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Christians4LessGvt

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The Coming Iran Showdown
« on: February 10, 2010, 07:57:36 PM »
The Coming Iran Showdown   

Feb 10, 2010

For 30 years, the anniversary of the 1979 Islamic revolution has been an occasion for Iran?s Khomeinist rulers to demonstrate their power with a mixture of military parades and mass gatherings in the capital (Tehran) and other major cities. The highlight of the show has always been the appearance of the ?Supreme Guide,? flanked by the regime?s grandees, at Tehran?s largest square to deliver a sermon in a ceremony called ?renewal of bonds.?

This year, however, the Khomeinist rulers are nervous.

To start with, they have decided to keep the Supreme Guide, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, away from the main ceremony. Although the crowds will consist mostly of rent-a-mob elements, many of them shipped to Tehran from the provinces, no one can guarantee the kind of sheep-like discipline that has marked such gatherings in previous years. Today Iran is in a decidedly insurrectionary mood. With hundreds of figures from past governments, including two former presidents and one former prime minister, having joined the opposition, along with scores of former lawmakers, there is every possibility that even supposedly loyal crowds could switch sides on the spur of the moment.

The Khomeinist establishment, or at least what is left of it, has been debating strategy for the anniversary for weeks. The more radical faction ? led by Gen. Mohammad-Ali Aziz Jaafari, commander of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard, and backed by Pres. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad ? has been urging a mass crackdown against the opposition. According to sources in Tehran, Jaafari has presented a plan code-named ?Tanzih? (Eradication), which envisages the arrest of some 3,000 opposition activists, including former president Mohammad Khatami and former prime minister Mir-Hussein Mussavi. The plan would also authorize the Revolutionary Guard and the paramilitary Basij (Mobilization) street fighters to crush any mass demonstration by force, even if that means producing a bloodbath.

General Jaafari is said to favor a ?Chinese-style? crackdown to silence the growing pro-democracy movement. During the past six weeks he has been shipping units into Tehran and its environs and positioning Basij fighters, often in civilian clothes, at sensitive points. By Thursday he will have over 100,000 men in the capital.

His forces have set up a special headquarters, named ?Simorgh? after a mythical Persian bird, with one of Jaafari?s aides, Asghar Abkhizr, at its head. Simorgh has announced two days of free travel on all trains, private and public coaches and buses, and taxis for those wishing to come to Tehran for the occasion. In every case, however, only those whose loyalties are ascertained by the Guard will be allowed to reach the capital.

At a press conference in Tehran yesterday, Abkhizr announced that pro-regime demonstrations would take place at 33 locations in Tehran. This is part of an unofficial agreement with the opposition to prevent clashes between rival crowds. Tehran?s longest thoroughfare, Revolution Street, will divide Tehran into two halves. The northern half will be open to the opposition to hold its rival demonstrations. The southern half will be totally covered by pro-regime crowds.

The subtext of all this is that while the regime is prepared to tolerate some opposition demonstrations in parts of the capital, it will not allow the pro-democracy movement to contact and thus ?contaminate? pro-regime elements shipped in from all over the country.

Some sources in Tehran fear that the Guard and the Basij may stage-manage clashes between rival crowds as a pretext for crushing the opposition Chinese-style. Pro-Ahmadinejad newspapers in Tehran are clamoring for a ?tough stance to end the sedition once and for all.? Yet others within the regime have made no secret of their opposition to a Tiananmen-style massacre. Ali Larijani, speaker of the Islamic Majlis, Iran?s ersatz parliament, and Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, the mayor of Tehran and a general in the Revolutionary Guard, have called for a ?political solution? rather than a massacre in the streets of the capital.

The final decision rests with Khamenei, who appears to be wavering.

The announcement this week that Tehran has started to enrich uranium to an even higher grade, in defiance of five resolutions passed by the United Nations Security Council, may be seen as a further move by the radical faction to mobilize its base.

Concern that Tehran may witness a bloodbath this week is not confined to Iran itself. In a rare show of harmony yesterday, the 27-member European Union and the United States warned the Khomeinist regime not to opt for a bloody crackdown. The pro-democracy movement has welcomed the U.S.-EU joint statement as a sign that the major democracies may have started shedding their illusions about persuading the Khomeinist regime to abide by international law and respect the human rights of its citizens.

The coming showdown in Tehran could mark a new phase in the struggle for the future of Iran. A bloodbath could actually hasten the demise of the regime, for Iran today is not what China was in 1989. If the scenario for separate demonstrations by pro-regime and pro-democracy marches is allowed to proceed, the existence of two mutually exclusive visions of Iran will be further highlighted. Even if nothing spectacular happens, the fact that regime has lost its popular base and is forced to rely on coercive forces and rent-a-mob crowds would further undermine its legitimacy.

? Amir Taheri is an Iranian-born journalist based in Europe,
and author of The Persian Night: Iran Under the Khomeinist Revolution.


http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=NTc0MWJmODBiYzJlODRlNWI0NDEzNDgyNzUxYmI5NWI=

"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

Michael Tee

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Re: The Coming Iran Showdown
« Reply #1 on: February 10, 2010, 10:06:03 PM »
<<Concern that Tehran may witness a bloodbath this week is not confined to Iran itself. In a rare show of harmony yesterday, the 27-member European Union and the United States warned the Khomeinist regime not to opt for a bloody crackdown. The pro-democracy movement has welcomed the U.S.-EU joint statement as a sign that the major democracies may have started shedding their illusions about persuading the Khomeinist regime to abide by international law and respect the human rights of its citizens.>>

Nobody will miss the brutal wackos who are now running the country but the danger is that England and the U.S.A. will re-establish their grip on the country that they lost when the Islamic Revolution overthrew the Shah.  Looks like a tragedy for the hopes of sovereignty and self-rule in the region and a coming triumph of neocolonialism.  Wonder where the Islamic Revolution really went wrong?  They shoulda stuck with Shahpour Bakhtiar.  I guess the seeds of destruction were really sown when the extremist religious factions took it over.  Ass-holes.

Christians4LessGvt

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Re: The Coming Iran Showdown
« Reply #2 on: February 11, 2010, 12:34:42 AM »
February 10th, 2010 1:33 pm
 
Another Showdown at the Mullahs Corral

I believe that the Iranian regime has assembled the largest armed force in history to protect it from the Iranian people's righteous indignation on Thursday the 11th.  There will be hundreds of thousands of police, revolutionary guards, Basij, and people bused in from the countryside to Tehran.

Additionally, the regime is shutting down communications, especially in Tehran.  Iranian Tweeters say internet is largely gone, and cell phones are not working.  None of this is new, and in the past the dissidents have managed to beat the censors; it will be interesting to see if the mullahs trusted advisers (mostly Chinese) are more effective this time.  They certainly have failed in China, and the Iranian authorities have demonstrated an almost supernatural ability to screw up their own plans.

A case in point: the political center of the city is Azadi Square, and workers have been stringing loudspeakers (and probably cameras) all over the  square and the approach routes, in order to drown out the chants of the demonstrators.  So today they tested the system by broadcasting the national anthem.  Except it was the shah's anthem, not the Islamic Republic's.

Was it sabotage, or that incredible knack of ruining even a simple dry run?  Who knows?  Whatever it was, it reinforces the regime's popular image of a bunch of thugs who can only kill, maim and torture, but not build anything of value.

The regime is very nervous, as well it should be.  They don't trust anyone outside a very small circle of fanatical loyalists.  The broadcasters at radio/tv headquarters scheduled to cover the festivities were all replaced on Tuesday.  Activists, intellectuals, and relatives of opposition leaders have been thrown in jail.  These measures have been in effect for some time now. Reporters Sans Frontires claims 400 journalists have left the country since June 2009 and 2000 journalists are jobless but have not cowed the dissidents.  We?ll soon see if that has changed.

One of the most fascinating aspects of the current phase of the Iranian revolution is that many of those arrested knew it was coming, had the opportunity to hide, but chose to go to jail.  They viewed their arrest as a badge of honor, and (not to make light of the horrors of Iranian jails) perhaps even a good career move.  They expect the regime to fall, and they are building up credits for the next government.

The two leaders of the Green Movement, Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, expect to be arrested either Wednesday or Friday, and indeed they have been daring Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to do it. They believe that if they are arrested, the country will rise up against the regime.

I wonder if Khamenei has the nerve to go all the way.  He fears he will pay a big price for a "Chinese" massacre in the streets of Tehran.  On the one hand, a move against the Green leaders might provoke a massive uprising throughout the country.  On the other, he might find himself in personal difficulties.  In the past few days he  has received two distinguished visitors.  The first was Grand Ayatollah Abdul Karim Mousavi-Ardebili, from Qom, one of the country?s leading clerics.  Mousavi-Ardebili asked Khamenei to back off, to restrain from using violence against the people, and to release the political prisoners.  

Khamenei told him to pound sand.  When Mousavi-Ardebili went to his car, Khamenei accompanied him, and before getting into the vehicle, the Grand Ayatollah said to Khamenei "you remind me of the shah in his final days;  you have lost contact with the country, you do not understand what is going on."

Maybe so.  But it is also possible that Khamenei knows full well what is happening, and is determined to fight to the end.

The other distinguished visitor was Hashemi Rafsanjani, "the fox," one of the richest men in the Middle East and a high government official who knows where all the bodies are buried.  Various accounts of this meeting "a very unpleasant one according to all the leakers" are circulating.

One thing is certain:  it was a long (3 hours) and very contentious conversation, with Rafsanjani ominously speaking of dire consequences if the regime continued to slaughter the opposition.  It seems Rafsanjani also called for the release of Ali Reza Beheshti, one of Mousavi's top aides, and significantly the brother-in-law of Ali Akbar Mohtashami Pour, the "godfather of Hezbollah," and a former defense minister.

Rafsanjani also delivered a letter from one of the most esteemed members of the elite of the Islamic Republic (who does not want his identity revealed), stressing the importance of Beheshti's release, and the dangerous consequences that would befall the supreme leader if that were not quickly accomplished.

And what might be the "dire and dangerous consequences," you may ask?

I believe that Khamenei fears the public disclosure and documentation of his many criminal acts, ranging from ordering the terrorist attacks in Lebanon against French and American soldiers and marines, to authorizing the killing of Iranian dissidents.  There are many other cases, and, in a country like Iran, proof of Khamenei's central role is undoubtedly in many hands, as is the proof of the falsification of the June 12th election results, which was just delivered to the Canadians by a certain Saeed, an employee of the Guardian Council who has been granted asylum by Ottawa.

Oh, and yes, Beheshti was released within hours.

The opposition has its strengths, and the regime its weaknesses, as you see?

That's the background. Now it's time to watch. Lots of very good people will be live-blogging.  Two of the very best are Banafsheh and Homylafayette.


http://pajamasmedia.com/michaelledeen/2010/02/10/another-showdown-at-the-mullahs-corral/
« Last Edit: February 11, 2010, 08:14:29 AM by ChristiansUnited4LessGvt »
"Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall!" - Ronald Reagan - June 12, 1987

BT

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Re: The Coming Iran Showdown
« Reply #3 on: February 11, 2010, 01:29:24 AM »
Is Hezbollah biting the hand that feeds it?

Quote
It seems Rafsanjani also called for the release of Ali Reza Beheshti, one of Mousavi's top aides, and significantly the brother-in-law of Ali Akbar Mohtashami Pour, the ?godfather of Hezbollah,? and a former defense minister.