Abstract
Introduction
In May 2018, the United States of America (USA) President Donald Trump abrogated the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA, or ‘Iran Nuclear Deal’) between Iran, the USA, China, Russia, the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Union (EU). Subsequently, in August and November 2018, the US sanctions lifted by the JCPOA were re-imposed. Trump’s abrogation of the JCPOA was despite the International Atomic Energy Agency’s (IAEA) view that Iran had complied with the JCPOA’s requirements.
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Consequently, Trump’s actions are indicative of an implicit disregard for the norms and values associated with the idea of a ‘western liberal world order’, such as the rule of law; collective problem solving,
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multilateralism and interdependence.
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Indeed, his actions also threatened to
For a better understanding of both the impact of Trump’s actions and also how world order is constructed as part of an attempt to govern the international system, it is necessary to examine Iran’s relationship with the international. Furthermore, it is essential to highlight the agency of
Ideas attain meaning though discourse. Drawing on the discourse theory of Ernesto Laclau and Chantal Mouffe, the analysis is based on a discourse analysis of Green Movement texts, which I have mapped alongside the implementation of sanctions. My argument is two-fold. Firstly, for the Green Movement, the ideas of democracy and sovereignty are relational, and the sanctions regimes threaten both. Consequently, there is a clear rejection of sanctions. Furthermore, individuals associated with the Green Movement view sanctions both in the context of a historical trajectory going back to the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1906–11), and in relation to regional dynamics and the impact of the so-called ‘War on Terror’. This is because of the legacy of UK and US interference in Iran’s affairs. Secondly, this article puts forward Antonio Gramsci’s notion of domination, rather than hegemony, as a means of better understanding the power relations between the Green Movement and those states and institutions upholding the norms and values of a ‘western liberal world order’ through sanctions. This is because the Green Movement has not consented to the ‘leadership’ of actors associated with a ‘western liberal world order’; and the sanctions are indicative of the use of force. Thus, the ideas of the Green Movement call into question both the
The article contributes to three bodies of literature: neo-Gramscian IR, world order debates and literature on Iran’s Green Movement and similar processes in the Middle East. It shows how Gramsci can be used to explore the power relations of world order that moves beyond Eurocentrism and presents world order, in this instance, as domination, as opposed to hegemony. It contributes to world order debates by both highlighting the agency of not only the ‘non-West’, or Global South, but also a non-state actor. Additionally, it illustrates the contradictions of a
The article proceeds by first addressing the methodology. Then, the article puts forward a borrowing of Gramsci’s work as an appropriate analytical tool for exploring world order power relations that goes beyond neo-Gramscian IR’s Eurocentrism. After establishing how the Green Movement is understood in an intellectual and historical context, the article demonstrates why sanctions regimes, in this case, should be seen as domination.
Methodology
This article is part of a wider research project that examines the idea of democracy articulated by Islamic Republic of Iran political and intellectual elites, such as former presidents, and self-identifying democracy movement groups and individuals. 11 The rationale borrows from Larbi Sadiki’s work highlighting Arab political and intellectual elite voices regarding the idea of democracy in a broader intellectual and political environment. This is one where Western powers often view democracy as irrelevant to the Muslim world. 12 Furthermore, democracy is fiercely contested because in different contexts different meanings are attached to the idea. Thus, to gain a better understanding of the meanings attached the idea of democracy, the methodology draws from the discourse theory of Laclau and Mouffe.
Discourse theory explores how ‘social practices articulate and contest the discourse that constitute social reality’,
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such as how the discourse regarding a ‘hegemonic western liberal world order’ is contested by the Green Movement. It is through discourse that the identities associated with ‘western liberal order’ are maintained, which is evident in the ‘construction of antagonisms and the exercise of power’.
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This approach provides an appropriate methodology because of the centrality of power and
The method of discourse analysis draws from the logics of equivalence and difference as this highlights the identities, creation of dichotomies and power relations integral to the notion of a ‘western liberal world order’. Power relations are evident in how through discourse, social space is divided and political frontiers are constructed, which are necessary for both identity construction and organising political space. 17 This process of dividing space between two camps, or creating a dichotomy, is facilitated through what Laclau refers to as ‘equivalential chains’. 18 This is a process whereby a subject, or actor, is equated with particular actions or norms and values that have wider significance. Such a value is the sign ‘democracy’.
For Laclau and Mouffe, signs that are yet to have meanings associated with them are elements, and the process of attaching meaning and establishing relationships between different elements is articulation.
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Crucially, through articulation meanings are attached to specific signs and those around which there is a partial fixation of meaning are nodal points. For instance, in political discourses, ‘democracy’ is a nodal point around which meanings are crystallised.
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Subsequently, discourse is when there is a ‘structured totality resulting from the articulatory practice’.
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For example, the discourses of democracy articulated by the Green Movement attach particular meanings to the sign ‘democracy’. However, since meanings and ‘social phenomena are never fixed or total’, there is an ‘ongoing struggle between different discourses to fix the meaning of important signs’.
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Thus, there is only ever a
Indeed, the Islamic Republic of Iran and its nuclear programme exists in a social reality whereby the global political space is influenced to varying degrees by the norms and values associated with a ‘western liberal world order’. Orientalist discourses that attach specific meanings to the nodal point ‘democracy’ also influence this political space. These are assumptions regarding who is
By focusing on the political rather than economic implications of the sanctions regimes, my analysis of the discursive construction of democracy reveals the power relations integral to the idea of a ‘western liberal world order’. It becomes apparent that the Green Movement’s discourse of democracy challenges the Orientalist discourse of naturally democratic/incapable of democracy dichotomisation and constructed political frontier. This is through a process of articulation that attaches different meanings to the nodal point ‘democracy’. Consequently, there are two contradictory discourses attaching meaning to democracy showing that there is only ever a
Crucially, the Green Movement, to be addressed in more detail below, has come to represent a broad spectrum of political projects: those who aspire to ‘democratic practices
I focus on political and intellectual ‘elites’ because of their relationship with Reformism. Many of this ‘elite’ considered themselves Reformists; were previously associated with Reformism; and/or explicitly expressed support for the 2009 presidential candidates Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, and later the Green Movement. The texts analysed are statements, letters and speeches of (1) Karroubi and Mousavi following the 10th presidential election on 12 June 2009; (2) those who historically self-identified as part of the democracy movement (before 2009); and (3) intellectuals, academics, artists and leading human rights activists who explicitly pledged support for the presidential candidate(s) through open statements. These texts were largely collected between 2009 and 2010 as protests materialised. Due to the varied nature of the Green Movement and the context in which it came about, it is difficult to determine the extent to which the ideas of the ‘elite’ are representative of all those associated with the Green Movement during the 2009/10 protests. The article makes no claims that it is representative. Certainly, there is evidence, addressed below, that anyone associated with Reformism was rejected by political activists. Nevertheless, as noted, all actions and objects are meaningful and regardless of how representative a discourse may or may not be, it is worthy of scholarly attention.
In terms of carrying out discourse analysis, initially the signifiers were the Persian language terms
World order, domination and hegemony
Gramsci’s notion of domination is helpful for highlighting the power relations between institutions and processes in the name of a ‘western liberal world order’ (EU, UN and USA sanctions regimes) and those on the receiving end (the Green Movement). Robert Cox, accredited with introducing Gramsci to IR, critiqued ‘problem-solving’ IR because it negated the process of history. Consequently, he put forward a ‘critical’ IR that ‘would examine how dominant states are configured and how they transport ideas and construct institutional structures that embed and complement such ideas’. 29 In so doing, Gramsci’s hegemony was used to provide an alternative to the state-centric power of problem-solving IR. 30 However, as part of a wider debate interrogating IR’s Eurocentrism, Cox’s project and neo-Gramscian IR have been critiqued on the grounds that it is Eurocentric. 31 This is because in providing a ‘set of prescriptions that might contribute to the transformation of world order’, neo-Gramscians have implicitly universalised what are specific structural qualities. 32 Furthermore, by accepting ‘the hegemonic story of Western modernity in IR’, neo-Gramscians reproduce a narrative relegating ‘the global South to the theoretical periphery’ by only presenting the ‘East’, ‘global South’ or ‘non-West’ as a site of resistance. 33 Consequently, this process essentially denies the ‘non-West’ agency. Thus, there should be ‘a post-racist critical IR’ that moves away from analyses whereby only the ‘West’ acts 34 by exploring ‘classes of people that are not located in the West’. 35
While these critiques are valid, there is disciplinary blindness regarding the use of Gramsci. A vibrant tradition in Middle East Politics engaging with Gramsci’s work does not suffer from this Eurocentrism. Here, scholars use Gramsci to look at political transformation and popular politics, 36 the state, 37 counter-hegemony/hegemony 38 and civil society and securitisation. 39 In the specific case of Iran, not only has Gramsci’s work been translated into Persian, 40 but so has scholarship on Gramsci’s ideas. 41 Thus, Gramsci’s work remains a useful analytical tool for moving away from Eurocentrism because his ideas provide useful ‘lines of enquiry for postcolonial scholars’. 42 It is also evident that there should be disciplinary engagement between neo-Gramscian IR and Area Studies as part of a wider Global IR project that highlights agency beyond the so-called ‘West’. 43
While debates on world order have moved beyond neo-Gramscian IR, the broader world order debate echoes similar concerns regarding the need for a global approach. As Amitav Acharya argues, Global IR should transcend ‘the divide between the West and the Rest’ by recognising multiple forms of agency that embrace local constructions of global order and respect diversity. 44 Furthermore, scholars such as Andrew Phillips, Christian Reus-Smit and Samir Saran have challenged the idea of an international order as solely ‘Western’ by highlighting a global approach to history, historical context and cultural diversity in global politics. 45 Interventions on the co-optation or mimicry of authoritarian states 46 ; engagement with a liberal world order by illiberal actors 47 ; and the relationship with a liberal world order 48 have not only highlighted the agency of ‘non-West’, and/or Global South actors in world order construction, but also problems with categories such as the ‘West’. This article addresses neo-Gramscian IR’s Eurocentrism and takes on a Global IR approach to world order by not only focusing on a ‘class of people not located in the West’, but by also highlighting their agency in rejecting a tool of a ‘western liberal world order’ because they view it as simultaneously detrimental to democracy and sovereignty.
World order is socially constructed. 49 Reus-Smit defines world order as the ‘systematic configurations of political authority, comprising multiple units of authority, arranged according to some principle of differentiation’. 50 Muthiah Alagappa defines it as ‘“rule-governed interaction” among states in “pursuit of [their] individual and collective goals”’. 51 However, the ‘existence of order depends on’ interstate interaction conforming to the accepted rules. 52 While these two approaches can complement each other, the latter is state-centric. The systematic configurations approach allows for institutions. However, the idea of conforming to accepted rules is essential. Indeed, as Michael Barnett notes, such ‘systematic configurations of political authority’ can only be maintained and have staying power if they are considered legitimate. 53 This is done through a series of norms and values that are deemed appropriate for maintaining order. Thus, ‘the legitimacy of international order’ relies on whether such an order ‘represents the wider segment of the international system, and whether it enjoys the support and participation not just of the established powers, but also of other actors’. 54
While the idea of
For Gramsci, hegemony is a process of economic, political and intellectual leadership. It can be achieved over subordinate groups when a dominant group realises ‘not only a unison of economic and political aims, but also intellectual and moral unity’.
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While for Gramsci the economic is integral to hegemony, its relevance has been debated. Laclau and Mouffe argue that the hegemonic project has ‘ceased to have any
In addition to hegemony, Gramsci puts forward domination as another type of supremacy by a social group.
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The nature of the relationship with subordinate groups dictates the difference between hegemony and domination. Crucially, while hegemony is achieved through consent and legitimacy,
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domination is not. Domination is when a ‘social group dominates the antagonistic groups, which it intends to “liquidate,” or to subjugate perhaps even by armed force’.
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Thus, domination, ‘an anti-thesis of hegemony’,
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describes a relationship whereby there are ‘subordinated groups that do
The focus here is not on the ‘most appropriate’ interpretation of the machinations of hegemony and world order, but rather on those on the receiving end of ‘western liberal world order’ policies. It is through this process of analysis that a deeper understanding of the implications of politics associated with world order can be understood, which subsequently questions the nature of the relationship between the upholders of world order and those on the receiving end. While Cox’s hegemony/world order is helpful in terms of identifying institutions that aim to govern the international through a set of values, his interpretation of the nature of power relations is problematic. Cox’s view that there was American
Consequently, the extent to which sanctions represent a western liberal
As noted, neo-Gramscian IR has been critiqued for its universalising approach.
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Certainly, this is a valid critique and further scholarship has highlighted other ways of maintaining regional and/or world order.
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However, what is evident in the case of the Green Movement is that two values often associated with a
The Green Movement: intellectual and historical context
Crucially the ideas that indicate the framework for international relations,
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which are articulated through discourse, do not exist in an historical and intellectual vacuum.
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It is evident that the interconnectivity between democracy and sovereignty has an historical trajectory going back to the Constitutional Revolution. For some Green Movement individuals, the impact of the sanctions regimes on democracy and sovereignty is associated with the nationalisation of Iran’s oil industry and the subsequent 1953
Some of the meanings attached to the nodal point ‘democracy’ articulated by the Green Movement echo those of the late 19th and 20th centuries. The Constitutional Revolution is widely considered as epitomising the beginning of Iran’s struggle for democracy. 80 During this revolution, ‘divergent concepts of democracy’ emerged: European-style parliamentary democracy; social democratic tendencies inspired by Transcaucasian social democratic associations; and expressions of radical democracy. 81 An outcome was Iran’s first parliamentary system and the adoption of a constitution inspired by the idea of a constitutional representative democracy. 82 The international context included an increasing involvement from external powers in Iranian affairs 83 and fear that Iran’s sovereignty was being jeopardised by British and Russian influence. Thus, parliament was set up not only as a means of holding the ruling monarchy to account, but also ‘as a guardian against certain foreign encroachments’. 84
During the rest of the 20th century, ‘the interrelated issues of independence and democracy became very important’. 85 The interregnum period (1941–53), including Mohammad Musaddiq’s premiership (1951–53), is regarded as an important period in the development of democracy. 86 Following Reza Shah’s abdication in 1941, Iran experienced a ‘democratic interlude’ involving ‘greater freedoms of the press’; ‘a more prominent parliament’; and ‘political debates, party politics and competition for power’. 87 However, the international environment was seen as detrimental to democracy. Increasing British control through the Anglo-Iranian Oil company (AIOC, BP’s predecessor) was facilitated by the 1933 thirty-year extension of the concessionary period. Consequently, the AIOC had not only almost turned part of Iran into an autonomous colony, but also indirectly ran the rest of it. 88 Thus, Musaddiq nationalised the oil industry. The UK and USA responded with the 1953 coup ousting Musaddiq 89 ; and with it came the end of the ‘democratic interlude’. 90
There were interrelated internal and external dynamics to the 1979 Revolution and the subsequent establishment of the Islamic Republic. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini rejected the idea of world order put forward by both the USA and its allies, and the Soviet Union. The former, referred to as ‘global arrogance’, was seen as the ‘oppressor’ and was associated with the ‘rich, their foreign patrons, [and] capitalist class’. 91 Khomeini constructed a ‘dark background of exploitative international relations’ whereby imperialism, and its ‘internal factors’, desired the removal of Islam from Muslim countries. 92 While the importance of sovereignty to the creation of the Islamic Republic is clear, its relationship with democracy is debated. Although the Islamic Republic is considered as detrimental to democracy by some, 93 Reformists consider it as extremely important. With Mohammad Khatami’s presidency in 1997, Reformism became a part of Iran’s official state discourse. For Khatami, ‘Islamic democracy’ is ‘government for the people’ involving people having rights; government having an obligation to the people; and the people having a role in the legitimacy of the government. 94 Furthermore, ‘Islamic democracy’ does not exist in isolation of the international; it is equated with a 200 year-long struggle for independence. 95 Thus, democracy is seen as integral to sovereignty in an environment where colonialism and imperialism are seen to have hindered both.
Between 2009 and 2014, the Middle East and North Africa witnessed widespread demonstrations and uprisings. While emerging from a ‘unique historical and political context’, 96 commonalities included widespread participation of young people and subaltern groups 97 and a demand for less authoritarian or more democratic practices. 98 Iran’s 2009/10 uprising was initially a civil rights movement reacting to electoral politics 99 and indicating an inclusive, civic national identity discourse. 100 It was also a reaction to long-standing and deep social and political divide. 101 The 2009 election is considered controversial because the incumbent Ahmadinejad was re-elected and fraud was widely perceived. 102 So, Iranians took to the streets demanding ‘Where is my vote?’; and Iran witnessed its largest demonstrations since the 1979 Revolution. Three days after the election, over a million ‘marched in Tehran’s Freedom Square and non-violent rallies continued each day for a week’ 103 with images and slogans reminiscent of the 1979 Revolution. 104 As noted, Mousavi announced the ‘Green Movement’ in July 2009 calling on all Iranians to consider the Constitution and basic rights in terms of the colour green. 105
Often considered a social movement, 106 it must be appreciated that the Green Movement comprised several groups and individuals with varied political aspirations noted above. In terms of intellectual roots, many (but not all) of those associated with it would have considered themselves as part of Iran’s democracy movement prior to the post-election uprising. For Mousavi, Karroubi, Zahra Rahnavard 107 (Al-Zahra University’s Chancellor and Mousavi’s wife), and former president Mohammad Khatami, who are sometimes considered the Green Movement’s ‘leaders’, the Green Movement reasserted Reformism. Consequently, these ‘leaders’ were explicitly part of the Islamic Republic political structure. Furthermore, Khatami supported Mousavi’s candidacy, who was prime minister (1981–89) during the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88). Khatami’s vice president Ali Abtahi supported Karroubi’s candidacy, who was former speaker of the parliament and a student of Khomeini. Rahnavard worked towards reforming workplace policies regarding women as one of Khatami’s advisors. 108
The women’s movement played an instrumental role in the Green Movement’s emergence through experience of campaign-orientated work and strategies to develop physical and online social networks.
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This experience developed during Khatami’s presidency (1997–2005), which allowed for the proliferation of civil society organisations and printed media in which women played a central role. With the re-emergence of a women’s press, women well-versed in both the Quran and feminist ideology strove to re-conceptualise the position of women. Instrumental in this were
Several intellectuals and academics including the diaspora, artists, clerics, journalists and human rights activists either explicitly supported or considered themselves as part of the Green Movement. These included some previously associated with Reformism, such as Abdolkarim Soroush, Mohsen Kadivar and Akbar Ganji. 113 The main constituency of the Green Movement was the middle class, which Kevan Harris defines in terms of social disposition, occupation and education. 114 Importantly, the grassroots level (activists and/or protestors that took to the streets) was fragmented with diverse political backgrounds. 115 Notably, however, many of these individuals rejected the ideas of the ‘leaders’ because of the association with Reformism. 116
Sanctions regimes as domination
As noted, world order is the ‘systematic configurations of political authority’ that is maintained through norms and values upheld by institutions and states in the international system. The idea of a world order can only be global if it is seen as legitimate and representing ‘wider segment of the international system’. A hegemonic world order is one whereby the norms, values and institutions associated with it have been accepted through a process of consent. However, a world order that is not exercised through consent, but rather through force, is better understood in terms of domination. The norms and values of what is often referred to as ‘western liberal world order’ include the ideas of democracy and sovereignty. However, it is evident that Green Movement discourses not only question the world order as hegemonic, but also as liberal. This is because sanctions are seen as being detrimental to both democracy and sovereignty. Furthermore, the idea of democracy is not only seen in relation to a domestic political order, but also in terms of the nature of political order on the international level. I have mapped democracy movement and Green Movement texts alongside events and official IAEA, UN, US government and EU documents associated with Iran’s nuclear programme. This contributes to not only appreciating the complexity of the sanctions, but also to a better understanding of the context in which democracy is articulated. These discourses and the sanctions regimes must also be contextualised with the interrelated regional dynamics of the ‘War on Terror’ discourse, the Israel-Iran cold war and concerns over Iran’s nuclear programme.
Following the 11 September 2001 World Trade Centre attacks, President George W. Bush articulated a discourse whereby Iran was equated with ‘terror’. Despite cooperating with the USA against the Taliban, 117 Bush attached specific meanings to Iran: ‘axis of evil’, ‘Islamist terrorism’ and a threat to ‘the peace of the world’ because of its support for Hamas and Hezbollah. 118 Later in 2002, following accusations that Iran was ‘hiding a uranium enrichment facility at Natanz and a heavy water plant at Arak’, 119 there was increased concern over Iran’s nuclear programme. In June 2003, the IAEA stated that Iran ‘failed to meet its obligations under its Safeguards Agreement’. Although the nuclear material would require further processing for it to be suitable for a nuclear explosive device, the failure to declare it was a concern. 120 By November 2003, the IAEA welcomed ‘Iran’s decision voluntarily to suspend all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities’ and noted ‘with satisfaction Iran’s’ decision ‘to conclude an Additional Protocol to its Safeguards Agreement’. 121 However, in 2004, the IAEA noted ‘with serious concern’ that Iran had not suspended ‘all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities’. 122
From 2005, Ahmadinejad’s presidency saw the reversal of the relative political liberalisation characteristic of Khatami’s presidency. While the repercussions of the ongoing ‘War on Terror’ continued to be played out in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Iran-Israel cold war intensified. In this environment, the USA imposed sanctions in response to the nuclear programme and concerns over support for Hamas and Hezbollah through the 2005 Executive Order 13382. This involved ‘freezing the assets of proliferators of weapons of mass destruction and their supporters’. 123 These sanctions extended pre-existing long-standing embargos following the US hostage crisis and the 1996 Iran-Libya Sanctions Act. In 2006, UN Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1696 noted ‘with serious concern’ the IAEA’s findings that there continued to be ‘existing gaps in knowledge’ regarding ‘the absence of undeclared nuclear material and activities’. 124 UNSCR 1696 requested all states ‘prevent the transfer of any items, materials, goods and technology that could contribute to enrichment-related and reprocessing activities and ballistic missile programmes’. 125
UNSCR 1737 escalated the response and invoked Article 41 of Chapter VII of the UN Charter. This allows the UN to act against a state short of military action through sanctions. This was due to ‘serious concern’ because Iran had not ‘established full and sustained suspension of all enrichment-related and reprocessing activities’; ‘resumed cooperation with the IAEA’; nor complied with UNSCR 1696. 126 This was followed by UNSCR 1747 in 2007 enforcing a two-way arms embargo. 127 UNSCR 1803, also under Chapter VII, extended sanctions to individuals. It asked ‘all States to exercise restraint and vigilance’ regarding any individuals travelling to Iran who may be associated with ‘providing support for Iran’s proliferation sensitive nuclear activities or for the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems’. 128 Crucially, the UNSCR also highlighted support for a resolution, encouraging Iran, China, Russia, the UK, the USA, France and Germany, that is ‘based on mutual respect and the establishment of international confidence in the exclusively peaceful nature of Iran’s nuclear programme’. 129 Six months later, UNSCR 1835 reiterated the demands of UNSCR 1803. 130
During the same period (2006–08), alongside the intensification of sanctions, Iranians felt the impact of an escalation in the Iran-Israel cold war. 131 It is necessary to understand that these regional dynamics had a political impact on Iranian domestic politics. First, human rights activists and democracy movement individuals were targeted by Ahmadinejad’s government in the name of national security. 132 Second, there was real concern that there would be an Israeli military attack on Iran. Indeed, Iran’s nuclear programme and support for Hamas and Hezbollah ‘brought the region to the brink of war’. 133 There were repeated signals indicating a willingness to attack Iran. For instance, in June 2008, the Israel Air Force simulated attacks on targets that were the same distance from Israel as Natanz. 134 Notably, this followed USA-led invasions in Iraq and Afghanistan and the US policies of developing regional alliances against Iran and ‘establishing long-term military bases next to Iran’s borders’. 135 This is also in the context of intensifying concern over Iran’s actions in the region following the removal of Saddam Hussein who had invaded Iran in 1980. In addition to the established relationship with Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria’s Bashar al-Assad regime, Iran was now able to develop relations with Iraq.
In direct response to this international environment and the legacy of external interference, the democracy movement’s ideas of democracy were intrinsically linked to Iran’s territorial integrity and national sovereignty. This is evident in an open statement issued by a group of academics. In this text, the meanings attached to the nodal point ‘democracy’ are related to both international and domestic politics. They state that democracy is ‘the best method for governing the country’, and the viable method for ‘people’s participation in major domestic and foreign decision making’. Further meaning is attached by contextualising democracy in terms of the role played by external powers historically and contemporaneously. The text highlights the ‘devastating impact’ of Iraq’s war against Iran which was ‘maintained with the support of major world powers’. This is a reference to the Iran-Iraq War when the USA was seen as supporting Iraq, while the Soviet Union armed Iraq. Then there is an explicit rejection of sanctions because they create a state of ‘neither war, nor peace’. They call upon peace movements worldwide to ‘raise their voice against military interventions and expansionist policies of war-mongers’. 136 Human Rights Lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi and journalist Ganji stated similar positions rejecting military attack and sanctions. 137 The implication of ‘neither war, nor peace’, as far as democracy activists were concerned, is that it allowed Ahmadinejad’s government to consider some activists as a threat to security. 138 Thus, through equivalential chains a political frontier is created between the democracy movement on the one hand, and those responsible for sanctions and Israel on the other. The former is equated with peace and democracy, while the latter is equated with violence.
In 2009, as noted, Iranians took to the streets in response to the disputed election result. The international environment provided an excuse to restrict political pluralism and civil society activism. 139 Four days after the election, foreign media were banned from reporting on the protests. 140 Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei accused Britain, the USA, and ‘foreign media’ of not only being involved in the protests, but also being responsible for them. 141 The protestors were portrayed as foreign agents and subsequently a threat to national security 142 ; or as ‘a “velvet revolution” financed and directed by the West’. 143 However, Mousavi and Karroubi explicitly rejected such accusations 144 ; and ‘the people were well aware of the movement’s homegrown origin’. 145 The EU rejected accusations of interference. 146
During the same period (2009–10), the sanctions regimes continued to escalate. The IAEA was concerned that previous UNSCRs (1737, 1747, 1803, 1835) were being defied; that Iran had ‘constructed an enrichment facility in breach of its obligations to suspend all enrichment related activities’; and had failed ‘to notify the Agency of the new facility [near Qom] until September 2009’. 147 In response, UNSCR 1929, under Chapter VII, declared all states ‘prevent the direct or indirect supply, sale or transfer to Iran, from or through their territories or by their nationals or individuals subject to their jurisdiction’ of arms and related material. 148 Alongside these sanctions, former President Barak Obama continued to establish the perceived threat of Iran’s nuclear programme at the heart of Iran-USA relations, and as having implications for regional and global dynamics. 149 Extending the 1996 Iran Sanctions Act, the US Senate and House of Representatives passed the 2010 Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability and Divestment Act, which in addition to a range of economic sanctions, imposed sanctions on those responsible for censorship and committing human rights abuses following the 2009 election. 150 Following a declaration that highlighted concern regarding nuclear programme activity addressed by the IAEA, 151 in 2010 the EU not only pledged its support for UNCR 1929, but also implemented its own additional restrictions which amounted to economic sanctions. 152
During the 2009 election campaign, aspirations for a more democratic political order within the Islamic Republic system were clear.
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In a statement given at a domestic and international media conference, Mousavi equates his aims with the nodal point ‘democracy’ by highlighting his aspirations: stronger political parties to facilitate more opportunity for the people to influence; freedom of the press; the rule of law and maintaining the constitution; and free and fair elections. These are all widely considered the norms and values of democracy. Further meaning is attached to nodal point ‘democracy’ by Mousavi’s explicit declaration that he is a Reformist.
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In an interview with the
Following the 2009 election and the subsequent arrests and violence, Mousavi’s and Karroubi’s texts focused on the importance of abiding by Iran’s Constitution and the issue of human rights. In this fluid environment, the meanings attached to the nodal point ‘democracy’ also evolved. For instance, on 13 August 2009 in a statement to the medical community, Mousavi states: ‘Our slogans during the election were chosen to fit the framework of the Constitution. Today we are still committed to the same slogans’. Mousavi concludes by referring to ‘The Green Path of Hope’, stating that green is the colour and symbol of the movement that seeks to ensure the framework of the Constitution. 156 Thus, in response to changing circumstances, democracy and Reformism are now equated with the Green Movement. Thus, the ‘Green Movement’ can be considered a nodal point around which meanings are partially fixated.
Echoing democracy discourses noted above, sovereignty and territorial integrity are integral to the meanings attached to the two nodal points ‘democracy’ and the ‘Green Movement’. For Mousavi and Karroubi, sovereignty is implicit because of the intellectual relationship with Reformism. It is explicit in specific texts, such as Mousavi’s September 2009 ‘Green Path of Hope’, or ‘11th Statement’, issued in response to the protests and subsequent mass arrests. Here, Mousavi states that the Islamic Republic is ‘the result of a century-long struggle for freedom, independence, justice and progress in the shadow of piety’. He also declares the necessity for territorial integrity if the post-election situation is to be resolved. This involves guarding against ‘the voracious greed of foreign adversaries’ and defending ‘the essence of the Islamic Republic’. 157 In his ‘13th Statement’ on 28 September 2009, Mousavi explicitly states his opposition to any sanctions and rejects them because they would affect ‘the people’ as opposed to ‘the government’. 158
These equivalential chains, whereby the Green Movement is equated with territorial integrity and/or sovereignty are also explicit in Mousavi’s ‘18th Statement’, or ‘Green Charter’, issued to mark the first anniversary of 10th presidential election. As in earlier texts, meaning is attached to the nodal point ‘Green Movement’ by equating it with ‘strengthening civil society’; enabling ‘free circulation of information’; ‘active participation of parties and associations’; and ‘fundamental human rights independent of ideology, religion, gender, ethnicity and social status’. These are to be achieved by reforming ‘laws and regulations to eliminate any type of discrimination in society’. Further meaning is attached by placing the nodal point in the context of a particular historical trajectory and contemporary politics. Here, the Green Movement is equated with the quest for ‘national sovereignty’ and freedom and social justice that was manifested in the Constitutional Revolution, the oil nationalisation movement and the Islamic Republic. 159 Regarding contemporary dynamics, Mousavi is explicit: ‘The Green Movement strongly insists on protecting independence and draws a line at involvement with foreign forces’. 160 This shows that the aspiration regarding a domestic order and an international agenda are interconnected.
During this period, elsewhere similar meanings are attached to the nodal point ‘democracy’. For Karroubi, the 2009 uprisings are part of the commitment to independence, freedom, people’s rights and establishing the Islamic Republic. 161 Later, Karroubi maintains that sanctions provide the government an excuse to suppress the opposition. 162 When asked what the ‘West’ can do ‘to support a democratic reform process’, cleric and former Reformist Kadivar states that ‘tightening of sanctions is not the right path ahead’. 163 In January 2010, prominent academics pledged support for Mousavi’s ‘17th Statement’ in which Mousavi asserts ‘opposition to foreign rule’ and loyalty to the constitution. 164 Thus, a discourse of democracy is articulated that is contingent on the contexts: sanctions are seen as detrimental to democracy and sovereignty.
On 8 November 2011, following an earlier report voicing ‘concerns about possible military dimensions to Iran’s nuclear programme’, the IAEA published a new report announcing bilateral sanctions from the USA, UK and Canada. 165 Despite meeting with the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, the IAEA was concerned that Iran had not ‘suspended its enrichment related activities’. In response to this report, an open letter by 120 academics and human rights defenders, many of whom had close ties with the Green Movement or considered themselves part of it, was published on a Green Movement website. In this text, the meanings attached to the nodal point ‘democracy’ echo those highlighted above. The text opens by showing concern over US, Israeli and British narratives suggesting the possibility of military attacks on Iran. Democracy is then clearly equated with sovereignty. They demand a ‘peaceful transition to democracy and a government in Iran that emanates from free elections to secure the civil, political, social, cultural and economical rights of all Iranians’. They assert that ‘the only way of achieving this goal is through stressing national sovereignty, protecting Iran’s territorial integrity, and recovery of all the rights of the people’. They later state: ‘We oppose military attacks on our country Iran under any excuse, including those under the guise of concerns for the irresponsible adventurism of the regime in its nuclear activities’. Finally, they ask that the Islamic Republic government help the IAEA ‘to remove all ambiguities from our nuclear program, so as not to give any excuse for the threat of war and destruction’. 166 However, in December 2011, the EU agreed on an oil embargo to be implemented in July 2012. 167 In February 2012, Obama issued an executive order blocking any property or interests of the Iranian government both in the USA, or under the control of any US citizen. 168
These sanctions regimes are indicative of the mechanisms associated with what Cox refers to as American hegemony, and indeed actors associated with a liberal hegemonic order. While it may be considered acceptable by a vast majority of states to control and contain Iran’s nuclear programme, a closer look at the political impact on Iran through the ideas of the Green Movement suggests a disconnect between their policies and the values associated with a liberal hegemonic order, such as democracy, progressive change and sovereignty. Furthermore, the explicit rejection of the sanctions regimes by groups promoting democracy and progressive change questions the extent to which the EU, USA and the UN can be considered as part of a
Conclusion
If we are to have a better understanding of the international system, world order and global politics, it is necessary to appreciate the complexity of all societies regardless of their geographic location and the agency of all. This article has endeavoured to create a better understanding of world order and Iran’s relationship with it by focusing on the idea of democracy as it has been articulated by the Green Movement prior to the JCPOA.
A discourse analysis of Green Movement texts not only highlights their agency, but also illustrates the contradictions of the ‘western liberal world order’ and challenges the Orientalist discourse that influences this political space. Furthermore, it is clear that domestic and international politics shape each other. Not only have external factors affected how democracy is understood, but there is also a clear international agenda. This is the removal of sanctions to maintain Iran’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
In order to better understand these power relations of ‘world order’, the article has put forward Gramsci’s domination. The notion of domination contributes to understanding the forceful nature of ‘western liberal world order’ in this particular case. This is not only because of the fact that there is no consent, but also because it has acted against its own liberal norms. In so doing, the article builds on extant scholarship that has questioned the hegemonic and global nature of the idea of western liberal world order.
This case study also draws attention to the divisions between the so-called ‘West’ and ‘the rest’, which exists not only in the practice of global politics, but also in IR. The article has endeavoured to use Gramsci’s work to highlight the former and address the latter. Neo-Gramscian IR can move beyond Eurocentrism and Orientalism. By making Iran the main focus, Iranians as part of the Global South are the agent in global politics.
