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The Opening in Iran
The uprising in Iran is the most beautiful event since the Hungarian revolution of
1956. It has shaken all the ruling powers of the world and exposed their collusion. The
Arab regimes are as alarmed as Israel. The Chinese bureaucracy was caught with its pants
down: it supported the Shah and denounced his opposition (thus continuing the policy of
Mao and Chou, who praised him for his anti-imperialism). As for the Russian
bureaucracy, far from stirring up trouble in Iran, it has always aimed at
maintaining a stable, highly policed regime there, as elsewhere on its borders, so as to
prevent any contagion of rebellion from spreading to its own people. It has sold arms to
the Shah and turned fugitive Iranian radicals over to SAVAK. Only when his downfall seemed
likely did it cautiously begin hedging its bets. The saber rattling between Russia and the
U.S. was strictly for the benefit of the spectators. American ambassador William Sullivan
admitted: We ran Laos, but in Iran, which is tremendously important to us,
theres not much we, or anyone else, can do. Ironically all the major powers
the U.S., Britain, France, China and the Soviet Union are alarmed by whats
going on in Iran. (New York Times, 13 November 1978.)
The possibility that the mass insurgence might overflow bureaucratic or priestly
mediation this is what lies behind all the powers horror of chaos
or a power vacuum in Iran. The Iranian movement is not essentially a religious
one; the partial margin of immunity granted religious expression simply provided an
opening and a rallying point for it. Women who previously wore the veil as a symbol of
defiance to the Shah are now defying Khomeini by refusing to wear it; his emissaries have
had to report to him that the oil workers do not respect religion; and the
momentum and contagion of the movement has already pushed even many of the religious to go
beyond his dictates. The destruction of banks, stores and cinemas is not a reaction
against modernization or Westernization, it is the same kind of
reaction against alienation that is found in modern revolts in the West, from
Watts to Gdansk.
The clergy, the bourgeoisie and the army all had, and still have, obvious
contradictions with each other. But none could do without the other two. In spite of his
intransigent rhetoric, Khomeini was negotiating behind the scenes and, like the National
Front, had long taken care to keep the army as intact as possible, warning his followers
against provoking it. Finally radical elements initiated the final battle without him and
forced his hand. The army, on the verge of breaking up, had to give in to his government
as the last hope for stemming the popular insurgence.
As in Portugal in the wake of the fall of the fascist regime, the political
untenability of outside intervention plus the weakness and contradictions of the internal
ruling forces in Iran may for a while leave spaces for partially free social
experimentation. The strikers who have gone back to work only on their own terms; the
people who have taken over and run their own towns, answering only to
themselves these represent potential dual-power situations that have not been
brought completely under control. In spite of Khomeinis appeals, hundreds of
thousands of arms seized by guerrilla groups or distributed among the people have not yet
been turned in. And the autonomist movements of the Kurds, the Baluchis and the
Azerbaijans are seizing their opportunity and may spread the insurgence to the already
crisis-ridden bordering countries where overlapping sectors of those peoples live.
The rulers and commentators pretend to see in any radical action the work of
communists or other leftists. In reality the Iranian communist party
the Tudeh Party has long been discredited for its reformism and servility to
Russian foreign policy. Though virtually wiped out by the Shahs police, it has
nevertheless praised his revolution from above while denouncing the mass
uprisings of 1963 and 1978. Recently it has called for a coalition government to work for
the normalization of the economy and put an end to the present crisis as
quickly as possible.
As for the guerrilla groups and militant students, though largely disillusioned with
the various communist regimes, they imitate the hierarchical organization and
manipulative practice that led to those state-capitalist bureaucracies. Sixty years of
Leninist-Stalinist counterrevolution have taught them nothing. They add to the ideological
pollution with their wooden language and lower the consciousness of the
hard-working, patriotic workers (who are thus applauded precisely for their
alienation) with their chorus of correct leadership, progressive
clergy, peoples army, workers states, and other
such self-contradictions. But who struggles for the real power of the soviets?
A popular government cannot defend the revolution because it has to defend
itself from the revolution. But once it has disarmed and demoralized the people, who can
defend it from the reaction? Mossadeq set the stage for the CIA coup by using the army
against strikers and demonstrators; Ben Bella set the stage for Boumédienne, who
destroyed the pockets of self-management in Algeria; Allende (with the support of Castro)
set the stage for Pinochet by attacking the workers and peasants who had armed themselves
and seized factories and land.
The fundamental question in Iran is not which combination of forces will hold the
state, but whether the workers will affirm themselves autonomously against it. If they
dont speak for themselves the bureaucrats will speak for them. If they
dont communicate their experiences and analyses (by seizing printing equipment or
radio stations, for example) the mass media will continue to block out or falsify them.
The only way to defend the revolution is to extend it. Even if it is defeated
there will be that much more to undo. A reformist or bureaucratic movement will scarcely
interest workers who already live in reformist or bureaucratic societies. Only a movement
that strikes radically at the global system will strike a chord among them, win their
support in resisting intervention, and inspire them to parallel revolt. The next
revolutions can find aid in the world only by attacking the world in its totality
(Situationist International).
Each time people begin to make their own history they rediscover the highest moments of
the repressed attempts of the past. A revolt like that in Iran is an opening, it cuts
through the organized confusion and enforced passivity and poses questions in concrete
terms. Its the social moment of truth.
BUREAU OF PUBLIC SECRETS
12 March 1979

Reprinted from Public Secrets: Collected Skirmishes of Ken Knabb.
The Situationist International quote is from Address to
Revolutionaries of Algeria and of All Countries.
No copyright. Original poster free on request.
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