40th anniversary of the Iranian revolution

Forty years ago, a great revolution against a dictatorial monarchy was in progress in Iran. Recalling the heroic scenes of those days still inspires us; scenes of comradeship despite the shortage of goods and fuel due to long days of nationwide strike, initiatives by working people to manage their communities and workplace, mass demonstrations, resistance to sometimes brutal repression, and the pinnacle of those events – an armed insurrection that overthrew the old regime.

However, the revolution did not end up as socialists expected. Like many other revolutions, counter-revolution rose amid blood and fire. The subsequent seizure of power by the most reactionary sections of Iranian society has provided counter-revolutionaries, including pro-capitalist reformists, monarchists, liberals and so on, with an excuse to condemn not only Iran’s 1979 revolution but also to deny the necessity for any revolutions in history. Despite this deception, we must mark that revolution and learn from its complicated process and final crushing.

Unfulfilled democratic revolutions

Iran’s modern history is characterised with two great events. First, the 1905-1911 ‘Constitutional Revolution’, which aimed to put an end to the medieval rule of the Qajar dynasty. The revolution began at the same time as the 1905 Russian revolution. The Constitutional Revolution, in spite of heroic struggles and sacrifices, was almost defeated by a compromise between the bourgeoisie, imperialism and feudalism. After about two decades of political turmoil, the Pahlavi dynasty, which had succeeded the Qajar, destroyed the gains of the revolution and erected an imperialist-backed dictatorship.

World War II led to the then newly allied Britain and the Soviet Union moving to remove Reza Shah Pahlavi in August 1941. This was because they saw him as trying to balance between them and Nazi Germany. In his place, his son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was declared Shah (King). These events opened up a new phase in Iranian history as workers and popular movements developed.

This new period was characterised by the movement for the nationalisation of the oil industry, which was then controlled by British imperialism. However, a US-UK-backed coup in 1953 put an end to this movement and opened the way for the new Shah to impose authoritarian rule.

This defeat was mostly due to the weakness of the National Front led by bourgeois nationalist Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadeq and the inaction and cowardice of pro-Soviet Tudeh Party, formed in the 1940s as the successor to the Iranian Communist Party. The Tudeh Party leadership’s full submission to the Stalinist-led Soviet Union increasingly weakened its appeal. At the same time, as a result of its programme of allying with what it saw as the progressive bourgeoisie as the next step in developing Iran; it failed to use its mass influence to independently mobilise the working class and poor around a revolutionary socialist programme and thereby failed to take advantage of that historic chance.

Roots of crisis

In the years following the 1953 coup, along with imposing excessive repression and the terror by its secret police and the military, the Shah’s regime earned huge revenues owing to a rise in oil prices. Under US auspices, the regime carried out a land reform, which accelerated an imperialist-dominated capitalist development. The Shah, who embodied the feudal class, now represented the comprador-bourgeoisie. The emergence, from the early 1960s, of elements of a more modern bourgeois-imperialist system led to the bankruptcy of traditional middle classes, as well as organisations of the clergy. This increased friction between the regime and sections of the clergy, like those around Khomeini, although the regime continued to be in good terms with senior clerics who always served as a barrier to the left and revolution.

The Shah’s ambitious plan to modernise the country, with the support of imperialist powers that had assigned to him the role of policeman of the Middle East, ended up in a crisis. Owing to petrodollars, Iran’s GNP growth rate reached about 30% in 1973. Despite the improvement of some life indexes of the people, an unprecedented class differentiation developed. Statistics showed a 20% wealthy layer consumed more than 50% of total goods and services in the mid-1970s.

The decay of traditional agriculture in the interest of services, and industries to a lesser extent, caused a huge migration of the peasantry to cities. These members of the impoverished peasantry resided as seasonal unskilled workers in slums around large cities. Months before the beginning of political demonstrations, these people, who erected unlicensed shanties overnight, engaged in clashes with gendarmes and municipality officers who tried to destroy their dwellings. Monarchists charlatans are today trying to obfuscate people by their sheer lies about the Iranian economy in pre-revolutionary years. However, statistics clearly show, for instance, inflation rate rose from 1.5 per cent in 1970 to 25.1 per cent in 1977. In the oil-driven economy, oil revenues hit records in 1974 with earnings of more than 30 billion dollars. However, the revenues then started to fall steadily each year, touching 21 billion dollars in a year before the revolution. Iran’s economic growth rate showed bizarre fluctuations in the last five years of the Pahlavi regime: 6.5% (1974), -2.42% (1975), 17.23% (1976), -4.6% (1977) and -14.05% (1978).

A large portion of the oil revenues went into services and unproductive activities rather than industries. Furthermore, the capitalist development in Iran was highly oil-driven, so that a shock in the oil market caused a sharp fall in the economic growth rate.

The economic downturn and the unprecedented gap between the poor and the rich ignited the masses’ wrath, but this was only a part of the story. The people viewed the Shah as a puppet of imperialism and believed that the US was plundering Iran with the aid of the regime.

Against this background, the revolution started in 1977, with sporadic demonstrations. In 1978, hundreds of people were killed in clashes with the police. Declaring martial law in large cities was not able to silence masses. General strikes paralysed the regime, and more than 100,000 oil industry workers inflicted the heaviest blow on the moribund regime by a strike which cut off Iran’s oil exports. Faced with mounting, determined opposition and amid signs of the state machine, especially the conscript army, the weakening Shah fled the country in early 1979. The revolution reached its pinnacle in February, with a two-day armed insurrection that put an end to the monarchy.

Forces in the 1979 revolution

The forces that fought the regime can be categorised as follows:

Khomeini and the clergy organisation that supported him: Khomeini was almost unknown until a few months before the revolution. But as Bijan Jazani, an Iranian Marxist activist, wrote in 1973, Khomeini had an influence on middle and upper layers of traditional petty-bourgeoisie and had developed links with the bazaar. Previously the regime’s incessant campaign against the Left, for which it found the religion a good tool, provided mullahs with an opportunity to expand their networks throughout the country.

The Iranian middle bourgeoisie organised in nationalist and liberal-religious parties, such as the National Front and the Freedom Movement. In many ways, the left reformism that was embodied in the Tudeh Party could be classified under this category.

The revolutionary left that was largely represented by two urban guerrilla parties, Fedayeen and Mojahedin (originally a radical petty-bourgeois party with a Marxist interpretation of Islam, whose majority converted to Marxism in 1975). The regime killed hundreds of their members and inflicted heavy blows on them in a couple of years before the revolution. These parties had a great influence mainly among university students and intellectuals, but as they left their clandestine activity and approached the masses they won considerable support among layers of workers, teachers, women and young people.

Covert compromise and masses’ initiative

As the degree of the militancy of the people was boosted every day in the last weeks of the monarchy, the fear of both imperialism and Khomeini of an inclination towards the Left. People cried “Leaders! Arm us!” But, Khomeini’s aides were in covert negotiations with US officials and the army generals. Just a few days before the armed instruction, Khomeini said he had not ordered a jihad (holy war) and desired a peaceful transfer of power. Western imperialist countries, which were no longer able to keep the Shah in power, preferred a compromise and the formation of a government composed of Khomeini and his followers, as well as the remnants of the monarchy, especially the army.

However, the tempo of events in a revolutionary situation was so fast that nobody could either predict or prevent people’s moves. On 10th and 11th February 1979, clashes between pro-revolution junior officers and monarchists in a barracks ignited the fire of an armed insurrection. The Fedayeen Organisation had held a large demonstration a day before in Tehran University that enabled it to organise its supporters rapidly to engage in the insurrection. They actively played a crucial role in capturing the radio and TV and police stations. However, because the people had a great illusion for Khomeini, the ultimate winner was him not the Left. The two-day armed uprising had huge impacts on the military and bureaucratic machine of the former regime and paralysed it. In the vacuum created by the insurrection, Khomeini and bourgeois factions started to modify the old machine in their own interests. Alongside, revolutionary organs – councils, committees – mushroomed all over the country and an obvious dual power emerged.

This seemed to be one of the most astonishing events in history; a backward theocratic regime was the counter-revolutionary product of one of the most magnificent revolutions in the 20th century.

Khomeini; from seizing power to purging dissidents

Khomeini and his clique initially had to move carefully to curtail and then crush the revolution. But just two years after the revolution, the new regime set for crushing the revolution, using false slogans that they were protecting the revolution. The wave of executions and arrests of political activists, dissolution of people’s councils and committees and imposing a regime of terror, left almost nothing from the revolution by the mid-1980s.

The eight-year Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988) hugely helped Khomeini to sweep unresolved crises under the carpet, more brutally crush opposition under the false banner of national unity and defending the revolution and unify his regime for a longer time.

Left’s mistakes and lost opportunities

To what extent did the unfavourable outcome of the revolution resulted from the Iranian Left’s theoretical, political and organisational mistakes, and to what extent from socio-economic peculiarities of Iran is still open to discussion? Here we can point to the most obvious mistakes to learn the useful lessons of the revolution.

Based on the dominant “anti-imperialist” discourse of those years, the Left was perplexed when Khomeini continued its confrontation with the West and the US, despite the expectation that it would soon turn into an ally of imperialists. This perplexity caused a major part of the revolutionary Left in Fadayeen Organisation to join the pro-Soviet Tudeh Party, which had supported the Islamic regime from the beginning and shamelessly cheered the repression of the opposition, until it itself was brutally crushed in 1982/3. This policy led to sacrificing of immediate demands of the working class for illusory “non-capitalist development” by Khomeini’s backward regime and ultimately collaboration around 1981 with the regime’s purge; an outrageous “police socialism”!

The Iranian revolution taught us a historic lesson that socialists cannot select their allies dependent on “negative characteristics”. In other words, the enmity of a social force towards the working class’s main enemy is not enough to choose it as an ally. The rise of the reactionary political Islam in recent decades is proof of this.

As the great experience of the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 showed, a clear policy based on correct understanding of the concrete development of the revolution, explaining and winning support for a clear programme, emphasis on the political independence of the working class from pro-capitalist forces, can guarantee the victory of the working class.

The other part of the left that preserved its militancy against the regime suffered from political and organisational weaknesses.

The Left failed to perceive the regime’s capacity to mobilise certain sections of petty-bourgeoisie in favour of its semi-fascist policies. What caused this fusion was the Shia clergy’s extremely anti-woman patriarchal ideology, which found an echo among male members of the petty-bourgeoisie whose business had been shattered by the domination of big capital, and the only kingdom left of their undisputed rule was family. Khomeini’s aversion to the Pahlavi regime emerged when it granted the right to vote to women. The other reason for Khomeini’s criticism was Pahlavi regime’s recognizing all faiths equal before the law, which, to Khomeini, was a blow to Muslim supremacy. The petty-bourgeoisie provided Khomeini with pawns to continue the war and smash his liberal and left opponents.

Based on its faulty understanding of the situation, the revolutionary left failed to launch an organised retreat after the Islamic regime started its huge crackdown in 1981. The Left expected a new revolutionary wave to rise but this did not happen. The leftist organisations were not able to shift from semi-open to underground struggle. They did not have a plan to protect their rank file. Therefore, tens of thousands of leftists were imprisoned and executed. The cadres who had survived Pahlavi’s repression perished in a ceaseless hunt. The left was completely uprooted in the mid-1980s.

A new revolutionary wave

Forty years after that the revolution was crushed, a new revolutionary tide is rising in Iran. Although the bulk of this new wave is the people who were born after the revolution, the 1979 revolution’s glorious days still inspires the current generation. Iranian workers have been to the fore of the protests that started in November 2017. Significantly, many of the demands that have arisen are not just economic and social but are political, including the right to form independent workers’ organisations, for re-nationalisation of privatised companies and for some form of workers’ control.

Under the rule of a repressive theocratic regime, workers are struggling to form their organisations for economic and political activities. However, as in 1979, there also exists the forces with a potential to hijack the new revolutionary wave. Pro-imperialist monarchists, liberals, reformists and bourgeois nationalists from ethnic minorities are each trying to take advantage of the wrath of masses. With their huge propaganda machines, they are trying to obfuscate the situation and lead the people into another quagmire. Under these critical circumstances, the working class’s vanguard must remember the great lessons of the 1979 revolution, which call on it to adhere to a revolutionary socialist strategy, and, at the same time, avoid dwelling outside the class as small groups and move to build its organisations, including a mass party that can clarify the steps that are needed to achieve the real transformation of Iran.

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