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Stealing the Iranian Election

by: Juan Cole  |  Informed Comment

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A woman holds rocks gathered for throwing at police in Tehran, Iran. A second day of protests is currently underway. (Photo: Reuters)

    Top Pieces of Evidence that the Iranian Presidential Election Was Stolen

    1. It is claimed that Ahmadinejad won the city of Tabriz with 57%. His main opponent, Mir Hossein Mousavi, is an Azeri from Azerbaijan province, of which Tabriz is the capital. Mousavi, according to such polls as exist in Iran and widespread anecdotal evidence, did better in cities and is popular in Azerbaijan. Certainly, his rallies there were very well attended. So for an Azeri urban center to go so heavily for Ahmadinejad just makes no sense. In past elections, Azeris voted disproportionately for even minor presidential candidates who hailed from that province.

    2. Ahmadinejad is claimed to have taken Tehran by over 50%. Again, he is not popular in the cities, even, as he claims, in the poor neighborhoods, in part because his policies have produced high inflation and high unemployment. That he should have won Tehran is so unlikely as to raise real questions about these numbers. [Ahmadinejad is widely thought only to have won Tehran in 2005 because the pro-reform groups were discouraged and stayed home rather than voting.)

    3. It is claimed that cleric Mehdi Karoubi, the other reformist candidate, received 320,000 votes, and that he did poorly in Iran's western provinces, even losing in Luristan. He is a Lur and is popular in the west, including in Kurdistan. Karoubi received 17 percent of the vote in the first round of presidential elections in 2005. While it is possible that his support has substantially declined since then, it is hard to believe that he would get less than one percent of the vote. Moreover, he should have at least done well in the west, which he did not.

    4. Mohsen Rezaie, who polled very badly and seems not to have been at all popular, is alleged to have received 670,000 votes, twice as much as Karoubi.

    5. Ahmadinejad's numbers were fairly standard across Iran's provinces. In past elections there have been substantial ethnic and provincial variations.

    6. The Electoral Commission is supposed to wait three days before certifying the results of the election, at which point they are to inform Khamenei of the results, and he signs off on the process. The three-day delay is intended to allow charges of irregularities to be adjudicated. In this case, Khamenei immediately approved the alleged results.

    I am aware of the difficulties of catching history on the run. Some explanation may emerge for Ahmadinejad's upset that does not involve fraud. For instance, it is possible that he has gotten the credit for spreading around a lot of oil money in the form of favors to his constituencies, but somehow managed to escape the blame for the resultant high inflation.

    But just as a first reaction, this post-election situation looks to me like a crime scene. And here is how I would reconstruct the crime.

    As the real numbers started coming into the Interior Ministry late on Friday, it became clear that Mousavi was winning. Mousavi's spokesman abroad, filmmaker Mohsen Makhbalbaf, alleges that the ministry even contacted Mousavi's camp and said it would begin preparing the population for this victory. The ministry must have informed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who has had a feud with Mousavi for over 30 years, who found this outcome unsupportable. And, apparently, he and other top leaders had been so confident of an Ahmadinejad win that they had made no contingency plans for what to do if he looked as though he would lose.

    They therefore sent blanket instructions to the Electoral Commission to falsify the vote counts.

    This clumsy cover-up then produced the incredible result of an Ahmadinejad landlside in Tabriz and Isfahan and Tehran.

    The reason for which Rezaie and Karoubi had to be assigned such implausibly low totals was to make sure Ahmadinejad got over 51% of the vote and thus avoid a run-off between him and Mousavi next Friday, which would have given the Mousavi camp a chance to attempt to rally the public and forestall further tampering with the election.

    This scenario accounts for all known anomalies and is consistent with what we know of the major players.

    More in my column, just out, in Salon.com: "Ahmadinejad reelected under cloud of fraud," where I argue that the outcome of the presidential elections does not and should not affect Obama's policies toward that country - they are the right policies and should be followed through on regardless.

    The public demonstrations against the result don't appear to be that big. In the past decade, reformers have always backed down in Iran when challenged by hardliners, in part because no one wants to relive the horrible Great Terror of the 1980s after the revolution, when faction-fighting produced blood in the streets. Mousavi is still from that generation.

    My own guess is that you have to get a leadership born after the revolution, who does not remember it and its sanguinary aftermath, before you get people willing to push back hard against the rightwingers.

    So, there are protests against an allegedly stolen election. The Basij paramilitary thugs and the Iranian Revolutionary Guards will break some heads. Unless there has been a sea change in Iran, the theocrats may well get away with this soft coup for the moment. But the regime's legitimacy will take a critical hit, and its ultimate demise may have been hastened, over the next decade or two.

    What I've said is full of speculation and informed guesses. I'd be glad to be proved wrong on several of these points. Maybe I will be.

    PS: Here's the data:

    So here is what Interior Minister Sadeq Mahsouli said Saturday about the outcome of the Iranian presidential elections:

    "Of 39,165,191 votes counted (85 percent), Mahmoud Ahmadinejad won the election with 24,527,516 (62.63 percent)."

    He announced that Mir-Hossein Mousavi came in second with 13,216,411 votes (33.75 percent).

    Mohsen Rezaei got 678,240 votes (1.73 percent)

    Mehdi Karroubi with 333,635 votes (0.85 percent).

    He put the void ballots at 409,389 (1.04 percent).

  

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Comments

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Just like here in the U.S.

Just like here in the U.S. in 2000 and again in 2004 elections are stolen. Unlike here, Iranians bravely defend their vote against much greater threat of violence. Also, have we been meddling in their election? We always do.

The Iranian election

The Iranian election scenario as described by the Western media seems painfully similar to the one run on the Zimbabwean elections of last year (2008). The US-favored 'opposition' candidate, with the polls barely up and running announces his victory--dubiously claiming the Interior Ministry has informed him of his victory, though this would violate the Ministry's own three-day grace period on announcing results. After this 'preemptive strike', if the real results run contrary to the opposition's announcement, the elections is automatically called into question. Mick

The smug smile on his face

The smug smile on his face makes my stomach turn so I can imagine what it's actually doing to the people that live in that country. Why did they even bother to have the elections ? They the Government knew exactly who the ruler was going to be. Personally I hope the people find a way ..peacefully of course.. to get the correct leader in place.

it is regretted that turhput

it is regretted that turhput which is normally objective would publish an analysis that even its author admits it's merely speculation and guess. Nothing in the article that shows even the slightest prove that would support the conclusion.

Rigging elections? How

Rigging elections? How American can the Iranians get? Once again we have succeeded in exporting democracy. Remember all those excitingly close elections in Cuba?

From a liveblogging post by

From a liveblogging post by Nico Pitney on huffingtonpost.com: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/tag/riots-erupt-in-tehran-over-stolen-election "One man who worked in the Ministry of Interior, which carried out the vote count, said the government had been preparing its fraud for weeks, purging anyone of doubtful loyalty and importing pliable staff members from around the country. They didn't rig the vote," claimed this man, who showed his ministry identification card but pleaded not to be named. "They didn't even look at the vote. They just wrote the name and put the number in front of it."

I was watching an interview

I was watching an interview with Jean Houston yesterday where she was saying the old political systems are going out like a great sunset. Ahmadinejad is apparently doing all he can to slow his eventual fall.

Did James Baker secretly

Did James Baker secretly serve as an advisor to Khamenei in last-minute election rigging??

The BBC reports that it

The BBC reports that it polled almost all of the 2,000 Iranians who voted in London; the result showed 90% in favor of Mousavi. Iran's electoral commission reported the vote in London as 80% for Ahmadinejad. This is so blatant as to suggest the regime's real message to the electorate is, "We will decide who wins; get used to it."

What about our own Election

What about our own Election Fraud? That there is outrage on this forum over obvious fraud in Iran is encouraging, but we still have electronic voting machines with no verifiable, unalterable paper-trail in use all over this country. That exit polls - the gold standard in ascertaining whether election fraud has occurred by all election-watchdogs worldwide - are no longer regarded 'relevant' starting in 2000 should bother every American citizen, yet we sleep. The fraud occurs here during the primaries - that is when any rogue who is not friendly to the big banking interests gets weeded out while the citizens aren't paying such close attention. As for Cole's blaming 'inflation due to spreading the oil wealth' - what theory is he basing that on? Sharing the proceeds of the sale of a valuable commodity is not inflationary at all - but printing money (like what has been done massively by our Federal Reserve Bank) is inflationary by definition - by Cole's logic, does this mean that we should all expect Obama and anyone who supported his economic policies to be summarily tossed out in the next election cycle, and if they're not that it is prima facia evidence of election fraud? Audit the FRB - support HR 1207.

Juan Cole should know

Juan Cole should know better. Mousavi's campaign had all the signs of being managed by the National Endowment for Democracy -- the former CIA project for rigging elections around the world. He only had to read the signs or do a little research. The most likely scenario is that Iranians saw this, while Amerians did not as they never seem to understand. All the attention paid in the US to Mousavi was stimulated by the NED and Voice of America. This created false expectations in the US. Let us not forget that the US Congress has appropriated about 400 million dollars over the last few years to destabilize the Iranian government. The campaign of Mousavi was a recipient of a lot of that money and he ran a campaign managed by the US. No wonder he lost by a large margin. Who in hell wants a US puppet president? The world has had enough of those.

Ahmadinejad seems to have

Ahmadinejad seems to have learned a thing or two about democracy from the American GOP. One can fool some of the people some of the time; but....

Bush always wanted to bring

Bush always wanted to bring democracy to the middle east. Looks as if he did.

When the Western media and

When the Western media and the arch imperial stooge Joseph Biden, decry the results of the Iranian election, perhaps the Ahmadinejad 'victory' is for the better, despite being fraudulently rigged. Opposition to Western hegemony, American imperialism and Israeli state terror, must be maintained, at all costs. Jettisoning the bourgeois niceties of democratic elections, is a small price to pay when the tragedy of allowing a pro-American 'Trojan horse' regime in Iran would be disaster.

The way Juan explains this,

The way Juan explains this, it sounds all too familiar. Just change the country from Iran to U.S., the name Mousavi to Kerry, Ahmadinejad to Bush and throw some American names to the cities and voala, U.S. 2004. Nobody seemed concerned here, why there!!!

The Iranian coronation has

The Iranian coronation has its parallel in the dogged resistance of the health insurance and banking industries' control of the US Congress. They are not going to give up that control unless we the citizens demand REAL CAMPAIGN FINANCE REFORM WITH TEETH.

Juan Cole has joined the

Juan Cole has joined the list of establishmentarian hacks -pretending to be 'independent' -but are just stooges for the US propagana machine. Throw Stephen Zunes in there as well- basically most of the writers in Alternet and Truthout.

When will the US rigged

When will the US rigged elections get some publicity in the media? Please inform us. We are waiting with baited breath! There is still a case going on in Ohio over the 2004 Presidential Election. Where is the publicity?

I was US consul in Tabriz in

I was US consul in Tabriz in the mid-'60's and monitored a Majlis election. The polling and all was impeccable but nobody oversaw the actual counting of ballots and the result was exactly what the then regime wanted. Cultural patterns can survive regime change.

If we really care about

If we really care about human rights, we have to stop conflating evils. The US election manipulations, and the difficulty of achieving anything like popular democracy in the US is awful and important to work on. But all of the world's people deserve rights and their local problems must be respected. People who live under any awful regime want their own criminals to be exposed to the world. This is as true of Iranians as anyone else. Maybe we cannot understand, much less work on, every problem in the world, but to minimize other peoples' very real oppression is a type of US-centric chauvinism we need to continue to confront.

There goes your tax money

There goes your tax money again the U.S. thought they had bought yet another puppet and failed. What next send in the assassins or let the Zionist bulldog off it's leash. What right does Iran have to their own oil when we need it? Unlike here the peasants voted and were counted.

Why do some on left assume

Why do some on left assume that because a foreign leader has been speaking some truths about US foreign policy that they are not corrupt themselves? Ahmadinejad and Khomeni are like Bush and Pat Robertson with even more power in Iran. Many polls have shown that most Iranians like most Americans do not want to live in theocracy with totalitarian tendencies which suggests that they may not support a conservative candidate like Ahmadinejad. It is difficult to assess the true will of the Iranian people this early after the election, but Juan Cole points out some interesting discrepancies. American love to simplify very complex political landscapes into left and right dichomoties. In most case a variety of factors including regional, ethnic, class, and political affiliations influence peoples political choices in place like Iran.

The place needs a new

The place needs a new Revolution to rid itself of the corrupt Islamic dictatorship, including the whole Islamic Council, murderous bastards all. With the Revolutionary Guards, and street thug enforcers, there's no way to do that without bloodshed. The poor people thought they were getting some moral democracy when they overthrew the Shah, instead they got Civil War, mass murder, and the most brutal religious dictatorship outside of the Taliban.

So for an Azeri urban center

So for an Azeri urban center to go so heavily for Ahmadinejad just makes no sense. In past elections, Azeris voted disproportionately for even minor presidential candidates who hailed from that province. Change the name to Pat Buchanan and make it a Jewish Community in Florida...in other words STFU you can count on one hand those here that could remotely lay claim to any ground once deemed moral Capone would indeed be proud of this our nations government and sheeple

Could it just be, that the

Could it just be, that the opposition became over enthusiastic, and many didn't take the time to vote when they had already thought the opposition would win? Ahmadinejad could have just one because of the complacency of the opposition, just like Major one in the 1992(?) election in the UK. Just because the media want him to lose (so they'll be allowed to invest more in Iran), dosn't mean he was ever going to. As for a difference in stats and oppinions to the real outcome, dosnt mean they were truthful to begin with. Just remember, there is opposition to Ahmadinejad aswell as to the opposition. There was, afterall, an enourmous rally at his victory ceremony.

No, Juan Cole is not an

No, Juan Cole is not an establishmentarian hack. If he has information to the effect that there was massive fraud, I'm inclined to accept his expert's view. This doesn't change one iota of my opposition to a war on Iran but it's true that Ahmadinejad doesn't make it any easier. He and his supporters in the highest spheres of the Iranian state richly deserve Netanyahu and Lieberman but the world deserves none of this idiocy.

I'm very disappointed with

I'm very disappointed with Juan Cole's above article. So he believes the election was rigged, eh? Well, I truly believe that the people of Iran, save a few elites here and there and some others who would like to be; were smart enough to vote for the person whom they believe would less likely be a puppet of the US. Kudos to them!

To "Sunday 18.58". Please -

To "Sunday 18.58". Please - there is no "bait" on our breath; it is waiting with "bated" breath - meaning stopped, i.e. not breathing- you might say "holding" our breath. BAIT is the wrong word. think of "noise abatement". You don't use BAIT there.

Interesting article. Free &

Interesting article. Free & fair voting is for sure wanted & needed everywhere. I am more concerned about voting fraud in my own country (USA) than I am in Iran, or anywhere else.

You mean that the Iranian

You mean that the Iranian govt. took a page out of the U.S. 2000 elections book and applied it? The only difference that I see is the apathy and acquiessence displayed by the U.S. electorate after its stolen elections!

Maybe they had a butterfly

Maybe they had a butterfly ballot. As we question the accuracy of the reporting of election results in Iran, we should be aware the the U.S. vulnerable to undetectable fraud with the DRE electronic voting machines, which do not allow for any paper evidence of the voters' intentions. With DRE machines, a recount is not possible. We are vulnerable.

It's interesting that the

It's interesting that the media is questioning the results of the Iranian when they totally ignored the problems in the Ohio 2004 presidential results. There were more votes reported than voters. The results were run through a computer in Tennessee that was running GOP software before being reported to the public. Everything necessary for election fraud was present in that system, but it was ignored by the media -- possibly because the media people don't understand the technology.

Spy vs. Spy. I wonder about

Spy vs. Spy. I wonder about this in relation to our covert destabilization efforts in Iran, exposed by Seymour Hirsch last summer. If we have the intent to invade Iran, don't we have to keep the same straw man in place long enough to knock it down? My question, who tampered with the election really?

So that's where the old

So that's where the old ballot machines went! No while I am happy to see probes in to the Iranian election, I believe it is still a bit too early to get a definite answer. Perhaps in the following week we'll have some more articles and hopefully some new probes!

I guess the US is very

I guess the US is very concerned about the Iranian elections , covert operations?.... We too had elections that were stolen by Bush, two times in a row....

If it wasn't stolen, it was

If it wasn't stolen, it was perpetrated. There never was any democracy in Iran. Just a slave system designed to maybe keep people's hopes up, just like we have here.

Juan Cole' article considers

Juan Cole' article considers the result of the iranian election fraudulent and this is true enough. but nonetheless mosavi is not the winner of this elections. the polls were slightly changed in-favor of ahmadinezhad to demonstrate that the supreme leader' candidate is highly popular and that the reformist social base is weak. Which is partly true considering the deep division that occurred between rich and poor in iran in the past 16 years under rafsanjani (reforming economy) and khatami (reforming culture).

The resemblance between the

The resemblance between the tactics of the Iranian opposition and the Venezuelan are striking. Having received ten years of practical education in the tactics of distortion of information by the mainstream media, I can understand implicitly and sympathize completely with the lower Iranian classes who know from certainty who their protector is. A very telling quote from a so-called progressive liberal source is that Ahmadinejad "pals around" with ChΓ‘vez. Palin pals, of course. Wake up people and recognize that much of the liberal media is merely there to make you think that you are progressive, while disguising the interests of the privileged class. The biggest problem regarding a real change in the United States is that the classes are ignorant of their true identity: the middle class feels more affinity with the rich than with the poor; and that is the direction in which they are headed. As the saying is, to hell in a handbasket, and fast.

This would have been a good

This would have been a good story at one time. Now unfortunately we no longer hold the high ground on election integrity, enforcement of the rule of law, and the moral treatment of prisoners after our own stolen elections in 2000 and 2004 and the subsequent rule of the Bush regime for eight years. Until we clean our own house we have no right to judge others.