Everyone is
looking for something to say about Iran. The neoconservatives are
predictably hailing the march of democracy on the streets of Tehran
for reasons of their own, while hawks like Senators John McCain
and Lindsay Graham are calling on the Obama Administration to do
something to help anyone tagged as a reformer. More moderate voices
are generally supporting President Barack Obama’s initial show of
restraint, avoiding any open support of either side, and only condemning
the violence because it is disproportionate and due to the suffering
it has caused. Still others are calling on the United States to
avoid any interference of any kind. The non-interventionists themselves
fall into two camps: the constitutionalists and libertarians believe
that interfering in other people’s quarrels is intrinsically problematical
because as John Quincy Adams said, "America does not need to
go abroad in search of monsters to destroy." Realists argue
that interventions by the United States rarely turn out well, citing
the cases of Vietnam, Bosnia, Lebanon, Iraq, and Somalia and more.
Having spent
much of my working life as an intelligence officer on the street
in places like Istanbul, I am astonished at what passes for expertise
in the debate over what to do about Iran. It is clear that even
the few genuine experts on Iran don’t really know what is going
on there because they are slaves to their sources of information,
which tend to reflect their own philosophical viewpoints and are,
in any event, narrowly based. It is conventional wisdom in most
of the US media that the Iranian election was stolen, the result
of massive fraud. But was it? Opinion polls conducted by a US-based
organization several weeks before the polling predicted an Ahmadinejad
victory. The president is hugely popular among poor rural Iranians
and also enjoys overwhelming support for his defense of Iran’s right
to develop nuclear energy. Elections are very complex affairs and
how a talking head sitting in Washington, breathlessly interpreting
grainy texting images, can even pretend to understand what is going
on in Iran and why defies all logic, particularly if the expert
in question speaks no Farsi and probably would have difficulty in
locating Isfahan on a map.
Mir Hossein
Mousavi is a reformer and modernist, isn’t he? Perhaps not. He has
always been extremely conservative in his political alignments.
As Prime Minister in 1981–9, he was regarded as a hardliner. He
started Iran’s nuclear program, helped found Hezbollah and may have
directed the attack on the Marine barracks in Beirut. He is, in
reality, a defender of extremely corrupt vested interests. That
he has attracted the support of the so-called "Gucci crowd"
of twentyish twitterers does not mean that he has embraced western
values. As president, he would not abandon nuclear energy and would
not immediately begin to talk nice to Barack Obama. His reformer
credentials are pretty much non-existent, the creation of a media
and an engaged punditry that wants to explain the Iran crisis in
terms that a European or American audience would find comfortable.
And then there
is the corruption issue, Iran’s six-hundred-pound gorilla. Mousavi
is heir to the corrupt Iran of the post-revolutionary period when
the country was looted by the senior clerics cooperating with the
business class, the bazaaris. Some intelligence sources believe
that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has been demonized by the western
media, is actually the reformer in that he has taken on the country’s
pervasive corruption with the full support of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
the Supreme Leader. Massive corruption has been business as usual
in Iran, frequently managed by politicians who have called themselves
reformers. Another so-called reformer, who is the money man behind
Mousavi, is former Iranian Majlis speaker Akhbar Hashemi Rafsanjani,
nicknamed "the Shark." Rafsanjani is a billionaire who
controls large sectors of the country’s economy, to include a chain
of private universities which became the source of the young organizers
who brought the twitterers out on the street.
If there was
one thing I learned from twenty years of experience as a military
intelligence and CIA officer it is that nothing is ever what it
seems. If a situation appears to be clear-cut, with good guys and
bad guys arrayed against each other it is probably anything but.
So maybe black and white comes out gray. All the more reason to
step back. The interventionists from both left and right do not
make it clear what the United States should do to help the "reformers."
Perhaps that is just as well as the only options would be to hurl
empty threats, start bombing, or initiate yet another CIA covert
action to destabilize the regime, ignoring the lessons of the CIA’s
1953 debacle, and with the predictable and contrary result of actually
strengthening the clerics and their rule.
Change by evolution
is better than by revolution. Both metamorphoses are underway in
Iran: one is immediate and reactionary and, perhaps necessarily,
more graphic and even grim. The other suggests the possibility that
long-lasting change might happen in Tehran – if outside influences
do not upset the sensitive process of transformation. As is frequently
the case, those who would do nothing probably have it right, whether
arguing for constitutional reasons or as realists. Iran and its
elections is an issue that we do not and cannot understand and it
is ultimately an issue that has to be decided by the Iranian people.
Rightly or wrongly, outside interference in what is taking place
on the streets of Tehran will be exploited by the regime to deflect
any legitimate criticism, making any change even less likely. The
old Hippocratic advice to doctors to "do no harm" should
perhaps be the best advice for the American political chattering
classes and the media. Doing no harm regarding events in Iran is
to stay out of it.
June
25, 2009
Philip
M. Giraldi, Ph.D. is the Francis Walsingham Fellow for the American
Conservative Defense Alliance and a former CIA counter-terrorism
specialist and military intelligence officer who served 18 years
overseas in Turkey, Italy, Germany, and Spain.