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Features

Guards’ Journal Warns of Street Protests Gaining Potency

March 4, 2021
Behnam Gholipour
4 min read
The nationwide protests of January 2018 and November 2019 were turning points in the history of street protests in the Islamic Republic
The nationwide protests of January 2018 and November 2019 were turning points in the history of street protests in the Islamic Republic
Although they were brutally supressed, the ruling establishment is now deeply afraid of further demonstrations
Although they were brutally supressed, the ruling establishment is now deeply afraid of further demonstrations

The nationwide protests of January 2018 and November 2019 were arguably turning points in the history of street protests in Iran. Although they were brutally supressed, the ruling establishment is now deeply afraid of further demonstrationsSince then, the Islamic Republic of Iran’s state-sponsored think-tanks and study centers have offered various recommendations to officials on how to prevent a recurrence. The latest of these are detailed below.

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Scattered riots in Saravan and other cities in Sistan and Baluchistan province were violently suppressed by security forces last week. Many Iranians were left wondering why, despite a week of unrest in this deprived province and a tidal wave of news coverage, other parts of the country did not follow suit in the way they had in 2018 and 2019.

Some have attributed the relative silence to the "localized" nature of the protests. Others have suggested people are no longer willing to take part in street protests after the bloody November 2019 crackdowns. Still others wonder whether the people have become indifferent, or are somehow still unaware of what has gone on.

The nationwide protests of January 2018 and November 2019 were turning points in the history of street protests in the Islamic Republic: events that were accompanied in turn by bloody repression on the part of the state. Fear of a repetition of these events has led the Islamic Republic to use all the political, economic, military and security tools at its disposal to prevent a recurrence, and to stifle any gatherings or movements that officials believe could lead to a general uprising.

During this period Iran’s thinktanks and study centers have also published significant volumes of texts and research on why the events of January 2018 and November 2019 took place, and have offered various solutions to officials to prevent their recurrence.

Declining Public Hope

One of the most recent studies in this regard is called Active Preventive Strategies for the Political-Security Crisis, which was published in the latest issue of the quarterly Defense Policy journal of Imam Hossein University, which is affiliated to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

This study summarizes the views of security and political elites affiliated with both reformist and fundamentalist factions in the Islamic Republic. Both groups mentioned "inefficiency" as one of the most important crises in the country that might trigger widespread demonstrations. Other causes cited included unfulfilled promises by officials, unemployment, ineffective problem-solving, declining public hope, high government rents, sanctions, disputes and corruption.

The authors of the paper said nationwide street protests had four “stages”, which they defined as "abnormality in social restraint", "disruption in social restraint", "disease of social restraint" and "tension in social restraint". "Disruption in social restraint" was the main driving force behind the protests, they wrote.

In this study, "social restraint" was defined as the people's refusal to engage in orderly protest in favor of chaos and disorder. The erosion of people’s patience, the article stated, in turn increased the likelihood of demonstrations and street riots. In turn, they said, if street protests became sufficiently widespread, the "structure" and "behavior" of the system would change and the disintegration of the country could become a serious possibility. They also warned it could cause  a "reduction of social capital", a "lack of trust in officials", the "avoidance of simple living", and "inefficiency" and "secrecy" in people’s behavior.

Fight Corruption to Deter Protests

After enumerating the dangers of continued protests, the study’s authors made a series of recommendations to the authorities of the Islamic Republic to prevent future street protests. The first and most pivotal was that the system show, to a great extent, that it is “serious” about fighting corruption.

This idea to have weighed on the regime with the appointment of Ebrahim Raeesi as head of the judiciary by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in March 2019. Fighting corruption was also a priority in the final year of Sadegh Larijani's tenure, and has become all the more so since. But despite the severity of the crackdown on systemic corruption by authorities, people in Iran are still deeply sceptical of the process employed to deal with such crimes.

The study also recommends reorganising “dysfunctional” structures and institutions, and suggests that Iranian officials allow "appropriate context and space for the realization of new discourses in society". These recommendations are presented in the form of three strategies, "preparedness", "counteraction" and "reconstruction", which indicate that the authors perhaps do not feel a sense of urgency about implementing them.

Meanwhile the quarterly journal Security Horizons, from Imam Hossein University, also  recently published a study that attempted to examine ways of controlling social actions that "target the values ​​and norms of the Islamic Republic”.

The article listed "increasing false sects and mysticism", "increasing identity and ethnic demands", "increasing emerging harm" and "increasing trends and challenges of social networks in mobilizing resources and activists" as factors strengthening collective “subversion” in the country.

Related coverage:

Why Baluchis are Facing Death to Escape Poverty

Revolutionary Guards Publish Methods to Suppress Protests

Iranians will be Protesting for the Foreseeable Future

The Regime’s Psychological Warfare Handbook to Crush Protests

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