HISTORYAT A GLANCE |
Renewed Opposition
In the years that followed the riots of June 1963, there was little overt
political opposition. The political parties that had been prominent in the
1950-63 period were weakened by arrests, exile, and internal splits. Political
repression continued, and it proved more difficult to articulate a coherent
policy of opposition in a period of economic prosperity, foreign policy
successes, and such reform measures as land distribution. Nonetheless,
opposition parties gradually reorganized, new groups committed to more violent
forms of struggle were formed, and more radical Islamic ideologies were
developed to revive and fuel the opposition movements. Both the Tudeh and the
National Front underwent numerous splits and reorganizations. The Tudeh
leadership remained abroad, and the party did not play a prominent role in Iran
until after the Islamic Revolution. Of the National Front parties that managed
to survive the post-1963 clampdown, the most prominent was the Nehzat-e Azadi-yi
Iran, or the Iran Freedom Movement (IFM), led by Mehdi Bazargan. Bazargan worked
to establish links between his movement and the moderate clerical opposition.
Like others who looked to Islam as a vehicle for political mobilization,
Bazargan was active in preaching the political pertinence of Islam to a younger
generation of Iranians. Among the best known thinkers associated with the IFM
was Ali Shariati, who argued for an Islam committed to political struggle,
social justice, and the cause of the deprived classes.
Khomeini, in exile in Iraq, continued to issue antigovernment statements, to
attack the shah personally, and to organize supporters. In a series of lectures
delivered to his students in An Najaf in 1969 and 1970 and later published in
book form under the title of Velayat-e Faqih (The Vice Regency of the Islamic
Jurist), he argued that monarchy was a form of government abhorrent to Islam,
that true Muslims must strive for the establishment of an Islamic state, and
that the leadership of the state belonged by right to the faqih, or Islamic
jurist. A network of clerics worked for Khomeini in Iran, returning from periods
of imprisonment and exile to continue their activities. Increasing internal
difficulties in the early 1970s gradually won Khomeini a growing number of
followers.
Meanwhile some younger Iranians formed a number of underground groups committed to armed struggle. Most of these
groups were uncovered and broken up by the security authorities, but two
survived: the Fadayan and the Mojahedin.The Fadayan were
Marxist in orientation,whereas the Mojahedin sought to find in Islam the
inspiration for an ideology of political struggle and economic radicalism.
Nevertheless, both movements used similar tactics in attempting to overthrow the
regime: attacks on police stations;
bombing of United States, British, and
Israeli commercial or diplomatic offices; and assassination of Iranian security
officers and United States military personnel stationed in Iran. In February
1971, the Fadayan launched the first major guerrilla action against the state
with an armed attack on an Imperial Iranian Gendarmerie (the internal security
and border guard) post at Siahkal in the Caspian forests of northern Iran.
Several similar actions followed. A total of 341 members of these guerrilla
movements died between 1971 and 1979 in armed confrontations with security
forces, by execution or suicide, or while in the hands of their jailers. Many
more served long terms in prison.
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