Archive for June, 2009

A protester throws an object towards police in Tehran, 20 June 2009

The struggle throughout Iran between emboldened reformers and strong-armed conservatives will,  one way or another, transform the political landscape of the Middle East for years to come. The events of the next few days could have more long-term consequence than the war in neighboring Iraq.

The pressures for reform in Iran are evident on the streets and in the social media that the regime cannot censor. Most significant, reform has clear support from many members of the ruling regime, including presidential candidate Moussavi, former president Khatami, and prominent cleric Rafsanjani. The regime cannot crush reform simply by bringing force into the streets, it will have to purge its own leadership ranks. This is a very difficult undertaking, especially for a government that seeks to rule by elite consensus more than Stalinist dictatorship.

The Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China faced similar moments of choice in the late 1980s. In both societies pressures for reform spread through non-traditional media. Reform ideas attracted the support of BOTH young students and empowered members of the most elite leadership circles, who believed they had to open society to deal with long-standing economic, social, and political deficiencies. Ambitious leaders like Mikhail Gorbachev and Hu Yaobang sought to improve their societies through hybrid forms of  democratization.

In the Soviet Union, leadership reform produced Glasnost and the end of Communism. In China, leadership reform produced a moment of promising political opening, followed by a brutal crackdown in Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989.

Which route will Iranian leaders choose — Glasnost or Tiananmen? The outcome will reflect popular pressures, but, more important, the internal leadership struggle in Iran’s government. The United States and its allies must think about creative actions (and non-actions) to help support an outcome to this leadership struggle that encourages more Glasnost and less Tiananmen.

The following Op-Ed essay from REUEL MARC GERECHT is one of the most thoughtful pieces on this topic that I have seen:

June 21, 2009
New York Times
Op-Ed Contributor

The Koran and the Ballot Box

WHATEVER happens in Iran in the aftermath of this month’s fraudulent elections, one thing is clear: we are witnessing not just a fascinating power struggle among men who’ve known each other intimately for 30 years, but the unraveling of the religious idea that has shaped the growth of modern Islamic fundamentalism since the creation of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt in 1928.

The Islamic revolution in Iran encompassed two incompatible ideas: that God’s law — as interpreted by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini — would rule, and that the people of Iran had the right to elect representatives who would advance and protect their interests. When Khomeini was alive and Iran was at war with Iraq, the tension between theocracy and democracy never became acute.

Upon his death in 1989, however, the revolution’s democratic promise started to gain ground. With the presidential campaign of Mohammad Khatami in 1997, it exploded and briefly paralyzed Khomeini’s successor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the theocratic elite. God’s will and the people’s wants were no longer compatible.

To the dismay of Ayatollah Khamenei, who remains supreme leader, Mir Hussein Moussavi, the candidate whom President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad “defeated” in the rigged elections, has become the new Khatami — except he is far more powerful. While Mr. Moussavi lacks Mr. Khatami’s reformist credentials, he is a far steelier politician. And the frustrations of President Khatami’s failed tenure have grown exponentially among a new generation that is less respectful of mullahs and revolutionary ideology.

Yet in the current demonstrations we are witnessing not just the end of the first stage of the Iranian democratic experiment, but the collapse of the structural underpinnings of the entire Islamic approach to modern political self-rule. Islam’s categorical imperative for both traditional and fundamentalist Muslims —“commanding right and forbidding wrong” — is being transformed.

This imperative appears repeatedly in the Koran. Historically, it has been understood as a check on the corrupting, restive and libidinous side of the human soul. For modern Islamic militants, it is a war cry as well — a justification of the morals police in Saudi Arabia and Iran, of the young men who harass “improperly” attired Muslim women from Cairo to Copenhagen. It is the primary theological reason that Ayatollah Khamenei will try to stop a democratic triumph in his country, since real democracy would allow men, not God and his faithful guardians, the mullahs, to determine right and wrong.

Westerners would do well to understand the magnitude of what is transpiring in the Islamic Republic. Iran’s revolution shook the Islamic world. It was the first attempt by militant Muslims to prove that “Islam has all the answers” — or at least enough of them to run a modern state and make its citizenry more moral children of God. But the experiment has failed. The so-called June 12th revolution is the Iranian answer to the recurring hope in Islamic history that the world can be reborn closer to the Prophet Muhammad’s virtuous community. Millions of Iranians said in the presidential election, and more powerfully on the streets since, that they want out of Ayatollah Khomeini’s dream, which has become a nightmare.

No matter what Ayatollah Khamenei does — and at his most recent Friday prayer sermon he gave no inclination he’s ready to stop hammering the reformers — this message isn’t going to change. In the nine years since the reform movement around Mr. Khatami was crushed, it has only grown stronger. It brought within its ranks Mr. Moussavi, a favored lay disciple of Ayatollah Khomeini, who clearly has no regard for either Mr. Ahmadinejad or the supreme leader.

What may seem more surprising is that so many prominent first-generation revolutionaries have sided with Mr. Moussavi. There are many reasons for this, but among the most salient is a growing belief that the Islamic Republic and the revolution are finished unless Iran becomes more democratic. This hope may be naïve (once glasnost starts …), but it is a powerful motivation for those who gave their souls to overthrow the shah.

It’s not clear what Mr. Moussavi thinks about democracy, but it’s a good bet that he’s willing to entrust the people with more power than was Mr. Khatami, who despite some differences could neither really break with his ruling clerical brethren, nor free himself from the age-old Islamic belief that the faithful need clerical supervision. And even if Mr. Moussavi isn’t the ideal reformer — he was prime minister in the 1980s — he is surrounded by the best and brightest of Iran. The regime has lost almost all the country’s intellectual capital. Even among the clergy, the best minds — the ones faithful Iranians talk about, like Grand Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri — have distanced themselves from Ayatollah Khamenei. I can’t think of a serious book written by an Iranian since the fall of Mr. Khatami expounding the Islamic Republic as a model for Muslims.

The reverse parallels here with the rest of the Islamic Middle East are striking. Where secular dictatorships rule, the best and the brightest are often attracted to the Islamist cause. The moral repugnance of these regimes trumps the appeal of their Westernization. Muslim fundamentalists often espouse democracy either because it is the only peaceful means of dethroning their rulers or because they really do believe that most Muslims are “good” Muslims. Democracy would make their societies more virtuous, they feel, more likely to preach and practice the traditional injunction to command good and forbid evil.

Until now, the Islamic Republic has had a propaganda heyday among devout Arabs, depicting itself as a virtuous state with a workable level of democracy — just enough to give the regime legitimacy and stability. Ali Larijani, the speaker of Iran’s Parliament and the wicked genius behind the crushing of the reform movement during Mr. Khatami’s presidency, loves to emphasize Iran’s democracy when he travels abroad, always highlighting America’s preference for secular dictatorships.

Now the clerical regime can no longer make this argument. As Iranians have come to know theocracy intimately, secularism has become increasingly attractive. Iran now produces brilliant clerics who argue in favor of the separation of church and state as a means of saving the faith from corrupting power.

Indeed, Iranians are on the threshold of turning the Koran’s ethical injunction into a democratic commandment: nothing good can be commanded without a vote of the people. The democracy-supporting clerics of Iraq are trying to do the same thing, but the Iranians, much further advanced in their thinking about church and state, will surely be much bolder. Whether he intended it or not, Mr. Moussavi — and indirectly Ayatollah Khamenei because of his crude determination to keep the former prime minister from power — has probably begun the final countdown on the Islamic Republic.

We can only guess about the effect of an Iranian crack-up on the rest of the Middle East. Although the region’s Sunni rulers were spooked by the aggressiveness of Mr. Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei (not to mention the idea of a Shiite state with nuclear weapons), the birth of real democracy in Iran, always the most dynamic state in the region, cannot but cause acute anxiety. Sunni Arab fundamentalists, whose day has not yet arrived, will be fascinating to watch. They will surely see the awesome power of democracy; they will probably conclude, however reluctantly, that God cannot be the sole legislator of the laws and ethics that good Muslims want to live by.

And American policy? For starters, many of America’s supposed allies may welcome a Khamenei crackdown. This may complicate matters for President Obama. But he should take note: inside Iran, the nuclear issue isn’t what the people are fighting about. They are fighting for freedom. Even if Ayatollah Khamenei proves triumphant in this round, the president should get on the right side of history. He has nothing to lose: the supreme leader is never going to give ground on the nuclear issue. And as the clerical regime gets nastier at home, it will become nastier abroad. Mir Hussein Moussavi is Mr. Obama’s only hope.

Reuel Marc Gerecht, a senior fellow at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, is a former Middle Eastern specialist in the C.I.A.’s clandestine service.

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One of my former students, David Hoyme, has recently joined an NGO working in Africa. He has sent me a very revealing account of Chinese foreign policy in Africa, as seen through the recent experiences of Zambia. See below.

Thank you, David, for sharing your insights!

David Hoyme

David Hoyme

The initial reaction my Zambian friend, Tom, had about the Chinese in his country was an exasperated laugh: “Oh those guys!” The sum of the conversation was that there is mutual racism between Zambians (read Africans as a whole) and the Chinese. The Chinese are very insular, they keep to themselves. According to my friend, about 75% of shops are Chinese-owned in Lusaka and many in our town of Livingstone. They treat Africans very poorly, and Africans view them with a mutual standoffish attitude. My brother, who has lived here for a number of years, says that he has only seen the Chinese working on the roads. They hold about 60% of the road construction contracts in Zambia and much of the mining concessions. This is true for most of Zambia’s neighbors as well. The Chinese come in and underbid everyone. It is widely rumored that they can underbid because they use low quality materials and rush the job, but the Zambian government benefits from this in two ways:

1. They get much needed labor and projects on the cheap

2. It lets them say to their country and the world: “hey we’re getting something done.”

So, the Chinese influence has little or no effect socially, but it has great effect economically and therefore politically. One of the candidates in the last election (Michael Sata is his name, I believe) ran almost entirely on an anti-Chinese platform and gathered a substantial following. At the last minute people voted against him because they knew if he won the major source of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) would be threatened.

I am sure you know this, but China is gaining a foothold in Africa because its economic aid and civil service projects do not come with the laundry list of requirements that accompany those from the US, the EU, the IMF or the World Bank. It is simple cost benefit analysis: African leaders can get desperately needed aid without having to address their own domestic shortcomings. In return, China gets needed raw materials to fuel its growth. The Chinese can also flood local markets with cheap consumer goods. You can draw your own moral judgments…

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D-Day Map

D-Day Map

June 6, 2009 marks the 65th anniversary of the allied landings on the Normandy and adjacent coastal beaches of Northern France. Led by General Dwight D. Eisenhower, this was the first successful military crossing of the English Channel since William the Conqueror in 1066. Through the Great Depression and the Second World War the United States displayed remarkable resilience, courage, and creativity. During the long struggle against the fascist powers the United States also displayed a savvy ability to nurture diverse international allies. These are attributes we need to encourage in our society today. We still have a lot to learn from the history of the Second World War…

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Spy vs. Spy    Mad Magazine

"Spy vs. Spy"

This innovative and experimental course includes separate concurrent versions for 150 undergraduates and more than 30 military officers and other “special students.”

See: http://iss.jasons.wisc.edu/

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Prof. Jeremi Suri has been selected as an Honored Instructor for the University of Wisconsin-Madison Chadbourne Residential College (CRC).  Read announcement…

Students select Honored Instructors every Spring from among those teaching at CRC who have made a significant and positive impact on undergraduate education.

The Chadbourne Residential College is a partnership between University Housing and the College of Letters and Science that aspires to be a vibrant community of students, staff, and faculty committed to interdisciplinary learning and civic engagement for the purpose of developing responsible, invested citizens in our local and global communities.
crc-announcement-jeremi-suri-20091

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April 28, 2008

by Kate Dixon

Jeremi Suri

Jeremi Suri

The Wisconsin Alumni Association has selected University of Wisconsin-Madison history professor Jeremi Suri as the 2008 recipient of the Ken and Linda Ciriacks Faculty Outreach Excellence Award.

The award recognizes UW-Madison faculty members who go above and beyond their job roles to support the Wisconsin Idea and WAA by delivering a variety of enrichment or outreach programs to a primarily alumni audience.

Read full article…

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About Jeremi Suri

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Jeremi Suri is the E. Gordon Fox Professor of History, the Director of the European Union Center of Excellence, and the Director of the Grand Strategy Program at the University of Wisconsin. He is the author of three books on contemporary politics and foreign policy. His research and teaching have received numerous prizes. In 2007 Smithsonian Magazine named Professor Suri one of America's "Top Young Innovators" in the Arts and Sciences. His writings appear widely in blogs and print media. Professor Suri is also a frequent public lecturer and guest on radio and television programs.

Featured Book
power and protest

Henry Kissinger and the American Century (Harvard Univ Press, 2007)

What made Henry Kissinger the kind of diplomat he was? What experiences and influences shaped his worldview and provided the framework for his approach to international relations? Jeremi Suri offers a thought-provoking, interpretive study of one of the most influential and controversial political figures of the twentieth century.

Read more at Harvard Univ press website >