IRAN: EXPORTING THE REVOLUTION

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP81B00401R000500100001-8
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RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
16
Document Creation Date: 
December 20, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 27, 2006
Sequence Number: 
1
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Publication Date: 
March 1, 1980
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP81B00401R000500100001-8.pdf1.09 MB
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Foreign Assessment Center Iran: Exporting the Revolution Secret PA 80-10121 March 1980 7 Copy 13 Approved For Release 2006/04/?-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Q Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 National Secret Foreign Assessment Center Iran: Exporting the Revolution An Intelligence Assessment Research for this report was completed on 10 March 1980. This assessment was prepared b Iran Task Force. Comments and queries are we come and should be directed to the Chief, Iran Task Force, on This paper has been coordinated with the Office of Strategic Research and the National Intelligence Officer for Near East and South Asi 1 Secret PA 80-10121 March 1980 Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R0005001OOO61$ Iran: Exporting the RevolutiorEl Key Judgments Iranian leaders, including Ayatollah Khomeini and President Bani-Sadr, are ideologically committed to aiding other Islamic revolutionaries. The Iranians see their revolution as an example for other "oppressed" peoples and believe that the organizational and ideological techniques they developed to topple the Shah can be used by others. Tehran's efforts to export its revolution have been complicated b the y confusion that has marked all facets of Iranian politics since the fall of the Shah. Iranian leaders and groups often have acted independently of the government and have embarrassed the Foreign Ministry's efforts to maintain correct relations with Iran's neighbors. If Iran's internal problems ease in the next year, Tehran probably will step up efforts to destabilize its neighbors. Bani-Sadr appears to be taking steps to increase support for unrest in Iraq and Afghanistan. Iranian support to Afghan insurgents could give the Soviets an excuse to intervene in Iran. Iran's efforts to export its revolution are a threat to key US interests. US allies in the area would have reason to be nervous if the Iranians were to play a more active role. Iranian-supported unrest could lead to sabotage and strikes by oil workers, since Shias inhabit many of the oil-producing areas of the Persian Gulf states. iii Secret Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Secret Iran: Exporting the Revolution One year after the fall of the Shah, Iran's leaders appear more determined than ever to export their Islamic revolution to other countries in the Near East and South Asia. Although internal problems continue to limit Iran's ability to export the revolution, Tehran radio broadcasts a steady stream of propaganda every day to Iran's neighbors. The country's leaders- including Ayatollah Khomeini and President Bani- Sadr-often express their commitment to the liber- ation of oppressed peoples throughout the Muslim world. Khomeini, for example, said on 20 February: I hope that (Iran) will become a modelfor all the meek and Muslim nations in the world and that this century will become the century for smash- ing great idols ... 0 meek of the world, rise and rescue yourselves from the talons of nefarious oppressors; 0 zealous Muslims in various coun- tries of the world, wake from your sleep of neglect and liberate Islam and the Islamic countries from the clutches of the colonialists and those subservient to them. Our revolution will not win unless it is exported. We are going to create a new order in which deprived people will not always be deprived. As long as our brothers in Palestine, Afghanistan, the Philippines, and all over the world have not been liberated, we Iranians will not put down our arms. We give our hand to deprived people all over the world. Iran's revolutionary rhetoric and its actions in the last year have greatly alarmed its neighbors. The Arab states of the Persian Gulf region have been the most visibly disturbed. Iraq has initiated a program of aid to dissidents inside Iran in order to weaken the Khomeini regime and prevent it from actively subverting Iraq's majority Shia M'alim, population. The leaders of Iran have consistently believed that their revolution should be a model for other countries in the region. Former Foreign Minister Yazdi commented right after the fall of the Shah's government in February 1979 that the monarchy's collapse signaled a "new era of Islamic struggle triggered by our revolution.' --Khomeini, Bani-Sadr, Yazdi, and other Iranian lead- ers believe that their revolution was a triumph of Islamic values over the decadence of a corrupt, repressive, Westernized regime. They stress that the revolution was based on Islamic idealism-a spiritual awakening-which in turn led to the polarization of society between the enlightened masses and the corrupt elite. As a result Tehran's revolutionary lessons are not exclusively Iranian but common to all Muslim countries and even all Third World countries. Iran's leaders argue-with some justice-that their revolution is unique in the modern history of the Middle East. Rather than seizing power through a military coup, they achieved their goal through the mass mobilization of society. Their people are first reminded of the virtues of Islam, which alienates them from their corrupt rulers. Armed with faith in Allah and the justice of their cause, this argument goes on, the people as a whole are ready to confront the regime. I 25X6 The revolutionary leadership believes that if Iran fails to export its revolution, the country will be isolated in an unfriendly environment of hostile regimes. Most of Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 PLO chief Yasser Arafat, Ayatollah Khomeini's son Ahmad, and President Bani-Sadr expressing solidarity with the world's "op- pressed" at the celebrations marking the first anniversary of the Iranian revolution. 25X6 these leaders are preoccupied with the example of Prime Minister Mossadegh's government in 1953, which, they believe fell because it lacked allies against the United States and the United Kingdom. The survival of the Islamic Republic is closely tied, in this view, to the overthrow of pro-Western regimes in the Middle East 25X6 Moreover, many Iranian leaders spent years in exile as leaders of the anti-Shah opposition during which they developed close ties with a broad range of Middle Eastern radical movements. Khomeini, for example, was one of the earliest supporters of Yasir Arafat's Fatah movement, and Bani-Sadr has long had close ties with the radical Lebanese Shia movement for- merly led by Imam Musa Sadr. The Iranians clearly feel obligated to support their fellow revolutionaries. Most Iranian leaders, including Khomeini and Bani- Sadr, have been careful to say in public that Tehran has no intention of interfering in the internal affairs of its neighbors and that since a revolution is primarily a spiritual awakening, it must begin in the hearts and minds of the oppressed. As such it cannot be simply exported by Iran, and no quantity of external aid can act as a substitute for the mobilization of each nation's own internal forces. Nonetheless, the Iranians believe that they can teach other Islamic peoples the necessary revolutionary techniques and organizational theory. Iran so far has provided mostly rhetoric and propa- ganda to other revolutionaries, safe haven for foreign dissidents, and a meeting place for radicals. In part, this reflects the ideological basis of their world view. It also reflects, however, the weakness of the central government in Tehran which has been preoccupied with consolidating its power and lacks the means to more actively export revolution. 7 Approved For Release 2006/04/27: CIA-RDP81 B00401 R000500100001-8 Secret Shia Muslim Population as Percentage of Total Population `'~'6 United Arab Saudi Arabia Emirates 2 Eastern Province South North Yemen Yemen C s~ 1 50 fn Gulf of Aden boundary representati a it at 4mmarity aatharltative. Oman