For those of you who are celebrating the victory of 'moderate' Hassan Rohani as President of Iran. maybe
this will get you to think again.
So how did a member of Iran’s Assembly of Experts and Supreme
National Security Council – and a confidant of Khamenei – become the
“great hope” of the moderate camp? It may be the embrace he received
from the two former presidents, Khatami and Rafsanjani, rivals to
Khamenei, that put him into the reformist category.
“He never called himself a reformist,” explains Dr. Soli Shahvar, who
heads the Ezri Center for Iran and Gulf Studies at Haifa University.
“But he uses rhetoric that is less blustery than that of Ahmedinejad,
and speaks more moderately, including on the subject of nuclear
negotiations.” Shahvar’s conclusion with respect to Rouhani’s win is
unambiguous. “I interpret his election in one way only: The regime
wanted him to win. If they had wanted one of the conservatives to win,
they would have gotten four of the five conservatives to drop out of the
race, paving the way for [eventual runner-up, Tehran Mayor
Mohammad-Bagher] Ghalibaf to win. But they didn’t do that. Moreover, it
was the regime that approved the candidacy of Rouhani alongside only
seven others. This is striking evidence that Khamenei wanted Rouhani to
win, both internally and externally.”
According to Shahvar, from the internal perspective, a victory for
another candidate like Ahmedinejad risked provoking a renewal of the
demonstrations like those of 2009. “Victory for a candidate who is
perceived as more moderate yet still has the confidence of Khamenei,
serves the regime in the best way. Externally, Iran today is in a very
difficult situation with regard to sanctions and its international
standing. A conservative president would only have increased Tehran’s
isolation in the world. A victory for someone from the ‘moderate
stream,’ however, will immediately bring certain countries in the
international community to call for ‘giving a chance to dialogue with
the Iranian moderates.’ They will ask for more time in order to
encourage this stream, and it will take pressure off the regime. And so
we see that in the non-disqualification of Rouhani and especially in the
non-dropping-out of four of the five conservative candidates there is
more than just an indication that this is the result the regime
desired.”
Rouhani, in his new position as president of the country, will first of
all have to bring relief in the economic crisis facing the citizens of
Iran. Yet this is a nearly impossible task in light of the international
sanctions which themselves are the result of the nuclear policy that
has been set by the supreme leader Khamenei. In a few months, the
public’s anger will be turned against the same man on whom so many
Iranians have, as of now, seem to have pinned their hopes.
Hmmm.
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