- 5 August 2010
- 3 Comments
- Events in Iran, Human Rights in Iran, Iran Election 2009, Sanctions, US-Iran War
Ahmadinejad Accuses Opposition of Supporting Sanctions
5 August 2010 Posted By Shawn Vl
Earlier this week, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reacted to the latest round of international sanctions by lashing out at his political arch nemeses, Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mir Hossein Mousavi, during a televised conference with the heads of Iran’s propaganda machine, the IRIB. Ahmadinejad didn’t call them out by name, instead referring to them as those “who were responsible for forcing the Imam [Khomeini] to drink the poisonous chalice” — referring to UN Security Council resolution that brought an end of the Iran-Iraq War. These individuals – Rafsanjani and Mousavi — “were complicit with the West” in imposing sanctions against Tehran and trying to “put an end to our government,” Ahmadinejad claimed.
Of course the leaders of the Green Movement have repeatedly spoken out against international sanctions. Nevertheless, Ahmadinejad pretended as if the opposite were true – not unlike much of official Washington – in order to attack the Green Movement as treasonous.
This being Ahmadinejad, he went even further. He declared “we wanted this from God –we were waiting for them [the Green Movement] to come,” alluding to the brutal crackdown on protests that ensued after his disputed re-election.
Despite Ahmadinejad’s bellicose rhetoric, his standing is not nearly as firm as he would have the world believe.
Ahmainejad’s allegations come a week after the head of the IRGC, Ali Jafari, admitted for the first time in public that some IRGC officials are supportive of the Green Movement. According to Rahe Sabz, top officials, such as the Supreme Leader and top IRGC officers decided to forcibly retire 250 members of the Guards who had sided with Mousavi after last year’s disputed presidential election.
These two events together show the depths of the rifts that continue to grow by the day within the Iranian government. Ahmadinejad’s striking accusations are surprising, even for someone as strident as Ahmadinejad. He is, after all, accusing the head of one of the most powerful institutions in the Islamic establishment of colluding with the U.S against his government. Moreover, while there was always some speculation that certain members of the IRGC were at odds with the government’s brutal reaction to the demonstrations, Jafari’s announcement further demonstrates that the IRGC is not a monolithic institution with unwavering allegiance is to the Supreme Leader.
Although the green movement may seem to be on hiatus, people in the U.S should not make the mistake of believing that the movement has been crushed by the government. While protestors have grown weary of taking to the streets to be beaten, the political schisms in Iran show no signs of healing, and only time can tell what will happen next.
3 Responses to “Ahmadinejad Accuses Opposition of Supporting Sanctions”
[…] up propaganda about the latest round of crippling sanctions. The National Iranian American Council reports: Earlier this week, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad reacted to the latest round of international sanctions by […]
Well come on, Shawn, Iran’s political makeup is by no means monolithic. And neither is the IRGC.
To be sure, there are more liberal minded folks in Iran, as represented by the roughly 35% that voted that way in the 2009 presidential election. But in the current composition of the Iranian government, they’re representative faction has become marginalized.
Yes, the outcome of the Imposed War is a sore spot for some veterans such as President Ahmadinejad, as well as former military department heads like Mohsen Rafiqdoust. But being Americans who remember well the experiences of the Vietnam War, perhaps we can identify with some of this. For who can forget the “swift boating” of John Kerry during the presidential campaign of 2004? Or President Bush’s commentary during his state visit to Vietnam.
Also, be aware of the fact that Maj. Gen. Jafari has instituted a number of changes to the IRGC, and one of them has been to cut out the deadwood. Ability and not seniority is now being stressed.
Quite right, Pirouz, that no group is monolithic. But it is a fantasy of hardliners everywhere that there is a pure land, a pure people, and a pure spirit; that by removing “dead wood” (“Ability and seniority is now being stressed…” they say) we can eliminate impurity and imperfection and build a Shining Force to carry us forward. Such people often respond with violence to perceived threats to their authority, e.g., by murdering, jailing, and raping peaceful protesters.
This mentality breeds corruption and narcissism–precisely the condition that we see in the dominant factions in Iran today. Fortunately, as in the US after the 2004 election, “marginal” voices are beginning to realize that they are not so marginal, and the fantasies peddled by the hard right wing are beginning to tarnish in the eyes of those who once placed their faith in them, masha’allah.