or killings of journalists (other than the usual, run-of-the-mill, criminal acts) in the philippines lately? i don’t think killings by the police or government forces are necessarily politically-inspired.

    • BongV BongV says:

      bencard:

      The UN’s Alston Report has the details, although the government will contest it.
      what am saying is that – the cumulative total of politically inspired killings dating all the way back from 1972 to 1984 up to the present (with journalism becoming a hazardous profession) most likely is at parity or even outnumbers the number of Iranians dying in the recent wave of protests.

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