By Saeed Rahnema
Shock, disbelief, despair, anger, street riots,
tire burning and confrontations with police brutality have engulfed Iran,
following the presidential elections that reinstalled Ahmadinejad through a
claimed landslide victory in the first round of voting. Everyone predicted at
least a runoff. Many believed that with the massive electoral participation of
about 82 per cent, Moussavi would eventually be the winner.
How did Ahmadinejad manage to win this election?
First, the Supreme Leader, Khamenei, and the circle around him came to the final
decision that he should stay in power. Ahmadinejad has proven that as a lackey
of the Leader, he would unquestionably carry out Khamenei's orders. In a show of
support for Ahmadinejad Sobh-e Sadeq, the official organ of the Representative
of the Supreme Leader in the Islamic Guard Corps, announced on June 8 that "we
should make sure that individuals who want to submit to the West would not be
elected."
On the basis of the Leader's decision, the
regime's electoral machine, mosques, religious foundations, the militia and the
Islamic Revolutionary Guards began mobilizing their blocs of voters. These
religious institutions have millions of people on their monthly payrolls and the
regime has always counted on their votes.
Ahmadinejad was also able to rely on his own
trustworthy "machine." Among the first decisions he made when he became
President in 2005 was the removal of provincial and sub-regional governors,
mayors and even village headmen, replacing them with his cronies mostly from the
military and security establishments. He regularly travelled to various towns
and villages with sacks of money that were distributed among his supporters. The
massive increase in oil prices during his presidency provided more opportunities
for him to spend generously. During the days leading up to the elections, the
parliament's Accounts Bureau revealed that over $1 billion were unaccounted for.
Benefiting from these free handouts, local officials and mullahs in rural areas
and small towns could easily mobilize voters in favour of Ahmadinejad.
Despite all these preparations for vote
collection, however, Ahmadinejad and the military/security establishment and the
conservative clerical clique were taken by surprise at the mass mobilization of
the educated urban middle classes, women and youth, who in the absence of a
better candidate, rallied around Mir Hussein Moussavi. As the days of the
elections got closer, the anti-Ahmadinejad movement became larger and bolder in
its demand for change. In many rallies, particularly in the universities,
Ahmadinejad was jeered, booed and faced with a chorus of "liar, liar." He had to
cancel several of his speeches and in some cases had to hurriedly jump into his
car to escape from demonstrators.
The scale of the pro-Moussavi movement was so
large and gaining such momentum that the establishment realized that in the case
of runoff elections, Ahmadinejad would definitely lose and civil society would
gain more ground and make more radical demands. Alarmed by the probability of
losing the vast majority of votes in large urban areas, the Ahmadinejad camp
began preparation for rigging and "engineering" the vote. The main mechanism for
this was the Ministry of Interior under Sadeq Mahsooli, his crony and
confidante. In the absence of any independent observers, the Elections Bureau
could easily manipulate the votes. They boldly decided that Ahmadinejad should
be declared the winner in the first round, and with a large enough margin to
eliminate any doubt; the bigger a lie, the better its believability!
The establishment was also prepared for the
crackdown in case of revolts. A couple of days before election day, the Head of
Political Department of the Islamic Guards Corps announced that they would
"crash any attempt for a velvet revolution." In addition to its already massive
array of repressive apparatuses – the Islamic Guards, the regular army and
police, the Basij militia, and Special Forces – the regime also recruited a
sizable number of young men through recruiting stations in large cities,
providing them with mopeds and cellular phones. These gangs are on-call and any
time there is a demonstration or anti-regime gathering they are dispatched to
attack protestors. Some of the motorcycles burnt by the supporters of Moussavi
in the street protests belonged to these gangs.
What the regime had not anticipated was the
massive reaction of the voters following the release of the concocted election
results. It's also worth noting that the continued confrontations of the two
main factions of the regime reached a critical point when candidates recklessly
exposed each other's embezzlements, corruptions and fake degrees during the
debates. This further polarized the clerical regime and the open conflict
between the two main factions within it. The support from one faction of the
ruling bloc made the suppression of the revolt by the disgruntled electorate and
protestors more difficult.
Both factions are now faced with a complex
impasse; if Moussavi backs down, this would be political suicide for him,
turning him into another compromising figure like former President Khatami. If
Ahmadinejad's side backs down, the legitimacy of the military-security
establishment and the Supreme Leader would take a further (and near irreparable)
blow.
There are some key and difficult questions at
this critical political moment: Which faction will back down? If the "reformist"
camp persists, and public revolt expands, will the regime resort to an even more
bloody and total suppression? In this case, would the street demonstrations be
elevated to a revolutionary movement with the aim of toppling the whole Islamic
regime, or would it retreat and dissipate? In the case that the "reformist"
movement does back down, would the public revolt also die down, or will some
elements separate themselves from the rest and follow a more radical and
independent path in confronting the regime?
It should be noted that both factions of the
regime are afraid of an uncontrollable escalation of tensions and civil
disobedience, and it is quite possible that they reach some sort of middle
ground concessions. If this happens, it will no doubt have a negative impact on
the movements within civil society. Some groups will accept the compromises,
some will be disappointed and depoliticized, and others will continue their
resistance independently. However, even though the post-election events might
appear as a new revolution, the protest movement is not in a position and does
not have the organizational means to challenge the Islamic regime in its
totality in a direct assault.
Nonetheless, whatever the results of this
election and the factional conflicts, this is the most critical turning point in
30 years of the Islamic Republic. The remarkably vibrant civil society led by
the women's movement, youth, teachers and workers, acted cautiously and
shrewdly. They entered the election process with specific demands and cast their
votes against the favoured candidate of the establishment.
If they had boycotted the elections, for fear of
legitimizing the status quo, the regime would not be in the disastrous mess it
now finds itself in. With a lower participation rate, Ahmadinejad would have won
the majority of the votes, the regime would not have needed to resort to the
shameful rigging, they would not be facing the mass disgruntlement and street
riots, and the regime would not have had to savagely suppress peaceful street
demonstrations, making itself even more disgraced in the eyes of Iranians and
the rest of the world. The regime, in a sense, succeeded in declaring its
favoured candidate the winner, but itself became the loser in the process.
Iranian civil society is moving step-by-step towards establishing its democratic
and secular counter hegemony.
About the author: Saeed Rahnema is a
professor of political science at York University and media commentator on the
Middle East.
... Payvand News - 06/19/09 ... --
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