Archive for the ‘Iran’ Category

Hard-Line Cleric Ebrahim Raisi Launches Bid for Iranian Presidency – Wall Street Journal (subscription)


Wall Street Journal (subscription)
Hard-Line Cleric Ebrahim Raisi Launches Bid for Iranian Presidency
Wall Street Journal (subscription)
DUBAIHard-line Iranian cleric Ebrahim Raisi announced he would run in the country's presidential election next month, challenging an incumbent who has tried to engineer an economic turnaround and sought closer ties with the West. Mr. Raisi, who ...
Conservative cleric Ebrahim Raisi enters Iran's presidential raceThe Guardian
RPT-Hardline prosecutor emerges as main challenger to Iran's RouhaniNasdaq
Hardline cleric Raisi to take on Rouhani in Iran's presidential ...Reuters
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Hard-Line Cleric Ebrahim Raisi Launches Bid for Iranian Presidency - Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Iran’s Next Supreme Leader – Foreign Affairs (subscription)

On July 17, 2016, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Irans supreme leader, turned 77. Rumors that he suffers from cancer have circulated for over a decade, and in 2014, the state-run news agency published photos of him recovering from prostate surgery. Although Khameneis prognosis remains closely guarded, the Iranian government is evidently treating his succession with urgency. In December 2015, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former president and a kingmaker, broached the usually taboo subject when he publicly admitted that a council within the Assembly of Experts, the body that selects the supreme leader, was already vetting potential successors. And last March, after new members of the assembly were elected to an eight-year term, Khamenei himself called the probability that they would have to select his replacement not low.

The death of Khamenei will mark the biggest political change in the Islamic Republic since the death of the last supreme leaderAyatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the revolutionary founding fatherin 1989. The supreme leader is the most powerful person in Iran, with absolute authority over all parts of the state. A new person in that position could dramatically alter the direction and tenor of Irans foreign and domestic policies.

But those hoping for a kinder, gentler Iran are likely to be disappointed. Since he took power in 1989, Khamenei has steadily built an intricate security, intelligence, and economic superstructure composed of underlings who are fiercely loyal to him and his definition of the Islamic Republic, a network that can be called Irans deep state. When Khamenei dies, the deep state will ensure that whoever replaces him shares its hard-line views and is committed to protecting its interests.

Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in Tehran, April 2006.

PAST IS PROLOGUE

When Khomeini died, observers considered Khamenei just one of a handful of possible replacementsand not even the likeliest. A 50-year-old midranking cleric at the time, Khamenei lacked Khomeinis towering stature. But at a meeting on June 4, 1989, the day after Khomeinis death, Rafsanjani,

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Iran taekwondo fighters ace 1st Africa, WTF President Cup G2 – Press TV

Female Iranian taekwondo fighters have featured praiseworthy displays of spinning kicks and fast kicking techniques at the first edition of Africa, World Taekwondo Federation (WTF) President Cup G2 in Morocco, and claimed the title at the end of the international event.

The Islamic Republic of Iran ended on the top of the medal count table with 8 (three gold, two silverand three bronze), having notched up 30 points.

The Ivory Coast was second with 4 medals (one gold, one silver plus two bronze) and 12 points. Croatia finished third with a total of three medals (one gold, one silver and one bronze), having garnered 11 points.

On Sunday, Haniyeh Akhlaghi got the bronze medal in the womens minus 67-kilogram weight division after she lost her final contest 4-5 to a representative from Croatia.

Iranian taekwondo fighter Soudabeh Poursadeghi also earned the bronze medal in the minus 49-kilogram weight category.

The achievement came on the same day that Irans Akram Khodabandeh prevailed over Moroccan participator Wiam Dislam6-4 in the final fight of the female over 73-kilogram weight category to snatch the gold medal.

In the minus 49-kilogram weight section, Nahid Kiyani conceded defeat to an opponent from Croatia to earn the Islamic Republic of Iran a bronze medal.

Earlier, Irans Fatemeh Maddahi had overcome her compatriot Kiana Akhavan in the ultimate showdown of the female minus 46-kilogram category, and won the gold.

Fatemeh Mostafaei and Nafiseh Mokhlesi collected the silver and bronze medals in the minus 73-kilogram section as well.

The first edition of Africa, WTF President Cup G2 opened in Agadir, Morocco, on April 7 and finished on April 9, 2017.

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Iran taekwondo fighters ace 1st Africa, WTF President Cup G2 - Press TV

Iran’s long-exiled prince wants a revolution in age of Trump – The Recorder

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates Irans exiled crown prince wants a revolution.

Reza Pahlavi, the son of the last shah to rule before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, has seen his profile rise in recent months following the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, who promises a harder line against the Shiite power.

Pahlavis calls for replacing clerical rule with a parliamentary monarchy, enshrining human rights and modernizing its state-run economy could prove palatable to both the West and Irans Sunni Gulf neighbors, who remain suspicious of Irans intentions amid its involvement in the wars in Iraq, Syria and Yemen.

But the Mideast is replete with cautionary tales about Western governments putting their faith in exiles long estranged from their homelands. Whether Pahlavi can galvanize nostalgia for the age of the Peacock Throne remains unseen.

This regime is simply irreformable because the nature of it, its DNA, is such that it cannot, Pahlavi told The Associated Press. People have given up with the idea of reform and they think there has to be fundamental change. Now, how this change can occur is the big question.

Pahlavi left Iran at age 17 for military flight school in the U.S., just before his cancer-stricken father Mohammad Reza Pahlavi abandoned the throne for exile. The revolution followed, with the creation of the Islamic Republic, the takeover of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran and the sweeping away of the last vestiges of the American-backed monarchy.

Yet the Pahlavis and the age of the monarchy have retained their mystique in Iran, even as the majority of its 80 million people werent alive to experience it. Television period pieces have focused on their rule, including the recent state TV series The Enigma of the Shah, the most expensive series ever produced to air in the country. While incorporating romances or mobsters into the tales, all uniformly criticize the royal court.

But Pahlavi, 56, insists young Iranians increasingly look toward Irans past. He pointed to recent demonstrations at the tomb of the pre-Islamic King Cyrus the Great, which have been claimed by a variety of anti-government forces as a sign of unrest. Under his fathers secular and pro-Western rule, Iran experienced a rapid modernization program financed by oil revenues.

If you look at the legacy that was left behind by both my father and my grandfather ... it contrasts with this archaic, sort of backward, religiously rooted radical system that has been extremely repressive, Pahlavi said.

Since the U.S. election, Pahlavi has given a growing number of media interviews, including with Breitbart, the far-right website once run by Trumps chief strategist, Steve Bannon. Pahlavi also has sent letters to the Trump administration.

Gauging national sentiment toward restoring the monarchy in Iran is impossible, especially after the crackdown that followed the countrys disputed 2009 election. Iranian state media routinely refer to the Pahlavi monarchy as despotic, but there has been some reassessing of history in other quarters.

A book published last year, The Fall of Heaven: The Pahlavis and the Last Days of Imperial Iran, offered a revisionist view of the shah. While acknowledging the abuses of his feared SAVAK intelligence service and the corruption surrounding his rule, the book portrays him as a fatalist in an era of disappearing Mideast monarchies.

The regime has repressed discussion of the Pahlavis for so long that it has had the opposite effect of making young Iranians inside the country curious about what they dont know, said historian Andrew Scott Cooper, the books author. Theres an interesting generational divide going on here to where young Iranians are saying to their parents and grandparents, the same people who marched against the shah and Pahlavis, Why did you get rid of that system and put this one in place?

He added: The family name still retains a lot of magic, more than ever today among Iranians. How that translates practically into support for Reza as a credible alternative leader, I just dont know.

Asked how his envisioned peaceful revolution could play out in Iran, Pahlavi said it would need to begin with labor unions starting a nationwide strike. He said members of the hard-line Revolutionary Guard, a paramilitary organization established to protect the clerical system, would be assured they wouldnt be all hung and shot.

Most importantly, he said Western governments need to keep their distance and not threaten military action.

Thats an exceedingly optimistic vision, especially considering the amount of power the Guard and other hard-liners wield in Irans economy. It also largely ignores the concerns many in Iran have about Western meddling. Pahlavis father took power following a 1953 coup engineered by Britain and the U.S.

Pahlavi, who still resides in the U.S., said he hasnt had any side occupation since 1979, and has received financial support from his family and many Iranians who have supported the cause.

My focus right now is on liberating Iran, and I will find any means that I can, without compromising the national interests and independence, with anyone who is willing to give us a hand, whether it is the U.S. or the Saudis or the Israelis or whomever it is, he said.

Pahlavi said he had yet to meet with the Trump administration despite his letters. Another Iranian exile group, the Mujahedeen-e-Khalq, previously paid a member of Trumps Cabinet $50,000 for giving a speech . However, the MEKs siding with Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s and its killing of Americans before the revolution, which the group now denies, makes it an unsuitable partner, Pahlavi said.

Its pretty much a cult-type structure, he said.

For now, Pahlavi said he looks forward to meeting with Trump and his administration. But he pins his hopes on Irans sense of history, something Cooper also acknowledged.

For many Iranians, the revolution is unfinished business, the author said.

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Iran's long-exiled prince wants a revolution in age of Trump - The Recorder

Syrian ally Iran blasts U.S. missile strikes as ‘dangerous …

Iran on Friday condemned the Trump administrations missile strikes against Syria, saying the unilateral U.S. action would strengthen terrorists and further complicate the situation in the Middle East.

The Islamic republic, a strong ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, said that whileit condemned the use of chemical weapons, the U.S. response was dangerous, destructive and a violation of international law.

The Pentagon fired dozens of Tomahawk missiles early Friday at a Syrian airfield in retaliation for a poison gas attack against civilians this week that the U.S. believes was carried out by Assads forces. It was the first time the U.S. directly targeted the Assad government since the Syrian conflict began in 2011.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Bahram Ghassemi rejected the conclusion that Assads forces had carried out the poison attack on Tuesday that killed more than 70 people in the town of Khan Sheikhoun, in rebel-held Idlib province. Doctors who treated some of the victims said their symptoms were consistent with exposure to the nerve agent sarin.

Ghassemi said the attack was suspicious and its timing, actors and perpetrators are cloaked in a curtain of ambiguity. He invoked Irans history as a victim of chemical warfare, carried out by Saddam Husseins Iraqi forces during a grisly war in the 1980s.

At Friday prayers in Tehran, where clerics deliver sermons that reflect the view of the ruling theocracy, Ayatollah Mohammad Emami Kashani echoed the Syrian government account, suggesting that poison gas was released when Assads military targeted a rebel weapons depot that had contained chemical agents.

The chemical weapons are in the hands of terrorists and the Syrian army attacks the terrorists, but all are making a hue and cry that the Syrian regime has used chemical weapons, Kashani said. It is a sheer lie.

Iranian Shiite Muslim militias, along with Russian air power and ground troops, have been among Assads strongest allies against the Sunni rebels, a patchwork of rival forces including extremists from Islamic State as well as more moderate groups trained and financed by the Pentagon and U.S. intelligence.

Western experts estimate that Iran spends billions of dollars a year to bolster Assad and support his military.

Iran has also recruited Shiite militiamen from Afghanistan and Iraq to fight alongside Syrian forces and help guard Shiite shrines in Assad-controlled areas.

Experts in Tehran said that Iranian and Russian support would help keep Assad in power barring a significant escalation by the Trump administration.

As long as Russia is supporting Assads regime, these missile attacks are a flexing of muscle by Trump, but they are far from toppling Bashar Assad, said Nader Karimi Juni, a leading political analyst. In fact, America cannot topple Assad unless its ground forces land on Syrian soil.

After Friday prayers, a small group of demonstrators shouted slogans denouncing the U.S. while some worshipers called for a strong response against the missile strikes.

We should send more defenders of holy shrines to Syria and Russia should retaliate and bombard the American-sponsored terrorists in Syria too, said Karim Hamwarsi, a worshiper.

Others were worried about a widening conflict. An elderly man riding Tehrans subway, who gave his name only as Ali, said Irans support for Assad was coming at a high price.

I am worried about future and there might be a war between Iran and America, he said.

Special correspondent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

shashank.bengali@latimes.com

Follow @SBengali on Twitter for more news from South Asia

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Syrian ally Iran blasts U.S. missile strikes as 'dangerous ...