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Iran's Human Rights Record
Should Be As 'Intolerable' As Its Nukes
Kaveh Ehsani
Topeka Capital-Journal (Topeka, KS, 12/17/04)
Minuteman Media
Northwest Arkansas Times (Fayetteville, AR, 12/20/04)
Chicago Sun-Times (Chicago, IL, 01/15/05)
Daily
Globe (Worthington, MN)
The Islamic Republic of Iran is in hot water with Washington and
European capitals because of its apparent pursuit of a nuclear bomb.
Dangling carrots of increased trade, the Europeans are trying to
persuade Iran to renounce atomic ambitions. Skeptical of these methods
but bogged down in Iraq, the Bush administration has grumbled on
the sidelines.
Hawks in Washington
want the United Nations to impose sanctions on Tehran
, the theory being that the clerical
regime is so unpopular at home that it will crack under additional
pressure from abroad. Especially after reactionary hardliners recaptured
Iran's parliament by fixing the February 2004 elections, this reasoning
goes, the Iranian people are fed up. Indeed, Iranians are chafing
under renewed restrictions on personal expression, and many of them
abstained from the spurious voting in the spring.
But not every international lever can
unleash democratic forces in Iran
that might eventually change
the regime from within. U.N. sanctions or military strikes directed
at halting the progress of the nuclear program will strengthen the
hand of the regime, despite widespread disillusionment with political
repression and economic stagnation. Should missiles hit or sanctions
hurt a population already facing considerable hardship, hard-line
clerics will be able to mobilize nationalist sentiment against an
external enemy. As one student, Saida Hussain, asked a reporter
for the BBC: “Why should the United States, Britain and Israel all
have nuclear weapons and not us?”
But another form of international pressure
might assist the struggling movement for democratic change in Iran,
a policy that places human rights over Western security concerns
and economic interests. For the last seven years, intrepid journalists,
student protesters and other activists have pushed vigorously for
transformation of the hidebound Iranian system. These activists
have borne the brunt of the conservative backlash, winding up jailed,
beaten and even killed for their beliefs. In November 2004, not
content to have stopped the reformist printing presses, hardliners
began arresting people for what they posted on the Internet. Right-wing
editorialist Hossein Shariatmadari claimed to espy “a spider's web”
spun by exiled supporters of the former Shah and the CIA.
While the United States – from President
George W. Bush on down – has been quick to denounce Iran's alleged
quest for a nuclear weapon as “intolerable,” the regime's violations
of human rights have drawn far milder words of disapproval from
Washington. Even after the rigged February elections, the State
Department had hardly anything to say. European negotiators, for
their part, have reacted with alarm when Tehran
seemed to be backtracking on promises not to enrich uranium, but
merely tut-tutted at the arbitrary imprisonment of pro-democracy
reformers. These virtual silences send ordinary Iranians the message
that the world can easily tolerate them languishing under oppressive
and corrupt clerical rule.
Washington's hawkish stance is not
inspiring another Iranian revolution, and the Europeans' proffered
carrots may fail to entice the Islamic Republic to halt its nuclear
program. It is time for a new and coordinated approach. The Bush
administration should remove Iran from its rhetorical “axis of evil.”
Both the United States
and the Europeans should open a political dialogue with Iran to
resolve security concerns, without preconditions. Expanded trade
relations and investment, however, should be subject to the world's
evaluation of how well the Iranian regime is respecting the civil
and human rights of Iranian citizens.
That kind of pressure would earn the
respect of the majority of Iranians, and make clear that the main
enemies of their prosperity and political participation reside within
their own government. Under that kind of pressure, the hardliners'
grip on Iranian society might indeed begin to slip.
--
Kaveh Ehsani is a research scholar
at the University of Illinois-Chicago and an editor of Middle
East Report.
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