Here’s something I’ve had to write at short notice for the issue of Socialist Resistance that’s out next week.

The theocratic regime which has ruled Iran since 1979 was created by a victorious counter-revolution. Ayatollah Khomeini’s “Islamic revolution” succeeded in defeating the real revolution by “joining it”, supporting a faction within the opposition to the Shah which would give it some authority among the masses. Some socialists at the time, such as the Tudeh interpreted the Khomeini leadership as middle class nationalists leading a popular anti-imperialist revolution. It was nothing of the sort. Its purpose was to defeat the working class and peasantry and ensure a stable bourgeois state. Those small groups on the Iranian left which did understand this at the time were hopelessly insufficient to make a real impact on events and the larger organisations were hopelessly unclear about what Khomeini represented.

Mir Hussein Mousavi and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad were both politically responsible for the murders of thousands of socialists and trade unionists during the counter-revolution. These were the people who had been occupying factories and oil fields under workers’ control. Neither candidate is progressive or politically supportable for socialists. They were the butchers of the Iranian labour movement thirty years ago.

Mousavi’s electoral programme was a more thoroughgoing neoliberal economic policy, a slight liberalization of the oppressive dress code the Iranian State imposes on women, a relaxation of the more draconian restraints on personal behaviour and a less confrontational attitude to the Obama administration. Ahmadinejad made his appeal to the poor and the religious. He made great play of his personal integrity and his anti-corruption campaigns. Ahmadinejad used some of the $250 billion in extra oil revenues since his election in 2005 to increase state employees’ pay, aid the poor and run local development schemes. At the same time he relies on a number of para-state organisations to repress decent and imposes countless petty limits on people’s freedom.

From afar it’s very difficult to say whether or not Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the Iranian presidential election only as a result of ballot rigging. Ahmadinejad’s vote share of the vote was close to his winning percentage in 2005 The point of course is that whether or not this is the case the ruling clerics would have little hesitation in rigging any ballot, presidential or otherwise if it suited their interests to do so and they felt they could get away with it. Undoubtedly many people in Iran are aware of this.

In any event both Ahmadinejad and Mir Hussein Mousavi were bourgeois candidates and the differences between them merely reflected differences within both the ruling class and the clerical elite of Iran.

This was a bourgeois election in the most literal and meaningful sense of the term given that any form of left or working class candidate if even on the most minimal reformist basis was absent. This is not surprising given that any form of independent working class organisation has been subject to repression by the state. Despite such repression there is though an incipient workers movement in Iran. The statement on the election by the Vahed Busworkers syndicate which appeared on various websites during the days of the June demonstrations took an elementary working class position on the election saying “In recent days, we continue witnessing the magnificent demonstration of millions of people from all ages, genders, and national and religious minorities in Iran. They request that their basic human rights, particularly the right to freedom and to choose independently and without deception be recognised.”

It is not right to call the events which followed the Iranian election a revolution. The Shah was brought down by a genuine revolution which was able to destroy the old regime’s army, police and gangster organisations. By contrast the demonstrations against Ahmadinejad melted away at the first hint of serious repression and it had not spread significantly to other parts of the country. The hundreds of thousands of people who took to the streets to voice their frustration with Iranian society had not reached a point where they wanted to bring down the regime. Their figurehead Mousavi was a player in a power struggle between two factions which support the Islamic Republic as it presently exists.

As the masses demobilise there will be some switching of roles and positions inside Iran and Mousavi’s supporters are the losers. The unknown factors are the extent to which the organisations of Iran’s working class have learned the power of political organisation and whether a new generation of young workers and students is learning that to overthrow the repressive theocracy a new revolution is needed with an entirely new programme.

35 responses to “Iranian election – a learning experience”

  1. “By contrast the demonstrations against Ahmadinejad melted away at the first hint of serious repression and it had not spread significantly to other parts of the country. The hundreds of thousands of people who took to the streets to voice their frustration with Iranian society had not reached a point where they wanted to bring down the regime. Their figurehead Mousavi was a player in a power struggle between two factions which support the Islamic Republic as it presently exists.”

    I think it could be premature to say the demonstrations have melted away. Is it the case that they didn’t spread to other parts of the country? I agree that they were “voicing their frustration with the regime”, but this means that they were already going beyond a position of merely replacing Ahmedinajad with Mousavi. For that reason, there should be an expression in this editorial of unequivocal support for the demonstrations and for the demand for annulment of the election. (Of course, we would add a series of further democratic demands)

    I think it would also be useful to note that the regime chose the candidates for the elections and rejected 450 of them.

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  2. Martin – I’m curious where you think the fudge is.

    The piece begins by saying that the regime is the fruit of a counter revolution. It says that both men were involved in suppressing the revolution. It point to some weak signs of workers’ independent action. It makes an assessment that the recent events are protests rather than a pre-revolutionary situation and looks forward to the emergence of a new revolutionary generation.

    Phil – I thought the tenor of the piece was supportive of the protestors while avoiding tagging on the traditional shopping list of demands but I’m open to suggestions.

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  3. Well I hope that someone gives it a good edit making clear that SR does support the uprising against the regime. The only mention of it is when you quote the bus workers as supporting the protestors.

    Like Phil above I am surprised you are so quick to declare the movement dead. We will see.

    Some comrades might see “the fudge” in the fact that SR is once again is remaining silent on the political antics of their Respect MP and his support for the Iranian regime.

    But they swallowed his anti-abortion activities in parliament and his sexist remarks in the Daily Record – why shouldn’t they swallow his support for Ahmadinejad?

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  4. Galloway hasn’t said he supports Ahmedinejad; rather that it’s unlikely that the (more) neoliberal candidate won the election.

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  5. Stuart, perhaps you need to read Liam’s article in the context of our leaflet, which endorses and reprints the statement of the bus workers’ union: http://socialistresistance.org/?p=561 and Campaign Iran’s statement of support for the demonstrations, which we also republished: http://socialistresistance.org/?p=554

    A week is a long time in politics but, as it stands, Liam’s judgment about the decline of the movement is spot-on.

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  6. well here http://www.workersliberty.org/story/2009/06/20/iran-confrontation-looms-stand-workers-women-and-students is the text of the leaflet that I’ll be giving out at the demo in leeds this lunchtime; it ends thus:

    On 26 June there will be a Global Solidarity Action Day to demand union rights for Iranian workers. At the end of last year the dictatorship arrested and jailed many union leaders (there was a simultaneous crackdown on Kurdish political activists). Mansour Osanloo, leader of Tehran’s bus workers syndicate, is still in jail — he was sentenced to five years in July 2007. Whatever happens in the next days socialists in the west should a great effort into this building this. Workers’ Liberty supporters will be organising leafleting in London (see this website). We must help workers’ component of the Iranian opposition movement survive and in the future grow much stronger.
    We say:
    Down with the clerical-fascist regime;
    For a democratic secular republic;
    Neither Mousavi nor Ahmedinejad but for a democratically elected assembly to decide a constitution for Iran;
    Support the struggles of students and women for human rights;
    Rights for the oppressed national minorities;
    Solidarity with the workers of Iran!

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  7. “differences between them merely reflected differences”
    But these differences were a reflection of the problems facing the country. In a country with little democracy the division tend to find some such reflection.Could there be a question that the workingclass might have more room to develope and grow if the regime suffered a defeat. The struggle for democratic rights is a starting point.

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  8. “Galloway hasn’t said he supports Ahmedinejad; rather that it’s unlikely that the (more) neoliberal candidate won the election.”

    He said more than that though. He said that:
    the media coverage was fair-“the Iranian broadcast media went to extraordinary lengths to be fair ”

    that the protests were of the elite “the Iranian broadcast media went to extraordinary lengths to be fair ”

    and that the protests would melt away- “It will soon fizzle out.”

    and that Ahmedinejad is Chavez and the oppostion equivalent to the right wing middle class pro-imperilaist opposition to Chavez

    “Mahmoud Ahmadinejad commands the loyalty of the poor, the working class and the rural voters whose development he has championed.

    This election almost mirrors the class composition of the recent polls in Venezuela. President Hugo Chavez has exactly the same friends in his country. And the same enemies.”

    So that is pretty much support for Ahmedinejad and not an iota of support for the protestors or workers fighting the regime.

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  9. The second quote should have been:
    ‘that the protests were of the elite “the English speaking more liberal elites now on the streets demonstrating.”
    all from
    “http://blogs.dailyrecord.co.uk/georgegalloway/2009/06/you-can-count-on-the-fact-elec.html

    Socialists hsould of course support the demands for democratic rights, for the right of assemby and protest, for an election under working class control with candidates chosen by the working class not the regime and support Iranian working class organisations striking against the regime.

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  10. hopinewsfromiran Avatar
    hopinewsfromiran

    You should read:

    Another day of bloodshed and resistance in Iran – June 24

    Another day of bloodshed and resistance in Iran – June 24

    So much for “By contrast the demonstrations against Ahmadinejad melted away at the first hint of serious repression and it had not spread significantly to other parts of the country.”

    We are getting reports of actions in Tehran involving thousands every day not to mention the prospect of oil workers striking. Outside of the capital in places like Shiraz and Tabriz protests and heavy fighting continues. When the doctors and nurses are striking you know that this is going to be a struggle which is not going to go away. This will not fizzle out, the protests are changing form.

    Chris S

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  11. http://blogs.dailyrecord.co.uk/georgegalloway/2009/06/you-can-count-on-the-fact-elec.html

    Liam you say in Socialist Resistance that it “is not right to call the events which followed the Iranian election a revolution.”

    But you leave out whether or not we should support the protests.

    As there is more of a bloody crackdown today in Iran following the decision not to have a recount
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/8117242.stm

    this poses, sharply, the pivotal question: whose side are you on?

    Galloway has made it clear – the dictatorship.
    You seem to be sitting on the fence an uncomfortable and not a principled place.

    The Lindsey workers strike is not a general strike- but we should support them and fight to make it into one.

    The Iranian protests are not (yet) a revolution but we should support them and fight to make it into a revolution.

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  12. Jason the piece makes it clear that Iran is a repressive bourgeois state. So if people are taking to the streets there demanding less repression, asserting their right to dissent and opposing even normal levels of electoral support they are to be supported.

    If I’ve disregarded the normal tropes of Trot writing I apologise but you’d be hard pushed to read that piece and find anything supportive of the Tehran regime

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  13. I’m all for avoiding the normal tropes of Trotskyist writing and I’m not demanding a series of excalmations such as “General Strike Now! Victory to the Revolution!”

    BUT it is important when people are being shot in the streets to make clear whose side you are on- your piece whilst clearly anti the government deso not. Perhaps even adding the paragraph you wrote above would help
    Jason

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  14. Liam “If I’ve disregarded the normal tropes of Trot writing I apologise but you’d be hard pushed to read that piece and find anything supportive of the Tehran regime”

    Which is precisely why the article is a fudge. It’s just a mass of words to cover the fact that you daren’t write what your group believes.

    You don’t dare -even from the safety of your own blog-condemn Galloway and the other leaders of respect for supporting the regime.

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  15. splinteredsunrise Avatar
    splinteredsunrise

    There’s where you’re falling down, Liam. What’s going on in Iran is intrinsically less interesting than what Galloway says about Iran, and the article should start off with a forthright condemnation of Galloway. Thus speak people who don’t believe you should be working with Galloway in the first place.

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  16. splinteredsunrise -you have this arse about face; people don’t believe in working with galloway in part because it means self-censorship; as well as him having loathsome politics obviously.

    Would SR/ISG be pulling punches on Iran if it wasn’t for the need to keep in with Galloway? Probably, their fore-runner organisations were always careful not to upset labour left ‘personalities’.

    But personalities is all beside the point. On the demo in Leeds yesterday the only chant in English was “no to democracy, yes to dictatorship”, and the only I could translate was “Ahmadinejad is our Pinochet”. No socialist worthy of the name could fail to agree that these instinctive slogans from Iranian students and exiles are worthy of support. The strong feeling yesterday was that Iranians had been cheated out of the chance to dump the Ahmadinejad by the rigged elections.

    The mealy-mouthed article above dismisses all this with: “the demonstrations against Ahmadinejad melted away at the first hint of serious repression…” and “As the masses demobilise…”; rather than seeking to strenghten and build links with those masses that are on the streets.

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  17. Martin, I tend to agree that part of the problem is accomodation to left personalities in this case Galloway whose position on Iran is terrible.

    That doesn’t mean that socialists cannot work with Galloway. When he called on soldiers to refuse to obey illegal orders it was absolutely right to work with him and ask him to speak on antiwar platforms. But socialists should always make clear our position for the working class against the dictatorship.

    On Trotskyist tropes I think it is perfectly possible to write crisp fresh political prose that is bothe complex and absolutely and clearly partisan against dictators like Ahmedinejad.

    Finally, whilst I agree that Liam’s piece sits on the fence I think it is good to distribute a draft and hopefully Liam can incorporate changes in the final piece if the deadline has not already passed.

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  18. “The Iranian protests are not (yet) a revolution but we should support them and fight to make it into a revolution.”

    Perhaps you could provide a step by step guide to help us ‘fight to make it into a revolution’ – not sure what we can do here in Britain when it comes to fighting. Should we be storming the Iranian Embassy now or do we wait until next week?

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  19. That really is a little silly and a rather parochial comment, TLC.

    Are you saying that because the events in Iran are 2-3000 miles away that our attitude towards them doesn’t matter? Des that ahve anything to do with trying to defelct from Galloway’s comments?

    It does matter and there are practical steps. Sending solidarity donations is part of it, supporting Iranian workers/ activists here is another. And at the very least and most basic is communicating support for workers’ organisations in Iran and the protests.

    That’s the very basic first step. Then there’s raising money, being in active dialogue etc.

    And if the imperialists step up action against Iran in terms of sanctions or other actions it is important also to have an active record of supporting Iranian workers against the dictatorship.

    Also it is important to build class struggle here- even at the most basic such as supporting the Lindsety workers, supporting the occupation of a school in Lewisham or the many other day to day activities I’m sure you and I would agree on.

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  20. Please jason – why are you so abstract? You use terms like ‘fight to make it into a real revolution’ but apparently what you actually mean is do a collection at work or support a school in Lewisham. Your faux revolutionary talk turns out to be much more prosaic – and we wonder why many people think the Left inhabit a world that bears so little relation to their own.

    How often do you argue for ‘a real revolution’ at your union branch meeting or is it only when you address the pre-existing left that your rhetoric goes all ubber-bolshie?

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  21. Unlike TLC the vanguard students and workers in Iran who took the lead in the recent demonstrations know they need a revolution in Iran – a radical change in the country from top to bottom.

    The problem as always is how to get it when the dictatorship is armed to the teeth and smashes up your demonstrations and shoots you down.

    But for the oh so superior TLC sitting in his comfortable armchair in Britain such questions are “abstract”.

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  22. TLC, you asked for a step by step guide. It includes work based and street collections. It includes occupations.

    And in many places it includes organisng self-defence against occupations and demonstrations being broken up by the police or army. Such conditions are not at all abstract but very real.

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  23. Jason said ‘TLC, you asked for a step by step guide. It includes work based and street collections. It includes occupations.

    “And in many places it includes organisng self-defence against occupations and demonstrations being broken up by the police or army. Such conditions are not at all abstract but very real.”

    Jason – please let me know where there are “self-defence organisations” in Britain “against occupations and demonstrations being broken up by the police or army. ” at the present time. I’m sure we would all like to support them. But I know and you know that they do not exist – pretending otherwise is just so much posturing.

    You see the problem with you and Stuart and your oh so revolutionary chatter is that in Britain in 2009 it is utterly meaningless. There are no self-defence organisations, no ‘vanguard students’ , no ‘fighting’ to turn the Iranian movement into a real revolution in Britain. Time to get real!

    This is faux international solidarity where abstract slogans are bandied around trying to outcompete others on the left with ever more revolutionary phrases.. But this revolutionary-sounding rhetoric has absolutely no purchase amongst the vast amjority of those in Britain. That is why it is abstract, Stuart – because you are not in Iran, no one is listening to you in Britain let alone Iran. You cannot deliver.

    The British left has a great history of telling others in the world what they should be doing – usually from a position of utter and abject failure at home. Your solidarity is meaningless because you can’t deliver any thing much past empty rhetoric – and that aint going to transform anything into a revolution.

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  24. TLC “…no ‘fighting’ to turn the Iranian movement into a real revolution in Britain.”

    Indeed that’s why its known as the *Iranian* revolution.

    Not so much time to get real as time to buy an atlas.

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  25. Indeed Bill, which is why i entered this silly fray in the first place – in response to your comrade Jason’s geographically confused statement, “The Iranian protests are not (yet) a revolution but we should support them and fight to make it into a revolution”

    Apparently you agree with me. It’s jason who needs an atlas.

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  26. Well if you insist on being a pedant.
    Jason didn’t say “a revolution in Britain” did he?
    As I think any reasonable person would have understood by his statement.
    (Present company excepted.)

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  27. It is not geographically confused to point out that in Iran as in many other places there is the need for organised self-defence. You ask for where this might happen- well, Iran for a start, Ethiopia, Zimbabwe and many many other places.

    Just because they are thousands of miles away does not mean that we shouldn’t care or refuse to raise money, engage in dailogue or discussions.

    It is indeed true that in Britain at the moment there is no prospect of a revolutionary situation but that does not mean that there is nothing that we can or should do.

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  28. Yes but Bill and Jason – you seem willfully unable to see the point I’m making. Jason says in his original post that I took exception to

    “The Iranian protests are not (yet) a revolution but we should support them and fight to make it into a revolution”

    The question that I raise again is HOW is Jason – a person living somewhere in Greater Manchester – going to FIGHT to make anything happening in Iran into a revolution. No one is saying you can’t raise money if you want, or engage in dialogue or debate or any such thing. But we are in the UK -talk of self -defence in Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, etc is just moving the goal posts as we are telking about what those in Britain can do to aid those in Iran. It’s irrelevant. This talk of fighting to turn it into a real revolution is simply posturing from abroad.

    Jason will not be doing this himself. He will not be FIGHTING. He will be sitting at his computer tipperty tapping away. It’s worthy, it’s not objectionable but it’s NOT fighting or anything remotely close to it.

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  29. Like I said pedantry is a quality. But is it a good quality?
    Although perhaps on reviewing your posts cynicism may be a more apt description.
    How might one fight for a revolution in Iran while living in Britain? Not wanting to be accused of telling my grandmother how to suck eggs, may I suggest that a starting point is at least to state ones support for that revolution?
    As for the rest – you’re so clever work it for yourself.

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  30. That should of course be “work it *out* for yourself.”
    Not wanting to leave myself open to misinterpretation and all.

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  31. I’m not sure if TLC is merely making a drafting suggestion in which case I’m happy to amend it to “The Iranian protests are not (yet) a revolution but we should support them and those who fight to make it into a revolution”

    However, I think it is not always wrong to use the collective ‘we’- their struggle is our struggle etc. Of course no one is pretending that those of us in Britain or Europe are fighting for our lives but TLC suggested earlier that it is ‘posturing’ to send messages of support or funds to those who are really are in a position to to ahve to fight for their lives.

    When I met with Ethiopian Teachers’ Association union members in Addis Ababa as armed police broke up the meeting they didn’t think it was posturing or fake to raise money in Brtian in schools and NUT associaitons to support their fight. They thought it was essential.

    But as I say I’m happy to accept TLC’s drafting correction. Is TLC prepared to accept that Galloway’s statements that -”the Iranian broadcast media went to extraordinary lengths to be fair ” and that the protests are “the English speaking more liberal elites now on the streets demonstrating.” are politically mistaken?

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  32. That’s fine Jason. I’m more than happy to accept your amendment. You see it’s not pedantry that is the issue here (and please BillJ that accusation really is a bit rich coming from you) but the use of language that is accessible to people who are not already of the far left.

    If you say you are going to fight to make the Iranian protests into a revolution people are perfectly at will to ask you how you intend to do that? If you say you support those who want a revolution then that is a different matter and it’s much more obvious what you mean. Words matter because we are trying to convince people with our arguments.

    As for the quotes from Galloway there is a problem here as you are asking me to comment on stuff I have no expertise on.

    But here goes”the Iranian broadcast media went to extraordinary lengths to be fair ” – I simply cannot answer this question as I cannot speak farsi and don’t watch Iranian television. But I’m more than happy to accept that the Iranisn media was biased in favour of the incumbent and so Galloway my be ‘mistaken’ on this. Equally, I suppose it may be true. I don’t trust the BBC to tell me this so I’ll withhold full judgement until I’m given more evidence.

    “the English speaking more liberal elites now on the streets demonstrating.” seems to me to be a reasonable description of much of the nature of the protests. That is not to say that I’m not sympathetic with their demands but it doesn’t change the fact that they are more likely to be English speaking and liberal than the supporters of the president who are more concentrated in the countryside and be conservative.

    So I’m not sure that are ‘politically mistaken’ statements – just ones that you disagree with.

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  33. Language is important of course as is making our message accessible. I think my meaning was farily clear but as I say can accept that if it was for a leaflet or publication could be clearer.

    As for not speaking Farsi and how middle class the protests are: Galloway’s comments have a context- three decades of oppression of the workers’ movement, of women, of democrats, of students.

    When people are being shot on the streets it is not neutral to extol the fairness of the Iranian media when even the cnadidates were handpicked by the regime or emphasise that the protestors are middle class let alone call them an elite. It is a political mistake because it gives every impression to the readers that the Iranian elections were relatively fair and that the protests will melt away and are only that of the privileged.

    it is extremely naive to believe that the Iranian media went to great lengths to be fair. Ga

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  34. The Fourth International’s executive bureau this weekend agreed this statement:
    http://internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1683

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  35. Saturday, 4 July 2009
    Revolutionary Strategy on Iran documnt by me has overcome techinal problems!

    SOME VERY BRIEF COMMENTS ON REVOLUTIONARY STRATEGY FOR IRAN BY ANTHONY BRAIN.

    There is a lack of strategic discussion among revolutionaries how to apply the Trotskyist strategy of Permanent Revolution in Iran. Three basic methodological mistakes being made are downplaying Imperialism’s role in Iran; a tendency to be uncritical to a right wing Bourgeois pro-privatisation leadership who are attempting to build a mass base by using democratic slogans; and there are Ultra-Lefts using the pro-Imperialist leadership for democracy in not intervening within potential mass struggles which could bring the Iranian Proletariat involved which could change Iran and other Middle Eastern countries.

    Lenin and Trotsky always stressed that without a rounded revolutionary strategy Opportunist and Ultra-Left tactical errors could result. The overwhelming majority of revolutionaries oppose Australia’s DSP majority leadership call for any intervention by Australian Imperialism into Iran. There are serious differences however over how critical revolutionaries should be towards a pro-Imperialist leadership of a struggle they claim is for democratic rights and to what extent Imperialism is intervening into Iran.

    It is important that revolutionaries point out Imperialism is only interested in achieving immense profits through super-exploiting Colonies/semi-Colonies and utilise only Bourgeois-Democratic slogans when Bourgeois Nationalist regimes or Workers’ states impede full maximisation of Imperialist profits. We are entering into a period which is part of an epoch of Capitalist/Imperialist decay where there are great dangers of Imperialist adventurism which if spins out of control could lead to a nuclear holocaust. Bushism after 9/11 was the first stage of this process. An ideological struggle against Liberal justifications for Imperialist interventions are key to Socialist revolutions because as Lenin said in an article on Marx in 1913 when revolutionary ideas reach the masses they become a massive material force which can sweep Capitalism away

    Due to American Imperialism being defeated in Iraq and Afghanistan which has caused an upturn in world revolution and deepened a process of radicalisation within the Imperialist countries has weakened them for a period. This has objectively strengthens the left internationally but due to a crisis of revolutionary leadership are not being utilised properly. Opportunities cannot being missed indefinitely because it plays into the hands of reaction. That is why re-building a new international revolutionary leadership is crucial. In this context of Imperialism being weakened Jim Lobe quotes in a 1st of August 2008 edition of Asian Times online entitled “The ‘down side’ to an attack on Iran cites a Rand air force (which is part of Rand Corporation” article published in July 9th calls for American Imperialism trying to influence pro-democracy movements in Iran rather than bombing Iran.

    There is no clear information about all the class forces involved in Iran’s post-election crisis. Imperialism has made a great play of a million demonstrating against what they saw as electoral fraud. Then it apparently dissipated with predominantly pro-Privatisation middle class forces being in small demonstrations. Revolutionaries by applying Trotsky’s strategy of Permanent Revolution utilise these inter-Bourgeois conflicts over how much to allow Imperialist control over Iran to strengthen the working class and specially oppressed layers. If workers mobilise in considerable numbers to what they see as a struggle for greater democratic rights revolutionaries would intervene to strengthen the workers and specially oppressed confidence in their own power independent of all Bourgeois forces but would politically fight the pro-Imperialist and pro-Privatisation leadership. If the workers do not come out in big numbers and they are left to pro-Imperialist and pro-Privatisation forces revolutionaries would not join them because their class composition is totally counter-revolutionary.
    Posted by Brain on Trotskyist theory at 17:26 0 comments

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