WHAT
DOES IT MEAN TO BE A REFORMIST IN IRAN?
PolicyWatch 2583
March 10, 2016
By Mehdi Khalaji
Read this article on our website:
http://washin.st/1RT78si
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An unprecedented combination of regional turmoil, international pressure, and
authoritarian machinations have coopted the reformist movement, leading many
Iranians to view the current regime as Iran's only means of survival.
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The meaning of the term "reformist" has fundamentally changed in Iran
since the movement's heyday in the 1990s. Having reconciled themselves to the
policies of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, today's reformists are primarily
concerned with gaining power.
NO MORE CONFRONTATION
Akbar Ganji, a well-known reformist journalist in exile, has offered a sound
critique of the movement by explaining that reformists no longer accept the
views of the late Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, the influential figure who
was once a designated successor to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini but later became
a sharp critic of velayat-e faqih, the system under which the Supreme Leader
wields absolute authority. As Ganji put it in a March 3 interview,
"Reformists now believe that instead of confronting Ayatollah Khamenei,
they have to reconstruct their relations with him. Therefore, in their view,
the election result should not be interpreted as a 'no' to Ayatollah Khamenei
[intended] to incite him to react in a costly and unpredictable way...In
[their] view, the worst policy in the current situation is confrontation with
him. They say, 'Instead of confrontation, we should act in a way that
encourages Khamenei to support the government as he did during the nuclear
negotiations'" (for more on their post-election narrative, see PolicyWatch
2582, "Reformists Apply the 'Lesser Evil' Theory to Iran's
Elections," http://washin.st/1RRw9Ej).
Ganji's claim about reformists giving up their defiant approach to Khamenei and
his military, intelligence, and economic apparatus seems right. In other words,
they are trying to alter the very notion of reform in order to assure Khamenei
and other hardliners that "enemies" such as the United States cannot
use the movement to subvert the regime. In revolutionizing the idea of reform,
they hope that Khamenei will in turn reform the notion of revolution, so that
he will once again view them as loyal to the Islamic Revolution's principles
and easily appropriated by the system without causing trouble. A cynic might
therefore say that "reformist" refers not to a distinct ideology, but
rather to individuals associated with the Khatami government in the late 1990s
who now wish to return to government.
This exceedingly deferential approach is more comprehensible when one considers
Iran's lack of well-established political parties, which makes individual
members of parliament much more vulnerable to outside influence. For example,
over the course of its six-year term, the outgoing Majlis has completely
changed its attitude toward each of the past two presidents based solely on
actions and statements by the Supreme Leader and the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps (IRGC). Such behavior shows the degree to which parliamentary
politics have become subordinated to the dynamics of the regime's unelected
core.
ELECTIONS WITHOUT CHANGE
The Islamic Republic can best be categorized as "electoral
authoritarianism." In such regimes, elections are just as important as the
state's authoritarian agenda, though not for the usual reasons. These systems
are not as closed as true autocracies, but not as open as true democracies.
Instead, multifactional elections and other formal democratic institutions
operate within or alongside authoritarian practices and policies. As scholar
Andreas Schedler put it, election results in these systems "are the combined
outcome of two unknown and unobservable variables -- popular preferences and
authoritarian manipulations." Regimes use creative mechanisms to run these
elections and incite people to take part in an ostensibly competitive process,
and while the exact results are not always predictable, they do not undermine
the system's core. In this manner, political struggle between various factions
is constrained within the regime's rules and redlines.
Holding elections is vital for such regimes because they cannot rely solely on
undemocratic sources of legitimacy; this is particularly true for Iran given
its historical background, anti-monarchical revolution, and highly modernized
society. Elections serve the regime's authoritarian nature, insulating it
against popular uprisings. Whether one calls such regimes
"pseudo-democracies," "disguised dictatorships," or
"competitive authoritarianism," what they all share in common is a
mixture of democratic and authoritarian practices that effectively close the
door on both reform and revolution. Occasional inclusive gestures are used to
refresh a regime's image at home and abroad, but other restrictions keep the
political competition to a minimum (e.g., in Iran, Jews, Christians, Sunnis,
and women can all vote like anyone else, but with little if any substantive
impact). For most citizens, hope is coupled with fear of brutal suppression, so
even minor changes can keep their hope alive.
ROUHANI EMPOWERED?
As usual, Khamenei interpreted the high turnout in the latest election as the
people's vote of confidence in the regime, but President Hassan Rouhani took a
different view. In a press conference shortly after the vote, Rouhani depicted
the outcome as a popular endorsement of his foreign and economic agenda:
"Today, sanctions -- even those unrelated to the nuclear issue -- have
been lifted. This has been announced [by the West] too...But people want all of
the sanctions lifted, and that's okay. We will let the negotiating team
negotiate [on nonnuclear sanctions] again, and we will certainly conclude that
[deal] too." Yet Khamenei is no doubt confident that the newly elected
parliament cannot empower Rouhani enough to back those words up, since that
would involve forcing the Supreme Leader to compromise on Iran's foreign policy,
the main cause of the remaining nonnuclear sanctions.
This outlook is evident in the moves Khamenei made in the days following the
elections. First, he appointed an anti-Rouhani hardliner to one of the most
important posts in Iran. Right after the election, news outlets reported the
death of Abbas Vaez Tabasi, the custodian of an institution called Astan-e-Qods
Razavi since 1979. Formally charged with overseeing the shrine in Mashhad, this
organization is actually Iran's largest endowment complex and financial enterprise,
involved in various industries (e.g., telecommunications, automobiles, energy,
mining, agriculture, banking, and construction) as well the educational,
medical, media, and charity sectors. The colossal apparatus and its billions in
annual revenue are exempt from taxes and government investigation --
Astan-e-Qods Razavi is accountable only to the Supreme Leader, and its
financial activities are not transparent to any of the government's three
branches.
Appointing Tabasi's replacement was important not only for its own sake, but
also as an indicator of how the elections would -- or, rather, would not --
affect Khamenei's approach to the "reformists." On March 7, he
appointed Sayyed Ebrahim Raisi al-Sadat as the new custodian. A top-ranking
judiciary official for more than three decades, Raisi is a well-known hardliner
who won a seat in the latest Assembly of Experts election. In 1988, he was
involved in mass executions of political prisoners, as revealed in Ayatollah
Montazeri's memoirs. His family ties are hardly encouraging either -- Ahmad
Alam al-Hoda, his father-in-law, is a top Mashhad imam who has frequently
criticized Rouhani and moderates in general.
Raisi's appointment fits Khamenei's recent pattern. In June 2015, he appointed
judiciary chief and well-known hardliner Sadeq Larijani to succeed Muhammad
Reza Mahdavi Kani, a traditional conservative, as head of Imam Sadeq University
and its associated organizations and endowments. Two months prior, he appointed
IRGC Welfare Foundation chief Parviz Fatah to chair the Imam Khomeini Relief
Aid Committee, replacing traditional conservative Habibollah Askar-Oladi. Thus,
even after elections in which hardliners were not major winners, Khamenei
strengthened their position in nongovernmental institutions that play an
outsize role in Iran's politics, economy, and regional activities, without
presidential or parliamentary supervision.
WHY SHIFT NOW?
The conventional makeup of Iranian politics has been destroyed by the recent
turmoil in the Middle East and the ongoing pressure on Tehran. Khamenei warned
the people that the turmoil following the contested 2009 presidential election
was designed by the West to overthrow the regime and destabilize the country,
claiming that the only alternative to the Islamic Republic was chaos. This
narrative gained considerable traction after the 2011 "Arab Spring"
ushered in a period of unimaginable violence in the region, discouraging many
Iranians from taking part in any political actions that might undermine the
system. At the same time, increasing international sanctions increased their
fear of a military attack.
These concerns, coupled with the outcome of the nuclear negotiations, have
raised the people's hope that minor changes through elections can save the
country from war and chaos. The high vote tallies for non-hardliners can be
interpreted as the public's longing for politicians who will take a less
hostile approach to the West and guarantee their peace, prosperity, and
security. In that sense, the people voted not so much for the regime's
legitimacy, but rather for its unique ability to keep the country from falling
apart. In the absence of any political alternative to the regime, and without
any guarantees that an uprising would produce a democratic outcome, Iranians
seem to regard the current system as Iran's only hope for survival.
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