It is a moment of truth for Iran, and truth can oftentimes be
painful for the young at heart.
The question will quickly transform from “who won?”
to “what will Mr. Mousavi
do?” The so-called reformist
presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi is now in a
position to do what no other man has done in Iran since the Iranian
revolution in 1979. He is now in a position to
directly challenge the government with a significant portion of the
population ready to hang on his every word.
But immediately, Mr. Mousavi protested to the
Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Khamenei about the election
results, as if to stab any true reform
minded follower in the heart, as if to remind all Iranians and
everyone else lest there be doubt that he is just another part
– a pawn – of this particular religious
government.
Indeed, how can there be hope for democratic change within a
theocracy? The fact is that Iranians went to
vote in mosques. They went to vote for religious
candidates who were hand-picked by their religious authority.
Yet, persistent Iranian idealism prevails, as it did when
Iranians elected twice Mohammad Khatami as a powerless
“reform” president.
There is some hope, however. Young Iranians
are forced to learn the hard fact that there is no
“winning” an election that is controlled by a religious
dictatorship. The only reform that will work
will involve an overthrow of government and even possibly
bloodshed.
Meanwhile, the United States and Israeli governments are
following closely and will come to realize the obvious - that there
will be no more “hope” for “change” in Iran
that does not involve force from the outside.
And perhaps the rest of the civilized world, whose governments are
mostly separated with their religious segments, will come to
realize that there is no hope and, in fact, no place in the
civilized world for religious governments. There
is certainly no place in the civilized world for a theocracy with
access to nuclear weapons.
And so it will come to pass. Crushing false
hopes is the exact recipe for creating a pathway for true reform in
Iran. True reform may have to involve threats,
covert actions and possibly invasions and bombs.
It will be time to get real and take care of
business. Just as the United States and Israel
refused to respect the election of Hamas and their apparent
democracy in the Gaza Strip, they will refuse to respect the
sovereignty of a theocracy trying to “improve” its
nuclear technology.
Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel has said several times that the
Iranian threat is more important to him than the world’s
economic crisis. They will, in effect, force
America into a precarious situation. President
Barack Obama clearly does not want to attack Iran, but will surely
not be able to stop Israel. An attack may cause
an unpredictable response from Teheran, who has threatened to use
the Persian Gulf as a weapon to disrupt oil
transportation. That means a Barack Obama
diplomatic balancing act is about to be put to the
test. Will this president, who has little
previous foreign policy experience, be able to help liberate
Iranians from a religious dictatorship, or at least liberate the
world from the threat of religious fanatics having access to
nuclear technology? Will he be able to do it
without spiking the price of crude oil and in effect, crippling the
world economy? Will he be able to take a neutral
approach and stay out of the inevitable fight between right wing
governments in the Middle East?
Not likely on the latter. All eyes are on Iran as crushed
false hopes lead to difficult questions for America’s new
president. Just as Iran and oil defined the
presidency of Jimmy Carter, Iran and oil may end up defining Mr.
Obama’s presidency. The striking
similarities are all the more reason why President Obama will
likely be advised to do the opposite of President Carter and take
an aggressive approach in dealing with Iran.