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An important axiom of the regime,
necessary for US. policy makers to remember, is that the Islamic
Republic's ruling class is an inveterate enemy of the United Stares and
the existing world order. The regime's overall objective is the
destruction of the United States and the civilization it represents.
What is to be done about Iran? The current U.S. Administration might
be better served if it would engage in some strategic thinking. The
concentration of media pundits has focused on only one dimension of the
Islamic Republic, its nuclear program. This sole focus obscures the
essence, motivations, and objectives of a regime ultimately more
dangerous to the world than even its nuclear capability.
To begin with, U.S. policy makers might take a fresh look at the
operating principles by which the regime lives -- as well as its
strengths and weaknesses -- to develop better a series of policy options
on how best to weaken or even destabilize the regime. At the very least,
such a process might yield an approach that would induce the regime to
curtail its terrorist activities and support for radical movements
throughout the globe, if not slow down its nuclear program.
Operating Principles of the Regime
The prime directive of Iran's ruling class is to ensure the regime's
stability. During its three and a half decades, the Islamic Republic has
successfully negotiated contentious passions within the regime's power
centers to avoid open confrontation. When it appeared that factional
intra-regime differences were about to unravel the existing order, the
regime's leaders pulled back and restored equilibrium within its senior
ranks. The most memorable example of this pattern transpired during the
era of Mohamad Khatami (08/1997-08/2005), when his election to the
presidency emboldened Iran's population to push the theocracy for
comprehensive reforms.
Iran's security forces, reactionary mullahs and hardliners rightfully
interpreted this trend as an existential threat to the regime and
surmised that liberals were exploiting the reforms Khatami enacted to
carry out a democratic counter-revolution. Khatami was privately, and
later publicly, warned to reign in his supporters. In addition,
intelligence agents from the Ministry of Information and Security (MOIS),
in an attempt to intimidate Khatami supporters, executed several liberal intellectuals.[1] Finally, a group of 24
high-level Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps [IRGC] officials issued a
public ultimatum to President Khatami, either to put down the student
riots or be removed from office.[2]
After this threat was published, Khatami-era political reforms began to
be rolled back. The real power "behind the curtain" had
evidently decided the prime directive of regime survival had to be
enforced.
Sometimes, the regime's power brokers have disciplined their own who
might have pushed their personal agendas too recklessly. The former
president of Iran, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, for instance, had made
no secret that he would like to be the next Supreme Leader. However the
hard-line Chairman of Iran's Council of Guardians, Atyatollah Jannati,
who vets all candidates for public office, criticized Rafsanjani during a
nation-wide television broadcast of his sermon during a Tehran-based
Friday prayer service: "A presidential candidate must live a simple
life but when he drives around in a Benz [Mercedes Benz], he cannot
possibly understand the people's pain when they are hungry and he
therefore is unable to sympathize with the lower classes".[3]
Former President Mahmoud Ahmedinijad attempted to surround himself
with a coterie of clerics more loyal to him than to the Supreme Leader
Khamenei. Both Rafsanjani and Ahmadinijad have been chastised for these
excesses.
Rafsanjani's storied riches and ability to survive the harsh
vicissitudes of the Iranian revolutionary politics have caused current
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to see him as a potential rival to be moved
aside if the opportunity arises. Consequently, when Rafsanjani's ambition
gave offense, after he decided to run for a third, non-consecutive, term
as president in the 2012 Iranian presidential elections, Khamenei
discouraged his candidacy. The Council of Guardians, roughly analogous to
an Iranian supreme court, then ruled against permitting Rafsanjani to
run, citing his advanced age of 70 years.[4] As all members of this body are
appointed by the Supreme Leader's Office, in rejecting Rafsanjani, the
Council evidently implemented Khamenei's will.
Rafsanjani had also earned the enmity of Khamenei and regime military
leaders with his attempt to ride the popular wave of the "Green
Revolution," when millions of Iranians disputed the results of the
2009 re-election of hardliner President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and denounced
Khamenei as a dictator deserving of death.[5] The regime's internal security
services punished Rafsanjani for his attempt to garner favor with the
protestors by arresting Rafsanjani's daughter, Fatemeh, and his son,
Mehdi, who were briefly detained for alleged economic or political
offenses.[6]
Ahmadinejad, when he was midway through his second term as Iran's
president, also ran afoul of the regime's more hard-line factions. He had
surrounded himself with a private group of religious and political
advisors who appeared more loyal to him personally than to Khamenei. When
Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, President Ahmadinejad's religious confidant,
helped establish a rival theological focus, separate from the Supreme
Leader's Office -- and Ahmadinejad encouraged a mystical connection to
the alleged site of the Twelfth and last Imam's disappearance, from which
the Imam would ultimately emerge at the end of time to transform the
world, implementing the tenets of Shii Islam[7] -- Khamenei launched a private
political offensive against the president's office by approving the
arrest of several of Ahmadinejad's closest advisors. An embittered
Ahmadinejad, a few months before leaving office, was secretly detained by
an IRGC detail that warned him not to make good on his threat to air
regime dirty laundry in public after his term. [8]
Additionally, Mir Hossein Moussavi and Mehdi Karroubi, despite having
been founding fathers of the existing totalitarian order[9], have also been disciplined for
having encouraged the reformist "Green Movement" protests in
2009. Both men spent more than 1000 days under house arrest.
The Islamic Republic, although a totalitarian system, is not a
top-down dictatorship. There is no "leader" who is supreme.
There are several partially autonomous "dowres" (circles) of
influence. There is also considerable "behind the curtain"
wheeling and dealing and collegial decision-making. The government,
including the office of the president, is not primary.
Moreover, these circles of power are drawn from a central corps of
mullahs, security officials, and influential civilians from Islamic
revolutionary families. Nevertheless, these influential nodes form only
fleeting coalitions depending upon the issue or political trend. One
could think of them as bubbles interlocking for a brief period before
disengaging to form new constellations.
Contrary to frequent erroneous reporting, regime leaders are not
recalcitrant ideologues. They are flexible in political maneuver, nuanced
in their understanding of the West, well-informed about internal and
external threats, and pragmatic in decision-making.
Regime decision-making bears some similarity to the structures of the
departed Soviet Union; the most visible institutions of the regime are
the least potent instruments of power. This is particularly true of the Majlis,
a consultative assembly rather than a law-making legislature in the
Western governmental sense. The Supreme Leader's Office, the Guardian
Council, high-ranking Iran-Iraq war veterans, ex-military economic
potentates and Islamic Revolution Guard Corps elites all share slices of
real power.
Despite the public persona of the so-called Ayatollah Khamenei, he
rarely issues a major decree without first vetting it with these other
power centers. Nevertheless, regime factions have embraced the Leninist
principle of Democratic Centralism: once the power circles have arrived
at a final decision, often following much private and public debate, all
factions are expected to endorse the policy. Almost always, the cover of
respectability of the Supreme Leader is invoked, formally to end the
debate. The strength of his public pronouncements rests on the "valiyat-e-faqih"
[Guardianship of the Jurist] theocratic principle of political-religious
infallibility, a principle that lies in the personhood of Ayatollah
Khamenei as "rakbar" (the leader). Despite this concept
there are no overweening personality cults in Iran such as existed with
Qaddafi's Libya or Saddam Hussein's Iraq.
An important axiom of the regime, necessary for U.S. policymakers to
remember, is that the Islamic Republic's ruling class is an inveterate
enemy of the United States and the existing world order. To quote Imam
Khomeini: "America is worse than Britain. The Soviet Union is worse
than both of them. But today it is America that we are concerned with.
All of our troubles are caused by America and Israel"[10] Imam Khomeini gave ample proof
of his anti-American animus when he embraced the seizure of the United
States Embassy on November 4, 1979. His holding 52 U.S. diplomats hostage
for 444 days underscored his deep-seated antipathy for what he referred
to as "Satan-e-Bozorg" [the "Great Satan"] or
"Istikbar i-Jahani" [the "World Arrogance"].[11] These terms of reference
remain in political vogue today, just as the familiar chant of "Marg
bar Amreka" or "Death to America." The constancy of
these themes is rhetorical evidence that the regime's overall objective
remains the destruction of the United States and the civilization it
represents. The same is true of the Iranian regime's objective to expunge
Israel from the face of the planet. There has been no diminution of the
regime's passionate attachment to these twin goals.
The regime also seems to remain dedicated to its objectives of
radicalizing, and then uniting, the entire Muslim world. Having achieved
this prerequisite regime, "true believers" assume that
supplanting the existing nation-state system would quickly follow. Imam
Khomeini denounced the world's divisions into countries as artificial and
foreign to the will of God. "These boundaries around the world to
designate a country or a homeland are the product of a deficient human
mind. The world is the homeland of humanity. All people should reach the
salvation of both worlds. This will happen only by implementation of
God's divine laws."[12]
Many of Khomeini's political concepts and views still resonate in the
regime's understanding of its historical mission. Khomeini's writings and
speeches are, in fact, cited by regime leaders as "inspiring the
Islamic Awakening which resulted in the overthrow of Mubarak of Egypt,
Ben Ali of Tunisia, Gaddafi of Libya, and Saleh of Yemen."[13] Ayatollah Khamenei personally
repeated this claim by stating that Khomeini had fashioned the
"hegemony-free model" for the current movement in the Islamic
World."[14]
However, the International Affairs Department of the Institute for the
Compilation and Publication of Imam Khomeini's Works is the primary
propagation instrument for the preservation of Khomeini's ideas.[15]
Khomeini, especially in the first years of the Islamic Republic,
encouraged cooperation between the Shia and Sunni branches of Islam. He
wanted to bridge this millennium-long chasm in the Islamic world. To this
end, he ruled that it was permissible for Shia to pray in mosques, even
when the prayers there were led by a Sunni Imam. He also established Qods
Day, in which he called upon all Muslims to take concrete steps to
liberate Jerusalem from "the Zionist Entity." He supported
Sunni Palestinian groups as well as anti-Western revolutionary Islamic
movements throughout the world. The continued cooperation of Gaza's
ruling party, HAMAS, with Iran's regime is a testament to Khomeini's
ideas regarding closing the gap between Shia and Sunni. Another instance
of Khomeini's transcending the Sunni-Shia divide was the propagation of
his ideology in Bosnia. [16]
Khomeini's description of Iran's unique position in world affairs, for
example, continues to shape the regime's idea of itself: "One cannot
find a country today whose motto is "Neither East Nor West...the
future belongs to Islam and the Muslims."[17] The Islamic Republic justifies
its "export of the revolution" -- and zealous worldwide
offensive to support terrorist, separatist, and rebellious movements --
by embracing Khomeini's interpretation of Shia Islamic doctrine.[18] In it, he defines the
political norms of the existing international order as based on the
shallow foundation of man-made laws or "qavanin bashiri."
Khomeini insists that the oppressed [mostaz'afan] of the earth
will triumph over their oppressors [mostakbaran] when divine laws
supplant the laws of man. For him, this is the God-given mission that the
Islamic Republic must help bring about.[19]
Despite this seemingly uncompromising revolutionary agenda, Iranian
statesmen have been sufficiently skilled to avoid total isolation, a
status that could endanger the existence of the regime. The Islamic
Republic's diplomats have artfully exploited U.S. policy differences with
Russia and China, for instance, by maintaining amicable relations with
Moscow and Beijing. Tehran also has developed close diplomatic links with
smaller nations, such as Venezuela, also hostile to the "global
arrogance" -- meaning the United States.
Assessments of Regime Strengths and Weaknesses
The greatest strength of the regime is its will to remain in power. It
has done so only because it has effectively handled all opposition. In
the first months of the regime's existence, Khomeini outmaneuvered
threats by radical youths to wrest control of the revolution from the
mullahs by embracing the militant students' seizure of the U.S. Embassy.
Later Khomeini staged "a night of the long knives" against the
powerful, well-organized, pro-Soviet Tudeh [Communist Party of Iran], an
erstwhile ally against the Shah. After Iraq's invasion of Iran in 1980,
Khomeini decisively exploited Marxist-Leninist Mujahedin-e-Khalq's [MEQ]
support for Saddam Hussein by labeling them as traitors to Iran.
During Khatami's presidency, the regime was able to frustrate and
crush liberals who wanted to transform Khatami's reforms into the
establishment of a European-style liberal democracy. The brutal suppression
of the Green Movement, after the allegedly fraudulent presidential
election of 2009, is still another example of the regime's skill at
outlasting and outmaneuvering determined opposition.
Perhaps the greatest example of the regime's ability to endure is its
capability to isolate clerical opposition to its continued existence. The
five hundred political clerics that serve the Supreme Leader's Office
were able to suffocate the opposition of traditional and liberal clerics
alike,[20]as
in isolating Grand Ayatollah Montazeri and holding him under house arrest
for having criticized Imam Khomeini's fatwa that called for the
assassination of author Salman Rushdie.[21] Also, many senior clerics in
Shia Iran's holy city of Qom remain in silent opposition, managing to
retain their teaching posts in theological seminaries as well as the
generous stipends doled out by the pro-regime clerical emissaries.
The regime's security apparatus has, over time, improved its ability
to monitor, penetrate, and manipulate opposition organizations. The
regime's praetorian guard, the security agencies, also have been
effective in crowd control techniques, counter-intelligence practices,
and tactics to suppress dissidents. They are capable, loyal, and brutal;
nuanced in the application of terror and shrewd in their judgment on when
to apply force or merely to collect intelligence on the opposition.
Regime security services, for example, do not always discourage
demonstrations at the first signs of protest. Sometimes, they thoroughly
film events and, after an exhaustive filtering process, arrest selected
individuals who had participated in the demonstration. They come quietly
and at night, usually threatening family members in the home, a method
that usually elicits cooperation from the individual about to be dragged
off to prison. Sometimes after several days of interrogation and torture
the protester is released back into his milieu with the mission of
collecting information on his or her fellow anti-regime activists. Still
another tactic is to release the prisoner only to re-arrest him in the
near future, a tactic designed to break the victim's morale. Security
officials also often threaten to arrest loved ones, a technique that
usually prompts a prisoner to cooperate with authorities.[22]
The authorities also underscore their willingness to employ raw terror
against their own citizens, as in posting snipers on rooftops to shoot
down street protestors and ordering gangs of chain-wielding toughs to
charge into crowds of demonstrators. There should be little doubt that
this regime is one that controls its populace by terror. The regime is
quick to imprison or execute any citizen deemed "counter-revolutionary."
They often publicly execute dissidents as well, claiming they are common
criminals, and displaying their bodies for hours. Sometimes, presumably
for psychological impact, the police have ordered recently hung victims
transported throughout Tehran on construction cranes.
A public hanging
in Iran.
|
The government also maintains an archipelago of secret prisons
throughout the country. The primary responsibility of regime security
services is apparently to suppress whatever might be viewed as dissident
activity -- a task facilitated by the weak, divided, and unorganized
nature of the opposition. Its most vocal members are middle-class
students, many from the more affluent neighborhoods of
"Shemran," the northern suburbs of the capital, Tehran.[23] Coalition-building among
various opposition groups in Iran such as between student rebels and
working class Iranians has not been effective, in part, because of
traditional class cleavages in Iranian society. In Iran, there is also no
tradition of independent labor unions. Past attempts to organize free
labor groups have been crushed. The lack of a vibrant free labor movement
deprives the opposition of a powerful civil society organization which could
help build an effective anti-regime coalition.[24]
The regime has also been careful not to breach the economic dimension
of its social contract made with Iran's working-poor labor class that
dominates the neighborhoods south of Tehran. The regime continues to
provide food and housing subsidies to these workers as well as employment
opportunities, including joining the ranks of the Basij [Organization for
the Mobilization of the Oppressed]. The Basij are gangs who keep student
protestors in line and help enforce the conservative social norms of the
regime. They assure that teenage boys and girls demonstrate no signs of
public affection, that women display "good hijab" [complete
covering of their hair], that the genders use separate slopes while
skiing, and that young men do not wear Western dress such as T-shirts and
hats with un-Islamic or immodest messages.
Youths who enter the Basij are subjected to an intensive core
curriculum in ideological political training. These courses focus on
nurturing loyalty to the theocratic principles upon which the regime is
based. There are courses in "Velayat" [Guardianship], Basirat
[Insight], and Marefat [Awareness].[25] As the curriculum emphasizes
unwavering loyalty to the regime, the regime seems to want to safeguard
Basij recruits from being infected by their young counterparts in the
Green Movement.
Nature of the Regime
Today's Iran is much less a theocracy than it is a military
bureaucracy. The economy now is largely run by retired military
bureaucrats, many of whom who are veterans of the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq
War. This ruling class of mullahs and martial plutocrats has accrued
great fortunes, by expropriating the financial resource of several
charitable foundations [bonyads]. One account of the Office of the
Supreme Leader estimates that the Leader's office has established a real
estate empire worth about $52 billion.[26] A large portion of this wealth
has apparently been accumulated from seized property of the regime's
opponents and émigrés.[27]
The U.S. Treasury Department claims that the Supreme Leader's Office
controls dozens of public and private companies.[28] Other leaders of the 1979
Islamic Revolution, such as former President Rafsanjani, also are
fabulously wealthy. Rafsanjani earned the nickname "kooseh,"
[shark] from his ability to arrange business deals that have possibly
made him the richest man in Iran.[29]
When Ahmedinijad was president, there was also a surly struggle between
them for control of the vast revenues of Iran's Islamic Azad University.
Rafsanjani won the contest by being named Chairman of Azad University's
Board of Trustees.[30]
Iranians, in general, are apparently contemptuous of the clerical
class; many street jokes exist at the expense of the clerics, and there
is a decline in attendance at mosques. At regime-sponsored religious
ceremonies, many of the attendees are apparently military and security
personnel in plain clothes, whose attendance ensures support for regime
hard-liners' speeches.[31]
Consequently, with the waning of clerical influence, the real muscle of
the regime now resides in the upper ranks of the Pasdaran, or IRGC.
Although the political mullahs along with their praetorian allies, the
IRGC, may not have great popular support, there seem to be some Iranian
nationalists who apparently are also not enamored of the West, seem proud
of Iran's high profile on the international scene and determined to
protect Iran's national sovereignty. They seem to remember with
bitterness the UK/US-aided 1953 overthrow of the Mossadegh
administration, the Shah's surrender of the sovereignty of Bahrain, as
well as the West's support for the return of Iranian islands in the
Persian Gulf to the United Arab Emirates.[32] Popular support for Iran's
acquisition of nuclear weapons may be more pronounced than western
analysts might assume.[33]
Moreover, it also may be that a majority of Iranians support the
development of a companion intercontinental ballistic missile capability
as well as the country's space program. There is no doubt that Tehran's
current challenge to Arab and Western power in the Persian Gulf is also
popular. Many patriotic Iranians support these policies despite their
antipathy towards the regime -- a loyalty that permits the regime a bit
of cover on sensitive nationalist issues. [34]
Nevertheless, the regime's greatest weakness is that the vast majority
of educated young Iranians appear to despise the existing order [35].
President Rouhani's election has not only failed to slow down the
execution rate of Iranians, most of whom are young people hanged
allegedly for drug offenses -- Rouhani's election has, in fact, increased
executions. [36]
Like many of history's great revolutions, the Iranian revolution is
eating its young.
[1]
Marz-e-por-gohar (Our Glorious Borders) Party, Roozbeh Farhanipour claims
that between 1988 and 1998 there were at least 103 murders of Iranian
dissident intellectuals. The murders reached a crescendo in 1998. New
York Times, Douglas Jehl, December 14, 1998.
[2] "The
Shadow Commander" by Dexter Filkins September 30, 2013, The New
Yorker. The public letter to Khatami warned that he must put down the
1999 Student-led Revolt or the military would do so, implying that he
would be removed from office in the process.
[3]
"Rafsanjani's Benz at Center of Controversy" by Aram Karami.
Iran Pulse: Must reads from the Iranian Press, 19 May 2013.
Rafsanjani drives around Tehran in a Mercedes.
[4] "Could
Rafsanjani Be Disqualified From Race Because of Age?" by Max Fisher,
Washington Post, May 20 2013. (Council of Guardians rules
Rafsanjani at 78 is too old to qualify as viable candidate for the
Presidency).
[5]
"Rafsanjani and Khamenei: The Ahmadinijad Years." By Akbar
Ganji Al-Jazeera. September 25, 2013.
[6] BBC News
Middle East by Jamshid Barzegar, September 24, 2013. Rafsanjani's son and
daughter arrested.
[7]
Al-Islam.org. "The Twelfth Imam: Mohammad ibn al-Hassan (al-Mahdi)
The Hidden Imam Expected to Return."
[8] Breitbart:
"Iranian President Arrested by Revolutionary Guard" by Awr
Hawkins, May 2, 2013.
[9] The
Forbidden Truth: Interviews of Roozbeh Farahanipour, by Jamie Glazov,
Frontpage Magazine. Mousavi was named Prime Minister by Imam Khomeini in
1981. Mousavi also was responsible for mass executions during the 1980s.
Karroubi embezzled large sums of money as head of the "Foundation
for Families of the Martyrs." He also was infamous for numerous sexual
scandals. Later with Imam Khomeini's support he was selected as Speaker
of the Majlis (Parliament).
[10] Islam
and Revolution: Writings and Declarations of Imam Khomeini (translated by
Hamid Algar) Sermon, October 27, 1964. Berkeley: Mizan Press. 1981. p.
181.
[11] Fred
Holiday, "Iran's Revolution in Global History" Open Democracy:
Barcelona Institute for International Studies, March 5, 2009. Dr. Farouk
Saleem, "Shaytan-e-Bozorg" Centre for Research and Security
Studies (A Blog of Overseas Pakistanis), February 8, 2009.
[12] Kashf
Asrar (Revealing Secrets). Tehran, Islamiya Press, 1943.
[13] Tehran
Times, 14 May 2012. "Islamic Awakening in the Thoughts of Imam
Khomeini" Conference.
[14]
"Islamic Invitation" Istanbul, Turkey June 4, 2012. Khamenei's
Speech on the 23rd anniversary of Khomeini's death in front of
the mausoleum where he (Khomeini) is buried.
[15] The
Institute for the Compilation and Publication of Imam Khomeini's Works.
Tehran, Iran. Al-Islam.org.
[16] Ahlul
Bayt News Agency: Iranian Cultural Center. Sarajevo. June 3, 2013. Features
Forum and Film about Imam Khomeini (as a voice of moderation).
[17] Keyhan
newspaper July 26, 1982.
[18] "We
have then, no choice but to destroy those systems of government that are
corrupt in their very nature and to overthrow all treacherous, corrupt,
oppressive and criminal regimes." Islam and Revolution: Writings and
Declarations by Khomeini (1941-1980). Edited by Hamid Algar, Routledge
Press, 2005, p.48.
[19] Khomeini
Sermon of December 3, 1962.
[20]
"Assets of the Ayatollah" by Steve Stecklow and Babek
Daghanpisheh, Reuters. November 13, 2013.
[21]
Montazeri was once the presumed successor of Khomeini as Deputy Leader
until he was forced to resign after he denounced the Fatwa to kill Salman
Rushdie, author of the book "The Satanic Verses", a
satiric critique of Islam, the Koran, and Muhammad.
[22]
Interview of Roozbeh Farahanipour, leader of the Iranian Opposition group
"Marzeporgohar" (Defend Our Borders). March 1, 2014. Roozbeh is
a secular, nationalist political activist who was Tortured in Evin
Prison. Upon his release, he escaped over Iran's border to Turkey. During
the widespread protests in 2009, he secretly traveled back to Iran to
conduct anti-regime operations.
[23]
Interviews with U.S. Government contractor translator Saeed Khalaji and
Defense Language Institute Instructor of Persian/Farsi Bijan Moshiri.
Saeed's family is from the Shemran district of Tehran, where his father
owned a jewelry shop. Bijan has been in contact with student opposition
groups in Iran.
[24] The
United Nations' Geneva-based International Labor Organization (ILO) has a
detailed account of the regime's arrests of labor activists and the
suppression of attempts to establish a free labor movement in Iran. The
International Transport Workers Union's Iranian affiliate, "The
Vahed Syndicate" has petitioned the ILO to assist in applying
pressure on Iran's regime to release its Treasurer Reza Shahabi. Also see
Mansour Osanloo's op-ed article in the New York Times, June 13,
2013. Osanloo, the former head of Tehran's Bus Drivers' Union, was
imprisoned from 2006 to 2011.
[25]
"The Ideological Political Training of Iran's Basij" by Dr
Saeid Golkar. Brandeis University: Crown Center for Middle East Studies.
Waltham. Massachusetts.
[26] Tim
Federholz "Iran's Supreme Leader Built a Real Estate Empire on
Seized Property" November 11, 2013. This wealth is deposited at
"Setad Ejraiye Farmane Hazarte" for the use of Khamenei.
[27] The
institution of the "Setad-e-Ezraiye-e-Farman-e-Hazraet-e-Eman"
(The Headquarters of the Execution of the Command of the Holy Imam) was
established to manage those properties abandoned by émigrés and enemies
of the regime. The wealth of these properties was originally earmarked
for the poor and other charitable purposes. Reuters Press following a
three year investigation determined that this financial empire has
expanded to a huge financial empire at the disposal of the Supreme
Leader's Office. Reuters Tim Fernholz and Fars News Service, Hassan
Mosavi. 12 November 2013.
[28] U. S.
Treasury Department/ Terrorism and Financial Intelligence Division,
Stuart Levy. The Leader's corporate holdings are estimated to have
reached $95 billion.
[29] The
Rafsanjani family has vast energy, agriculture, and real estate assets in
Iran but also abroad. For instance, the Rafsanjani family has invested a
large sum of money in the Centerpoint Shopping Center in Toronto, Canada
as well as in the construction industry which built highways in Toronto. Iran
Zamin, January 27, 2007 and www.onlinedemocracy.ca,
September 9, 2005. Moreover, Rafsanjani's 44 year old son Mehdi Hashemi
Rafsanjani reportedly received at least part of a multi-million dollar
bribe payment for his assistance in granting a contract to Norway's State
Oil Company. Iran Press Service 17 October 2003. "Mehdi Hashemi
Rafsanjani, Son of Ali Akbar (Hashemi Rafsanjani) Involved in Bribe
Case" Oslo Norway, Dagens Naerinsliv newspaper: 3 September
2003.
[30]
"Calls to Boycott Majles Vote: Questions for Ahmadinijad" by
Mohammad Sahimi Front Line, Los Angeles, 22 December 2011
[31] One
example of this politically-motivated and staged audience at public
functions is the commemoration ceremony at Imam Khomeini's massive
mausoleum complex south of Tehran on the 4 June 2010 anniversary of his
death. When Hassan, the grandson of Khomeini (a sympathizer of the
student-led Green Movement of 2009) rose to speak, Basij members who had
positioned themselves in the front of the assembly hall began to ridicule
Hassan and chant hard-line rhetoric. "Backstage at Friday
Prayers" by Hamid Farokhnia 9 June 2010.
[32] These
events generated opposition to the Shah from many nationalistic-minded
Iranians. The Islamic revolutionaries were able to co-opt Iranian
nationalists who criticized the Shah for his "capitulations" to
Saudi Arabia.
[33] The 6
November 2013 issue of Haaretz contained an article quoting a poll
conducted in Iran that claimed that 34% of Iranians supported Iran's
development of nuclear weapons. However, a full 85% of Iranians supported
an Iranian nuclear power capability despite international pressure and
sanctions.
[34] A litmus
test which reveals continued Iranian disdain for the Arab is the name for
that body of water south of Iran but north of the Arabian Peninsula.
Iranians uniformly insist despite their domestic politics insist that it
is the Persian rather than Arabian Gulf. See Dr. Lawrence Franklin on
"Andishe TV", Los Angeles explaining why it is the Persian
Gulf. 31 May 2012.
[35] Eyewitness
accounts and videos show that the vast majority of Iranian protestors in
the streets following the disputed elections in 2009 were Iranian young
people. At night, groups of young people would take to the rooftops to
shout anti-regime slogans, sardonically screaming the phrase "Allahu
Akbar" [Allah is Greatest].
[36] In the
first two months of Rouhani's tenure, al least, 125 Iranians were
executed. International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran. "Iran
Should Halt Executions as Rate of Hangings Accelerates" 8 October
2013.
Iran:
Another Execution Underway
The Case of Reyhaneh Jabbari
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Reyhaneh Jabbari is at risk of imminent execution for having killed a
member of the Iranian intelligence services, Morteza Abdolali Sarbandi, a
physician, who was attempting to rape her. Her execution verdict was
signed a few days ago. She is now 26 years old and has been in Tehran's
Evin prison since 2007.
In Iran, self defence does not justify death sentence -- especially in
a rape case.
Please help us save Reyhaneh Jabbari from execution in Iran. Thank
you.
Her Petition Background (31 Aug 2010)
Reyhaneh Jabbari is from Iran. She is now 22 years
old and has been in Tehran's Evin prison where the last Wednesday of
every month a number of prisoners are hanged.
In July 2007 she was alone inside a coffee shop;
after a while she went out of the shop and talked on the phone about
architecture and design. Morteza at that time went to her and asked to
arrange a time one day to change the design of his house into an office.
The afternoon of 7th of July 2007, Morteza made an
appointment with Reyhaneh that aimed to change the decoration, asked
Reyhaneh's address via text and Reyhaneh gave him her address politely
while there were no any romantic messages between them.
On the way home, Morteza stopped his car in front of
a pharmacy -- some are lacking condoms - then they went into the
apartment and Morteza closed the door. After a while, Morteza approached
her and wanted to have sex with her, he had already made some drinks
containing sleeping drugs. Reyhaneh did not allow him to rape her,
therefore he asked her several times to have sex with him but Reyhaneh
did not allow it and was in total disagreement with him because Morteza
was much older than her and she did not want to have any emotional or
sexual relationship. During this time she got more nervous and anxious.
Completely afraid, she took a knife out of her bag
and stabbed him in the back of his right shoulder. The apartment door was
locked and there was no way to ask anyone for help. At this moment,
Morteza's friend entered and Reyhaneh immediately went out, took the
elevator and ran out of the building. Morteza, because of heavy bleeding,
died.
After that, an interrogator came up to the place and
made a report. At that time Reyhaneh said to him that she was innocent,
that she had met Morteza a week earlier, and said she killed him in self
defense.
"The evening I was there, I knew that he wanted
to rape me, so because of self defence I stabbed him and escaped,"
she said.
During a meeting concerning the case at the Criminal
Court Branch 74, the family of the victim -- one girl and two boys --
stood up and demanded a "death sentence."
Reyhaneh explained that she had to defend herself:
"Two and half months before the crime, I saw the doctor and his
friend, at that time my phone was ringing, so I picked up the phone and
was speaking to one of my friends about the decoration, and design, and
the doctor's friend realized that I was an interior designer."
She added: "Mortza's friends came closer and
got, my contact number to ask help to design a private health centre.
After a couple of days, the doctor's friend's calls started and
thereafter Morteza himself called and invited me to visit the flat, which
was supposed to be converted to private health centre. The time was 6:15
that evening when I reached there, and I found Morteza looking
suspicious. I was so worried and anxious so, I decided to take out the
knife and I stabbed his right shoulder. Believe me, I just wanted to be
safe, that is why I did it, because I had no other choice. The same day,
Reyhaneh was sentenced, and the decision was confirmed by the supreme
court.
Now, any moment it is possible for her to be hanged.
Her crime is self defense and she does not deserve to die.
Please do not allow her to be hanged, she is now waiting for our help and
support.
The Islamic Penal Code says that every individual
has the right to protect, and defend themselves, and in Reyhaneh's
situation, if the crime happened it would not be a criminal conviction.
PLEASE DO NOT LET REYHANEH JABBARI BE HANGED
Please Sign This Petition.
Reyhaneh's Facebook Page
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