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Jun 17 2009
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ImageThe Iranian Elections and a Hysterical Media
by Ron Jacobs

Here comes the hysteria and bold-faced lies. In the wake of the Iranian election, various commentators and so-called reporters in the United States are reacting as if the end of the world was at hand. Although nobody knows for certain and everyone only has the words of western press pundits and an angry candidate to go by, virtually every mainstream US news source is calling the re-election of Ahmadinejad the result of fraud.

There has been no verification of this from any objective source, nor has there been any proof beyond the speculation of media folks who either want to create a story or are so convinced of what they believe to be the incumbent’s essentially evil nature that they can not comprehend his re-election. A good example of this is a story by Bill Keller in the New York Times. In that piece, Ahmadinejad was once again incorrectly called a Holocaust-denier and his support was put down as being comprised mostly of women hating peasants and civil servants who somehow benefited from his patronage. The liberal reformer Moussavi’s supporters were portrayed in a considerably more favorable light.

Completely missing from Keller’s piece and many other pieces in the US mainstream media (and liberal magazines like the Nation) is any genuine attempt to analyze both the class nature of the different candidate’s supporters and the role Washington plays in the media’s perception of Iranian politics. Keller’s most honest analytical statement in his entire piece:

“Saturday was a day of smoldering anger, crushed hopes and punctured illusions, from the streets of Tehran to the policy centers of Western capitals.”

Keller and his fellow journalists accept that the desires of Western capitals, especially Washington, should be important to Iranians. While this may certainly be the case among a small number of the intelligentsia and business community in Iran, the fact is that the West, especially Washington, is still not very popular among the Iranian masses. Not only are they aware of decades of western intervention in their affairs, the fact that thousands of US troops continue to battle forces in two of Iran’s neighbors makes Washington unwanted and detested. Why should they do anything to please it? Yet, in the minds of the US news media, it is Washington’s needs that dominate all discussion.

As for the class analysis. Rightly or wrongly, Ahmadinejad seems to appeal to the majority of peasants and workers in Iran. Just like Marat and the Jacobins appealed to the peasants and urban poor during the French revolution while Brissot and the Girondins appealed to the merchants and educated classes, Ahmadinejad’s support comes from those who need bread while Moussavi’s comes from those with plenty of bread and now want more civil liberties. While it is arguably true that Ahmadinejad’s policies have caused as many economic policies as they have solved, the fact remains that his supporters believe in his 2005 campaign call to bring the oil profits to the dinner table.

Mr. Moussavi’s statements regarding the eventual reduction of commodity subsidies that benefit the poor may have hurt him in that demographic more than his supporters acknowledge. In a Washington Post article published the day before the election, it was noted (along with the fact that Ahmadinejad won the 2005 election with a “surprising” 62% of the vote) that his economic policies included the distribution of “loans, money and other help for local needs.” One of these programs involved providing insurance to women who make rugs in their homes and had been without insurance until Ahmadinejad came to power.

Critics, including Moussavi, argue that his “free-spending policies have fueled inflation and squandered windfall petrodollars without reducing unemployment.” There are other elements at play here, including the fabled corruption of certain unelected leaders in Iran and the role the international economic crisis plays in each and every nation’s economy–a factor from which Iran is not immune. In addition, the particular nature of an Islamic economy that blends government and private business creates a constant conflict between those who would nationalize everything and those who would privatize it all.

In regards to what this means for relations between Washington and Tehran–they will continue down whatever path Mr. Obama wishes them to go. Tel Aviv, which criticized the election results, would not have changed its desire to quash Tehran no matter who won. Indeed, the fact that Ahmadinejad was re-elected makes it easier for Tel Aviv to continue demonizing the only genuine threat to its dominance of the region.

The bottom line, however, is that the president of Iran really has no power in the course Iranian foreign policy takes. That power remains with the Council of Guardians and the legislature. Mr. Obama would do well to continue his attempts to negotiate without conditions. He would also be wise to end any covert activity against the Iranian government currently being conducted. The western media would do well to inform themselves on the real nature of Iranian politics and society instead of taking the viewpoint that what’s best for Washington is best for Tehran. Then again, that media should consider the non-Washington viewpoint in all of its international coverage.

For the left, the answer is clear. The situation in Iran has changed. The apparent popularity of Moussavi and other officially reocgnized reformers showed this before the election. The dispute over the truth of the election results proves this even further. However, neither Ahmadinejad or Moussavi represent a genuine move away from the power of the bazaar class and its appointed clerical council.

The desire for more civil freedoms must be coordinated with the need for economic justice. Both of these aspirations seem to be currently at odds. It seems apparent that only a leftist movement is capable of bringing the two together in a nation divided between its cities and its countryside;its middle class and its workers and rural dwellers. This was the case prior to the takeover of the Iranian revolution by socially conservative religious forces in 1980 and it could be the case again.

Ron Jacobs is the author of The Way The Wind Blew: A History of the Weather Underground. His most recent novel Short Order Frame Up is published by Mainstay Press. He can be reached at: rjacobs3625[at]charter.net.


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1. 17-06-2009 23:50
Western Murdochracy racist hypocrisy
A sensible, balanced article by Ron Jacobs in marked contrast to the salivating hysteria from the lying, racist Zionist (RZ)-beholden Mainstream media. 
 
As an agnostic, humanist humanitarian my prejudice is against theocracy and constraints on political freedom and freedom of expression and accordingly if I had been an Iranian I would probably have voted for Moussavi or another \"permitted\" progressive or Opposition candidate - but then I am NOT an Iranian.  
 
From the little I know about Iran I would suspect that Moussavi supporters were the majority in Teheran (and hence their evident aggrievement) - but then Teheran is not Iran.  
 
No evidence other than passionate assertion has been advanced for electoral fraud per se and I have no reason to believe that the Iranian elections were any more \"corrupt\" than those in the Western Murdochracies in which oligopoly media ultimately dictate the result between the almost indistinguishable, Bush-ite/neo-Bush-ite 2 major parties. 
 
The hypocrisy of the lying West is illustrated by the aftermath of the \"elections\" in the Occupied Palestinian Territories held under racist Zionist guns in 2006.  
 
Hamas overwhelmingly won with 76 seats out of 132 whereupon the West reiterated their \"convenient belief\" that Hamas representative are \"terrorists\" - and the racist Zionists (RZs) proceeded to kill or imprison the elected Hamas \"MPs\" . Further, in January 2009 the Israelis killed about 1,400 Gazans in an attempt to kill or capture the Hamas \"MPs\" still \"at large\" - ostensibly in response to zero (0) Israeli deaths from Gaza rockets in the previous year.  
 
Indeed Obama in his lying, racist, holocaust-ignoring Cairo Speech commented that \"“Hamas does have support among some Palestinians\" (76 seats out of 132 is \"support among some Palestinians\"!!) (see: Obama’s Speech to Muslim World. Zionist Spin & Orwellian Holocaust Denial ).  
 
The lying, racist, Zionist-beholden Mainstream media ignore the reality that the 50% of inhabitants of the Holy Land who are Indigenous Inhabitants have virtually no say in its government - the 1.5 million Palestinian Israelis suffer under Nazi-style Apartheid Laws and 2 of their major parties were banned; the 4 million Occupied Palestinians gave 76 out of 132 seats to Hamas in a body representing Occupied People but this was overturned by Apartheid Israel with Western backing.  
 
And of course this ignores the over 7 million Palestinian refugees, of whom many millions are outside the Holy Land and forbidden by the racist Zionists (RZs) to return or to vote (unlike overseas Lebanese in the recent Lebanon elections).  
 
Pro-Zionist Western racism, hypocrisy and lying over \"democracy\" in the Middle East is utterly repugnant.
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gpolya@bigpond.comNOSPAM! ">Dr Gideon Polya

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