The following was posted on the site
Jadaliyya a few weeks ago; it concerns Iran and the U.S. anti-war
movement, and was based on a talk given at the United National
Anti-War Coalition (UNAC) Conference on 24 March 2012 in Stamford,
Connecticut. It was part of a workshop called, “Solidarity Not
Intervention,” organized by Raha Iranian Feminist Collective. Just
before this workshop, the conference overwhelmingly voted down a
resolution put forward by Raha and Havaar: Iranian Initiative Against
War, Sanctions, and State Repression that read: “We oppose war and
sanctions against the Iranian people and stand in solidarity with
their struggle against state repression and all forms of outside
intervention.” The article is an example of the harmony that is
possible between anti-war, pro-human rights, feminist and
non-interventionist sentiments, despite those who would treat those
values as incompatible.
The popular struggles against
dictatorship known as the Arab Spring have transformed the notion of
self-determination for people in the Middle East from an abstract
ideal into a concrete reality. This ideal has long inspired anti-war
activists in the US who have worked to expose US claims of spreading
democracy, liberating women, or relieving humanitarian crises
through military intervention. When organizing against
justifications for war in Afghanistan and Iraq that centered on the
oppressive policies of the Taliban or Saddam Hussein’s rule, we
have argued: the people can liberate themselves and will be more
able to do so when sanctions and bombs don’t threaten their very
existence. Of course, it was hard to sway many people who ended up
supporting these invasions as a painful but necessary form of
“liberation,” as some kind of lesser evil to local forms of
oppression.
Most recently, in the case of Libya,
we saw some sections of the anti-war movement embrace the idea that
Western bombs could be used to support self-determination—at best
an oxymoron and at worst a plan for more civilian deaths and the
reassertion of US control over the direction of popular rebellions.
In Syria, this debate continues to rage, with the US already
providing forms of support for some opposition groups. In this
context, an anti-war movement that wants to oppose all forms of
foreign military intervention—including wars in the name of
democracy and human rights—must have something to say about the
state repression that greets any genuine struggle for
self-determination if our support for this ideal is to have any
concrete meaning.
The increased sanctions and growing
threats of military intervention against Iran—all those options
President Obama keeps reminding us are “on the table”—demand
that we rise to the occasion and urgently rebuild an anti-war
movement that can resonate with millions of people in the US, in
Iran, in the Arab countries, and around the world. This article
offers perspectives for not just opposing war but also standing in
solidarity with a new wave of popular struggle.
The Green Movement and the Arab Spring
To many ordinary Iranians, the link
between the Green Movement and the Arab Spring was immediate and
obvious. “Mubarak, Ben Ali, now it’s time for Sayyed Ali,” was
the chant that echoed in the streets of Tehran on 14 February 2011,
when Iranians risked their lives to demonstrate in solidarity with
the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt. “Sayyed Ali” is a reference
to the Supreme Leader of Iran, and they were calling, not for new
elections as in 2009, but for altering the very foundations of the
government. That same government paid lip service to supporting
uprisings against US-allied states, but sent riot police and
militias out to prevent its own citizens from taking that support to
its logical conclusion. Unable to gather in central squares as they
did in the summer of 2009, protesters took to the streets in
neighborhoods around the city. The neighborhoods that saw the most
activity that day were in the poor and working class sections of
southern Tehran. This should be no surprise: ordinary Iranians have
been suffering from neoliberal austerity measures, high
unemployment, inflation, government corruption, censorship, and the
brutality of security forces—a list that could just as easily
describe the conditions that led to revolts in Tunisia and Egypt.
We need to write the story of the
Green uprising back into the story of the Arab Spring in order to
understand the internal dynamics of Iranian society and to see
clearly where the lines of solidarity must be drawn. Most media
coverage hasn’t made this link; instead, reporting has tended to
reflect the nationalist divisions in the region and to assume there
is a hermetically sealed entity called the “Arab World.” Any
mention of Iran during the Tunisian and Egyptian revolutions was
made only in regard to the Iranian state and debates over its
relative influence in the region; Iranian people have been rendered
invisible.
But the reality is that when millions
of Iranians took to the streets in 2009, the election results were
just the latest outrage; they provided an opportunity for people to
demonstrate their frustration with the overall conditions of their
lives. At this time, there was already a student movement, a women’s
movement, a labor movement—all struggling to survive. The popular
uprising of that summer was not controlled by any politician; it was
not funded or controlled by US agencies or any other outside power
(accusations that Mubarak made as well, and that the Egyptian
military continues to make). Imperialist countries always have their
spies and covert operations, but it would be a travesty to the
Iranian people, or the Egyptian people for that matter, to credit
foreign governments with having that much power and to so grossly
distort what actually happened—and the lasting impact on Iranian
society.
The Green uprising was a collective
decision to resist, a decision to face down fear of police and
prisons and torture and death, a willingness to risk everything for
the chance to transform an intolerable present into hope for a very
different future. It drew in people from the working and middle
classes, in cities across the country, and it shook the government
to its core. In response, the regime unleashed a brutal crackdown of
arrests, lengthy prison sentences, gang rapes and other forms of
torture, expulsions of students and faculty from universities,
curriculum purges, and executions. Many activists have been forced
underground or into exile.
In short, the crisis within Iranian
society led millions of people to want to do, to try to do, what
Tunisians and Egyptians have since done; the difference in Iran is
that the movement was crushed. It is our hope that this is
temporary, and that the Iranian people have the chance to try again.
Unfinished Business
The Green Movement and the Arab Spring
derive from the same crisis: the nation states that came to power
after the decolonization movements of the 1950s, 60s, and 70s
maintained class, gender, and other hierarchies and enriched a
ruling clique at the expense of the majority of people. The hopes
and promises of decolonization have largely been deferred, as people
have had to face the double burden of national dictatorships and the
relentless interference of the US (among other imperial nations).
The Green uprising and the Arab Spring are post-colonial revolts and
we have think through how to relate to them. We have to ask: what
are the continuities with the past and what are the new conditions
we face? The continuities are easier to see: we have the ongoing
aspirations and violence of US imperialism and we have growing
inequality driven by capitalist competition and crisis. What is new
is the form resistance has taken: in Iran, Tunisia, Egypt, and
elsewhere, the popular revolts that emerged have largely targeted
national governments, not imperialism. They have not been led by
traditional political parties and have opened up space for mass
participatory democracy and new forms of organizing. Neocolonialism
and neoliberalism have created new splits within different sections
of local ruling classes (see, for example, Paul Amar's analysis of
the Egyptian military’s business interests), and made it possible
for the grievances of poor, working, and middle class people to
coalesce in mass movements against authoritarianism.
Formal, national sovereignty failed to
meet people’s needs and the long-deferred demands for democracy,
dignity, and equality are back on the agenda. We also have new
possibilities for solidarity, as we have never before had so much
potential for interconnection and identification among and between
our different struggles. Who would have thought union activists in
Madison, Wisconsin or anarchists in New York City would cite
Tunisian and Egyptian people as their inspiration for a renewed
resistance to oppression and inequality in the US? Since September
2011, Occupy Wall Street has carried the message of a conflict
between a global one percent and a global ninety-nine percent into
the mainstream, evoking Tahrir Square again and again to legitimize
its own tactics of taking public space.
What Kind of Anti-War Movement?
In many ways, it was easy to support
the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, whether you were a long-time
leftist or someone watching the news who found the power and dignity
of the protestors deeply compelling. Because these revolts were
massive, non-violent, and against corrupt US-backed dictators,
solidarity was instinctive and immediate among those who consider
themselves part of the anti-war left in the US. The question of
whether or not to take a position on an internal struggle within a
country not our own was not an issue anyone raised.
However, this does become an issue, it
seems, when the dictatorship people are resisting is not a US ally.
Many of the activists who work together in UNAC have made precisely
this argument when it comes to the case of Iran, that we should
simply say “US hands off Iran” and leave it at that. But it is
precisely in these cases, where things don’t line up so neatly,
that one must put formulaic responses aside and apply some fresh
thinking.
Given that US imperialism is often
packaged as an intervention on the side of the oppressed, I very
much understand the recourse to a position that we should simply
stay out of other people’s business and focus on the actions of
our own government. People will liberate themselves, period. Of
course, even non-military forms of western "aid" can work
to undermine self-determination. The complicity of many NGOs, of the
Peace Corps, and of other organizations originating in US Cold War
foreign policy has been well documented. Supporting these “soft”
forms of interventionism, however, is entirely different from
offering solidarity to an indigenous, grassroots movement.
Solidarity has long been a slogan among labor and the left. The case
of Iran tests our ability to make this word meaningful.
I want to challenge, from within the
anti-imperialist left, the idea that we, activists based in the US,
shouldn’t take a position on internal affairs of Iran.
If we don’t support Iranians
struggling in Iran for the same things we fight for here, such as
labor rights, abolition of the death penalty, and freedom for
political prisoners, we risk a politically debilitating form of
cultural relativism. At best, we are hypocrites; at worst, we show
an inability to imagine Iranians as anything other than passive
victims of western powers. Ironically, this echoes racist and
Orientalist stereotypes of the kind that most anti-war activists
would hasten to decry. And yet, by what name do we call this refusal
to recognize the full humanity of Iranian people and their heroic
struggle against state repression? How do we say we are against
imposing the privations of sanctions, against subjecting the Iranian
people to the violence of US/Israeli bombs, but are willing to take
no position when those same people are subjected to violence by the
Iranian government? This would make us an anti-war movement
disconnected from social justice and life on the ground for ordinary
Iranians; it would mean we have lost our moral compass.
At a time when America’s overseas
empire is threatened by popular uprisings in West Asia and North
Africa and is trying to figure out how to regain control over the
region, we can no longer formulate our position solely in national
terms, solely in relation to the US state; this is a cop out and it
is not an adequate response to the actual demands of global
solidarity.
The phrase “solidarity” is empty
if we are not permitted to imagine or care about the lives of people
different from ourselves, if their lives and struggles and
aspirations can never become as real as our own. This is not about
mapping our political programs or cultural biases on to anyone else;
it is about recognizing that you may be different from me—I may be
in the belly of the beast and you may be in a country targeted by
the US—but our liberation is inextricably linked. As you go, I go,
and even if I don’t know you and can’t pretend to fully
represent you, I am as responsible to you as you are to me as we are
to that very notion of basic human dignity that governments
everywhere trample upon daily. It means that the outrage I feel when
an Egyptian woman is stripped and beaten in Tahrir Square is part of
the outrage I feel when an American woman is beaten into a seizure
by the NYPD in Zuccotti Park. And this is part of the outrage I feel
when Iranian women’s rights activist Bahareh Hedayat is sentenced
to nine and a half years in prison. Solidarity means acknowledging
that, even though we are all different, none of us can absolve
ourselves of the responsibility to fight for a world where no one is
imprisoned for resisting inequality and oppression.
Strategic Imperatives
If we agree with this perspective in
principle, we then have to think strategically about the best way to
build a large and effective anti-war movement. Some people think the
way to do this is to have points of unity that cater to the lowest
common denominator. This is sometimes called the united front
approach. But when it comes to Iran, we have an example of how any
strategy, when undertaken without thinking through the actual
politics involved, can produce the opposite of its intended results.
By voting against standing in solidarity with the Iranian people’s
struggle against foreign intervention and state repression, UNAC has
prioritized unity with supporters of the Iranian government (such as
the American Iranian Friendship Committee and the Workers World
Party) over the potential to build a broad anti-war movement.
Refusing to say anything about repression in Iran cuts the anti-war
movement off from the majority of Iranians (in Iran and in the
diaspora) as well as the majority of people in the US who will need
an answer to their concerns about human rights violations in Iran
that is more compelling than the one coming from pro-interventionist
circles. UNAC’s application of the united front keeps the movement
small by ceding the moral high ground of human rights to the same
forces that used this human rights rationale as an excuse for
occupations in Iraq and Afghanistan. At the same time, unity with
supporters of the Iranian government means that every anti-war rally
is turned into pro-government propaganda broadcast on Iranian state
television—a slap in the face to millions of Iranians whose
resistance and suffering both become invisible once again.
In 2009, when many Iranians and others
in the US came out in solidarity with the Green uprising, we in Raha
saw our role as doing all we could to channel that solidarity away
from support for any outside intervention on behalf of human rights,
freedom, or democracy. We argued for the need to free all political
prisoners, from Guantanamo to the Iranian prison Evin; to end the
death penalty in the US and in Iran and everywhere; in other words,
to build solidarity between our movements here and the movements
there. Our role was to always point out that the best way to support
women’s rights in Iran, for example, is to build a thriving
movement for women’s rights here that will then be in a position
to do joint, grassroots solidarity, rather than looking to the UN or
NGOs or any government. That summer, the US had engineered a coup in
Honduras, so we went on the green solidarity marches in New York
City with signs that said “No to militarism from US to Iran to
Honduras” and a banner that read “Liberation Comes from Below.”
We believe there should be some
relationship between an anti-war position and social justice. For
example, Ron Paul is against war on Iran, but we probably wouldn’t
consider him welcome in UNAC. We cannot say we don’t want people
to be starved or bombed, but if they are imprisoned and tortured we
have no comment.
We need to connect with the concern
and outrage that millions of people, from all backgrounds, feel
about the repression in Iran and channel it away from intervention
into solidarity. In order to develop a political perspective
adequate to the challenges we face, we must draw from our
theoretical traditions and adapt them to the present.
Nothing Less Than Liberation
For ordinary people throughout the
Middle East, there have long been two sources of oppression.
Throughout modern Iranian history—from the Constitutional
Revolution beginning in 1905, to the movement for nationalization of
oil in the early 1950s, to the Iranian revolution in
1978-79—Iranians have had to fight against both colonialism, or
“estema'ar,” and despotism, or “estebdaad.” Often
imperialism and despotism work hand in hand, as in Egypt under
Mubarak and in Iran under the Shah; but sometimes these interests
conflict over who will primarily benefit from the exploitation of
the people and resources of the nation and region.
As a feminist collective, Raha stands
in another long tradition of women of color feminists, in the US and
around the world, who have faced multiple sources of oppression that
are not the same but that are both intolerable. Women have had to
resist male domination coming from imperialist and state policies
that affect our most intimate relationships. For example, just
because we don’t think the solution to patriarchal violence
against women in the US can be found in the prison-industrial
complex doesn’t mean we should silently submit to it either.
Feminists have had to think dynamically about the connections
between different forms of oppression, and have refused to accept
that they must settle for any of them.
The unfinished struggle for national
liberation that began with movements for decolonization and that
continues today is also the unfinished struggle for women’s
liberation. Women played a central role in overthrowing the Shah but
were then told that their equality was secondary to the fight
against imperialism. Over and over again, women have been told to
wait. But we have seen that when national sovereignty is
consolidated at the expense of women, we are no longer talking about
a project of self-determination, but instead, of transferring power
to a new patriarchal ruling class. Anti-imperialism has since become
the cynical rhetoric of the Iranian state; thus, this rhetoric
alienates the majority of the people who suffer under its rule.
If anti-imperialism is going to become
meaningful again to people in the region AND to people in the US—and
indeed it must if there is any hope for genuine democracy—than it
cannot be severed from the larger struggle for human liberation.
A feminist anti-imperialist
perspective maintains that it is not only possible, but imperative,
to simultaneously stand against all forms of outside intervention in
Iran and against all forms of domestic oppression targeting ordinary
Iranian people. We are committed to building the broadest movement
possible to stop the US government, the European Union, and any
other foreign power from further destabilizing and threatening the
lives of our brothers and sisters in Iran. But this must be an
ethical movement that makes no apologies for the torture and
imprisonment of dissidents and that expresses solidarity with
popular resistance in Iran. Here and everywhere, we must oppose
militarism, prisons, censorship, torture, and the death penalty. In
Raha, we believe that genuine liberation comes from below—from the
self-activity of masses of ordinary people—and that this is the
broadest, most compelling starting point for organizing an effective
opposition to empire.
[For more global feminist voices
against war on Iran contact Raha at rahanyc@gmail.com or
Rahacollective.org.]
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