Friday, June 19, 2009

Iran Update

I heard John McCain (interviewed on the Michael Medved Radio Show) today saying that he believes signs are pointing towards a very bad crackdown by the Iranian regime starting very soon.

It looks like he was right.


Iran Stuff UPDATE: Is Tomorrow The Showdown Day?

iranprotest6-18.gif

Above the post update:

Below I speculated that Ayatollah Khamenei's decision to lead the Friday prayers at Tehran University would be the time the regime says enough is enough. Looks like it.

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran’s Supreme Leader, has told Mir Hossein Mousavi to stand beside him as he uses Friday prayers at Tehran University to call for national unity. An army of Basiji — Islamic volunteer militiamen — is also expected to be bussed in to support the Supreme Leader.

Seems there's a not too subtle "or else" included in that call for unity.

Original Post:

More protests today with a major rally in Tehran to commemorate those killed in earlier debates clashes.

In response to a call by the leading opposition candidate in the June 12 presidential election, Mir Hossein Mousavi, the massive procession streamed toward Imam Khomeini Square largely in silence, then broke into chants against Ahmadinejad and alleged electoral fraud, witnesses said.

"Death to the dictator!" some chanted. "Where are our votes?"

Press TV, an English-language version of Iranian state television, said the crowd numbered in the "hundreds of thousands" and described the rally as "peaceful." It said Mousavi, in a brief address to the crowd, called for "calm and self-restraint." A Mousavi Web site estimated the gathering at more than 1 million people, the Associated Press reported.

The march, billed as a show of mourning for at least seven protesters killed after a huge demonstration Monday, came after Iran's elite Guardian Council Thursday invited the four presidential candidates to a special meeting Saturday to review their concerns. The council, a 12-member panel of senior Islamic clergy and jurists, is charged with confirming the election results. It is investigating allegations of fraud and has agreed to a limited recount in places where irregularities are found.

Photos from the march here.

Twitter continues to be an invaluable source of information on events. Remember when the Obama administration was given credit for asking Twitter to postpone a scheduled down period so Iranians could keep using it? Turns out it was the idea of someone originally brought to the State Department by Bush/Rice (via Jim Treacher's, um, Twitter feed).

Michael Totten has a good post
 up about Mousavi, who he is and what he may become.

Though I'm pessimistic about the guy, there may be some reasons to be hopeful about Mousavi. He's a devout Muslim but at the same time his wife and daughters are professionals and he seems comfortable with that. On the other side he was Prime Minister under Khomeini and sat on his hands during religious crackdowns and political purges, so his claims to be a reformer and supporter of liberty sound less than credible. Also, we can never forget he was fully cleared by the Guardian Council and Khamenei.

The reality is if, and it's a huge if, Mousavi does some how become President, the conditions under which it will happened means the power arrangements in Iran will have drastically changed along with the expectations of Mousavi's supporters. He'd have to make more than token efforts to live up to them.

A Mousavi victory that dismantled the theocratic structure of Iran's government would be a huge victory for the US. Unfortunately, it's also the one our government seems to be rooting against at this point.


All that said, I have my doubts that anything will change. There was this ominous yet inconclusive report from "The Tehran Bureau"

I have now received e-mails from totally trustworthy sources within Iran that many Sepaah commanders [Sepaph is IRGC] have been arrested,

...because they are opposed to what is going on and in particular to the plan for tomorrow. ['plan for tomorrow' not sure yet]

Per the Washington Post article linked up top, Khamenei is going to lead the Friday prayers at Tehran University. Could this be the, 'you've had your fun, now let's get back to business" warning?

The regime isn't going down without a fight but it seems unlikely that Mousavi and the people in the streets are going to accept some lovely parting gifts and go home.

If Tehran Bureau is right, are these arrests an attempt to get rid of the waverers and are there more out there? Enough to stop an attack or maybe to split the Guard?

Sorry to have more questions than answers but not even the really, really smart folks know.

Either way though, this can't go on forever or even very much longer.

3 comments:

Epaminondas said...

There is no way the mullahs can be done away with without bloodshed.

MASSIVE REVOLUTION.

Likewise the compulsory (for the mullahs) crackdown

Who cares if it's Mousavi or Ajad? Only Obama. If it's the former he can pretend his engagement and dialog delusions hold water. If not, then he's no worse off and can praise the ROBUST democracy in Iran (ever get the feeling we are approaching the 'we pretend to work and they pretend to pay us' total cynicism point of the USSR?)

The only outcome that benefits the people of Iran and then the people of the USA and the world is if the mullocracy is OBLITERATED.

Everyone KNOWS THIS. That's why the mullahs blame us if a 'reformer' farts. THEY HAVE TO.

Anonymous said...

via Austrian Times -

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad allegedly involved in Vienna murders
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was part of a death squad that killed three Kurds in Austria, it was claimed today (Thurs).

Green party security spokesman Peter Pilz said Ahmadinejad had been involved in the killings in Vienna in 1989 and may have actually shot one of the trio.

Pilz said: "I have no doubt he was involved", adding he may have pulled the trigger on one of the guns used to kill the men.

Pilz said new eye-witnesses had come forward who had identified Ahmadinejad as being involved in the assassination of Kurdish Democratic Party of Iran chief Abdul Rahman Ghassemlou, his deputy Abdullah Ghaderi-Azar and Austria-born Fadel Rasoul on 13 July 1989.

He said a German weapons dealer had told Austrian investigators there had been a meeting in the Iranian embassy in Vienna during the first week of July 1989 at which a certain "Mohamed" who later became president of Iran had been present.

The dealer said the purpose of the embassy meeting had been to discuss illegal arms deliveries.

Pilz claimed there had been two Iranian teams involved in the assassinations - a negotiations team and an execution team. Pilz said Ahmadinejad had been responsible for gathering and preparing the weapons used and had been a member of the execution team.

Pilz said he had passed on documents on the case that had been translated into German to the interior ministry and the state prosecutor’s office.

Former Iranian President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr has also claimed Ahmadinejad had belonged to the execution team in Vienna, and a number of media reports implicated him in the murder of the three Kurds.

The Iranians suspected of having killed the Kurds took refuge in the Iranian embassy after the murders and were allowed to leave Austria after the Austrian government came under massive pressure from the Iranian government.

The Greens spokesman called for a foreign-policy initiative to support democratic forces in Iran and warned: "A president who has probably engaged in massive election fraud, been responsible for the deaths of many journalists and Kurds in Iran and strongly suspected of murder in Vienna is not someone capable of respecting democracy and human rights.

"The European Union should not consider him credible."

Meanwhile, more than 700 Iranians demonstrated in Vienna on Tuesday in support of defeated Iranian presidential candidate Mir Hussein Mussawi.

The demonstrators, who walked from the Heldenplatz to the Iranian Embassy, carried posters with slogans such as "where is my vote, election fraud in Iran, and time for a change" and chanted "freedom, freedom" and "free elections, free people" in Farsi and German.

Police said the gathering had been peaceful and passed without incident.

Pastorius said...

Epa,
That's why I'm rooting for the Iranian people. I don't care much about Mousavi, but I do care about the people of Iran, and that means the Mullahs have to go.

They are, to borrow the phrase of President Reagan, an evil empire.