Iran’s workers to U.S.: hands off
Published Jul 1, 2005 9:25 PM
With the Bush administration threatening war on Iran, that country’s
presidential election got world attention, more than any election since the
1979 revolution that overthrew the shah and ousted the U.S. neocolonial
regime.
The U.S. media reports all claimed surprise over the victory of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the mayor of Tehran. The real surprise was the emergence of
the Iranian workers, whose votes gave Ahmadinejad his victory.
Iran is in
a deep economic recession, with unemployment estimated at between 15 and 20
percent. There have been widespread protests by workers, unlike anything seen
for two decades.
The presidential candidate the U.S. expected to win,
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, is a wealthy business owner. His economic program was
to accelerate privatization and encourage more foreign investment. He invited in
the World Bank and its neoliberal policies. As for the threats from the U.S.,
Rafsanjani was seen as someone friendly to the European imperialist powers who
could also be accommodating to the U.S.
After all, he was one of the
principal operators in the “Iran-Contra” affair, when Ronald Reagan
and Oliver North secretly sold arms to Iran, while it was at war with Iraq, in
return for Iran’s help in securing the release of U.S. hostages in
Lebanon.
Ahmadinejad, on the other hand, comes out of the revolutionary movement that overthrew the U.S. puppet regime of the shah.
Ahmadinejad, the son of an ironworker, ran a populist campaign,
blaming the emergence of private banks and the privatization program for the
deepening unemployment and poverty. Some even describe him as an Islamic
socialist. That probably better describes what many workers hope they’ll
get through this election. Ahmadinejad promises he’ll bring more jobs,
higher wages, better housing, expanded health insurance and more social benefits
for women. He also promises a fairer distribution of Iran’s vast oil
wealth—instead of by “one powerful family,” as he put
it.
Iran’s workers and poor came out and voted in numbers big enough
to send a message. The vote was for jobs, not the World Bank. And the vote told
the U.S.: hands off.
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