Iran’s Hardliners Reinvent Themselves

TEHRAN – Promising a better life to the society’s downtrodden, the son of a blacksmith and mayor of Tehran, Mahmoud Ahmadinedjad, has stunned Iran by beating an establishment figure to become the nation’s new president.

While Ahmadinedjad’s promises of "fighting corruption, poverty, and discrimination" appealed to the minds and hearts of millions of jobless youth and underpaid public and private sector workers, some analysts here say the slogans really provided a cover for the former revolutionary guard commander and other "hardliners" to seize back the presidential office and consolidate their hold on the Islamic state’s organs.

His opponent in Friday’s run-off contest, Hashemi Rafsanjani, 72, was formidable – chairman of the State Expediency Council, a two-term former president (1989-1997), and a practiced politician who was able to position himself as a "reformer" in an election that began with eight candidates, at least one of whom had more genuine reformist credentials than the former leader.

He was also a familiar face on the international stage and the clear choice of Washington.

His campaign, dubbed "Rafsanjani, 2005 version," mimicked the colorful, slick U.S. style. His educated supporters ranged from those in the lower middle class to the rich, all of whom were eager for more cultural freedom as well as more open and stronger ties with the United States and western countries in general.

Wielding secular jargon and icons, Rafsanjani reduced the contest’s issues to dress codes and permissiveness in society in general, and to resuming ties with the United States – broken after the 1979 Islamic revolution – particularly to settle a simmering dispute over Iran’s nuclear program.

On the other hand, Ahmadinedjad’s campaign was managed by grassroots volunteers – including those from the basij (volunteer militia), schoolteachers, and other low-paid government employees – and, perhaps, by rank and file members of the guard. His slogans, handwritten or in calligraphy, dominated the poorer areas of downtown and south Tehran, a sprawling urban area of about 15 million people.

Following the first ballot, Rafsanjani took aim at his more conservative opponent, labeling him "fanatic and backward and hostile to the West." He accused the mayor’s camp – especially the commanders of vigilante groups and militia or revolutionary guards – of manipulating the minds of the poor.

Supporters of Ahmadinedjad, 49, who holds a Ph.D. in engineering, countered that Rafsanjani had resorted to begging actors, actresses, writers, and intellectuals for their votes.

"Fighting with mafia in the ruling establishment" and vowing to "return Iran to the principles of the 1979 Islamic revolution" was how the mayor’s camp painted its efforts.

Ahmadinedjad pulled into second behind Rafsanjani by a very narrow margin in the first round of voting June 17, but caught everyone by surprise in the run-off, obtaining 62 percent of nearly 28 million votes cast.

Sixty percent of eligible voters cast ballots in the second vote, according to the Iranian government, slightly lower than the 63 percent who voted the first time.

Prior to the run-off, Ahmadinedjad warned voters about looking to Washington for solutions. "Do not exaggerate on the role of America; resuming ties with America is not a panacea, and our main domestic issues, such as corruption, discrimination, poverty, and unemployment, should be solved without American intervention."

"It is obvious that America does not like an independent country like Iran, and if we want to stay independent we should find a way to out-maneuver America and not be bullied by her hegemony-seeking policy," he added.

"It does not imply we welcome war with America," said Ahmadinedjad, who will take office in August.. "At the same time, we do not budge and we want to be tough in any negotiation with the U.S. or [the international] nuclear agency."

At the same time, Rafsanjani appeared to be sending conciliatory signals to the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush in pre-election interviews with USA Today, CNN, and the San Francisco Chronicle, among others.

"I am going for a policy of relaxation of tension, and this is a policy that I will apply to the United States as well," he told CNN.

"And if Americans are sincere in the cooperation, working with Iran, I think the time is right to open a new chapter in our relations with the United States."

Secular intellectuals and pro-Western political activists believe, on the other hand, that Ahmadinedjad’s Achilles heel is his hardline version of Islam and his so-called "reactionary and fanatic reading of culture."

But Shirin Ebadi, a human rights activist and the winner of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize, and Shahla Lahiji, a well-respected publisher of books on Iranian women, insisted in interviews with British and Japanese media after Friday’s vote that the Iranian people will not allow their freedoms and liberties to be reversed, no matter who occupies the presidential office.

"Women in Tehran 10 days ago, before the run-off, announced in a protest gathering before the main gate of Tehran University that they want equal rights and to change the Islamic constitution in favour of them, and they will keep fighting for their rights regardless of who is president. After all, according to the constitution, the president is not a powerful decision-maker," said Ebadi.

Other critics are arguing that from now on the "reformist versus conservative" notion of Iranian society will no longer be valid and that new factions will emerge.