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Monday
Jan112010

Iran Analysis: The Regime Beyond the Headlines

The world is once again watching Iran. A series of weekend developments are in the global press this morning. Thomas Erdbrink of The Washington Post covers the Parliamentary report on the abuse of detainees, headlining the allegations against former Tehran Prosecutor General and current Presidential aide Saeed Mortazavi, "An Iranian parliamentary probe has singled out a former Tehran prosecutor as being responsible for the violent deaths of three protesters in a now-closed prison facility after anti-government demonstrations in July." Nazila Fathi of The New York Times writes on the same lines.

Credit to both reporters and to others for picking up on the development. Credit also for coverage of the Supreme Leader's weekend address as well as notice of President Ahmadinejad's presentation of his five-year National Development Plan to Parliament.

The Latest from Iran (11 January): Reading the Regime


However, all the information deserves a much closer look. Below the surface of pronouncement and public reports, there are powerful currents swirling within the Establishment. This is no less than an attempt, perhaps the last one before showdown reaches the highest levels of the regime, to find a way out of the political conflict.

There are hints tucked away in today's stories. Erdbrink, for example, has this enticing quote from Abbas Abdi, a former journalist critical of the Government: 
Mortazavi is the highest official the parliament could accuse without getting in trouble. If they would go after lower-level officials, their probe would have been meaningless." It is now up to the judiciary to press official charges against the former prosecutor.

Fathi goes for the line of a sop to the Green movement:
One analyst, a former senior official who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that in pinning the blame on Mr. Mortazavi, the government was trying to pacify the opposition.

“They might go as far as sacrificing Mortazavi, but I don’t think this is going to fool the opposition,” he said. “This does not mean a major compromise. It is just a tactic, and they are willing to sacrifice him because he crossed the lines.”

Both soundbites are half-right: Mortazavi now wears the title of Number One Scapegoat for the post-election excesses.

This, however, has little to do with concessions to the opposition. The regime's tough response to the Saturday march of Mothers of Mourning and their supporters, putting 33 in prison and reportedly injuring several, backs up the rhetoric that continues to come from Ministers, officials, Parliamentary leaders like Ali Larijani, and the Supreme Leader. No more demonstrations. No more resistance.

(At best, there may be an argument that the Parliamentary report is a signal to Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, who raised the abuse charges back in July, that they should come in from the opposition cold and strike a deal. However, even that possibility --- raised in last week's letter from conservative/principlist leader and Presidential candidate Mohsen Rezaei to Ayatollah Khamenei --- has not been borne out by any other Government moves.)

And the Abdi line is incomplete, either in its reading or its representation by Erdbrink. The idea that Mortazavi is the biggest fish/scapegoat (pardon the mixing of animal metaphors) and therefore that the investigations and the allegations stop with the former prosecutor is a misunderstanding: the Parliamentary challenge to Ahmadinejad has come too far to stop with Mortazavi's punishment.

Remember, the President's response to this report --- after it was presented to Parliament --- was to proceed with the official ceremony for Mortazavi's appointment as the head of the unit investigating smuggling of currency and drugs. That's a come-and-get-me taunt to those in and close to the Majlis --- Rezaei, Ali Motahari, Ahmad Tavakoli, even Ali Larijani --- who want the President, not one of advisors, to admit errors and injustices. Motahari made that clear in his video interviews last week.

So leave the Green opposition to the side for the moment. One of two scenarios happens:

1. Mortazavi falls, and Ahmadinejad takes a blow to this authority. His Parliamentary and political foes will either then accept that they have contained Mahmoud or, smelling blood and victory, they will press on.

2. Ahmadinejad will not sacrifice Mortazavi, and the fight gets even more intense.

Into this mix let's throw in the Supreme Leader. His speech last Saturday was difficult to read because it had two apparently conflicting messages. On the one hand, as we initially updated, he was warning protesters to shut up and go away, a repetition of his 19 June line that tried to validate the Presidential election. On the other, he was indicating that there had to be some acceptance of excessive measures by security forces and assurances that they would not be repeated.

How to reconcile those signals? Well, by recognising to whom they are directed. The first is simply to keep the opposition at bay and, indeed, far, far away while the regime tries to sort itself out. The second, more immediately important message is to those who nominally support Khamenei. Read it carefully, and I think you've got the Supreme Leader lending some backing to the Parliamentary/political criticism of the Presidential office and, therefore, telling Ahmadinejad and the security forces aligned with him: Be Careful.

Another reminder: this isn't new. Rewind to July and August and there are a series of power plays and disputes between Parliament and the President and even the Supreme Leader and Ahmadinejad. Mahmoud and Company won some of those battles, getting more influence in ministries like Intelligence, and lost some, for example, with the forced climbdown over the appointment of Esfandiar Rahim-Mashai as First Vice President. At that time, however, Ahmadinejad's biggest victories were getting to be President, with his inauguration in August, and getting his big Cabinet picks the following month.

All of this is back in play, however. As a very well-informed source told me last week, "The only way this ends is if and when some [expletive deleted] stabs Ahmadinejad in the back."

Reader Comments (9)

Two developments.
1) AN was in Bandar Abbas inaugurating an Alum smelter w no fan fair
2) There is a major rumor that the Persian star refinery and all its contractors are about to go on strike. The impact is a lot smaller than it initially seems but non the less is important

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterwhereismyvote

SL with backing AN , is backing his own son, Mojtaba; he will never change his mind and give ground and Green Movement has to continue his fight untill the overthrow of the regime and velatefaghih; we have not to fall in his trap !

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered Commenterange paris

RE the Mourning Mothers, CNN did a good job of reporting it I think:
http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/meast/01/10/iran.mourning.mothers/index.html

I'm trying to recall if the Argentinian dictatorship ever did anything so egregious to the Madres de la Plaza de Mayo....

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterCatherine

Mortazavi:

The parliament is irrelevant. The Iranian regime is in the complete control of Khamenei (remember the confirmation of AN cabinet?), though of course rivalries exist below him in the jockey for influence. Khamenei has a playbook and it is following it: (1) repress brutally, (2) repress brutually, (3) misinformation, and (4) do your best not to inflame people, which can be seized upon by the opposition. This last prong, like the others, is multi-faceted. Thus, the regime generally avoids shooting into crowds, confiscate bodies to avoid funeral protests, and occasionally offers window-dressing acts of appeasement. These include, generally, reducing very high prison sentences on appeal, public calls for law abidance, and, where necessary, a regime sacrifice. Kazirak was a scandal, and, more importantly, one that implicated Khamenei's oversight of the security forces. Thus, a sacrifice was necessary. Just like Saeed Emami, the chosen lamb was a high-profile enforcer, a thug who carried out orders, but one not vital to the bayteh rahbari (the leader's complex that essentially runs the country).

A useful exercise is to go to the NY Times archives (since EA didn't exist!) and search for "Khamenei". Many articles will pop up that show that shows the regime's playbook is simply the same one that was used to thwart the reform movement from 1997 to 2005.

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterGreen

to Catherine

In the beginning of the movement in 1977 " Las Madres de Plaza de Mayo " suffered a lot - they were attacked by special task forces and detained -
some of them disappeared.

https://webspace.utexas.edu/cmr485/www/mothers/history.html

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered Commentergunni

Green,

A very good reminder of past events but, personally, I think the distinction of 2009/10 is that we are beyond the "playbook" where a regime sacrifice will quell the opposition outside the Establishment, and, thus, the turmoil within it.

S.

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterScott Lucas

Has anyone seen any reaction to the Majlis report from any of the participating groups in the Green movment (Mousavi, Karroubi, student organizations, etc)? My guess is the analysts statement in the Fathi piece and as confirmed above, that all will see through the Mortazavi "sacrafice" is correct but am curious to any statements made. I have not had a chance to look myself so apologies for relying on the efforts of others.

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBijan

Video of Mottaki, talking at a forbidden foreign organisation (Council on Foreign Relations): http://ayandenews.com/news/17258/

January 11, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterArshama

@ Gunni
How soon we forget! Thank you for the article and I recommend others at least scan through it. I hope the current stage of oppression suffered by the Mothers of Laleh Park isn't "just the beginning", but beating up women in general and elderly women in particular is crossing a big red line, so I wouldn't be surprised if more outrage is in store. Although I don't believe in this day and age a country that is in the spotlight as much as Iran could get away with a guerra sucia (dirty war) on the same scale as Argentina's, but it's chilling to note how many tactics and attitudes these two repressive regimes share.

January 12, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterCatherine

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