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Iran: Ahmadinejad Has One Quip Too Many, Prompting Intervention

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  • Iran: Ahmadinejad Has One Quip Too Many, Prompting Intervention

    IRAN: AHMADINEJAD HAS ONE QUIP TOO MANY, PROMPTING INTERVENTION
    Kamal Nazer Yasin

    Eurasianet
    http://www.eurasianet.org
    June 5, 2009

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's penchant for loopy one-liners
    and unsubstantiated allegations may finally be getting the best of
    him. A raucous presidential debate -- featuring comments so outrageous
    that Ahmadinejad provoked rebukes from all across the political
    spectrum -- has energized the Iranian electorate, and riveted attention
    on the June 12 presidential vote. Turnout may end up being so large,
    and attention so great, that it may make it difficult to rig. That
    can only be bad news for the incumbent.

    There are seven days now left before the presidential vote. Political
    apathy has characterized Iranian election cycles for almost a
    decade. Low voter turnout, in fact, paved Ahmadinejad's path to
    power. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Intellectuals
    and members of the economic middle class have been especially prominent
    in staying away from politics since experiencing disappointment during
    the administration of former reformist president Mohammad Khatami. [For
    background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. But now the election is
    practically all that Iranians can talk about. Interest in the campaign
    is reaching a fever pitch.

    The catalyzing event for this development was a bruising
    nationally-televised debate on June 3 between the two main presidential
    contestants: Ahmadinejad, who is bidding for a second term, and his
    moderate-reformist challenger, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who was a former
    prime minister and a confidant of the Islamic Republic's founder,
    the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Roughly 60 percent of Iranians
    tuned in to the debate, and they were treated to a 90-minute verbal
    brawl that at times veered between a rhetorical prize fight and a
    professional wrestling bout. The candor that surrounded the debate
    had not been evident in Iran's political discourse since the early
    days of the Islamic Revolution.

    Ahmadinejad came out swinging, throwing out charges that his
    opponent was in an unsavory alliance with former presidents Khatami
    and Aliakbar Rafsanjani and others, whom he variously accused of
    corruption, mendacity and perfidy. He named several people, including
    a top cleric, as having acquired their wealth illegally. He went on
    to claim he had proof that former president Rafsanjani's sons had
    accumulated ill-begotten wealth and Rafsanjani himself had secretly
    colluded with an Arab state against him.

    Throughout, Ahmadinejad displayed a caustic and aggressive demeanor
    that many Iranians, due to the government's heavy control of state
    media, had not seen before. The highlight from Ahmadinejad's corner
    was when he pulled one of the files stacked in front of him and said
    he had proof that Mousavi's wife, who is an intellectual and dean of
    a university, had obtained her degrees inappropriately or illegally.

    After an uneven start in parrying Ahmadinejad's jabs, Mousavi
    went ballistic after the attack on his wife. He threw a haymaker
    at the president, painting him as unbalanced and accusing him of
    "adventurism, instability, unlawfulness and radicalism." Mousavi
    followed that up with a combination designed to impugn Ahmadinejad's
    patriotism. Referring to Ahmadinejad's repeated denial of the
    Holocaust, Mousavi said the incumbent has disgraced Iran in world
    opinion. "Shame has been brought on Iran. You have created tension with
    other countries. Heavy costs have been brought on the nation in these
    four years," Mousavi said. After listing a series of measures taken by
    the government that Mousavi said were illegal, he pointed his finger at
    Ahmadinejad and said his actions were paving the way for dictatorship.

    Mousavi also characterized Ahmadinejad's debate behavior as sinful. "We
    are Muslims, we believe in God. We cannot name people like that and
    accuse them," Mousavi said, referring to the incumbent's multiple,
    unsubstantiated corruption claims.

    The debate ended at midnight on June 3, and it immediately had an
    impact on the national atmosphere. In the capital, thousands of
    people poured out of their homes spontaneously and drove or walked
    to major intersections or gathering points, sounding car horns,
    shouting slogans and holding impromptu rallies in small numbers
    into the early morning hours. Several thousand security agents in
    riot gear, along with uniformed police, were deployed to prevent
    physical clashes. In some cities, like in the holy city of Mashad,
    violent clashes did occur. At least one death was reported, that of
    a student supporter of Mousavi beaten to death by vigilantes.

    Analysts believe that Ahmadinejad's reliance on smack-down tactics was
    calculated to portray Mousavi as a hireling of the corrupt and powerful
    few, and to inflame public passions based on class divisions. By
    linking Mousavi with Rafsanjani, the incumbent president clearly hoped
    to repeat tactics that proved successful in the 2005 election. In
    that campaign, Ahmadinejad succeeded in smearing his main challenger,
    Rafsanjani, and framing the election as a battle between rich and poor,
    greed and social justice.

    In an indication that Ahmadinejad's debate zingers were carefully
    prepared, the hard-line Fars News Agency reported the day before
    the debate that a number of students would hold a rally on June 3
    outside the headquarters of the Expediency Council, which Rafsanjani
    chairs. In the days since the debate, members of the Basij militia,
    which has served as Ahmadinejad's de facto campaign organization,
    were shouting slogans at rallies, such as "Mousavi is Rafsanjani's
    scarecrow." And during Friday prayers on June 5, pro-presidential
    supporters distributed anti-Rafsanjani pamphlets outside mosques.

    There are signs that Ahmadinejad's tactics may backfire for this
    election. At the very least, they earned him a rebuke from one of his
    staunchest supporters -- Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. [For background
    see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Speaking at a ceremony marking the
    20th anniversary of Ayatollah Khomeini's death, the Supreme Leader
    indicated that Ahmadinejad had crossed a line.

    "One doesn't like to see a nominee, for the sake of proving himself,
    seeking to negate somebody else," Ayatollah Khamenei said. "I have
    no problem with debate, dialogue and criticism but these debates must
    take place within a religious framework."

    Rafsanjani, for his part, announced that he would press a defamation
    suit against the president, the Mehr news agency reported June 5. That
    would be a legal case that could divide the Iranian establishment. The
    Expediency Council that Rafsanjani heads is Iran's top forum for
    legislative arbitration. It also functions as an advisory body to
    the Supreme Leader, who is one of Ahmadinejad's top patrons.

    On June 4, Rafsanjani publicly aired concerns that pro-Ahmadinejad
    forces were preparing to carry out widespread ballot-stuffing.

    Ayatollah Khamenei's injunction against attack-style politics
    would appear to leave Ahmadinejad in a difficult position for the
    campaign's home stretch. Having embraced a Rovian philosophy of
    hate-and-divide, he can't be seen as backtracking, or he will lose
    the support of the poor masses that he needs to manipulate in order
    to win the election. But disobeying the Supreme Leader can have its
    own consequences. Ahmadinejad also runs the risk of waking a sleeping
    giant -- the large bloc of reformist-leaning voters that has slumbered
    through the last two presidential elections.

    Editor's Note: Kamal Nazer Yasin is a pseudonym for a freelance
    journalist specializing in Iranian affairs.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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