Iranian Political Perspectives on the Escalating Tensions Between

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Iranian Political Perspectives on the Escalating Tensions Between Artical Name : Iranian Political Perspectives on the Escalating Tensions between Tehran and Washington Artical Subject : Iranian Political Perspectives on the Escalating Tensions between Tehran and Washington Publish Date: 01/03/2017 Auther Name: Future for Advanced Research and Studies Subject : 9/26/2021 9:19:30 AM 1 / 2 After recent threats made by US President Donald Trump against Tehran, the growing tensions between Iran and the US have become a focal point of interactions among Iranian political forces readying for the presidential elections on May 19, 2017. The main currents of the political scene want to exploit the tensions to promote their political viewpoints and put pressure on rival currents to tilt the presidential elections in the favor of their own candidates against President Hassan Rouhani, who is running for a second term.The 2011 house arrest of former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Mousavi, his wife the academic Zahra Rahnavard, and former Chairman of the Shura Council (parliament) Mehdi Karroubi is at the core of the ongoing debate between the political currents. Rouhani¶s supporters want to settle the issue before the elections in order to boost the president¶s chances of retaining his position for a second term. Furthermore, in his 2013 campaign promises, Rohani included a vow to play a prominent role in domestic Iranian interactions. The vow drew support from the middle class that have political heavyweights and play a prominent role in the domestic affairs.However, the fundamentalist conservatives are trying hard to win the presidency and make a comeback after their huge loss in the last presidential elections, when four party members lost against Rouhani. Rouhani was able to win from the first round with a large margin. Conservatives are trying to prevent a resolution for the house arrest issue before the elections as this puts more pressure on Rouhani and his administration of moderates in general. This move could further undermines the middle class support for Rohani if he fails to fulfill his campaign promises.At the same time, conservatives are counting on ongoing quarrels about the nuclear deal despite the fact that a year has passed since international sanctions against Iran were lifted. Such debates serve as indicator for Rouhani¶s government failure to achieve its political and economic goals. Khatami¶s initiativeFormer President Mohammad Khatami -a reformist accused of contributing to the Iranian political crisis in 2009 after the ³Green Movement´rejected the results of the elections that gave then President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a second term- proposed a new initiative known as ³national reconciliation´The aim of this intitative is to lift the house arrests of Mousavi and Karroubi, and diffuse tensions among the moderate camp. The moderates¶disquiet was apparent during the funeral of former President Hashemi Rafsanjani on January 9, 2017. Mourners chanted slogans supporting Mousavi and Khatami, while condemning a decision by authorities to ban Khatami from attending the funeral.Khatami took advantage of two developments in order to add weight to his new proposal. First, the new challenges facing Iran after Trump¶s victory and his advocacy of hardline policies towards Iran regarding three main issues: Iran¶s breach of the nuclear deal; Tehran¶s alleged support for terrorism; and human rights violations.Khatami and the moderate current believe that dealing with pressure from Trump¶s administration requires addressing the residual issues of the 2009 political crisis, which still linger until today. They claim the regime is in dire need of national unity and domestic cohesion to counter the gradually increasing pressure within the coming phase.Secondly, this year marks the sixth anniversary of Mousavi and Karroubi¶s house arrests, after they called for protests in 2011 to support the Egyptian revolution based on a Friday sermon by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei. Khamenei had declared his support for the Egyptian revolution, which he said was, ³inspired by the Iranian Islamic revolution.´Those calling for national reconciliation led by Khatami believe that the current political conditions taking place in Iran vary differently from those existed six years ago. Accordingly, it is important to deal with this issue differently in order to encompass the negative implications it could have in the coming period, especially if Iran comes under more pressure from sudden developments on the foreign scene amid the rising concerns about Iran¶s support for terrorism. Furthermore, there is the concern of Iran¶s interference in the domestic affairs of regional countries and its negative role in wartorn countries. This was made evident in statements made by several officials participating in the February 17-19 Munich Security Conference. The statements imply that several international powers believe that the dispute with Iran is no longer limited to the nuclear deal, but also includes Iran¶s support of terrorism. Rapid containmentAlthough some members of conservative circles quickly supported Khatami¶s new initiative, such as Deputy Shura Council Speaker Ali Motahari, a politician known for his public criticism of regime policies, others tried rapidly to contain the proposal by criticizing it and launching a smear campaign against Khatami. This campaign presented Khatami as a key figure in what is known as the ³sedition current´a reference to the movement protesting the 2009 presidential results, and taking advantage of the same developments to justify their position.In other words, ultra conservatives want to take advantage of escalation with Trump¶s administration to implicitly accuse the moderate camp of serving the interests of foreign powers and relying on these powers to shore up support at home. It also continues to campaign against the nuclear deal.Khamenei leads this campaign by rejecting the initiative for three main reasons. First, he does not believe there is a serious domestic crisis requiring national reconciliation since the majority of Iranians, in his view, support the regime. Second, Khamenei accuses foreign powers of stirring domestic turmoil in Iran by exaggerating disputes among political powers and sighting them as indicative of the regime¶s weakness. Third, reconciliation with the ³sedition current´could undermine the regime instead of easing tensions over policies he did not resolve.The controversy over Khatami¶s initiative is likely to escalate political disputes domestically in the weeks leading up to the presidential race. What remains is a toss-up, as both moderates and conservatives seek to clench victory and bolster their influence in regime¶s institutions. 9/26/2021 9:19:30 AM 2 / 2.
Recommended publications
  • Iranian National Commission for Unesco Internationa
    UNITED NATIONS ORGANIZATION FOR EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND CULTURE (U N E S C O) IRANIAN NATIONAL COMMISSION FOR UNESCO INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON WOMEN’S ROLE IN TRANSMISSION OF INTANGIBLE CULTURAL HERITAGE Tehran, Iran, 27 - 30 September 1999 LIST OF PARTICIPANTS _____________ Bahrain Ms Aisha Matar Director Modern Craft Industries Co. 263 Isa Al-Kabeer Road Manama 309 Bahrain Tel: 973 25 46 88 / 530 106 Fax: 973 24 66 15 Paper: Modern Craft Industries Project in Bahrain Finland Prof. Pirkko Moisala Department of Musicology Sibelius Museum Abo Akademi University Biskopsgatan 17, FIN-20500 Abo Finland Tel: + 358 2358 2 215 43 38 Fax: + 358 2 251 8528 Email: [email protected] Paper: The Role of Women in the Oral Transmission of Music - Examples from Nepal and Finland 2 Ghana Mama Adokuwa-Asigble IV c/o 31st Dec. Women’s Movement P.O. Box O.65, Osu Accra, Ghana Tel: + 233 21 221 470 Fax: + 233 21 220 303 Paper: Puberty Rights and Adulthood: The Rôle of Women in Transmitting Cutlural Values Ms Rejoice Abla Dugbazah Linguist C/o 31st Dec. Women’s Movement P.O. Box O.65, Osu Accra, Ghana Tel: + 233 21 221 470 Fax: + 233 21 220 303 Hungary Professor M Hoppal European Folklore Institute HUNGARY - 1011 Budapest Szilagi D, ter 6 Tel/Fax: + 36 1 212 20 39 Home: + 36 1 201 62 37 Email: [email protected] Paper: The Role of Women in the Transmission of Folklore - Local Cultures in a Global World India Ms Maya Rao A-30 Friends Colony East New Delhi 110065 India Tel/Fax: 91 1169 27 691 E.mail: [email protected] Paper: no paper, oraldescribing the Indian traditional performance art of Kathakali, and her experiences as a mother Indonesia Prof.
    [Show full text]
  • Perspectives on the 2009 Iranian Election
    The anatomy of a crisis Perspectives on the 2009 Iranian election Issue 1, 2009 1 Created in November 2007 by students from the UK universities of Oxford, Leicester and Aberystwyth, e-International Relations (e-IR) is a hub of information and analysis on some of the key is- sues in international politics. As well as editorials contributed by students, leading academics and policy-makers, the website contains essays, diverse perspectives on global news, lecture podcasts, blogs written by some of the world’s top professors and the very latest jobs from academia, politics and international development. The pieces in this collection were published on e-International Relations during June 2009. Front page image by Hamed Saber edited and compiled by Stephen McGlinchey and Adam Groves 2 Contents 4 Introductory Notes 5 Iran’s Contested Election 10 Losing the battle for global opinion 12 Reading into Iran’s Quantum of Solace 14 Decisions Iranians should make and others should support 16 Why Iranians have to find their own course 18 The Iranian women’s rights movement and the election crisis 20 Defending the Revolution: human rights in post-election Iran 23 The 2009 Iranian elections: a nuclear timebomb? 26 Contributors 3 Introductory notes Stephen McGlinchey With the contested re-election of Mahmoud intensify Israeli fears that some kind of interven- Ahmadinejad on June 12th 2009 and the wide- tion was necessary for its own national security. spread protests that followed, domestic Iranian politics once again came to the fore internation- If reports are correct that the popular tide is ally. Not since the final days of the Shah, the turning against the regime in Iran, there is a Islamic revolution of 1979 and the ensuing hos- real danger that it will respond by pandering to tage crisis, had it occupied such a prime posi- populist fears in the country and enhancing its tion across the international political landscape.
    [Show full text]
  • Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada Page 1 of 8
    Responses to Information Requests - Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada Page 1 of 8 Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada Home > Research Program > Responses to Information Requests Responses to Information Requests Responses to Information Requests (RIR) respond to focused Requests for Information that are submitted to the Research Directorate in the course of the refugee protection determination process. The database contains a seven- year archive of English and French RIRs. Earlier RIRs may be found on the UNHCR's Refworld website. Please note that some RIRs have attachments which are not electronically accessible. To obtain a PDF copy of an RIR attachment, please email the Knowledge and Information Management Unit. 16 January 2017 IRN105716.E Iran: Student protests, including treatment of protestors by authorities (2013-January 2017) Research Directorate, Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada, Ottawa 1. Overview A 2014 report by Amnesty International (AI) states that [a]t various periods throughout the history of the Islamic Republic, students, teachers and academics have been among those particularly targeted by the Ministry of Intelligence and other security authorities for expressing dissent or leading protests. Often, they have been arrested and detained in harsh conditions, tortured or subjected to other forms of ill-treatment, and tried before grossly unfair Revolutionary Courts on vaguely-drawn charges, and convicted and sentenced to prison terms and, in some case, flogging. (AI June 2014, 44) However, in a 2014 report, the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA) [1] reports that "[f]ollowing Hassan Rouhani's election as president [on 14 June 2013], some measures against students were eased" (GCPEA 2014).
    [Show full text]
  • Women in the Iranian Election Campaign And
    MIDDLE EAST PROGRAM OCCASIONAL PAPER SERIES FALL 2009 MIDDLE EAST PROGRAM FALL OCCASIONAL PAPER SERIES 2009 Introduction 1 Iran’s Presidential Elections: Women’s Role in the Pre- and Post-Election Politics 4 Quiet Leadership and Pressure from Below: Women’s Participation in Iranian Public Life 10 Women in the Iranian Election Campaign Women in Iran’s Green and Protest Movement: Their Role in the 2009 Presidential Introduction and called attention to the lack of progress on Election Protests 15 Kendra Heideman, Intern, Middle East Program regressive policies regarding women’s rights in Women played a prominent role throughout each Iran since Ahmadinejad was elected in 2005. The June Elections and the phase of Iran’s disputed June 2009 presidential Women were also active in the campaign, Change in Political election, including its aftermath. They were voted in large numbers, and later joined the Culture 18 actively courted by the candidates. Two candi- post-election protests despite the risk of arrest dates in particular, Mir-Hossein Mousavi and and in defiance of the batons, clubs, and guns of Mehdi Karroubi, promised to address women’s government security forces. The picture of Neda Reporting Chaos 20 rights issues and grant women cabinet seats if they Agha-Soltan, shot and bleeding to death on June were elected. In addition, Mousavi was joined 20, 2009 on a Tehran street, became the iconic by his wife, Zahra Rahnavard, on the campaign image of the protest movement. Another lasting trail in an act that underscored his commitment symbol was the use of the color green by mem- to a broad program for improving women’s bers of the Green Movement, a movement that rights, including his previous vow to review had started before the election and turned into laws that discriminate against women.
    [Show full text]
  • Amnesty International Public Statement
    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL PUBLIC STATEMENT 14 February 2014 AI Index: MDE 13/009/2014 IRAN: RELEASE OPPOSITION LEADERS UNDER HOUSE ARREST THREE YEARS ON The easing of restrictions placed on former presidential candidates Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi and his wife, university professor and political activist, Zahra Rahnavard, since the election of President Rouhani is not enough, warned Amnesty International on the third anniversary of the house arrest of the three opposition figures. The opposition leaders have been held without charge or trial for three years, with no possibility to challenge the lawfulness of their detention. The organization urges the Iranian authorities to immediately end their arbitrary detention and stop the harassment of their families. The three opposition figures remain in a legal limbo as no security body is claiming responsibility for their prolonged house arrest amid contradictory official statements. In October 2013, Iran’s Justice Minister, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi, said that Iran’s Supreme National Security Council was reviewing their house arrests but a month later Iran's Prosecutor General and Judiciary spokesperson, Gholamhossein Mohseni Eje'i, said that “those who were put under house arrest after the 2009 election were criminals and had oppressed the people,” and that “no changes have been made in their punishment.” On 16 January 2014, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi stated during a conference that the “country would have witnessed renewed protest, unrest, and demonstrations had there been a trial” and therefore authorities have determined that “they should remain restricted.” On 4 February 2014, Mostafa Pour-Mohammadi announced that the opposition figures “could be pardoned” if they repent and promise to abide by the country’s laws, a position confirmed by Gholamhossein Mohseni Eje'i on 11 February 2014 when he announced that "as long as the sedition leaders do not repent, nothing else will be done and their situation will remain the same”.
    [Show full text]
  • Spotlight on Iran
    Spotlight on Iran June 2, 2013—Khordad 12, 1392 Editor: Dr. Raz Zimmt The woman by his side: Zahra Moshir – Will the mayor’s wife become Iran’s first lady? In recent years the wives of Iranian politicians gain wider media exposure than in the past. In the 2009 presidential election, Zahra Rahnavard, the wife of reformist opposition leader Mir-Hossein Mousavi, was put at the forefront of her husband’s campaign. In contrast, A’zam Sadat Farahi, the wife of President Ahmadinejad, made only a few appearances with her husband. Of all the candidates’ wives in the current presidential election, one in particular deserves special mention: Zahra Sadat Moshir, the wife of Tehran’s Mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf. Since her husband was elected mayor, Moshir, a doctor of social science, has served as the mayor’s advisor and director of the Department of Women’s Affairs in the Tehran municipality. In recent years Moshir has worked to advance the status of women in Tehran, integrate them into the labor market, and help solve the social hardships that women face. Moshir’s positions reflect a worldview that blends support for integrating women into the labor market and even pushing them to senior executive positions with a conservative Islamic outlook that emphasizes women’s traditional family roles and takes a positive view of gender segregation in the public space. The growing media exposure of Iranian politicians’ wives and the increasing public interest in these women have recently come under criticism from conservative circles, who believe that this phenomenon reflects the negative influence of the Western culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Iran: End Arbitrary House Arrests of Mousavi, Karroubi, and Rahnavard; Free All Prisoners of Conscience
    JOINT PUBLIC STATEMENT Iran: End arbitrary house arrests of Mousavi, Karroubi, and Rahnavard; Free all prisoners of conscience (Beirut, London, Paris, 13 February 2013) - The Iranian authorities should immediately release from arbitrary house arrest two former presidential candidates Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi, his wife Zahra Rahnavard, author and political activist, and cease harassing or detaining without cause the couple’s two daughters and Mehdi Karroubi’s son, said the Nobel Peace laureate Shirin Ebadi and six leading human rights bodies. Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, International Federation for Human Rights, League for the Defence of Human Rights in Iran, and Reporters Without Borders co-signed today’s appeal. On 14 February 2011, security and intelligence officials placed two former presidential candidates and Zahra Rahnavard, and Karroubi’s wife, Fatemeh Karroubi, under house arrest after they called for demonstrations to support the popular “Arab Spring” uprisings across the region. Zahra and Narges Mousavi, daughters of Mir Hossein Mousavi and Zahra Rahnavard, and Mohammad Hossein Karroubi, son of Mehdi Karroubi were arrested on Monday 11 February 2013, two days before the second anniversary of arbitrary house arrests of their parents and Mehdi Karroubi. They were released later the same day. “For two years now Iranian officials have stripped these opposition figures of their most basic rights without any legal justification or any effective means of remedy,” Ebadi said. “They and their families should not have to endure even one more day under these wholly unjustifiable and abusive conditions.” Mir Hossein Mousavi, former Prime Minister and Mehdi Karroubi, former Speaker of Iran’s parliament, had been presidential candidates in the 2009 election in which the incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared the winner, in disputed circumstances.
    [Show full text]
  • Reporters Without Borders Media­18­02­2015,47595.Html
    Reporters Without Borders http://www.rsf.org/iran­iranian­authorities­step­up­ media­18­02­2015,47595.html Middle East/North Africa ­ Iran More censorship Iranian authorities step up media censorship 18 February 2015 Reporters Without Borders condemns a surge in cases of harassment of journalists and print media by the Iranian authorities in the past few days, including the conservative weekly 9 Day’s closure, the fining of the reformist monthly Mehrnameh and judicial system spokesman Golamhossien Mohsseni Ejehi’s open threats against all the media. Ejehi warned the media at a news conference on 16 February that they could be banned or fined if they published any information about “the individuals designated as ‘heads of sedition’ by the High Council for National Security and Justice.” He was alluding to former reformist President Mohammad Khatami, former prime minister and presidential candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi (owner of the now closed newspaper Kalameh Sabaz), best­selling author Zahra Rahnavard (Mousavi’s wife), and former parliamentary speaker and presidential candidate Mehdi Karoubi (owner of the now closed newspaper Etemad Melli). The authorities designated Mousavi, Rahnavard and Karoubi as “heads of sedition” ten days after their arrest on 14 February 2011. They have been held under house arrest, illegally and without trial, and denied all rights ever since. It was the fourth anniversary of their arrest four days ago. Reporters Without Borders has learned that a Tehran prosecutor already summoned newspaper editors to a meeting a few weeks ago in order to remind them of this ban’s existence. “This is not the first time that senior judicial officials and entities such as the High Council for National Security, the Tehran prosecutor, the prosecutor general, the Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance and the Supreme Leader’s office have intervened to impose censorship,” said Reza Moini of Reporters Without Borders.
    [Show full text]
  • Will I Ever Be Enough?
    Will I Ever Be Enough? A Marxist Analysis of Women Protesting Obligatory Veiling in the Islamic Republic of Iran Sanaz Ahmadi Religion in Peace and Conflict Master thesis 30 credits Spring 2018 Supervisor: Nils Billing TEOLOGISKA INSTITUTIONEN MARXIST ANALYSIS OF PROTESTS AGAINST OBLIGATORY VEILING IN THE IRI ii MARXIST ANALYSIS OF PROTESTS AGAINST OBLIGATORY VEILING IN THE IRI Abstract The My Stealthy Freedom (MSF) movement on social media has garnered over 1 million likes on Facebook and continues to make headlines in major media outlets. The founder Masih Alinejad routinely speaks out against obligatory veiling in the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI). This study analyses hijab and the MSF movement from a Marxist feminist perspective, evaluating the emancipatory potential for women. The study attempts to untangle Islam from the discourses around the oppression of women to find the material roots of oppression upon which the discourse has been built. The legislation of women’s clothing and women’s bodies has a long history, with just the hijab having been made compulsory and forbidden three times in Iran within the previous century. Through the use of Multimodal Critical Discourse analysis, photographs and videos from the MSF movement are compared to hijab propaganda by the IRI to identify whether the concern of the MSF movement is limited to obligatory hijab, or if it places within the broader movement for women’s emancipation. The results show that despite the visual emphasis on the hijab, the MSF movement has a broader aim emancipating women as expressed by the activists of the movement. Keywords: feminism, Marxism, Iran, hijab, Islam, women’s studies, Middle East, multimodal critical discourse analysis iii MARXIST ANALYSIS OF PROTESTS AGAINST OBLIGATORY VEILING IN THE IRI Background ................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Women's Movement Haleh Esfandiari • Since the 1979 Revolution, Women Have Struggled to Regain Lost Rights and Win a Larg
    The Women’s Movement Haleh Esfandiari • Since the 1979 revolution, women have struggled to regain lost rights and win a larger role in society, despite a regime unfriendly to women’s issues. • The theocracy’s suspension of the Family Protection Law enacted under the monarchy once again put women at the mercy of men in the family. • Women fared modestly in politics. They won positions in parliament, city councils, cabinet and other decision-making jobs, but in small numbers. • But women made significant gains in education, particularly after obstacles to certain specialized fields were removed. • After initially pushing for rapid population growth, the government launched a highly successful family planning program. Iran’s birth rate went from one of the highest to one of the lowest in the region. Overview Iranian women made considerable progress during the Pahlavi era (1925-1979). Education for both girls and boys was free. When Tehran University opened in 1936, Iran’s first university admitted both men and women. In 1963, women acquired the right to vote and run for parliament. Under the Family Protection Law, women won the right to petition for divorce and gain child custody. A husband could no longer unilaterally divorce his wife or automatically gain custody of the children. The marriage age for girls was raised from 13 to 18. And men needed the court’s permission to take a second wife. By 1978, on the eve of Iran’s revolution, 22 women sat in parliament and 333 women served on elected local councils. One-third of university students were female.
    [Show full text]
  • Human Rights Situation in Iran – Annual Report 1393
    Human Rights Situation in Iran – Annual Report 1393 1 Human Rights Situation in Iran – Annual Report 1393 Human Rights Situation in Iran – Annual Report 1393 (Persian Calendar) The Department of Statistics and Publications of the Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRAI) of Iran has published its sixth annual report on the human rights situation in Iran. This report concerns the events and human rights incidents occurred in Iran over the course of one-year period (2014-2015). These reports have been collected by the HRAI reporters and associated organizations in addition to the reports published by the state media, unofficial media, and international resources. This report highlights some of the most important human rights incidents in Iran in 2014, which could be useful for the human rights activists and researchers. The names of the executed political prisoners or those awaiting the execution decree as well as arrested individuals in different categories are also included in this report. Part 1- Introduction This mid-year review highlights continual violations of human rights in Iran. It is based on the reports received from nongovernmental, not-for-profit, and human rights organizations. This review also sheds light on the violations of civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights in Iran or those that have been ignored or not executed. This is not a perfect review and certainly has several errors which actually further highlight the human rights challenges in Iran and difficulties in free access to human rights issues in Iran. Despite the designation of Mr. Ahmad Shaheed as the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights situation in Iran by the UN Human Rights Council and extending his mission in 2014, the Islamic Republic of Iran still has not issued permission for his visit to Iran.
    [Show full text]
  • Iran's 2009 Presidential Elections
    Iran’s 2009 Presidential Elections Casey L. Addis Analyst in Middle Eastern Affairs July 6, 2009 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R40653 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress Iran’s 2009 Presidential Elections Summary On June 12, 2009, following a heated campaign between reformist candidate Mir Hussein Musavi and incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Iranians turned out in record numbers to vote in the presidential election. Shortly after the polls closed, the Interior Minister announced that President Ahmadinejad had been reelected by a 62% margin. The announcement was followed by allegations of vote rigging and election fraud and prompted supporters of leading reformist candidate Mir Hussein Musavi and others to hold public demonstrations in several major cities of a size and intensity unprecedented since the Iranian Revolution of 1979. Despite a government ban on unauthorized public gatherings, protests reportedly have continued since the election. Restrictions on foreign and domestic journalists, reported disruptions of mobile phone networks, limited accessibility of some internet sites, mass arrests, and clashes between civilian protestors and Basij forces have garnered international attention and increased concerns about the Iranian government’s apparent disregard for human rights and basic civil liberties. Regardless of the actual election results, the Supreme Leader Khamenei, along with the Revolutionary Guard and the Basij, appear determined to impose the election outcome by force. The government crackdown on protestors appears to be effective, even as smaller gatherings have continued in Tehran and other major cities. Attention has now focused on the potential long-term effects of the post-election unrest on Iranian government and society, and what the outcome might mean for U.S.
    [Show full text]