home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
93
/
apr_jun
/
05319921.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
10KB
|
197 lines
<text>
<title>
(May 31, 1993) Diplomacy of Terror
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
IRAN, Page 46
Diplomacy of Terror
</hdr>
<body>
<p>When requesting foreign loans, Tehran sounds reasonable, but
the West insists that the Islamic republic still uses murder
and lies as tools of statecraft
</p>
<p>By BRUCE W. NELAN--With reporting by William Dowell/Tehran,
J.F.O. McAllister/Washington and William Mader/London
</p>
<p> Squeezed to the point of pain by low oil prices and overdue
debts, Iran is beginning to mind its manners. Tehran is trying
to convince the world that it is responsible and, above all,
credit worthy. In spite of the country's best efforts, Western
officials say they are not fooled; they insist that there is
too much visible evidence that Tehran sponsors terrorists and
is driving to develop nuclear weapons. Even the sober, measured
Secretary of State, Warren Christopher, unhesitatingly denounces
Iran as "an international outlaw." A senior Western diplomat
in Tehran is more specific. "They are meddling in the Middle
East," he says, "and they are still murdering people in Europe."
</p>
<p> Egypt and Algeria say flatly that Iran is the clandestine backer
of the Islamic fundamentalist bombers and gunmen who have declared
war on the secular governments in Cairo and Algiers. The U.S.
State Department's annual survey of terrorism calls Iran "the
most dangerous state sponsor" of such violence during the past
year. "Tehran's leaders," says the report issued last month,
"view terrorism as a valid tool to accomplish the regime's political
objectives, and acts of terrorism are approved at the highest
levels of government in Iran."
</p>
<p> There is no question that angering Iran can be fatal. Western
intelligence services say they have proof--though they will
not make it public for fear of compromising their sources--that Tehran was responsible for the assassination of the leader
of the Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran and three of his associates
who were gunned down in a restaurant in Berlin last year. A
Turkish journalist who had written disparagingly of Islamic
fundamentalism was killed by a pro-Iranian group's car bomb
in Ankara last January. Another Iranian opposition leader was
shot to death in Rome as he drove to his office last March.
</p>
<p> The best-known name on Iran's hit list is novelist Salman Rushdie,
author of The Satanic Verses, who went into hiding in 1989 after
Iran found the book offensive and issued a religious decree
calling for his death and offering a reward. Three Iranian officials
suspected of attempting to organize Rushdie's murder were expelled
from Britain last year. In Tehran the Iranian parliament, the
Majlis, reviewed its execution order and refused to rescind
it. The reward offered for Rushdie's murder has been increased
from $1 million to more than $2 million.
</p>
<p> Iran's immediate neighbors are growing nervous at the way Tehran
is staking a renewed claim to Persian Gulf leadership and backing
it up with a five-year, $10 billion arms buildup. At bargain-basement
prices, Iran is acquiring 20 to 30 modern Russian MiG-29 fighters
and SU-24 bombers, along with a Kilo-class submarine. Earlier
this year, China confirmed the sale of two civilian nuclear
reactors to Iran, which has its own uranium mines and has reportedly
been getting bomb-related technical help from Pakistan. Former
CIA Director Robert Gates has warned that Iran could become
a nuclear-armed power by the end of this decade.
</p>
<p> Other Iran watchers are not persuaded that the Islamic Republic
is bent on regional dominion or is in any position to pick a
fight with a major power. A Western diplomat in Tehran contends,
"Unless you project 20 or 30 years into the future, there is
no danger of anything more than petty harassment."
</p>
<p> Iranian officials deny they are going after nuclear weapons
and say the West is painting Iran as a menace only because it
does not buy its arms from Western producers. Arab states do
not accept that argument. "No one objects to Iran buying weapons
to defend itself," says retired Egyptian Major General Ahmed
Fakhr, who heads the National Center for Middle East Studies
in Cairo, "but the type of weapons that Iran has been buying
are destabilizing." One example: a delegation of 20 Iranian
experts recently visited North Korea to discuss the purchase
of new ballistic missiles with a 600-mile range--long enough
to reach Saudi Arabia and Israel. North Korea is now receiving
40% of its oil supplies from Iran.
</p>
<p> Today's Iranian leaders, Western analysts say, are perfectly
capable of presenting two faces to the outside world: the responsible,
reasoned face that solicits Western loans and investments, and
the rigid, ideological face that accepts murder and lies as
tools of statecraft. "Iran is in a sense more dangerous today
than it was under Ayatullah Ruhollah Khomeini," says a senior
British diplomat. "Then the antagonism to the West was blatant.
Now it is more nuanced."
</p>
<p> To visit Tehran today, in fact, is to marvel at the changes
in approach. Gone, for the most part, are the garish caricatures
of "Great Satan" America that used to adorn the walls of public
places. Where commercial advertising has not replaced them,
they have been whitewashed and painted over. Courting couples
may sit and talk--though without holding hands--in several
new gardens and parks.
</p>
<p> Many women are dispensing with the cumbersome chador and are
wearing simple head scarves. At the Red Shopping Mall in northern
Tehran, teenage girls sport cut-down Islamic dresses called
mini-manteaus, with flashes of color from bandanas under their
scarves. Says an Iranian student: "Women are trying to make
a statement. They're trying to say, `We are still here.' " Bright
new buses ply the capital's busy main streets, while shops and
showrooms spill over with expensive consumer goods.
</p>
<p> The taste for broader contacts extends beyond Tehran. In Qum,
a major religious center, clerics at the Ayatullah Golpaigani
Research Center use Mitac desktop computers, on which they can
call up 700 volumes of Islamic holy law encoded on Foxpro software.
The center's director, Ayatullah Ali Korani, wants to network
with U.S. universities. "I don't speak English or French," he
says, "but I speak computer."
</p>
<p> Four and a half years after the end of Iran's disastrous war
with Iraq, nearly four years after Ayatullah Khomeini's death,
a happier national spirit is struggling to emerge. The problem
for outsiders is to square what sometimes appears to be a Persian
lamb with a notably lion-like personality. The superficial prosperity
of Tehran is illusory. Because of war and runaway population
growth--estimated at 3.6% a year, though that may be declining--per capita economic output has shrunk about 40% since 1979.
Many factories are running at only 40% to 50% of capacity.
</p>
<p> Tehran badly miscalculated its income from oil exports after
the Gulf War, counting on an OPEC price hike that did not materialize.
The oil industry has not regained its prewar export capacity,
and its $16 billion a year in earnings helps prop up other failing
state enterprises. The country is already $5 billion in arrears
in its foreign-debt repayments, and is expected to be about
$10 billion behind a year from now.
</p>
<p> The talk of the whole country is the economy; the survival of
President Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani could depend on how well
he handles economic problems and the discontent they breed.
No one is suggesting he could lose his re-election bid in voting
scheduled for June 11, but his personal survival may be at risk.
There were reports of an assassination attempt on the President
last February, and full-blown riots swept three major cities
last year during protests against unemployment and poor housing.
</p>
<p> Rafsanjani's power base in the Majlis is made up of a small
clique of technocrats and the bazaari merchant class, of which
he is a member. The bazaaris were the key to the overthrow of
the Shah, and now they want the President to live up to his
promises to privatize industry and liberalize the centralized
economy. On the other hand, Islamic radicals are still the moral
guardians of the revolution, and they oppose reforms that might
endanger social benefits and let in greater Western influence.
They sometimes accuse Rafsanjani of being too liberal on cultural
matters. He in turn warns them that too rigid a line on music,
television and clothing risks alienating the new generation
of Iranian youth.
</p>
<p> As Tehran reaches out for Western trade and aid, Iranian society
is feeling a steadily increasing internal pressure. Films and
books, daring by local standards, that obliquely explore the
effects of authoritarianism and war are enthralling the intelligentsia.
For the rich, videotapes, cable television and satellite television
dishes are opening fresh windows on the world. One noteworthy
addition to the Iranian press is Golagha, a weekly satirical
magazine that fires barbs at people in power--though not at
Rafsanjani. Editor Kiyoumars Saberi, a former Deputy Prime Minister,
says his first issue in 1990 sold out all 40,000 copies in half
an hour. Now he sells 140,000 and says, "We are pushing the
limits" of censorship.
</p>
<p> More important, Abdelkarim Soroush, a leading intellectual of
the anti-Shah revolution, has openly challenged the clergy's
infallibility. "Religion is sacred," he said in an interview,
"but the understanding and interpretation are not necessarily
sacred." Religious interpretations, he said, "are like chemistry
and mathematics. They are debatable." Khomeini's heirs will
increasingly have to reconcile the everyday requirements of
national life with the exigencies of holy law. If they also
intend to be taken seriously in the community of nations, they
will have to stop using violence and terror in the pursuit of
Iran's interests.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>