By Akbar Atri on 6.30.05 @ 12:08AM
The victory of the mullahs' man in the presidential runoff spells new trouble.
Western news media consider elections in many countries to be
legitimate only if international monitors declare them so. Yet,
when it came to Iran's presidential runoff last week -- where no
such monitors were allowed -- they took the government's stated
results at face value.
In fact, the election of former Tehran Mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
is suspect by any measure. The mullah-controlled government claimed
a 60 percent turnout (63 in the first round). There is no
independent verification of this, nor will there be; however,
careful observers in the country reported many thinly used polling
stations and estimate turnout at under 50 percent.
In many instances, those who did vote were made to do so. The
Islamic Revolutionary Guard, the Basiji and the Islamic militia,
all of which Ahmadinejad has been associated since the 1979
revolution, made sure that anyone remotely connected with the
government and the military went to the polls.
With no outside monitors to interfere, the regime was in a
position to do whatever it would take to achieve the result it
desired: counting some ballots twice, throwing others out, and
manipulating computer vote-counting data.
Of the two candidates, former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
had been making warm noises about having a better relationship with
the United States. Although he had condoned his share of torture
and killing during and after the 1979 revolution, he positioned
himself this time as the "moderate." Pro-democracy Iranians were
not fooled, and anti-democracy, pro-theocracy elements wanted
someone more reliably "pure" -- Ahmadinejad. A dose of class
warfare figured in, too. Ahmadinejad, the son of a blacksmith,
appealed to the economically poorest voters on the basis of
pursuing "social justice." These voters interpreted this as a
promise of jobs and a better life. How he will do this in our
country, which has a 30 percent unemployment rate, he did not
say.
The objective of the mullahs, who rule through the Guardian
Council, was to preserve their power and perquisites at all costs.
They now control the presidency and the parliament, so they are as
secure as possible. The idea is to wait out President George W.
Bush's current term, in the hope that a successor will be more
tractable. Meanwhile, negotiations with the Europe Three (Britain,
France, and Germany) will go forward.
On Monday, Ahmadinejad spread soothing syrup at a news
conference. He said, "Moderation will be my policy. This will be a
government of religious democracy." This echoes a favored statement
of outgoing President Mohammed Khatami, the reformer who never
delivered reform. Ahmadinejad is closely following scripts in
support of Velayat Faghih -- the Ayatollah Khamanei, leader of the
theocrats -- while paying lip service to democracy. In May he was
quoted as saying, "We did not have a revolution in order to have
democracy." That statement sounds like the true Ahmadinejad. In the
early part of this decade he became worried that the country's
commitment to the principles of the revolution were unraveling, so
he joined the fundamentalist group Abadgaran, which won 2003's
municipal election. It went on to win control of parliament last
year. Their control of all the branches of government is now
complete and the "Islamic Republic," as the region's one truly
theocratic government, will feel free to spread fundamentalist
ideology throughout the broader Middle East.
Ahmadinejad spoke of rooting out "corruption." Ironically, the
Revolutionary Guards and other security forces which engineered the
outcome of this election are the main sources of corruption in
Iran. Ahmadinejad, however, does not mean the pocket-lining
corruption of these people when he refers to corruption. Rather, he
means cracking down on free speech, the stirrings of women's
rights, and gatherings of the regime's critics.
Initially, Ahmadinejad will tread cautiously in terms of
specific actions. He will test the water for several weeks, even
months. In the Europe negotiations he will press for the mullahs'
objectives: unfreezing of Iranian assets, accession to the World
Trade Organization, and a tacit European agreement to back off
support for Iran's democracy and human rights movement.
In return, he is likely to pledge a moratorium on Iran's uranium
enrichment program -- but not a once-and-for-all cessation of it.
He and his government will capitalize on the fact that being a
"nuclear nation" is popular with Iranians (though most mean this in
peaceful terms, not weaponry).
What of those who want democracy for their country? Members of
the Iranian Student Movement -- Takhim Vahdat and several other
like-minded groups -- are in discussion right now about forming a
new united front "umbrella" under which they will redouble their
efforts to achieve a democratic government freely elected of and by
and people.
topics:
Trade, Islam, Military, Iran