More on spokespeople: revolutions devouring their own
[NOTE: While writing this post on spokespeople, I came across the following post, which I wrote in 2006, about an Iranian spokesperson in 1979 who shortly thereafter came to a difficult end. His story seems both poignant and still relevant, and I thought I’d publish it again. Ghotbzadeh, unlike so many of our present-day spokespeople, was not merely a spokesperson or a journalist. But it was as a spokesperson for the new Khomeini regime that I—and America—knew him.]
In the Atlantic article I discussed yesterday, a name on the first page caught my eye: Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, the Iranian foreign minister at the time of the hostage crisis.
Suddenly, although I hadn’t thought of him in decades, the memory came back. Ghotbzadeh! I recall his sardonic, jaded, man-of-the-world expression—a strange combination of arrogance and weariness. As the spokesperson for the regime, he was featured often on TV (I think on the nascent “Nightline,” then entitled “America Held Hostage”). As a visible and familiar figure, he became somewhat of a focus for my frustration and annoyance with the entire situation. Something about him seemed hollow, although he was clearly intelligent and articulate.
As events unfolded, it turned out that Ghotbzadeh was one of those cautionary figures, a man who was instrumental in planning a revolution that then got away from him and proceeded to devour him in the process. Like Robespierre, Danton, and Desmoulins; like Trotsky and so many other engineers of the Russian revolution who were slaughtered in the great purges; authors of violent revolutions often come to violent ends at the hands of their violent former comrades.
Thus it was with Ghotbzadeh. Here he is:
Ghotbzadeh was close to the Ayatollah Khomeini while both were in exile in Paris, and became one of his right-hand men back home in the early days of the revolution. He seems to have been motivated most strongly by hatred of the Shah’s regime. But, paradoxically, his role in the hostage crisis was as a relative moderate (accent on the “relative;” moderate in comparison to what?). He seemed to be working for a diplomatic solution, and lost favor with the Iranian powers that be in the process.
Former hostage and Ambassador at the time, Bruce Laingen, has this to say about Ghotbzadeh:
I didn’t like him at the outset for the role he played as Foreign Minister, but I sensed as time went on over those months, that he came to the conclusion, himself, fairly early, that this hostage business was counterproductive to the revolution and that it needed to be ended. I think he genuinely wanted to end it and was prepared to make some concessions to do that. And he stuck his neck out to do that. He showed some guts.
It all unraveled rather quickly:
Ghotbzadeh finally resigned in 1980 over the deadlock in negotiations. That year, after he was arrested and briefly detained after criticizing the ruling Islamic Republican Party, he retired from public life. In 1982 he was arrested on charges of plotting against the regime. Although he denied any conspiracy to take Khomeini’s life, he apparently admitted complicity with Ayatollah Mohammad Kazem Shariat-Madari in a plot to overthrow the government. Ghotbzadeh was convicted in August 1982 and executed the following month.
Did he really plan to end the Khomeini reign, and, if so, with what was he planning to replace it? Or were the charges trumped up, and was he forced to confess to crimes he didn’t commit? At the time, I remember being astounded at the news of his startling reversal of fortune and allegiance; it was quite a switch from disliking him to feeling some sympathy for the man.
Guillotining having gone out of style, Ghotbzadeh was shot by a firing squad shortly after his trial. The revolution had eaten another of its own.
But not everyone connected with the early days of the revolution has met such a fate. Others connected with the hostage crisis have prospered. It’s unclear whether or not the current Iranian President, our good friend Ahmadinejad, was one of those “student” hostage-takers, although several former hostages have identified him as such. But there’s very little doubt about the identity of another former hostage-taker who’s riding high at present: Hussein Sheikholeslam, recently an Iranian diplomat and legislator.
Why do I mention Sheikholeslam? Only because I came across an interesting fact about him, an indication of the sort of cross-fertilization process that seems to have been at work in the revolutions of the 60s/70s. Sheikholeslam may not have been an actual student at the time of the hostage-taking in Iran. But whether or not Sheikholeslam was a student at that point, he certainly had been a student earlier—at UC Berkeley, where he learned a thing or two:
UC Berkeley gained a reputation as a center of student anti-war protest during the 1960s and 1970s. During that tempestuous period, an Iranian student named Hussein Sheikh-ol-eslam attended Cal. He became fluent in English. He also absorbed the demonstrations criticizing American imperialism in Vietnam and other nations.
After Hussein returned to Iran, writes Mark Bowden in his new book, “Guests of the Ayatollah,” his anti-Americanism planted deep roots in his Islamic religion. In late 1979, the tree connected to those roots bore ugly fruit.
The student protests of the 60s didn’t actually revolutionize much in the directly political and traditionally revolutionary (i.e. a sudden overthrow of the existing government) sense in this country. The “revolution” they began here was more cultural than anything else, with resultant political ramifications. But not so in Iran, where students who had learned the anti-American and propaganda lessons of the 60s used them later to great effect. Some forget that the 60s didn’t just happen in this country; the protests occurred in Europe as well.
Khomeini spent some of his exile in France, but I was surprised to learn (from Wikipedia, so this could be taken with a grain of salt) that the French were not necessarily simpatico to him during his rather short sojourn there:
In 1963, [Khomeini] publicly denounced the government of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. He was thereby imprisoned for 8 months, and upon his release in 1964, he made a similar denunciation of the United States. This led to his forced exile out of Iran. He initially went to Turkey but was later allowed to move to Iraq, where he stayed until being forced to leave in 1978, after then-Vice President Saddam Hussein forced him out…after which he went to Neauphle-le-Ché¢teau in France. According to Alexandre de Marenches (then head of the French secret services), France suggested to the Shah that they could “arrange for Khomeini to have a fatal accident”; the Shah declined the assassination offer, arguing that this would make him a martyr.
[NOTE II: My post about Azar Nafisi, author of Reading Lolita in Tehran, is relevant here. Nafisi, an Iranian national, likewise fell in with other radical Iranian students while studying in this country. Then, when she returned to Iran, she saw quite a few of those former associates imprisoned—and in some cases executed—by their former comrades-in-arms.]
A revolution, by definition is violent and revolutionaries do not shrink from killing those who oppose them. When one of their own opposes the dominant faction’s ‘program’ they become a liability, as that opposition creates dissension, invariably it is judged necessary to eliminate them.
Other than the American revolution, I cannot think of a revolution that post revolution, allowed substantive dissent and the American revolution did so because the right to dissent was at the heart of that revolution’s rationale.
I lived in southwestern Iran until about 5 years before the revolution. In the mid 70’s, so the story goes, The Shah had an opportunity to assassinate Khomeini. He was living in Iraq at the time. The Shah chose not to carry it out. Think about how the history of the past 40 years would have changed if the Shah had taken that action.
BTW, Iran was a wonderful place for a foreigner to live in the 60’s and 70’s
nkbay99:
Are you talking about this, which occurred in the 60s?
My guess is that the Shah had lots of opportunities to assassinate Khomeini, and refused them all for fear of making him a martyr.
Spokespeople are buried deep by their former friends for a reason. Everyone hates shallowness.
We know spokespeople are first and fairly only communists. Perhaps we need a more comprehensive word to encapsulate the word “communist;” maybe it is “enviests”from the word envy and envy of not just property but goodness and any other virtue.
Kevin Williamson has another superb article supporting Giuliani’s resounding denunciation of Obama. The appropriate one word summary of his and Giuliani’s analysis is “communist.”
Or they are bitches, in that they bitch and whine and complain and hate. Hard workers generally do not bitch or whine, but those who from early childhood, bitch and whine, end up hating and becoming communists and spokespeople and shallow. They look for the easy way to accumulate property and reputation–the very things they vociferate against.
Spokespeople? Not really found in conservative or christian environs, where every man is an individual and speaks his mind. And actions speak louder than words for the truly independent and secure individual.
Spokespeople are the result of a need to deflect, to scapegoat, to create a straw person, to ceremoniously outrage (and later to disclaim “at this point what difference does it make.) and to present game and travesty as honesty.
No wonder spokespeople are buried deep and forgotten- and while they need a certain articulate ability and intelligence– such ability is, in the end, overshadowed grossly by a shallowness birthed from a lack of gratitude.
“In the late 1980s Khomeini issued a fatwa to kill all opposition in jails around Iran. A Death Commission carried out mock trials behind closed doors, interrogating prisoners about their associations, affiliations, and allegiances with a series of questions designed to elicit an answer that assured the death sentence. The fatwa led to the execution of thousands of innocent men and women of all ages in a very short period. Another fatwa by hard-line clerics in the 1990s led to the murder of dozens of dissident intellectuals, journalists, poets, writers and political activists. Hundreds of students were killed and hundreds more tortured in response to their attempts at generating an uprising. The nightmare continues to this day.”
7/22/2010 @ 2:15PM
The Coming End Of Islamic Fascism In Iran
http://www.forbes.com/2010/07/22/iran-islam-fascism-revolution-opinions-contributors-reza-kahlili.html
Again and again for more three dcades with same sloguns fr tahran
“Shouting “Death to America” 200-300 students linked to the bassiji Islamist militia demonstrated outside the Swiss embassy, which represents US interests in Iran, an AFP correspondent said.
news.yahoo.com/iran-students-protest-against-us-muslim-killings-191228877.html
The only problem of a revolution that eats its children is that it doesn’t eat enough of them.
France suggested to the Shah that they could “arrange for Khomeini to have a fatal accident”
Revelation of which has led to massive anti-French demonstrations world wide, wikipedia networks for revealing classified French documents,… oh, wait.
Why can’t we be French? Or, more to the point, why can’t the CIA/NSA?
Easy come easy go…
We hear a lot about the United States’ Judeo-Christian heritage, but according to President Obama, “Islam has been woven into the fabric of our country since its founding.”
That’s what the president told a White House conference on “countering violent extremism” on Wednesday.
To add to the strangeness of the Iranian saga,
the story of the MEK:
http://www.vice.com/read/masoud-banisadr-mek-cult-184
He wrote a memoir:
http://tinyurl.com/qfwxpe6
The whole thing is beyond belief.
Beliefs!
Neo – What you referred o in your article in 2006 seems to have happened before Khomeini was exiled. The proposed plan to assassinate him occured sometime later when he was in exile in Iraq. It was well before he became a power.
BTW – Life under the Shah was generally very good (at least for Americans). The Shah and his queen, Farah, took large steps to improve the lot of women in Iran – improved access to education and politics, among other areas. Also, the Shah was very tolerant of religious minorities, Jews, Bahai, Armenians, other Christians. A high point of our time in Iran was a performance of the Bolshoi ballet, attended by the Shah and the president of Russia.
Why can’t we be French? Or, more to the point, why can’t the CIA/NSA??
If that happen then US have not got what she got in ME right now? isn’t?