http://www.geostrategy-direct.com


Iran's increasingly unpopular mullahs turn to a non-cleric as 
president 

 

The Guardian Council dismissed the election results of the Interior 
Ministry and decided that Rafsanjani would be first and Ahmadinejad 
second. 
 
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 
•  Age: 49 
•  Position: president-elect of Iran 
•  Whereabouts: Teheran 
Iran's Islamic regime has selected a non-cleric in what could mark 
the last gasp of a fading regime. The mission of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad 
is to galvanize popular support for the ruling clerics as they move 
toward long-range missile and nuclear weapons capability. 
Twenty-five years after the Islamic revolution, the regime has run 
out of clerics deemed credible with the people. As a result, Iranian 
supreme leader Ali Khamenei turned to a non-cleric to become the 
nation's president. 
"The election signifies a return to the idealistic principles that 
have been forgotten over the past few years," the Teheran Times said 
in an editorial. 
Iranian opposition sources who have been monitoring the elections 
said Ahmadinejad marked a new stage for the regime. Khamenei is 
seeking to create a unified Iran to face Western pressure to halt 
the nation's nuclear weapons program. Khamenei expects a U.S.-led 
drive to undermine the regime over the next year. 
"Support for the West, particularly the United States, is extremely 
high, particularly among university students," an opposition source 
with daily contact in Iran said. "Many clerics are scared to walk 
the streets in fear of being attacked." 
Enter Ahmadinejad. His job will be to galvanize internal support for 
the regime by stepping up rhetoric against Israel and the United 
States and promising better times for the people. Indeed, the 
president-elect, who will assume office in August, is expected to 
become an ardent booster of Iran's terrorist policies. 
Over the past year, Iran has increased support to just about every 
Palestinian terrorist group and has become a leading financier of 
Fatah. Islamic Jihad has received significant increases in funding 
from Teheran, and Hamas relies on Iran more than ever for terrorist 
operations. 
Iran's confidence is based on its emerging strategic position. 
Teheran is the leading power in the Middle East. It no longer has a 
rival in Iraq and has been reconciling with such problematic 
neighbors as Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey. U.S. intelligence 
has assessed that Iran has imported $2 billion worth of weapons from 
1996 to 1999 and another $600 million from 2000 to 2003. 
The 49-year-old Ahmadinejad, who participated in the takeover of the 
U.S. Embassy in Teheran in 1979, is regarded as the most anti-
Western of the presidential candidates. His campaign was supported 
by his former employers in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and 
the Basij volunteers. 
Most Western diplomats had expected Rafsanjani to become Iran's next 
president in the election staged by the regime. The diplomats 
pointed to the first place win by Rafsanjani — who in 2000 failed to 
win a parliamentary seat — in the first round of elections on June 
17. 
The diplomats had thought that Ahmadinejad was set up by the 
Guardian Council, the protectors of the Islamic regime, as a straw 
man to highlight the liberal qualities of Rafsanjani. They 
envisioned a run-off election against an archconservative as aiming 
to bolster Rafsanjani's credentials. 
Indeed, the opposite was the case. The regime concluded that 
Rafsanjani no longer had credibility with ordinary Iranians. The 
modest Ahmadinejad, who could be seen bicycling in Teheran, was just 
the prescription. 
"In the political atmosphere of the advertisements, little was said 
about the economic issues," said Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a former vice 
president. "We focused our attention on elites and forgot the 
ordinary people who are trying to get their daily bread." 
Ahmadinejad's selection is a gamble for the regime. One of seven 
children, Ahmadinejad was born in Garmsar, about 100 kilometers 
south of Teheran, and moved to the capital with his family as a 
child. He honed his revolutionary credentials at Teheran's 
University of Science and Industry in the 1970s and then served with 
the IRGC during the war with Iraq from 1980 to 1988. 
Ahmadinejad was one of the university students who took over the 
U.S. Embassy. The Islamic regime exploited the ardor of these 
students but never trusted them on the assumption that what they did 
to the shah could be done to his successors. 
In the Basij militia, Ahmadinejad's job was to recruit young 
Iranians for life-long service to the regime. Basij members attended 
anti-Western rallies where they shouted, "Death to America" at the 
top of their lungs. The members also attacked Iranian dissidents, 
particularly supporters of the outgoing administration of President 
Mohammed Khatami. 
Still, Ahmadinejad was accepted into politics. In the 1990s, he 
became governor of the northwestern province of Ardebil and was 
elected mayor of Teheran in 2003. 
Over the past year, Ahmadinejad criticized what he termed 
concessions by the Khatami government to the European Union 
regarding its demand for a permanent suspension of Teheran's uranium 
enrichment program. The program has been under the supervision of 
the IRGC. 
"Nuclear energy is a result of Iranian people's scientific 
development," Ahmadinejad said. "This right of the Iranian people 
will soon be recognized by those who have so far denied it." 
As president, Ahmadinejad will have to focus on one foreign policy 
task: keep the West, particularly the United States, at bay as 
Teheran completes the nuclear fuel cycle and develops enough atomic 
bombs to deter an attack. 
Over the past year, opposition sources said, Iran has accelerated 
cooperation with North Korea to complete its Shihab-3 intermediate-
range missile program. 
"Iran's peaceful technology is the outcome of the scientific 
achievements of Iran's youth," Ahmadinejad said in his first news 
conference as president-elect. "We need the peaceful nuclear 
technology for energy, medical and agricultural purposes and our 
scientific progress. We will continue this." 
Still, Ahmadinejad is expected to appoint those with the most loyal 
of credentials — particularly from the IRGC — to his administration. 
That would mean reshuffling such ministries as energy, interior and 
intelligence, headed by reformist supporters of Khatami. 
Ahmadinejad has charged the Energy Ministry with corruption and 
favoring foreign contractors over Iranians. 
"We are looking at everyone who is now in the government, and any 
official who changes his tendencies and begins serving the people 
may stay at his post and continue to work with Ahmadinejad," said 
Abdul Hassan Faqih, Ahmadinejad's campaign manager. 








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