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- <text id=93HT1437>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1979: Ayatullah Khomeini
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 7, 1980
- Man of the Year
- Ayatullah Khomeini: The Mystic Who Lit the Fires of Hatred
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Iran's Ayatullah Khomeini seized his nation and shook all Islam
- </p>
- <p> The dour old man of 79 shuffles in his heel-less slippers
- to the rooftop and waves apathetically to crowds that surround
- his modest home in the holy city of Qum. The hooded eyes that
- glare out so balefully from beneath his black turban are often
- turned upward, as if seeking inspiration from on high--which,
- as a religious mystic, he indeed is. To Iran's Shi'ite Muslim
- laity, he is the Imam, an ascetic spiritual leader whose
- teachings are unquestioned. To hundreds of millions of others,
- he is a fanatic whose judgments are harsh, reasoning bizarre
- and conclusions surreal. He is learned in the ways of Shari'a
- (Islamic law) and Platonic philosophy, yet astonishingly
- ignorant of and indifferent to non-Muslim culture. Rarely has
- so improbable a leader shaken the world.
- </p>
- <p> Yet in 1979 the lean figure of the Ayatullah Ruhollah
- Khomeini towered malignly over the globe. As the leader of
- Iran's revolution he gave the 20th century world a frightening
- lesson in the shattering power of irrationality, of the ease
- with which terrorism can be adopted as government policy. As the
- new year neared, 50 of the American hostages seized on Nov. 4
- by a mob of students were still inside the captured U.S.
- embassy in Tehran, facing the prospect of being tried as spies
- by Khomeini's revolutionary courts. The Ayatullah, who gave his
- blessing to the capture, has made impossible and even insulting
- demands for the hostages' release: that the U.S. return deposed
- Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi to Iran for trial and no doubt
- execution, even though the Shah is now in Panama; that America
- submit to a trial of its "crimes" against Iran before an
- international "grand jury" picked by Khomeini's aides. He
- claimed that Iran had every legal and moral right to try
- America's hostage diplomats, an action that would defy a
- decision of the World Court, a vote of the U.N. Security Council
- and one of the most basic rules of accommodation between
- civilized nations. The Ayatullah even insisted, in an
- extraordinary interview with TIME, that if Americans wish to
- have good relations with Iran they must vote Jimmy Carter out
- of office and elect instead a President that Khomeini would find
- "suitable."
- </p>
- <p> Unifying a nation behind such extremist positions is a
- remarkable achievement for an austere theologian who little
- more than a year ago was totally unknown in the West he now
- menaces. But Khomeini's carefully cultivated air of mystic
- detachment cloaks an iron will, an inflexible devotion to
- simple ideas that he has preached for decades, and a finely
- tuned instinct of articulating the passions and rages of his
- people. Khomeini is no politician in the Western sense, yet he
- possesses the most awesome--an ominous--of political gifts:
- the ability to rouse millions to both adulation and fury.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini's importance far transcends the nightmare of the
- embassy seizure, transcends indeed the overthrow of the Shah of
- Iran. The revolution that he led to triumph threatens to upset
- the world balance of power more than any political event since
- Hitler's conquest of Europe. It was unique in several respects:
- a successful, mostly nonviolent revolt against a seemingly
- entrenched dictator, it owed nothing to outside help or even to
- any Western ideology. The danger exists that the Iranian
- revolution could become a model for future uprisings throughout
- the Third World--and not only its Islamic portion. Non-Muslim
- nations too are likely to be attracted by the spectacle of a
- rebellion aimed at expelling all foreign influence in the name
- of xenophobic nationalism.
- </p>
- <p> Already the flames of anti-Western fanaticism that Khomeini
- fanned in Iran threaten to spread through the volatile Soviet
- Union, from the Indian subcontinent to Turkey and southward
- through the Arabian Peninsula to the Horn of Africa. Most
- particularly, the revolution that turned Iran into an Islamic
- republic whose supreme law is the Koran is undermining the
- stability of the Middle East, a region that supplies more than
- half of the Western world's imported oil, a region that stands
- at the strategic crossroads of super-power competition.
- </p>
- <p> As an immediate result, the U.S., Western Europe and Japan
- face continuing inflation and rising unemployment, brought on,
- in part, by a disruption of the oil trade. Beyond that looms the
- danger of U.S.-Soviet confrontation. Washington policymakers,
- uncertain about the leftist impulses of Iran's ubiquitous
- "students"--and perhaps some members of Iran's ruling
- Revolutionary Council--fear that the country may become a new
- target of opportunity for Soviet adventurism. The Kremlin
- leaders in turn must contend with the danger that the U.S.S.R.'s
- 50 million Muslims could be aroused by Khomeini's incendiary
- Islamic nationalism. Yet if the Soviets chose to take advantage
- of the turmoil in Iran as they have intervened in neighboring
- Afghanistan, the U.S. would have to find some way of countering
- such aggression.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini thus poses to the U.S. a supreme test of both will
- and strategy. So far his hostage blackmail has produced a result
- he certainly did not intend: a surge of patriotism that has made
- the American people more united than they have been on any issue
- in two decades. The shock of seeing the U.S. flag burned on the
- streets of Tehran, or misused by embassy attackers to carry
- trash, has jolted the nation out of its self-doubting "Viet Nam
- syndrome." Worries about America's ability to influence events
- abroad are giving way to anger about impotence; the country now
- seems willing to exert its power. But how can that power be
- brought to bear against an opponent immune to the usual forms
- of diplomatic, economic and even military pressure, and how can
- it be refined to deal with others in the Third World who might
- rise to follow Khomeini's example? That may be the central
- problem for U.S. foreign policy throughout the 1980s.
- </p>
- <p> The outcome of the present turmoil on Iran is almost
- totally unpredictable. It is unclear how much authority
- Khomeini, or Iran's ever changing government, exerts over day-
- to-day events. Much as Khomeini has capitalized on it, the
- seizure of the U.S. embassy tilted the balance in Iran's murky
- revolutionary politics from relative moderates to extremists
- who sometimes seem to listen to no one; the militants at the
- embassy openly sneer at government ministers, who regularly
- contradict one another. The death of Khomeini, who has no
- obvious successor, could plunge the country into anarchy.
- </p>
- <p> But one thing is certain: the world will not again look
- quite the way it did before Feb. 1, 1979, the day on which
- Khomeini flew back to a tumultuous welcome in Tehran after 15
- years in exile. He thus joins a handful of other world figures
- whose deeds are debatable--or worse--but who nonetheless
- branded a year as their own. In 1979 the Ayatullah Ruhollah
- Khomeini met TIME's definition of Man of the Year: he was the
- one who "has done the most to change the news, for better or for
- worse."
- </p>
- <p> Apart from Iran and its fallout, 1979 was a year of turmoil
- highlighted by an occasional upbeat note: hopeful stirrings
- that offset to a degree the continuing victories of the forces
- of disruption. On a spectacular visit to his homeland of Poland
- and the U.S., Ireland and Mexico, Pope John Paul II demonstrated
- that he was a man whose warmth, dignity and radiant humanity
- deeply affected even those who did not share his Roman Catholic
- faith. Despite his rigidly orthodox approach to doctrinal
- issues, the Pope's message of peace, love, justice and concern
- for the poor stirred unprecedented feelings of brotherhood.
- </p>
- <p> The election of Conservative Party Leader Margaret Thatcher
- as Prime Minister of Britain was perhaps the most notable sign
- that many voters in Europe were disillusioned with statist
- solutions and wanted a return to more conservative policies. At
- year's end her government could claim one notable diplomatic
- success. Under the skillful guidance of Thatcher's Foreign
- Secretary, Lord Carrington, leaders of both the interim
- Salisbury government and the Patriotic Front guerrillas signed
- an agreement that promised--precariously--to end a seven-
- year-old civil war and provide a peaceful transition to genuine
- majority rule in Zimbabwe Rhodesia. There were other indications
- of growing rationality in Africa, as three noxious dictators who
- had transformed their nations into slaughterhouses fell from
- power: Idi Amin was ousted from Uganda, Jean Bedal Bokassa from
- the Central African Empire (now Republic), and Francisco Macias
- Nguema from Equatorial Guinea.
- </p>
- <p> Southeast Asia, though, as it has for so long, endured a
- year of war, cruelty and famine. Peking and Moscow jockeyed for
- influence in the area. China briefly invaded Viet Nam and then
- withdrew, achieving nothing but proving once again that
- Communists have their own explosive quarrels. Hanoi's Soviet-
- backed rulers expelled hundreds of thousands of its ethnic
- Chinese citizens, many of whom drowned at sea; survivors landed
- on the shores of nations that could not handle such onslaughts
- of refugees. In Cambodia, the Vietnamese-backed regime of Heng
- Samrin was proving little better than the maniacal Chinese-
- supported dictatorship of Pol Pot that it had deposed. Hundreds
- of thousands of Cambodians still faced death by starvation or
- disease as the year ended, despite huge relief efforts organized
- by the outside world.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S., 1979 was a year of indecision and frustration.
- Inflation galloped to an annual rate of 13% and stayed there,
- all but impervious to attacks by the Carter Administration. The
- burden of containing inflation eventually fell on the shoulders
- of new Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker. His tough fiscal
- measures, including higher interest rates and a clampdown on
- the money supply, do promise to restrain price boosts--but
- only after a distressing time lag, and at the cost of making
- more severe a recession that the U.S. seemed headed for anyway
- in 1980. President Carter's energy program at last began
- staggering through Congress, but a near disaster at Three Mile
- Island in Pennsylvania raised legitimate questions--as well
- as much unnecessary hysteria--about how safe and useful
- nuclear power will be as a partial substitute for the imported
- oil that the eruption in Iran will help make ever more costly.
- The conclusion of a SALT II agreement wit the Soviet Union--more
- modest in scope than many Americans had urged, but
- basically useful to the U.S.--led to congressional wrangling
- that raised doubts about whether the Strategic Arms Limitation
- Treaty will even be ratified in 1980. The SALT debate put a
- substantial strain on U.S.-Soviet relations, which were
- deteriorating for lots of other reasons as well.
- </p>
- <p> For much of the year, Carter appeared so ineffective a
- leader that his seeming weakness touched off an unprecedentedly
- early and crowded scramble to succeed him. Ten Republicans
- announced as candidates for the party's 1980 presidential
- nomination; at year's end, however, the clear favorite was the
- man who had done or said hardly anything, Ronald Reagan. On the
- Democratic side, Senator Edward Kennedy overcame his
- reservations and declared his candidacy, but early grass-roots
- enthusiasm about his "leadership qualities" dissipated in the
- face of his lackluster campaigning, his astonishing incoherence,
- and his failure to stake out convincingly different positions
- on the issues. At year's end Carter was looking much stronger,
- primarily because his firm yet restrained response to Iran's
- seizure of hostages led to a classic popular reaction: Let's
- rally round the President in a crisis.
- </p>
- <p> None of these trends could match in power and drama, or in
- menacing implications for the future, the eruption in Iran. A
- year ago, in its cover story on 1978's Man of the Year, Chinese
- Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping, TIME noted that "the Shah of Iran's
- 37-year reign was shaken by week upon week of riots." Shortly
- thereafter, the Shah fell in one of the greatest political
- upheavals of the post-World War II era, one that raised
- troubling questions about the ability of the U.S. to guide or
- even understand the seething passions of the Third World.
- </p>
- <p> Almost to the very end, the conventional wisdom of Western
- diplomats and journalists was that the Shah would survive; after
- all, he had come through earlier troubles seemingly
- strengthened. In 1953 the Shah had actually fled the country.
- But he was restored to power by a CIA-inspired coup that ousted
- Mohammed Mossadegh, the nationalist Prime Minister who had been
- TIME's Man of the Year for 1951 because he had "oiled the wheels
- of chaos." In 1963 Iran had been swept by riots stirred up by
- the powerful Islamic clergy against the Shah's White Revolution.
- Among other things, this well-meant reform abolished the feudal
- landlord-peasant system. Two consequences: the reform broke up
- properties administered by the Shi'ite clergy and reduced their
- income, some of which consisted of donations from large
- landholders. The White Revolution also gave the vote to women.
- The Shah suppressed those disturbances without outside help, in
- part by jailing one of the instigators--an ascetic theologian
- named Ruhollah Khomeini, who had recently attained the title of
- Ayatullah and drawn crowds to fiery sermons in which he
- denounced the land reform as a fraud and the Shah as a traitor
- to Islam. (An appellation that means "sign of God." There is no
- formal procedure for bestowing it; a religious leader is called
- ayatullah by a large number of reverent followers and is
- accepted as such by the rest of the Iranian clergy. At present,
- Iran has perhaps 50 to 60 mullahs generally regarded as
- ayatullahs.) In 1964 Khomeini was arrested and exiled, first to
- Turkey, then to Iraq, where he continued to preach against the
- idolatrous Shah and to promulgate his vision of Iran as an
- "Islamic republic."
- </p>
- <p> The preachments seemed to have little effect, as the Shah
- set about building the most thoroughly Westernized nation in all
- of the Muslim world. The progress achieved in a deeply backward
- country was stunning. Petroleum revenues built steel mills,
- nuclear power plants, telecommunication systems and a formidable
- military machine, complete with U.S. supersonic fighters and
- missiles. Dissent was ruthlessly suppressed, in part by the use
- of torture in the dungeons of SAVAK, the secret police. It is
- still not clear how widespread the tortures and political
- executions were; but the Shah did not heed U.S. advice to
- liberalize his regime, and repression inflamed rather than
- quieted dissent.
- </p>
- <p> By 1978 the Shah had alienated almost all elements of
- Iranian society. Westernized intellectuals were infuriated by
- rampant corruption and repression; workers and peasants by the
- selective prosperity that raised glittering apartments for the
- rich while the poor remained in mud hovels; bazaar merchants by
- the Shah-supported businessmen who monopolized bank credits,
- supply contracts and imports; the clergy and their pious Muslim
- followers by the gambling casinos, bars and discotheques that
- seemed the most visible result of Westernization. (One of the
- Shah's last prime ministers also stopped annual government
- subsidies to the mullahs.) Almost everybody hated the police
- terror and sneered in private at the Shah's Ozymandian
- megalomania, symbolized by a $100 million fete he staged at
- Persepolis in 1971 to celebrate the 2,500 years of the Persian
- Empire. In fact, the Shah's father was a colonel in the army
- when he overthrew the Qajar dynasty in 1925, and as Khomeini
- pointed out angrily from exile at the time of the Persepolis
- festival, famine was raging in that part of the country.
- </p>
- <p> But the U.S. saw the Shah as a stable and valuable ally.
- Washington was annoyed by the Shah's insistence on raising oil
- prices at every OPEC meeting, yet that irritation was outweighed
- by the fact that the Shah was staunchly anti-Communist and a
- valuable balance wheel in Middle East politics. Eager to build
- up Iran as a "regional influential" that could act as America's
- surrogate policeman of the Persian Gulf, the U.S. lent the Shah
- its all-out support. President Richard Nixon and Secretary of
- State Henry Kissinger allowed him to buy all the modern weapons
- he wanted. Washington also gave its blessing to a flood of
- American business investment in Iran and dispatched an army of
- technocrats there.
- </p>
- <p> The depth of its commitment to the Shah apparently blinded
- Washington to the growing discontent. U.S. policymakers wanted
- to believe that their investment was buying stability and
- friendship; they trusted what they heard from the monarch, who
- dismissed all opposition as "the blah-blahs of armchair
- critics." Even after the revolution began, U.S. officials were
- convinced that "there is no alternative to the Shah." Carter
- took time out from the Camp David summit in September 1978 to
- phone the Iranian monarch and assure him of Washington's
- continued support.
- </p>
- <p> By then it was too late. Demonstrations and protest marches
- that started as a genuine popular outbreak grew by a kind of
- spontaneous combustion. The first parades drew fire from the
- Shah's troops, who killed scores and started a deadly cycle:
- marches to mourn the victims of the first riot, more shooting,
- more martyrs, crowds swelling into the hundreds of thousands and
- eventually millions in Tehran. Khomeini at this point was
- primarily a symbol of the revolution, which at the outset had
- no visible leaders. But even in exile the Ayatullah was well
- known inside Iran for his uncompromising insistence that the
- Shah must go. When demonstrators began waving the Ayatullah's
- picture, the frightened Shah pressured Iraq to boot Khomeini
- out. It was a fatal blunder; in October 1978 the Ayatullah
- settled in Neauphle-le-Chateau, outside Paris, where he gathered
- a circle of exiles and for the first time publicized his views
- through the Western press.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini now became the active head of the revolution.
- Cassettes of his anti-Shah sermons sold like pop records in the
- bazaars and were played in crowded mosques throughout the
- country. When he called for strikes, his followers shut down the
- banks, the postal service, the factories, the food stores and,
- most important, the oil wells, bringing the country close to
- paralysis. The Shah imposed martial law, but to no avail. On
- Jan. 16, after weeks of daily protest parades, the Shah and his
- Empress flew off to exile, leaving a "regency council" that
- included Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhtiar, a moderate who had
- spent time in the Shah's prisons. But Khomeini announced that
- no one ruling in the Shah's name would be acceptable, and Iran
- was torn by the largest riots of the entire revolution. The
- Ayatullah returned from Paris to a tumultuous welcome and
- Bakhtiar fled. "The holy one has come!" the crowds greeting
- Khomeini shouted triumphantly. "He is the light of our lives!"
- The crush stalled the Ayatullah's motorcade, so that he had to
- be lifted out of the crowds, over the heads of his adulators,
- by helicopter. He was flown to a cemetery, where he prayed at
- the graves of those who had died during the revolution.
- </p>
- <p> Khomeini withdrew to the holy city of Qum, appointed a
- government headed by Mehdi Bazargan, an engineer by training and
- veteran of Mossadegh's Cabinet, and announced that he would
- confine his own role during "the one or two years left to me"
- to making sure that Iran followed "in the image of Muhammad." It
- quickly became apparent that real power resided in the
- revolutionary komitehs that sprang up all over the country, and
- the komitehs took orders only from the 15-man Revolutionary
- Council headed by Khomeini (the names of its other members were
- long kept secret). Bazargan and his Cabinet had to trek to Qum
- for weekly lunches with Khomeini to find out what the Ayatullah
- would or would not allow.
- </p>
- <p> Some observers distinguish two stages in the entire upheaval:
- the first a popular revolt that overthrew the Shah, then a
- "Khomeini coup" that concentrated all power in the clergy. The
- Ayatullah's main instrument was a stream of elamiehs
- (directives) from Qum, many issued without consulting Bazargan's
- nominal government. Banks and heavy industry were nationalized
- and turned over to government managers. Many of the elamiehs
- were concerned with imposing a strict Islamic way of life on all
- Iranians. Alcohol was forbidden. Women were segregated from men
- in schools below the university level, at swimming pools,
- beaches and other public facilities. Khomeini even banned most
- music from radio and TV. Marches were acceptable, he told
- Italian Journalist Oriana Fallaci, but other Western music
- "dulls the mind, because it involves pleasure and ecstasy,
- similar to drugs." Fallaci: "Even the music of Bach, Beethoven,
- Verdi?" Khomeini: "I do not know those names."
- </p>
- <p> In power, Khomeini and his followers displayed a
- retaliatory streak. Islamic revolutionary courts condemned more
- than 650 Iranians to death, after trials at which defense
- lawyers were rarely, if ever, present, and spectators stepped
- forward to add their own accusations to those of the
- prosecutors; death sentences were generally carried out
- immediately by firing squad. An unknown but apparently large
- number of other Iranians were sentenced to life imprisonment.
- Khomeini preaches the mercy of God but showed little of his own
- to those executed, who were, he said, torturers and killers of
- the Shah's who got what they deserved. Some were, including the
- generals and highest-ranking politicians, but the victims also
- included at least seven prostitutes, 15 men accused of
- homosexual rape, and a Jewish businessman alleged to be spying
- for Israel. Defenders of Khomeini's regime argue with some
- justification that far fewer people were condemned by the
- revolutionary courts than were tortured to death by the Shah's
- SAVAK, and that the swift trials were necessary to defuse public
- anger against the minions of the deposed monarch.
- </p>
- <p> As usually happens in revolutions, the forces of
- dissolution, once let loose, are not so easily tamed. Iran's
- economy suffered deeply, and unrest in at least three ethnic
- areas--those of the Kurds, the Azerbaijanis and the
- Baluchis--presented continuing threats to Tehran's, or Qum's, control.
- Many Western experts believe Khomeini shrewdly seized upon the
- students' attack on the U.S. embassy, which he applauded but
- claims he did not order, as a way of directing popular attention
- away from the country's increasing problems. It gave him once
- again a means of presenting all difficulties as having been
- caused by the U.S., to brand all his opponents--believers in
- parliamentary government, ethnic separatists, Muslims who
- questioned his interpretations of Islamic law--tools of the
- CIA. When the United Nations and the World Court condemned the
- seizure, he labeled these bodies stooges of the enemy. It was
- Iran against the world--indeed, all Islam against the
- "infidels."
- </p>
- <p> When Bazargan resigned to protest the capture of the
- hostages, the Ayatullah made the Revolutionary Council the
- government in name as well as fact. Then, during the holy month
- known as Muharram, with popular emotion at a frenzied height as
- a result of the confrontation with the U.S., Khomeini expertly
- managed a vote on a new constitution that turned Iran into a
- theocracy. Approved overwhelmingly in a Dec. 2-3 referendum,
- the constitution provided for an elected President and
- parliament, but placed above them a "guardian council" of devout
- Muslims to make sure that nothing the elected bodies do violates
- Islamic law. Atop the structure is a faqih (literally,
- jurisprudent), the leading theologian of Iran, who must approve
- of the President, holds veto power over virtually every act of
- government, and even commands the armed forces. Though the
- constitution does not name him, when it goes fully into effect
- after elections this month and in February, Khomeini obviously
- will become the faqih.
- </p>
- <p> How did the Ayatullah capture a revolution that started out
- as a leaderless explosion of resentment and hate? Primarily by
- playing adroitly to, and in part embodying, some of the
- psychological elements that made the revolt possible. There was,
- for example, a widespread egalitarian yearning to end the
- extremes of wealth and poverty that existed under the
- Shah--and the rich could easily be tarred as clients of the "U.S.
- imperialists." Partly because of the long history of Soviet,
- British and then American meddling in their affairs, Iranians
- were and are basically xenophobic, and thus susceptible to the
- Ayatullah's charges that the U.S. (and, of course, the CIA) was
- responsible for the country's ills. Iranians could also easily
- accept that kind of falsehood since they had grown used to
- living off gossip and rumor mills during the reign of the Shah,
- when the heavily censored press played down even nonpolitical
- bad news about Iran. When Khomeini declared that the Americans
- and Israelis were responsible for the November attack by Muslim
- fanatics in Mecca's Sacred Mosque, this deliberate lie was given
- instant credence by multitudes of Iranians.
- </p>
- <p> By far the most powerful influence that cemented Khomeini's
- hold on his country is the spirit of Shi'ism--the branch of
- Islam to which 93% of Iran's 35.2 million people belong. In
- contrast to the dominant Sunni wing of Islam, Shi'ism emphasizes
- martyrdom; thus many Iranians are receptive to Khomeini's
- speeches about what a "joy" and "honor" it would be to die in
- a war with the U.S. Beyond that, Shi'ism allows for the presence
- of an intermediary between God and man. Originally, the
- mediators were twelve imams, who Shi'ites believe were the
- rightful successors of the Prophet Muhammad; the twelfth
- disappeared in A.D. 940. He supposedly is in hiding, but will
- return some day to purify the religion and institute God's reign
- of justice on earth. This belief gives Shi'ism a strong
- messianic cast, to which Khomeini appeals when he promises to
- expel Western influence and to turn Iran into a pure Islamic
- society. The Ayatullah has never claimed the title of Imam for
- himself, but he has done nothing to discourage its use by his
- followers, a fact that annoys some of his peers among the
- Iranian clergy. Ayatullah Seyed Kazem Sharietmadari, Khomeini's
- most potent rival for popular reverence, has acidly observed
- that the Hidden Imam will indeed return, "but not in a Boeing
- 747"--a reference to the plane that carried Khomeini from
- France to Iran.
- </p>
- <p> Iran and Iraq are the main Muslim states where the majority
- of the population is Shi'ite; but there are substantial Shi'ite
- minorities in the Gulf states, Lebanon, Turkey and Saudi
- Arabia. Khomeini's followers have been sending these Shi'ites
- messages urging them to join in an uprising against Western
- influence. The power of Khomeini's appeal for a "struggle
- between Islam and the infidels" must not be underestimated. In
- these and many other Islamic countries, Western technology and
- education have strained the social structure and brought with
- them trends that seem like paganism to devout Muslims. In
- addition, Muslims have bitter memories of a century or more of
- Western colonialism that kept most Islamic countries in
- servitude until a generation ago, and they tend to see U.S.
- support of Israel as a continuation of this "imperialist"
- tradition.
- </p>
- <p> With Khomeini's encouragement, Muslims--not all of them
- Shi'ites--have staged anti-American riots in Libya, India and
- Bangladesh. In Islamabad, the capital of Pakistan, a mob burned
- the U.S embassy and killed two U.S. servicemen; the Ayatullah's
- reaction was "great joy." In Saudi Arabia, possessor of the
- world's largest oil reserves, the vulnerability of the royal
- family was made starkly apparent when a band of 200 to 300 well-
- armed raiders in November seized the Sacred Mosque in Mecca, the
- holiest of all Islamic shrines, which is under the protection
- of King Khalid. The raiders appeared to have mixed religious and
- political motives: they seemingly were armed and trained in
- Marxist South Yemen, but were fundamentalists opposed to all
- modernism, led by a zealot who had proclaimed the revolution in
- Iran to be a "new dawn" for Islam. It took the Saudi army more
- than a week to root them out from the catacomb-like basements
- of the mosque, and 156 died in the fighting--82 raiders and
- 74 Saudi troopers. In addition, demonstrators waving Khomeini's
- picture last month paraded in the oil towns of Saudi Arabia's
- Eastern Province. Saudi troops apparently opened fire on the
- protestors and at least 15 people are said to have died.
- </p>
- <p> Such rumblings have deeply shaken the nerves, if not yet
- undermined the stability, of governments throughout the Middle
- East. Leaders of the House of Saud regard Khomeini as an
- outright menace. Egypt's President Anwar Sadat denounced
- Khomeini as a man who is trying to play God and whose actions
- are a "crime against Islam [and] and insult to humanity."
- Nonetheless, the Ayatullah's appeal to Muslims, Sunni as well
- as Shi'ite, is so strong the even pro-Western Islamic leaders
- have been reluctant to give the U.S. more than minimal support
- in the hostage crisis. They have explicitly warned Washington
- that any U.S. military strike on Iran, even one undertaken in
- retaliation for the killing of the hostages, would so enrage
- their people as to threaten the security of every government in
- the area.
- </p>
- <p> The appeal of Khomeini's Islamic fundamentalism to non-
- Muslim nations in the Third World is limited. Not so the wave
- of nationalism he unleashed in Iran. Warns William Quandt,
- senior fellow at the Brookings Institution: "People in the Third
- World were promised great gains upon independence [from
- colonialism], and yet they still find their lives and societies
- in a mess." Historically, such unfulfilled expectations prepare
- the ground for revolution, and the outbreak in Iran offers an
- example of an uprising that embodies a kind of nose-thumbing
- national pride.
- </p>
- <p> Selig Harrison, senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment
- for International Peace, says the overthrow of Iran's Shah "is
- appealing to the Third World as a nationalist revolution that
- has stood up to superpower influence. At the rational level,
- Third World people know that you cannot behave like Khomeini
- and they do not condone violation of diplomatic immunity. But
- at the emotional level, mass public opinion in many Third World
- countries is not unfriendly to what Khomeini has done. There is
- an undercurrent of satisfaction in seeing a country stand up to
- superpower influence."
- </p>
- <p> The Iranian revolution has also had a dramatic impact in
- Western economies. 1979 was the year in which the world economy
- moved from an era of recurrent oil surpluses into an age of
- chronic shortages. Indeed, it was a year in which the frequent
- warnings of pessimists that the industrial nations had made
- themselves dangerously dependent on crude oil imported from
- highly unstable countries came true with a vengeance. For more
- than three centuries the industrial West had prospered thanks
- partly to resources from colonies or quasi-colonies. Now a great
- historical reversal was at hand.
- </p>
- <p> "If there had been no revolution in Iran," says John
- Lichtblau, executive director of the Petroleum Industry Research
- Foundation, "1979 would have been a normal year." The strikes
- that accompanied the revolution shut off Iranian production
- completely early in the year. Through output resumed in March,
- it ran most of the time at no more than 3.5 million bbl. a
- day--little more than half the level under the Shah. Khomeini made
- it clear that no more could be expected. In fact, Iranian output
- has dropped again in recent months, to around 3.1 million bbl.
- a day. Oil Minister Ali Akbar Moinfar says it will go down
- further because "at the new price levels, Iran will be able to
- produce and export less and still cover its revenue needs."
- </p>
- <p> The cutback in Iran reduced supplies to the non-Communist
- world by about 4%. That was enough to produce a precarious
- balance between world supply and demand. Spot shortages cropped
- up, and the industrial West went through a kind of buyers'
- panic; governments and companies scrambled to purchase every
- drop available, to keep houses warm and the wheels of industry
- turning, and to build stockpiles to guard against the all-too-
- real prospect of another shutdown in Iran or a supply disruption
- somewhere else.
- </p>
- <p> The lid came off prices with a bang. OPEC raised prices
- during 1979 by an average of 94.7%, to $25 a bbl.--vs. $12.84
- a year ago and a mere $2 in 1970. Moreover, oil-exporting
- nations shifted a growing proportion of their output to the spot
- market, where oil not tied up under contract is sold for
- whatever price buyers will pay. Before the Iranian revolution,
- the spot market accounted for only 5% of the oil moving in world
- trade, and prices differed little from OPEC's official ones.
- During 1979, anywhere from 10% to 33% of internationally traded
- crude bought by the industrial countries went through the spot
- market, and prices shot as high as $45 a bbl.
- </p>
- <p> The runaway price rises will fan inflation in the U.S.,
- Western Europe and Japan. Affected are not only the price of
- gasoline and heating oil but also the cost of thousands of
- products made from petrochemicals--goods ranging from
- fertilizers and laundry detergents to panty hose and phonograph
- records. Oil price hikes will bear on apartment rents and the
- price of food brought to stores by gasoline-burning trucks. The
- price boosts act as a kind of gigantic tax, siphoning from the
- pockets of consumers money that would otherwise be used to buy
- non-oil goods and services, thus depressing production and
- employment. In the U.S., which imports about half its oil, a
- 1980 recession that would increase unemployment might happen
- anyway; the oil price increases have made it all but inevitable.
- </p>
- <p> At year's end OPEC had almost come apart; at their December
- meeting in Caracas its members could not agree on any unified
- pricing structure at all. So long as supply barely equals
- demand, there will be leapfrogging price boosts; four countries
- announced 10% to 15% price hikes last Friday. In the longer run,
- the disunity could lead to price-cutting competition, but only
- if the industrial countries, and especially the U.S., take more
- drastic steps to conserve energy and reduce imports than any
- they have instituted yet--and even then OPEC might come back
- together. It is presumably not in the cartel's economic or
- political self-interest to bankrupt its major customers,
- especially since many of OPEC's member states have invested
- their excess profits in the West. Yet even moderate nations like
- Saudi Arabia, which have fought to keep price boosts to a
- minimum, argue that inflation price hikes will be necessary as
- long as oil prices are tied to a declining dollar.
- </p>
- <p> A still greater danger is that the producers may not pump
- enough oil to permit much or any economic growth in either the
- industrial or underdeveloped worlds. The producers have learned
- that prices rise most rapidly when supply is kept barely equal
- to, or a bit below, demand; they have good reason to think that
- oil kept in the ground will appreciate more than any other
- asset, and the Iranian explosion has demonstrated that all-out
- production, and the forced-draft industrialization and
- Westernization that it finances, can lead not to stability but
- to social strains so intense that they end in revolution. The
- result of a production hold-down could be a decade or so of
- serious economic stagnation. Oil Consultant Walter Levy sees
- these potential gloomy consequences for the West: "A lower
- standard of living, a reduction in gross national product, large
- balance of payments drains, loss of value in currencies, high
- unemployment."
- </p>
- <p> Warns Mobil Chairman Rawleigh Warner: "The West can no
- longer assume that oil-exporting countries, and specifically
- those in the Middle East, will be willing to tailor production
- to demand. The safer assumptions is that the consuming countries
- will increasingly have to tailor their demand to production. And
- the factors that determine the ceiling in production are more
- likely to be political than economic or technical."
- </p>
- <p> The West will be lucky if oil shortages are the worst
- result of Khomeini's revolution. An even more menacing prospect
- is a shift in the world balance of power toward the Soviet
- Union.
- </p>
- <p> The Ayatullah is no friend of the Soviets. Far from it:
- while in his mind "America is the great Satan," he knows, and
- has often said, that Communism is incompatible with Islam.
- Tehran mobs have occasionally chanted "Communism will die!" as
- well as "Death to Carter!"
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, Islamic fundamentalism could become a domestic
- worry to the Kremlin. Its estimated 50 million Muslims make the
- Soviet Union the world's fifth largest Muslim state. (After
- Indonesia (123.2 million), India (80 million), Pakistan (72.3
- million) and Bangladesh (70.8 million).) For the Kremlin,
- Muslims represent a demographic time bomb. By the year 2000,
- there will be an estimated 100 million Soviet Muslims, vs. about
- 150 million ethnic Russians. Most of the Muslims live in areas
- of Central Asia, bordering on Iran, that were subjugated by
- czarist armies only a little more than a century ago--Samarakand,
- for example, fell in 1868. The Soviets have soft-
- pedaled antireligious propaganda and allowed the Muslims to
- maintain mosques and theological schools. Consequently, the
- Azerbaijanis, Turkmen and other Muslim minorities in the
- U.S.S.R. could eventually become targets for Khomeini's
- advocacy of an Islamic rebellion against all foreign domination
- of Muslims.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Moscow can hardly ignore the opportunity presented by
- Khomeini's rise. An Iran sliding into anarchy, and a Middle East
- shaken by the furies of Khomeini's followers, would offer the
- Soviets a chance to substitute their own influence for the
- Western presence that the Ayatullah's admirers vow to expel. And
- the Middle East is an unparalleled geopolitical prize.
- </p>
- <p> Whoever controls the Middle East's oil, or the area's
- Strait of Hormuz (40 miles wide at its narrowest) between Iran
- and the Sultanate of Oman through which most of it passes,
- acquires a stranglehold on the world's economy. The U.S.S.R.
- today is self-sufficient in oil, but it could well become a
- major net importer in the 1980s--and thus be in direct
- competition with the West for the crude pumped out of the desert
- sands. The warm-water ports so ardently desired by the Czars
- since the 18th century retain almost as much importance today.
- Soviet missile-firing submarines, for example, now have to leave
- the ice-locked areas around Murmansk and Archangel through
- narrow channels where they can easily be tracked by U.S.
- antisubmarine forces. They would be much harder to detect if
- they could slip out of ports on the Arabian Sea.
- </p>
- <p> The conflagration in Iran, and the threat of renewed
- instability throughout the region, could open an entirely new
- chapter in the story of Soviet efforts to infiltrate the Middle
- East. So far, the Soviet leaders have played a double game in
- the hostage crisis. Representatives of the U.S.S.R. voted in the
- United Nations and World Court to free the hostages. At the same
- time, to Washington's intense annoyance, the Soviets have
- proclaimed sympathy for Iran's anger against the U.S. The
- Kremlin apparently wants to keep lines open to Khomeini's
- followers, if not to the Ayatullah himself, while it awaits its
- chance.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, Moscow has been acting more brazenly throughout
- the entire region of crisis. Around Christmas, the U.S.S.R. began
- airlifting combat troops into Afghanistan, reinforcing an
- already strong Soviet presence. Last week the Soviet soldiers
- participated in a coup ousting a pro-Moscow regime that had
- proved hopelessly ineffective in trying to put down an
- insurrection by anti-Communist Muslim tribesmen. At week's end,
- Washington charged that Soviet troops had crossed the border in
- Afghanistan in what appeared to be an outright invasion.
- </p>
- <p> Who or what follows Khomeini is already a popular guessing
- game in Tehran, Washington and doubtless Moscow. Few of the
- potential scenarios seem especially favorable to U.S. interests.
- One possibility is a military coup, led by officers once loyal
- to the Shah and now anxious to restore order. That might seem
- unlikely in view of the disorganized state of the army and the
- popular hatred of the old regime, but the danger apparently
- seems significant to Khomeini; he is enthusiastically expanding
- the Pasdaran militia as a counterweight to the official armed
- forces. A military coup might conceivably win the backing of the
- urban intelligentsia, which resents the theocracy and Washington
- analysts think that even some mullahs might accommodate
- themselves to it if they see no other way of blocking a leftist
- takeover. Whether such an uneasy coalition could fashion a
- stable regime is questionable.
- </p>
- <p> Another potential outcome is a takeover, swift or gradual,
- by younger clergymen in alliance with such Western-educated
- leaders as Foreign Minister Sadegh Ghotbzadeh. A government
- composed of those forces would be less fanatical than the
- Ayatullah but still very hard-line anti-U.S. Another
- possibility, considered by some analysts to be the most likely,
- would be an eventual confrontation between Khomeini's religious
- establishment and members of the urban upper and middle classes,
- who applaud the nationalistic goals of the revolution but chafe
- under rigid enforcement of Islamic law--and have the brains to
- mount an effective opposition.
- </p>
- <p> A leftist takeover is the most worrisome prospect to
- Washington policymakers. The Mujahedin (Islamic socialist) and
- Fedayan (Marxist) movements maintain guerilla forces armed with
- weapons seized from the Shah's garrisons during the revolution.
- Both groups disclaim any ties with the U.S.S.R., and some
- Iranian exiles believe a dialogue between them and moderate
- forces would be possible. However, they are very anti-Western.
- A third contender is the Tudeh (Communist) Party, which has a
- reputation of loyally following Moscow's line. It is currently
- voicing all-out support of Khomeini because, its leaders
- disingenuously explain, any foe of America's imperialism is a
- friend of theirs. In gratitude, the Ayatullah has permitted them
- to operate openly.
- </p>
- <p> Any of these potential scenarios might draw support from
- Iran's ethnic minorities, whose demands for cultural and
- political autonomy--local languages in schools, local
- governing councils--have been rebuffed so brusquely by
- Khomeini's government as to trigger armed rebellion. Iran, a
- country three times the size of France, was officially
- designated an empire by the Shah, and in one sense it is; its
- 35.2 millon people are divided into many ethnic strains and
- speak as many as 20 languages, not counting the dialects of
- remote tribes. The 4 million Kurds, superb guerilla fighters who
- live in the western mountains, have at times dreamed of an
- independent Kurdistan, and today have set up what amounts to an
- autonomous region. The Baluchis, a nomadic tribe of Sunni
- Muslims, boycotted the referendum on the Iranian constitution,
- which they viewed as an attempt to impose Shi'ism on them. The
- 13 million Azerbaijanis, a Turkic people, also boycotted the
- constitutional referendum and in recent weeks have come close
- to an open revolt that could tear Iran apart.
- </p>
- <p> Some Washington policy planners have toyed with the idea
- of encouraging separatism, seeking the breakup of Iran as a kind
- of ultimate sanction against Khomeini. But the hazards of doing
- this far outweigh the advantages; true civil war in Iran would
- be the quickest way of destroying whatever stability remains in
- the Middle East. The lands of the Azerbaijanis stretch into
- Turkey and the Soviet Union, those of the Kurds into Turkey and
- Iraq, those of the Baluchis into Afghanistan and Pakistan.
- Successful secessionist movements could tear away parts of some
- of those countries as well as of Iran, leaving a number of weak
- new countries--the kind that usually tumble into social and
- economic chaos--and dismembered older ones. All might be
- subject to Soviet penetration. Anarchy in Iran could also
- trigger a conflict with its uneasy neighbor, Iraq, which shelled
- border areas of Iran three weeks ago. The geopolitical stakes
- there would be so great that the superpowers would be sorely
- tempted to intervene.
- </p>
- <p> The options for U.S. policy toward Iran are limited. So
- long as the hostages are in captivity, Washington must use every
- possible form of diplomatic and economic pressure to get them
- released. The Carter Administration has all but said that
- military action may well be necessary if the hostages are
- killed. But if they are released unharmed, many foreign policy
- experts think that the U.S. would be well advised not to
- retaliate for the seizure but simply to cut all ties with Iran
- and ignore the country for awhile--unless, of course, the
- Soviets move in. Primarily because of the intimate U.S.
- involvement with the Shah, Iran has turned so anti-American that
- just about any Washington attempt to influence events there is
- likely to backfire; certainly none of Iran's contending factions
- can afford to be thought of as pro-U.S. Iran needs a
- demonstration that the U.S. has not the slightest wish to
- dominate the country.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. must try to contain the spread of Khomeini-inspired
- anti-Americanism in the Middle East. The best way to do that
- would be to mediate successfully the Egyptian-Israeli peace
- negotiations, to ensure that they will lead to genuine
- autonomy for the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza. The
- degree to which the Palestinians problem has inflamed passions
- even among Arabs who consider themselves pro-U.S. is not at all
- understood by Americans. Says Faisal Alhegelan, Saudi Ambassador
- to the U.S.: "All you have to do is grant the right of
- Palestinian self-determination, and you will find how quickly
- the entire Arab world will stack up behind Washington."
- </p>
- <p> There are also some lessons the U.S. can learn that might
- help keep future Third World revolutions from taking an anti-
- American turn. First, suggests Stanley Hoffmann, Harvard
- professor of government, the U.S. should stop focusing
- exclusively on the struggle between the U.S. and Communism and
- pay more attention to the aspiration of nations that have no
- desire for alliance with either side. Says Hoffmann: "To me, the
- biggest meaning of Iran is that it is the first major
- international crisis that is not an East-West crisis, and for
- that very reason we find ourselves much less able to react.
- There is very little attention given to the problems of
- revolutionary instability and internal discontent. Americans
- don't study any of this, and when such events happen, we are
- caught by surprise."
- </p>
- <p> A corollary thought is that the U.S. must avoid getting
- tied too closely to anti-Communist "strongmen" who are detested
- by their own people. Says Selig Harrison: "We should not be so
- committed that we become hostage to political fortune. We
- should have contact will all the forces in these countries, and
- we should not regard any of them as beyond the pale, even many
- Communist movements that would like to offset their dependence
- on Moscow and Peking." Such a policy, of course, is easier
- proclaimed than executed. In some volatile Third World
- countries, the only choice may be between a tyrant in power and
- several would-be tyrants in opposition. But when the U.S. does
- find itself allied with a dictator, it can at least press him
- to liberalize his regime and at the same time stay in touch with
- other elements in the society.
- </p>
- <p> Finally, Khomeini has blown apart the comfortable myth that
- as the Third World industrializes, it will adopt Western values,
- and the success of his revolution ought to force the U.S. to
- look for ways to foster material prosperity in Third World
- countries without alienating their cultures. Says Richard
- Bulliet, a Columbia University historian who specializes in the
- Middle East: "We have to realize that there are other ways of
- looking at the future than regarding us as being the future. It
- is possible that the world is not going to be homogenized along
- American-European lines."
- </p>
- <p> It is, unfortunately, almost surely too late for any such
- U.S. strategies to influence Ayatullah Khomeini, whose hostility
- to anything American is bitter, stubborn, zealous--and total.
- But he may have taught the U.S. a useful--even vital--lesson
- for the 1980s. He has shown that the challenges to the West are
- certain to get more and more complex, and that the U.S. will
- ignore this fact at its peril. He has made it plain that every
- effort must be made to avoid the rise of other Khomeinis. Even
- if he should hold power only briefly, the Ayatullah is a figure
- of historic importance. Not only was 1979 his year; the forces
- of disintegration that he let loose in one country could
- threaten many others in the years ahead.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-