Page 4-Sunday, October 28, 979-The Michigan Daily Wh hmiisrvoluio n'tdng elswhere BY.T D Allman m ________________________________ I I',r M ^ . ANKARA, Turkey-Iran's Islamic Revolution is proving to be far less ex- portable a commodity than its oil. The oil, contrary to early fears, continues Jo flow worldwide from Iran to America, Japan and Europe. But as to religion, the Ayatollah Khomeini has widened the gap between Islam in his country and Islam elsewhere, rather than in- spiring any kind of Islamic ecumenical or political movement in other coun- tries. The. primary 'reason for the parochial, as opposed to catholic appeal of Khomeini's Islam is the doctrinal fragmentation within the religion itself. IRAN IS THE world'-s only over- whelmingly Shi'ite Moslem nation. All its neighbors, except Iraq, are predominantly Sunni, Islam in Iran tends to be fiercely independent of secular authority, even though Khomeini as the religious leader vir- tually runs the country. In other Moslem countries Islam is usually financially dependent on the secular government, and in no position to challenge, let alone supplant it. In Syria and Egypt, for example, the Moslem clergy are paid by the state. Here in Turkey. the chief religious official is a government civil servant who controls both spiritual appointments and the purse strings. Under Khomeini, moreover, the state religion is not Islam, nor even Shi'ism, but Khomeini's particular brand of Shi'ism. For Sunni Moslems, both in- side and outside Iran, the ascendancy of that new faith is alarming. While the Islamic Republic guarantees the religious and political rights of Iran's tiny Jewish, Christian and Zoroastrian minorities, it is much less clear about the rights of Sunni Moslems-who nake up about ten per cent of Iran's population and the vast majority of the Moslem world. The Islamic Republic has, in fact, shown that Iran is not only a very unusual Moslem country, but is unique. WHilE IN MOST of the Moslem world, Islam established itself well before the development of a nation state, in Iran the process was the exact reverse. Iran was a powerful empire with an established national identity a thousand years before the Prophet was born. The Iranians did not so much convert to a foreign religion, Islam, as they transformed it from a universal religion into a creed as distinctly nationalistic in many ways as the Or- thodox Church in Russia or the Anglican faith in England. Historians have referred to the process as the "Iranian conqust of Islam." The result is that to highly orthodox Moslems in countries like Saudi Arabia, and to highly secularized Moslems in countries like Turkey, Islam as it is practiced in Iran appears much more idiosyncratically Iranian than an examiple of their own faith at work. Many Saudis, for example, believe the Koran unequivocably prohibits pictoral representation of any kind-ranging from paintings to television. But the Iranians, with their long, pre-Islamic tradition of fine arts, discarded that in- terpretation centuries ago. Today, Iran is festooned with millions of paintings and photographs of Khomeini-something a devout Saudi finds as heretical as a conservative Catholic would find rock and roll music being played at an ecumenical mass. And while Khomeini's orthodoxy offen- ds Moslems who believe in separation of church and state in countries like, Turkey and Egypt, the ayatollah's em- phasis on social and economic equality disturbs the conservatives. 'Has the Islamic revolution -had a domino effect anywhere? Judging from visits to a number of Iran's Moslem neighbors, few believe Khomeini's revolution provides a useful model for their countries. As one, prominent Turkish politician recently remarked: "Even if Mr. Khomeini were giving away Islamic Revolution free, he wouldn't find many takers among us Turks." THOUGH TURKEY NOT long ago received a flurry of press attention as the Mideast country most likely to be "the next Iran," extensive.travels here confirm that politician's contention. Turkey has severe problems, as many of Iran's neighbors do. But even those Turks who want revolutionary change tend toward extreme right- and left- wing ideologies deriving from Marxism Khomeini supporters flee from the Shah's forces during a rally last November before the Shah's regime finally fell. and fascism, not Islam. As for Turkey's disaffected minorities, Khomeini's in- ternal policies have destroyed whatever appeal the Islamic revolution might have had for them. One sees signs reading "Killer Khomeini" in Kurdish villages all over eastern Turkey. When Yasser Arafat, chairman of the PLO, made a triumphal visit to Tehran shortly after the Shah fell, some feared a volatile fusion of Palestinian guerrillas, Iranian petrodollars and Islamic faith. But while . the Palestinians are delighted at Iran's repudiation of the Shah's pro-Israeli policies, PLO officials in Beirut make it clear they don't see Khomeini's policies as relevant models for economic or political development. "When you're as big and rich as Iran," one high-ranking Palestinian observed, "maybe you can act out Koranic fantasies. When you are weak and poor like us, you have to be realistic. All we want is a secular state of our own, like everybody else, not the kingdom of God on earth," Iran's two eastern neigh- bors-Afghanistan and Pakistan-were deeply divided long before the Shah fell. Pakistan's military ruler, General Zia- ul Haq, has attempted to use Islam to provide a sense of unity and purpose. But Pakistan in no sense has undergone an Islamic revolution. Though Zia has promised elections, power remains firmly in the hands of the military-not the Moslem laity or clergy, as in Iran. IN AFGHANISTAN, the Soviet- supported, left-wing government is in deep trouble with the country's conser- vative and fiercely independent tribesmen, but not because of Iran. Afganistan guerrillas are all Sun- nis-and they are rebelling against social programs, ranging from sweeping land reform to the elimination of feudal privilege. Iran's Islamic revolution, in fact, has had a significant effect in only one other nation so far-in Iraq, the only other country where Shi'ites form a substan- tial part of the population. But whatever hopes the Islamic revolution had aroused among Iraq's Shi'ites and discontented minorities by now have been crushed-not only by Khomeini, but by Iraq's own repressive gover- nment. Last summer, Iraq's new president executed virtually the entire Shi'ite wing of his own Baathist party, in the course of what resembled an in- ternal power struggle-much more than a an attempted religious revolution. Iran's Islamic revolution has been contained, then, by -Iran's distinct national characteristics. THlE MAJOR BENEFICIARY of this curtainment outside Iran is the Soviet Union, for which a spreading Islamic revolution could have created a threat much more immense than any it posed either to its other neighbors or to the United States. Six of the Soviet Union's 15 republics have majority Moslem populations and one of them-Azer- bai jan-has a majority Shi'ite population. But Khomeini's failure to grant autonomy to Iran's Turkoman minority has limited whatever appeal the Islamic revolution might have had in Central Asia. And in the Caucuses, the: wine-drinking, secularized Soviet Azerbaijanis, who enjoy mixed bathing on their own Caspian beaches, seem, unimpressed by Khomeini'sa puritanism. The result is that with China to the' east, its restive satellites to the west, both detente and the Soviet economy in trouble, and growing problemswith' Afghanistan, the Kremlin at least has. little to worryabout in Iran. Iran, inthe end, has not had an Islamic revolution so much as it has had an "Iranian Shi'ite revolution." Using the Koran, Khomeini has wound up demonstrating what others did with the Bill of Rights and the collected works of Karl Marx-that while the philosophers propose, nationalism' disposes, remaining the single .most powerful force in the world today. T. D. Al/man wrote this piece for the Pacific News Service. ,# Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom Vol. LXXXX, No. 46 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Getting on withS A T FIRST they clamored for a com- mitment for more defense spen- ding, and most recently they- tried to make the long-known -presence of Soviet troops in Cuba a major inter- national crisis. And now, after both failing attempts, the opponents of the strategic arms limitation treaty are using their last resort - the so-called "killer amendments." The Senate's cold warriors who couldn't kill the SALT treaty through emotionalism and scare-tactics are now trying to amend the treaty to death. And so far, it isn't working. The Senate so far has shown that it is able to rise above petty politics and the haranguing of a demogogic few. The Foreign Relations Committee, which is now considering the pact, has beaten back two such "killer amendments" and has allowed the treaty to so far go unscathed. And SALT picked up a major supporter when Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd came out and gave his unqualified support for the .pact. It seems that those who predicted that SALT would die in the Senate, or emerge in some unrecognizable form, underestimated the power of- reasonableness and rationality in the face of extremism. The votes on the two treaty-killing amendments were close, but they showed that in the Foreign Relations Committee at least, there is still a majority that will allow the for- ces of moderation to prevail. Perhaps now the likes of Seator Baker will go elsewhere than the SALT debate to play their presidential politics. While the right-wingers can continue harping about America's lack . . ,- ..- - , ,, , P , - of nuclear arsenals and weapons deployments in Europe. But that ultimate goal of a world at peace with itself, and not always on the brink of nuclear devastation; cannot be realized without the first cog in the slow, arduous process of disengagement - SALT II. Some changes in the treaty that are being seriously considered are serious helpful, well-thought changes that can only make the treaty a better one for both parties - like an attached under- standing that neither side could im- pede the collection of signals from nissiles in test flights. But the dif- ference is, first, that such a change is not a direct affront to Moscow, like Senator Baker's ridiculous amen- dment that would have required the Soviets to dismantle their heavy missiles. The second difference is that the changes being considered are in the form of "understandings," or sense of the Senate resolutions, that make the view of the Senate clear without hanging any unnecessary or unrealistic amendments onto the treaty text. The SALT treaty is still far from ap- proved. But by defeating the first two "killer amendments" and delivering a sharp one-two rebuff to Senator Baker and the treaty opponents, the members of the Senate are moving to show all the world watching that they can act rationally in a debate of this magnitude. Godspeed. UTl E}ithigU1 9 adg EDITORIAL STAFF Sue Warner.................... .........EF )ITOR-IN-C(IIEF Richard Berke,.Julie Rovern.........MANAGING EDITORS While Americans view Fidel Castro as a revoltionary dictator making trouble in distant parts of the world or as a Soviet stooge doing their bidding in return for massive bailouts, the Cuban leader's image, throughout the Third World is sharply different. Though many Third World leaders radically disagree with Castro's policy of seeking to align the Third World with the Soviet Unior against the U.S., as evident in the recent Havana Conference of Non-Aligned Nations, virtually all grant him great respect as a world leader.' LEFT-LEANING PRIME Minister Michael Manley of Jamaica has praised him as "one of the great liberation forces of all history." Right-leaning President Jose Lopez Portillo of Mexico has spoken of his Cuban revolution as "small in size but immense in quality." And in Africa, the mildly conservative leader of Zambia, Kenneth Kaunda, stated forthrightly: "we admire Cuba." Castro's growing reputation as a world leader began with Cuba's transformation from its pre-1959 image as a fun-spot of Miami into a serious and effectiveeactor on the international scene. The Third World directly credits Castro's leadership for thissuc- cess., Castro's global stature also highlights the fact that the Third World today no longer has any leaders of world reputation. Tito offers some competition but his age (87) and the fact that he leads a European nation mitigate against him. The other charismatic giants of the non- aligned nations are long since dead-Nehru of India, Nkrumah of Ghana. Sadat's image has been badly weakened by his dealings with Israel, and Yasser Arafat is hurtby deep divisions within his own PLO supporters and the fact that he leads a movement rather than an in- dependent nation. CASTRO'S NEW charisma as' world leader does not mean his views are widely accepted, or that his own record as Cuban leader is unblemished. There is widespread distrust of his align- ment with the Soviet Union which some perceive as satellite status arising from Cuba's lopsided economic dependence upon the Soviets. There is both admiration and fear of Chan militarv ad- Personally, he is admired for his own revolutionary history: the fact that he led the battle against the corrupt Baptista, has main- tained his simple' life style, and refused to use his power for per- sonal enrichment. Depsite all the failures, Castro can claim some stunning suc- cesses in reshaping Cuba society. His accomplishments in education and health are highly regarded in the Third World. No nation has matched Cuba's suc- cess in its efforts to eliminate illiteracy. In a region where literacy rates often fall below 50 per cent, Cuba's claim to have achieved over 98 per cent literacy is remarkable. CASTRO'S CUBA has also broken the traditional dichotomy between rural and urban Third World sees world leader By Richard Millett sports has enhanced Cuba's image. Beyond this, many in the Third World who still resent a con- tinuing domination by ex-colonial powers admire Castro for his ability to have borken U.S. dominance over Cuba's economy and politics. Castro succeeded in dettroying the power of Cuba's traditional ruling class, which had been firmly allied with U.S. interests ruling the island. THE HIGH POINT of this struggle, of course, came with the 1961 defeat of the Bay of Pigs invasion. Many who had sym-. pathized with at least some of Castro's aims still felt that he would inevit'ably be overthrown when his actions became in- tolerable for the United States. The failuredof the invasion at- tempt shattered the myth of U.S. reliance on sugar-have not been successful. This has served to highlight the high degree of economic dependence on the Societ Union. Yet in the Third World such economic dependence is not uncommon and is viewed as the result of world market con- ditions ,over which Third World leaders have little control. While acknowledged as a factor limiting Castro's ability to criticize the Russians in inter- national forums, is it not per- ceives as the major determinant in Cuban, Third World in- volvement. THE ASPECT of Castro'$ African involvement most ofter stressed by that continent's leaders and usually ignored by the U.S. is Cuba's aid in development efforts. Thousands of Cubans work in Africa, espeeially in Angola and Mozam- bique, in agriculture, medicine, and education. Their efforts are aided by the similarity between Portuguese and Spanish, by the fact that many Cubans are at least of partial African descent, and by Cubans' willingness to share the living conditions of those with whom they work These qualities contrast sharply with Russian as well as North American involvementrin development projects. Cubans also bring with them an awareness of the technological limits on Third World develop- ment efforts, and of the impor- tance of small-scale, local projec- ts. Their aid can be provided rapidly, with a minimum of visible strings attached, and ser- ves to promote the local regime's political as well as economic ob- jectives. Similar policies, without the military component, charac- terize Cuban efforts in the Carib- bean and now in Nicaragua An ability to move rapidly and effec- tively in such" areas as health, education and fisheries when a new regime needs 'support has generated appreciation! The bottom line is that, for much of the developing world, blood is thicker than water; Castro's anti-imperialist, Third World ties are much stronger, much more enduring than his current political links with the Soviet Union. North Americans may disagree with this and with many of the other perceptions of Castro's place in world politics. but it would be a serious mistake to discount the strength of his in- fluence as both a representative and a leader of much of the non- "His accomplishments in. education and health are highly regarded in the Third World. No nation has matched Cuba 's suc- cess in its effort to eliminate illiteracy. In a region where literacy rates often fall below 50 per cent, Cuba's claim to have achieved over 98 per cent literacy is remarkable. " education. Today, many of the most modern, best equipped schools are in the country. Also, great strides have been made in expanding opportunities for secondary and higher education to all with the ability-and the revolutionary loyalty-to profit from it. invincibility in Latin America and made Castro even more of a folk hero to much of the world. The image was somewhat tar- nished by the 1962 missile crisis-in which Castro appeared to have been virtually by-passed by the two superpowers-and by the later failure ofCuban efforts