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    Middle East
     Jun 6, 2007
Page 1 of 2
Iran's practical nationalism
By Dmitry Shlapentokh

Iranians have recently demonstrated interest and appreciation of their country's past, including the 6th-century BC Achaemenid Empire. This topic has become extremely sensitive, as violent Iranian reaction to the recent movie 300 demonstrated. This changed approach to the distant past demonstrates what in the Russian Revolution was known as "national Bolshevism", the transition from belief in world revolution to emphasis on the importance of the state. And this has a direct implication for



Iranian foreign policy.

The history of Iran has always had a political context, and Iran's recent increased interest in its Achaemenian past may be a sign of an important change in the ideology and geopolitical posture of the regime. The Achaemenid Empire was the first universal empire (barring possibly the Assyrian Empire), and it is usually regarded as the beginning of Iranian national history. For most Western historians, it also reflects inefficient and repressive Oriental despotism, as demonstrated by the Achaemenids' inability to defeat the Greeks and their final conquest by Alexander the Great of Macedonia in the 4th century BC.

In general, Western historians show the Achaemenids playing an important role in the early history of what is now Iran, albeit mostly as a demonstration of the superiority of the West. Iranian interest in its pre-Islamic past has been extremely limited until the last - Pahlavi - dynasty. The last shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi (reigned 1941-79), was especially fond of the Achaemenids. He made references to them, and encouraged his subjects to call their children after their great rulers. At the very end of his rule, he staged lavish celebrations of what he regarded as the 2,500th anniversary of the Iranian monarchy. Soldiers dressed as warriors of all the Iranian dynasties marched in parades in front of the shah, Iranian dignitaries and foreign visitors.

The ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Iranian revolution, naturally hated the Achaemenids. In his philippics, he was hardly different from most Western historians, who saw the Achaemenian kings as brutal despots who wallowed in luxury and debauchery amid the misery of the masses. It was not Achaemenid glory, or even the Iranian state, but a utopian drive for a worldwide Shi'ite revolution, spreading true Islam and embedding social justice, that inspired the protagonists of the Islamic Revolution (1979).

It was not books about ancient Iranian history but the Koran that pushed the wave of Basij Iranians to attack Iraqi positions during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88). Still, as time progressed, the eschatological, anti-state ideology that disconnected past and present started to change, along lines not unknown in other great revolutions of the modern era, the Russian Revolution (1917-21) in particular.

Russian national Bolshevism
The ideology of the early Russian (Bolshevik) Revolution was, in many ways, similar to that of the Iranian revolution. The history of the czars, actually the entire history of Russia, was discarded, relegated to the place of, as Leon Trotsky put it, "icons and cockroaches". The sources of inspiration for the revolution were outside Russian borders: the "prophet" Karl Marx was born in Germany, and the holy book - Das Kapital - was originally in a foreign tongue.

Their Mecca and Medina, the passion and heroic feats of the Russian Revolution, their Karbala, where they were martyred for the "salvation of humanity", were also in foreign lands, embedded in foreign histories. The Bolsheviks looked for inspiration to the French Revolution and the Paris Commune of 1871, giving them much more attention than their native historical tradition.

The early Bolsheviks also discarded the state, making it not a goal in itself but a springboard for worldwide revolution, close to the revolutionary Iranian state and the Taliban quasi-state in Waziristan. Like the Iranian revolutionists and the Taliban, the Bolsheviks had no respect for their oppressive national history. The rulers of the past were denigrated and their effigies destroyed, along with priceless artifacts from the treasuries of the country's long history.

As time progressed, however, the nature and perception of the regime started to change. The worldwide revolution did not happen, and the Red Army horde, which supposedly strove to liberate toilers all over the globe, was stopped near the gates of Warsaw. At the same time, many Russian intelligentsia discovered that under the coating of the Soviet regime was the same old Russian Empire. The revolution not only changed the socioeconomic matrix but also reinvigorated the state, bringing a stronger elite into play.

These observers were quite aware of the regime's despotic nature and brazen repressiveness. In contrast to most emigres and foreigners, however, they did not see the regime as hindering the rise of the state. In fact, they saw the brutal elan of the regime as a sort of prerequisite for Russia's glory, believing that after reaching a degree of security, the regime would relax its iron grip. The sense of change, the solidification of the regime, its economic and geopolitical success - its problems notwithstanding - also started to be understood by the Soviet elite.

Profound changes in ideology took place. Russia was no longer seen as just a springboard for worldwide revolution; it became the goal in itself. The revolution was seen as a force not so much to liberate the proletariat worldwide as to forge a mighty Russian state, not a break with but a continuation of historical tradition. Not surprisingly, the view of the Russian past also changed. The great Russian rulers re-emerged in official discourse in all their glory.

Mighty Alexander Nevsky crushed the "dog knight" invaders from the West, and equally glorious Dmitry Donskoi repelled the menacing Mongols/Tatars from the East. By bloody purges, Ivan the Terrible, a 16th-century czar, cleansed Russia of traitors and turncoats. And Peter the Great, while preserving the basic matrix of Russian political culture, acquired the necessary Western know-how to make Russia one of the greatest European powers.

This view of history de-emphasized Russian defeats and found convenient explanations for Russia's problems, such as the treasonous ineptitude of the foreign-born elite who wormed their way to the top. After Russia's victory in World War II, national Bolshevism reached its pinnacle: Russia was not just the mightiest state in history but the source of all human invention. Balloons, aircraft, radio and electricity had been invented in Russia long before the West discovered them. Moreover, it was Russian culture in its universal appeal that had crystallized the drive for universal brotherhood.

It was natural that the people of the Earth should unite around Russia, for the Russian state was qualitatively different from the West. Western states usually conquered other states for exploitation and domination; Russia just brought them into the extended family, where they were provided care and love.

In fact, Russia, as a sort of collective Christ, sacrificed itself for others. And this spirit of universal brotherhood was already clear in Russian literature and poetry, all the marvelous jewels of the unsurpassable Russian culture. This spiritual greatness had been in the Russian soul long before the Bolshevik Revolution, which made it possible to materialize these ideas in their fullness.

In all this ideological construction - whose legitimate pride in great achievement was mixed with mythology - one point was clear: the ideology of a mighty nation shaped its foreign policy by raison d'etat - not the preconceived shibboleths of the revolutionary era.

Chinese national Bolshevism
The Russian experience was hardly unique; the same evolution of

Continued 1 2 


After the talks, Iran starts talking (Jun 1, '07)

Why Iran will fight, not compromise (May 30, '07)


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