I listened to the radio program Tehran Rising produced by America Abroad--a
program distributed by Public Radio International
<http://www.americaabroadmedia.org/programs/view/id/157>
this evening and I must say that I was deeply disturbed by the way the piece was framed.
The program centers on "spreading Iranian influence" in the Middle East.
Frankly it is somewhat fatuous to try to hang a story about
change and unrest in the Middle East on the Iranian bogeyman. Haven't we
had enough of this? Since nations such as Lebanon, Bahrain and Iraq, all
covered in the reporting for this piece, are hugely different in their internal
and external dynamics, to make this a story about Iran really obscures any
nuance whatever in the politics of the region, and implies that nothing would
be happening if it weren't for Iranian machinations. There are certainly a few
people in Iran who would exult in this misperception--giving Iran far more.
Interested people should listen to the program or read the transcript themselves.
However, here are some of my objections:
1. The piece posits a "cold war" between Iran and Saudi Arabia. This is a complete
fictional construction. Saudi Arabia has long been wary and disturbed by
the Shi'a majority in the Hasa, its eastern oil territory. This was true
even under the Shah and long before. The fear of the uprising in Bahrain
has little or nothing to do with confronting Iran--it is driven by fear
that the Bahraini uprising will spread over the causeway to its own
province.
2. The implication that Iran is doing something to spur on the Bahrain
uprising. Your own interviewee, Kristin Smith Diwan, denied this.
Moreover, I just participated in a seminar for the U.S. Central Command
in Tampa. Two Military Intelligence agents--fluent in Arabic and
Persian--former students of Ray Motaheddeh and Juan Cole--flatly denied
that there was any evidence that Iran had any agents on the ground in
Bahrain, based on their own extensive investigations in February and March.
3. Hezbullah--I think you know not only my position on Hezbullah but
that of virtually every other observer of Hezbullah, and that is that
iran has no effective control over Hezbullah's political actions today
(as opposed to 30 years ago). You documented clearly the charitable
actions carried out by Hezbullah that were supported by Iran. Iran
never denied this. At the same time, the program clearly pointed out the
correct statement that the bulk of Lebanon's redevelopment funds came
from foreign remittances and from the Gulf States. The program
misleadingly implies that Hezbullah is not receiving funds from the same
sources. In fact the bulk of Hezbullah's funds come from those sources,
not from Iran. Of course the Sunni's such as the one interviewed on the
program are opposed to Iran, but look at the welcome President
Ahmadinejad got from BOTH Shi'as and Sunnis in his recent trip.
4. The implication that Iranian influence is negative or evil as opposed
to being just what nations do. Turkey is trying to increase its
influence in Central Asia, but no one complains about that. Iran is
being squeezed economically and of course is trying to develop economic
and political ties.
5. Ash Jain and all those at WINEP are dedicated to propagandizing
against Iran. The idea that Iran is "exploiting weak democracies" is
rather silly. Iran can't exploit anyone unless they are able to
promulgate messages and actions that are welcome to the populations of
other nations. In fact, Iran has made little or no headway in any
predominately Sunni nation. Karim Sajjadpour is quite right about the
"self-limiting" nature of Iran's influence. Case in point: Tajikistan.
Persian speaking, culturally Iranian, the Tajiks should be susceptible
to Iranian influence. They are extremely wary of Iran because Iranians
are Shi'a and Tajiks are Sunni.
5. Ash Jain claims that Iran has "won" because Hamas has stabilized and
become a force in the Middle East. For heaven's sake, one would think
that the denizens of Hamas have no interest in their own affairs and
future. Does he think that Hamas lives only to fulfill some fantasy
foreign policy influence on Iran's part?
6. Let's be clear. No Shi'a religious leaders outside of Iran
agree with Iran's form of government or want
to emulate it. Ayatollah Ali Al-Sistani is flatly opposed to Iran's
brand of clerical rule, and disagrees with the idea that the Iranian
Revolution should be spread abroad--a vain hope anyway.
7. Therefore the flat answer to the question of Iranian influence is:
Some in Iran would like to see Iran have greater influence in the
region, but their "success" is largely a figment of the imagination of
overwrought Westerners looking about for another "cold war" enemy, to
echo the framework of this program." Much of what is attributed to Iran
here is the result of the natural dynamics of the individual communities
of the region playing out their own local interests. The fact that some
in Iran may be cheerleading from the sidelines doesn't mean that Iran is
in control. Nor does it mean that what Iran is doing is any different
than any other nation in the world trying to create favorable relations
for itself.
Best,
Bill Beeman
University of Minnesota
4 comments:
You were at the Centcom seminar?
You must have heard this.
Iran, Mattis said, currently represents the greatest threat to long-term regional security.
“We are countering the malign activities of the regime, while bolstering relationships with our partners,” he said, adding that Iran persistently rebuffs international efforts toward engagement.
“[Iran] continues to coerce its own population and pursue activities disruptive to regional peace and stability,” Mattis said, “including supplying arms to militant proxies in Iraq and Afghanistan, and supporting Hezbollah in Lebanon.”
The Centcom commander said he has “no reason for optimism” about Iran’s pursuit of nuclear weapons capability, growing ballistic missile arsenal, and destabilizing regional influence.
Your comments on Iranian influence in Bahrain are simplistic and somewhat disingenous as they do not take into account the schism between al-Da'wa and the Shirazlyyin.
Professor Beeman is out of touch with reality and ignores many facts on the ground. From Osama, Iran and to Muslim brotherhood. This is the same mistake the the gullible President Carter made on Iran and we have been paying the price ever since. Iran leads the world on human rights violation using Islam as a pretext, yet the good professor does not write about it. Iran in fact is interfering in Bahrain, Lebanon and Palestinian internal affairs...but that is OK with the good professor. Iran wants to wipe Israel off the map...who cares?
Such intellectual dishonestly is dappling!
Professor Beeman is out of touch with reality and ignores many facts on the ground. From Osama, Iran and to Muslim brotherhood. This is the same mistake the the gullible President Carter made on Iran and we have been paying the price ever since. Iran leads the world on human rights violation using Islam as a pretext, yet the good professor does not write about it. Iran in fact is interfering in Bahrain, Lebanon and Palestinian internal affairs...but that is OK with the good professor. Iran wants to wipe Israel off the map...who cares?
Such intellectual dishonestly is disingenuous and appalling!
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