Iran's Multiethnic Society
Explains Why Tehran Fears Democracy
Iran faces the democracy conundrum: in multi-ethnic
states where one non-majority group prevails over others, democratization
entails risk of loss of empire.
by Brenda Shaffer /August 31,
2020
The
twentieth century was not kind to multiethnic empires. During that time, most
of the world’s population transitioned from subjects to citizens. And, in most
of the empires where a non-majority group ruled over other ethnic groups, the
second tier ethnic groups seceded from central control. One of the few outliers
is Iran. Iran has been immune to the waves of democracy that swept over most of
the world during the twentieth century and has sustained control over vast
territories and minority populations that do not enjoy the same rights as the
Persian core. Over half of the population of Iran is comprised of
non-Persian ethnic minorities: Azerbaijanis, Kurds, Arabs, Turkmen, Baluch and
more. Most of Iran’s border provinces are populated by these non-Persian ethnic
groups, which share ties with co-ethnics in bordering states. Tehran’s fear of losing
its internal empire constrains Iran’s movement toward democracy. Like other
multi-ethnic empires, Iran faces the democracy conundrum: in multi-ethnic
states where one non-majority group prevails over others, democratization
entails the risk of loss of empire.
Violent
repression deters and inhibits ethnic groups from seeking self-rule. With
reform and democratization processes, and thus the removal of the threat of
death, imprisonment and torture, groups that have been dominated by others
often seek independence. Civil war during a regime change or regime collapse
also creates opportunity to attain self-rule, with the ruling elite weakened by
internal battles, and even groups that did not have strong independence
movements often seize the moment and breakaway from the ruling center. Thus,
the trends of democratization and loss of empire are connected.
Due to
this connection, the threat of the loss of empire has often squashed reform
programs of various multi-ethnic empires and states. Each time the USSR
initiated serious domestic reforms after World War II, powerful protest
movements broke out in Eastern Europe hoping to take advantage of Moscow’s new
openness to regain their freedom. Moscow violently suppressed these challenges
to its control of Eastern Europe, and subsequently ended the domestic reforms
that had catalyzed the anti-Soviet activity. In contrast, in the late 1980s,
Moscow did not suppress the challenge to its rule in Eastern Europe that
emerged during the Gorbachev period and maintained its reforms; subsequently,
Russia ended up losing its domestic empire, including territories where
Russians had prevailed for hundreds of years.
Both the
governing systems that have ruled Iran in the twentieth century—the Pahlavi
Monarchy and the Islamic Republic—have suppressed
Iran’s ethnic minorities and not allowed them to use their
languages in schools and government institutions. Despite possessing vastly
different ideological and strategic orientations, the two regimes have given
dominance to Persians, including exclusive use of the Persian language.
U.S. moves to restore all U.N. sanctions on Iran
In the
past two and a half years, widespread demonstrations and anti-regime activity have
been taking place in Iran. These demonstrations are exceptional in the history
of the Islamic Republic, as they encompass all economic classes, multiple
professional sectors and almost all provinces and major cities in Iran. The
demands of these protests are different from previous ones directed at the
Islamic Republic—they are not calling for a change in policy or protesting an
election outcome, but are directed against the system itself and calling for
its end. Due to the Covid-19 threat which has hit Iran particularly hard, the
anti-regime protests have abated. However, once the health danger subsides,
they are likely to flare up again. The regime’s recent blunders—shooting down a
commercial plane, firing on its own naval ships, mismanagement of the coronavirus—are
reminiscent of the types of mishaps witnessed in the last years of the USSR,
and seem to be signs of regime weakness.
However,
fear of loss of empire constrains the democracy movement in Iran. Most of the
mainstream Iranian opposition groups join the ruling regime in wanting to
preserve the Persians’ dominance and the Persian language in Iran. The regime
skillfully uses this fact to its advantage, warning opposition groups that
regime change risks losing Iran’s domestic empire. Both the mainstream
opposition and the regime seem to be aware that democratization can lead to
loss of Iran’s domestic empire, as has happened in many places. And, in fact,
it would be hard for a democratic government in Iran to explain why it allows
various freedoms, such as gender freedom and religious freedom, but does not
allow cultural and linguistic freedom to half of the population. If a new
regime did not allow these freedoms, it would most likely need to violently
suppress minorities, and effectively end democracy.
The
ruling regime in Iran and mainstream scholarship claims that indeed Iran is an
outlier and unified as one big happy mosaic where most of Iran’s ethnic
minorities strongly identify as Iranians. They point to the large numbers of
ethnically mixed families and also to the fact that most of Iran’s population
is united under Shia identity. In addition, the Islamic Republic does allow
members of the ethnic minorities access to power if they are willing to give up
their native culture. In fact, Iran’s leader Ali Khamenei himself hails from an
ethnically mixed family and speaks Azerbaijani, while Iran’s military chief Ali
Shamkhani is an ethnic Arab, indicating that individual members of ethnic
minorities can rise high in the regime.
Other
factors working in Iran’s favor in holding the country together is that the
Islamic Republic is not a federation or confederation, nor are the ethnic
groups concentrated in overseas territories. These structures often facilitate
empire disintegration. In addition, most of Iran’s neighbors do not support a
change in its borders, and some, such as Turkey and Iraq, actively work to
oppose it through coordinated attacks with Tehran on Kurds. As an additional
protection, the ruling regime in Iran usually appoints governors and heads of
local security services that are not native to the regions they govern, who
also usually do not speak the local languages. Thus, unlike during the Soviet
and Yugoslavia breakups, there are few local leaders in place with an interest
to break from the center. In addition, many of the minority groups infight over
control of land and other resources in shared regions, such as Kurds and
Azerbaijanis in Iran’s West Azerbaijan Province. Tehran is quite skilled in
exacerbating these conflicts.
At the
same time, ethnic-based movements are carrying out regular violent attacks on the regime and its
institutions. Economic disparities among ethnic groups also pull Iran apart.
The ethnic minority populated provinces are poorer, have lower levels of
government services and lower quality infrastructure than the Persian center.
Even water supplies are unstable in the areas populated by Arabs, Kurds and
Baluch. Also, while ethnically mixed families in Iran may be common in the
central cities, this is not the case in the provinces, where local languages
and cultures prevail. Furthermore, social and other mass media are fostering
revivals of ethnic-linguistic identity. Most of the minority populations in
Iran watch television and receive their news in their native languages by
satellite TV or internet, and not from Tehran’s government-controlled Persian
media. Through the foreign media, traveling to neighboring countries, and
interactions on social media, many are gaining ethnic awareness and pride.
Iranian official media in contrast, often presents very negative images of
members of the ethnic groups, based on widely held stereotypes. Previous
generations in Iran had by and large internalized the messages of the
Pahlavi regime that the ethnic minorities are inferior to the great Persian
nation that rules them. No longer.
In the
last two years, faced with growing opposition, some of it violent, the ruling
regime in Iran has turned to fostering Persian nationalist messages as a way to
bolster support among Iran’s core ethnic group. This is reminiscent of Stalin’s
use of the Russian Orthodox Church and Russian nationalism to galvanize Soviet
subjects to fight during World War II. While this may be a useful tool to
galvanize the Persians to stick with the ruling Islamic Republic, it is further
isolating and inciting Iran’s ethnic minorities.
The
Islamic Republic of Iran might be stuck in the democracy conundrum of
multiethnic empires, with no clear path to democratize without risk of losing
part or all of its domestic empire. Iranian democracy advocates are likely
thinking hard how to manage a democratic transition while keeping Iran intact.
Economic equity for the minorities in the provinces might help, as would
viewing language rights not as a threat to the unity of the state, but as a
potential tool for preserving the state’s unity, as in Canada. Some might even
decide that democracy is more important than continued rule over all of Iran’s
border provinces and take the risk of losing empire in order to have freedom.
Dr. Brenda Shaffer is Senior Advisor for Energy at the Foundation for
Defense of Democracies, a nonpartisan think tank focused on national security
issues. Follow her on twitter @ProfBShaffer
Image: Reuters.
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