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Challenging Ahmadinejad's "Win"

by: Maya Schenwar, t r u t h o u t | Report

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Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has been accused of stealing the election in Iran. (Photo: Reuters)

    After Iran's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was proclaimed the winner of a presidential election widely believed to be rigged, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei deemed the results a "divine assessment." However, after 48 hours of intensive protests throughout Iran, Khamenei backtracked, calling for an investigation into election complaints. The probe is to be conducted by the Guardian Council, a 12-member body of clerics and Islamic law experts. As demonstrations blaze on across the country, do reform-minded Iranians actually have a shot at a revote?

    It is unclear what evidence would be used in a voting probe. According to leaked election results, purportedly disclosed by disaffected government officials, Ahmadinejad came in third in the election, after reformist candidates Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karoubi. However, a poll of Iranian public opinion taken three weeks ago by the nonprofit Terror Free Tomorrow showed Ahmadinejad winning nationwide by a more than 2 to 1 margin.

    Mousavi and another defeated candidate have filed complaints with the Guardian Council, and Council spokesman Abbas-Ali Kadkhodayi told Iran's state-funded news agency that the election probe's results would be disclosed in ten days.

    On the surface, the probe may seem an impartial investigation by an outside body. However, half of the Council is chosen by Khamenei, while the other half is elected by the legislature from among a group of jurists vetted by an appointee of Khamenei.

    "The Council is selected directly and indirectly by the leader," Rasool Nafisi, a Middle Eastern studies professor at Strayer University and author of "The Rise Of Pasdaran," told Truthout. "It is the Council that has the power of vetting the candidates, and its chief, Ayatollah Jannati, sided openly with Ahmadinejad before the elections."

    Mousavi himself seems doubtful that the probe will turn the tables on Ahmadinejad's alleged win.

    "I have appealed to the Guardian Council but I'm not very optimistic about their judgment," he said on his web site, according to a translation printed by Reuters. "Many of its members during the election were not impartial and supported the government candidate [Ahmadinejad]."

    As protests raged Monday night and state brutality abounded - including the death of one man when pro-government gunmen opened fire on a crowd of protesters - many foreign journalists were threatened, arrested or asked to leave Iran. An election probe by the Guardian Council would likely not be subject to direct international oversight.

    Still, the groundswell of public expression that this election has sparked is proof that anything can happen, according to Jason Rezaian, a correspondent covering the Iranian election for Tehran Bureau.

    "More than anything, people want their voices heard," Rezaian told Truthout. "A recount or revote seems really unlikely, but the last couple of weeks have seen many unlikely events here and I think it's shaken the entire nation. The people for the first time feel like they have a say, and that it's trying to be silenced."

    Yet, with Khamenei still in place as supreme leader, the protests don't stand a good chance of affecting concrete official action, according to Juan Cole, president of the Global Americana Institute.

    "The reformists will likely just be crushed," Cole told Truthout. "Khamenei cannot be challenged in that system, and there is no recourse. It would take a coup or revolution."

    It is possible, however, that quiet sort of coup may be fomenting among Iran's Assembly of Experts, the scholarly body responsible for supervising the supreme leader. The chairman of the Assembly, former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, supports Mousavi and favors the reformist agenda, including a diplomatic relationship with the US and Europe. Rumor has it that Rafsanjani has been rallying support among the Assembly to vote Khamenei out of his post, according to an op-ed in The Guardian by Simon Tisdall.

    In a blog entry on ForeignPolicy.com, National Iranian American Council President Trita Parsi observes that Mousavi has already challenged Khamenei's authority. To protest the election results, Mousavi wrote a letter to powerful clergy in the city of Qom, instead of to the supreme leader.

    Already, a loud affirmation of Mousavi's complaint has come from Qom: Grand Ayatollah Sanei, who had previously termed vote-rigging a "mortal sin," is calling the Ahmadinejad presidency "illegitimate."

    Moreover, last week, after being accused of corruption by Ahmadinejad, Rafsanjani released an angry letter, which took the bold step of remonstrating the supreme leader for allowing public slander, and demanded that Khamenei ensure the elections were fair.

    Despite the public outcry from influential Iranian voices, the reformists' calls may well fizzle and die eventually, especially if the voting probe comes back "clean." A revolution - even a quiet one - is a lot to ask for. Nafisi worries that another four years of Ahmadinejad might dash the incipient optimism of the reformist movement.

    "If this election is not challenged seriously and effectively, it would put a damper on the youths' aspirations for change and improvement," Nafisi said.

    Their hopes aren't dampened quite yet, though. Rezaian noted that, regardless of state-imposed obstacles, the reformists are rallying on.

    "Tonight tens of thousands of people all over Tehran went to their rooftop to shout 'God is Great,' 'Death to the Dictator' and simply 'Mousavi,'" he said last night. "With text messaging cut, social networking blocked, they are doing whatever they can to keep the voice of dissent alive. I'm not sure if anyone knows what they're hoping to get out of it. They're just hoping."

  

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Maya Schenwar is Executive Director of Truthout.

Comments

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Throughout this process, the

Throughout this process, the Western corporate media have given more attention to it then any amount of attention to one stolen, possibly two, US elections. As well, when faced with a stolen vote, US electors,rather than mounting the barricades, turned the channel. It would appear the Iranians have a more robust and valued democracy than Americans.

The strange thing is that

The strange thing is that more than 40 million ballots have been handcounted in a few hours time and that in all districts, even in the hometowns of the opposition candidates the same percentages have been given to each candidate. Last time with the presidential elections it took more than 2 days before the election results were produced. While there was a record outcome and polling stations closed later in many cases

Correct, Cybernaught. And

Correct, Cybernaught. And of course there has been more attention to the Iranian demonstrations and the Iran government's response to them than there was coverage in the Western corporate media to the repression of protesters at both the RNC and DNC conventions in Denver and St. Paul last year, when U.S. police and intelligence agencies used infiltration, pre-emptive arrests, arrests of journalists (including Amy Goodman of DemocracyNow), and brute force against pro-democracy, anti-war, and anti-Bushite marchers. And, it goes without mention that the few deaths and Tehran are getting more coverage by exponential factors than the dozens of indigenous killed by the pro-U.S. government in Peru. Just Google DNC protests and RNC protests separately and watch the first video on each search for a reminder of what went on.

If there had been this much

If there had been this much investigation into the massive voter fraud in the US in 2000 and 2004, perhaps we would not now be occupying Iraq and Afghanistan, and torture would still be illegal and immoral.

I COMPLETELY agree with

I COMPLETELY agree with cybernaught, 100%! Well said!

The global corporate media

The global corporate media blitz against the Iranians just smells of a lie to me. Has the US even had a legitimate election in recent times? So many articles and interviews I read and listen have top members of the CFR providing quotes and information. If you understand what the US did to the Iranians 30 years ago then you can understand what is happening now. First you threaten, when they don't bend you try to over throw them politically if that doesn't work you roll in the army. Obviously they wanted to roll in the army, but it probably hasn't made sense for them yet. This media blitz has really shown the weakening of the US hand in trying to control Iran in my opinion. If the US doesn't get what it wants out of this I think we can expect an invasion within 10 years.

And if Ahmadinejad was

And if Ahmadinejad was America's puppet, what would we call the protesters then?

I'm sure the analogy to the

I'm sure the analogy to the theft of our 2000 election is obvious. "If only the same amount of investigation" etc. Well, for that level of investigation to have occurred it would have required an impassioned and motivated majority of Americans to bring their wroth to bear against those unconscionable acts by the amoral thieves of democracy. And, the press would have had to have not been spineless lapdogs of the corporate interests who were in bed with the conspirators. Instead we had the spoiled and complacent TV watching SUV driving ignorant believing everything they were spoon fed by our propaganda machinery, as they were successfully manipulated. It's no wonder this country is regarded as a hypocritic nation

You're getting some good

You're getting some good press, Cybernaught; you're also totally right. Who says democracy is "typically American?" This place needs to take a serious look at itself and stop bragging. Many Americans are some of the most obedient and stupid people on earth. It has something to do with the concept of "law-abiding." If the law violates your rights, folks, you need to challenge it.

I hope all will read Juan

I hope all will read Juan Cole at Informed Comment on the Ballen Terror Free Tomorrow polling. He says: "Terror Free Tomorrow Poll Did not Predict Ahmadinejad Win" followed an in depth analysis of the poll. Link here http://www.juancole.com/2009/06/terror-free-tomorro-poll-did-not.html

What is 'Truth' in light of

What is 'Truth' in light of today's CORPORATE OWNED, OPERATED AND EXPLOITED AMERICAN MEDIA...?... What does Freedom of the Press mean now..?... What does it mean to Free Speech when almost All the outlets for it are owned by gigantic global corporations...?.... So who can really put the light of truth on what's happening in Iran now when we have such a hard time getting at the Truth right here at home...?... Its almost all become 'angry noise newz'... Its full of 'Media Stars you need to listn to'.... Its full of 'Foisters' and 'Nation Dividers'... Its riddled with endless, ranting Propaganda... Its filled with endless speculation and nonsense... Its almost all hyped just for the sake of stirring up emotions among the population so we will still be tuned in when the commercials come on... Its all about revenue... Its all about lobbying for greater deregulation and more media concentration... Its about... Power... Wealth... Image and Ego... Its about a lot of stuff.., except ''THE TRUTH'' ....

Let's see what part of the

Let's see what part of the following you people do not understand: Iran is not the United States; Iranians are not inheritors of the liberal Enlightenment; Iran IS a fundamentalist country, inhabited mainly by people whose mindset was locked into place in the 7th century. Just as the Germans did in the 1930s, the Persians have democratically re-elected a totalitarian religious regime, one which promises them nuclear weapons. Next time, conduct your "polls" in Farsi, the language that Persians speak, and poll the countryside, rather than focus on the cities and the universities, and you might get some idea of what is actually going on in Iran. Stop assuming that everyone on the planet wants to be a "liberal." Billions are quite pleased to live under the jackbooted heel (and slippers) of religious ideologies. And that includes at least a quarter of the inhabitants of the United States.

Despite what fazzaz31 says,

Despite what fazzaz31 says, there are many in Iran, particularly among the younger generation, who desire a more open, democratic government. Obviously! Otherwise, no one over there would be protesting. Great potential for positive change exists. The mullahs may steal this election and cling to power for now, but their days are likely numbered--not least because their belligerent political stance is hardly conducive to economic growth over the long haul. The fewer absolutists in power around the world, the better. That includes in the US, where Christo-fascists aspire to create their own version of Iran. They're in check for now but have by no means vanished. So long as one political party is beholden to them, the threat of dominionism will return each election cycle.

This first comment by

This first comment by Cybernaught is quite accurate although he failed to mention the difference between the turnout of the percentage voters in the two country. Nor did he mention the fact that for the past dozen or so years the American budget has included a minimum allocation of $20 million to be spent on sabotaging the Iranian government, and that doesn't include what the CIA has to spend cuz nobody is privy to that information. Americans need to get a life and stop swallowing all the pap they are fed by the so-called "bad guys" of this world and take a look in the mirror!!