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  • Iran: the new elite

    Iran: the new elite

    en.fondsk.ru
    Ð?rbis Terrarum
    02.07.2009
    Vladimir YURTAYEV

    The early days of summer of 2009 proved quite stormy in the Islamic
    Republic of Iran in terms of politics. Almost the entire politically
    vocal population of the 70-million strong Iran, that's 40 million
    people, took part in the election of a new president. It is for the
    first time in Iran's history that a fully-fledged election campaign
    has been launched in the country, with the main opponents, old rivals
    in the struggle for power since the 1980s, namely the incumbent leader
    (rahbar) Ali Khamenei and Mir Hossein Mousavi, then Prime Minister of
    the Islamic Republic of Iran, had an opportunity to rally their
    supporters.
    Following his secure win of the presidential election of the 12th of
    June 2009, the incumbent president M. Ahmadinejad had a chance of
    getting in the lead of a united country after a dynamic election and
    his win in the first round. But this failed to prove the case. The
    proclaimed loser Mir Hossein Mousavi of the Islamic Revolution `Old
    Guards' urged his supporters to energetically contest the election
    returns and to take to the streets. The ensuing clashes in Tehran
    resulted in spilt blood and loss of human life on both sides. Judging
    by reports in western news media, the standoff was expected to spiral
    up, but it has grown clear that a repetition of the 1978 anti-Shah
    boat-rocking scenario will fail to become a reality. Back in 1978 the
    Islamic revolution in Iran began precisely with mass-scale street
    protests during the ceremonies of remembering the victims of the
    Shah's repressions. Today the opposition is still weak and unprepared
    to go it too far. Of no minor importance was the determination that
    the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps displayed by saying it was
    prepared to make short shrift of protests to enforce law and order.
    Understandably, just one candidate was to win. It seems strange that
    the opposition has elected for their leader someone who is, true, a
    political heavyweight, but who's unable to win from a younger
    candidate. But then the decision may well have been due to an
    over-assessment by the opposition of their resources and positions in
    Iranian society, where western election technologies will still
    misfire.
    On the 27th of June 2009 M. Ahmadinejad addressed an all-Iranian
    meeting of Iran's judiciary to sum up the first results of the
    election and formulate the key points of his new programme. First,
    Iran's president feels that a mass-scale turnout in the election of
    the 22d of Hordad 1388 (12th of June 2009, according to the Gregorian
    calendar) makes it safe to assume that the recent presidential
    election was a referendum during which the people of Iran reiterated
    their choice of the Islamic republic as a form of political
    power. Secondly, by making this choice the people of Iran `said
    liberal democracy was over'. Ahmadinejad believes the West has a
    `controlled' and limited democracy, when the people have their will
    mediated by political parties and are not immediately involved in the
    election process, whereas in Iran `the people were organizers,
    monitors and electors in the election process', which is evidence of
    freedom and democracy.
    When elaborating on his programme, Ahamdinejad focused on the notion
    of `fairness' (`adalyat', which is also used to denote `justice'), the
    lack of which is the main reason for `strife in the world'. Iran's
    president feels that a fair treatment of one and all is the solution
    for world peace. When addressing foreign reporters in what proved a
    most important election meeting on the 25th of May 2009,
    M. Ahmadinejad also spoke of `orientation towards God, adherence to f
    s, promotion of love and kindness' and urged the dominant forces to
    return in international relations to `fairness and kindness',
    something the entire world was craving. Ahmadinejad said that fairness
    that's been established in Iran is `a harbinger of fairness around the
    world' and pointed out that `ministering to fairness is the highest
    form of service of Allah'. It is thus safe to point out that the new
    regime has shaped a stable set of ideologemes it addresses both to the
    people and government of Iran and the entire world community.
    Of basic importance was M. Ahmadinejad's indication of the
    inviolability in Iran of the principle of `velayat-eh fakikh', that is
    rule by a Shia jurist on the basis of fairness, which is a concept of
    Imam Khomeini.
    On western countries' reaction to the presidential election in Iran
    M. Ahmadinejad said Iranians were surprised that `Mr. Obama interferes
    in Iran's affairs and allows statements that go beyond the bounds of
    decency (`adab'). Perhaps, the US president is trying to find a
    pretext to prolong or even disavow his pledge of holding direct talks
    with the president of the Islamic Republic of Iran. Barack Obama and
    Angela Merkel have spoken in concert to denounce acts of violence in
    Iran in the wake of the presidential election in the Islamic
    Republic. Obama said he admired the courage displayed by the people of
    Iran `in the face of cruelty', adding that the Untied States would
    always support the Iranians' right to the freedom of choice and
    freedom of expression.
    So, Iran's leaders have tested a model of holding presidential
    elections, the one that energetically involved the population into the
    political process. Just how the opposition will act now will determine
    the degree of severity, to which this freedom of expression will be
    restricted. In general, the presidential campaign that's drawn to a
    close has shown a higher degree of development of the Iranian
    society's political system, and this will inevitably affect the
    election technologies to be used in future. It is safe to claim that
    now the Iranians are through a course of training in a higher-level
    political struggle, with a growing threat of using the
    election-related technologies from the `colour revolution' arsenals
    against the existing political regime.
    But then, Iran remains Iran, which was borne out by the election
    returns, - we have already pointed out in a forecast on the Website of
    the Strategic Culture Foundation on the 5 `Iran's new president will
    be a person who should be M. Ahmadinejad's coeval. Iran's incumbent
    president has no competitors in this age group'. I personally took as
    indicative of whether the presidential election returns would or would
    not be recognized as legitimate the congratulations to M. Ahmadinejad
    on his re-election for a second term in office that the Catholicos of
    All Armenians Karekin II extended on the 27th of June 2009. The
    Armenian community in Iran is quite strong, so their recognition of
    and support for the election returns means a lot.
    Meanwhile things in and around Iran are moving in groove, with the
    partisan media are working off what money they got to (what some
    quarters thought) spin-doctor a new president, although the previous
    one has been re-elected. 200 protesters are presented as if they were
    200,000. Almost 13 million people make their home in Tehran, so even
    one million is just one sixth of the city's grown-up population. The
    others voted against the protesters. The whole thing boils down to the
    following: part of the old revolutionary elite that's taken possession
    of economic profits gave way to the new elite following
    M. Ahmadinejad's win in 2005, an elite that's emerged on the basis of
    the Army and that's relying on the other part of the old revolutionary
    elite, related to rahbar Ali Khamenei. The problem is whether the new
    old elite will manage to persuade the opponents not to take all of
    their money out of the country or not.
    Mass-scale money transfers from Iran came to everyone's knowledge when
    La Stampa reported the news that banks Saderat, Bank-e Melli, Bank-e
    Sepah and Melat had begun remitting their clients' currencies to
    Turkey, Malaysia, Pakistan, Indonesia and the United Arab Emirates.
    It is deplorable, of course, if another segment of the formed Iranian
    society moves away, but then the Islamic Republic may stand to gain in
    the long run, since if all one knows is Islam, there's nothing they
    could compare it with.
    One of the US leading foreign p izes up the situation in Iran as
    explosive. Z. Brzezinski warns that the situation is likely to be
    aggravated in the wake of the disputable presidential election, but
    one shouldn't rule out that the regime will stand out. Anyway, he
    says, today Iran is at the start of a deadly crisis. But the West
    cannot afford to ignore any regime in Iran. Brzezinski goes on to say
    that there are a number of issues that one just has to negotiate with
    the current Iranian regime, namely the nuclear programme, regional
    security and economy-related problems. Sanctions alone will fail to
    keep Iran away from its nuclear programme. Nor does Brzezinski rule
    out that Iran's nuclear weapons might prove conducive to regional
    stability. When elaborating on Iran's future, Brzezinski claims that
    the country boasts a social potential to become some time in future
    the West's important partner in the region, and even a partner of
    Israel, which supported Iran in the war against Iraq back in the
    1980s. If only because, Zbigniew Brzezinski says in conclusion, Iran
    is more `pro-western' than the neighbouring countries.
    On the 29th of June 2009 President M. Ahmadinejad told the head of the
    national judiciary Ayatollah Hashemi Shahrudi to launch an
    investigation into the murder of a young Iranian girl called Neda, who
    was shot at and killed by unknown people during a demonstration in
    Tehran. The opposition tried to use the murder as a banner of their
    struggle. President said the political defeat should not separate
    Iranians form one another, since all of them were under his protection
    as their country's citizens.
    It is obvious that keeping the situation stable in Iran is of
    paramount importance. Meanwhile some new scenarios for Iran's
    destruction start looming, the ones that have to do with the weakening
    of the proper Persian component of the Iranian elite as a result of
    emigration or its physical destruction. Russia has long-term interests
    in Central Eurasia and it needs peace in the region to advance
    them. The situation perfectly suits Russia and Iran to promote their
    interaction at all levels, while Russian businesses are prepared to
    carry out joint large-scale economic projects as indicated in the
    framework of strategic partnership proposals. But the expediency of
    separating economics from politics in Russian-Iranian relations should
    not mean ignoring change in Iran's foreign policy concepts, as well as
    the promotion in practical terms of the `diplomacy of fairness and
    dialogue'.
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