INTL Iran (5/7/11) Ahmadinejad v. Khamenei. How big will this rift get?

Housecarl

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Iran: Ahmadinejad on the Ropes in Clash with his Supreme Leader

Posted by Tony Karon Friday, May 6, 2011 at 4:16 pm

Iran's streets are quiet, the uprising that followed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's reelection two years ago but a memory as opposition leaders languish in prison or under house arrest, and fear of the brutal security forces restrains most from protesting. And yet, there are unmistakable signs that the regime is literally cracking up.

A public confrontation between Ahmadinejad and Iran's clerical Supreme Leader, Ayatullah Ali Khamenei has escalated into a high-noon showdown from which neither man can retreat without losing face - and damaging the regime, one way or another. Reports from Iran Friday suggested that Khamenei has given Ahmadinejad an ultimatum: Accept the Supreme Leader's reinstatement of Heydar Moslehi, the intelligence minister fired two weeks ago by Ahmadinejad, or resign as president.

Khamenei's move to reinstate a cabinet minister fired by Ahmadinejad marks an unprecedented meddling by the clerical leader in the affairs of the elected branch of government, and the President has - not for the first time - demonstrably bucked Khamenei's authority by refusing to attend cabinet meetings.

At the same time, Ahmadinejad and his supporters have come under withering attack from the conservative clergy, and from political allies of the Supreme Leader in parliament, who appear to be reviving moves to impeach the President. Ahmadinejad's key ally and chosen successor in the presidency, Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, was this week accused of "sorcery", and the commander of the powerful Revolutionary Guards on Thursday expressed support for Khamenei, and warned that "deviations" driven by "djinns, fairies and demons" will not be tolerated.

The Moslehi reappointment after Ahmadinejad fired him because of his loyalty to Khamenei and alleged spying on political figures was simply the last straw - a split between the Supreme Leader and the president he backed to the hilt in the 2009 election showdown has been looming ever since then.

Ahmadinejad has moved steadily to challenge the power of the clergy and assert his own. The 1979 revolution had created an uneasy balance between clerical power and the authority of elected bodies such as the presidency and parliament, giving the last word always to clerical Supreme Leader and his appointees. Khamenei not only holds executive power, but clerics get to determine who is allowed to run for election, and whether legislation accords with Islamic principles.

The limits of elected power in Iran had been clearly on view during the presidency of his predecessor, the more liberal Mohammed Khatami, who was consistently overruled in his efforts to reform the state from within. Curiously enough, though, a far more vigorous challenge to clerical authority is coming, now, not from the reformist left but from the nationalist right, led by Ahmadinejad.

The president and his supporters have not only repeatedly sought to diminish Khamenei's authority and challenge his edicts, they have even given ideological form to their political trend by emphasizing nationalist rather than Islamist themes, encouraging and celebrating expressions of pre-Islamic Persian identity that the Khomeini revolution had sought to suppress.

But in trying to understand what has produced the split in the alliance that banded together to crush the challenge of the Green Movement two years ago, it would be a mistake to assume that this is about us. Some have noted that Ahmadinejad's camp appears to be more inclined than Khamenei's to do a deal with the West on the nuclear issue. Perhaps, but that's not the reason for the split - and it could be perilous trying to find 'the good guys' in this particular fight.

Nor is there any clear shape to the dispute: Some of the clerics that might have supported Ahmadinejad against the more pragmatic conservatives such as parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani are now out front, alongside Larijani, demanding that Ahmadinejad bow before the Supreme Leader. The Revolutionary Guards were seen as the most hardline element within the regime, backing Ahmadinejad against the Green Movement and even established regime figures such as former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, but the Guards' leadership also appears to have turned on the president and thrown its weight behind Khamenei. Even the arch-conservative cleric Ayatullah Mohammed Taghi Mesbah Yazdi, once a strong backer of Ahmadinejad, has publicly castigated the nationalist trend associated with Ahmadinejad.

The president, who appears to have hoped to expand his own authority with the regime at the expense of the clerics, appears to have overreached, betting that from Khamenei's perspective, the president would be "too big to fail" - after all, the Supreme Leader had irreparably damaged the authority of his office, which is supposed to be above electoral politics, by publicly backing Ahmadinejad in the disputed June 2009 election, hoping to tap into the populist president's support base to boost his own support. Ousting Ahmadinejad would be a huge embarrassment, and also potentially risky. But Ahmadinejad appears to have pushed Khamenei too far. Now, the Supreme Leader is pushing back.

But this is less a fight over policy and philosophies of government than a power struggle within a narrow conservative elite. Policy differences on question such as whether and how to negotiate with the West may be more a symptom of that power struggle than its cause, even though its outcome could effect Iran's international posture in the coming months.

Ahmadinejad's camp would like to renew relations with the West, but on Iran's own terms. Khamenei is more suspicious. And, of course, he won't allow Ahmadinejad to take credit for an opening with the West, even if he's unable to bring himself to cut a deal with the "Great Satan."

Pressure on the regime from the failing economy is likely to exacerbate the tensions within the regime. Indeed, some analysts have suggested that it may even suit the Supreme Leader to cut Ahmadinejad loose and blame his polices for the looming economic disaster. Tehran watchers will be eagerly awaiting Ahmadinejad's answer to Khamenei's ultimatum. Apparently finding himself increasingly isolated, the President may have no alternative but to back down on the cabinet appointment. But whatever his choice, the latest showdown is a sign that the power struggle between the president and the supreme leader, which is likely to escalate in the years ahead of the 2013 election and the anticipated succession of the aging Khamenei, has weakened both power centers - and as a result has accelerated the demise in the authority of the regime as a whole.
 

Housecarl

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Moods and magic at the top in Tehran

06/05 23:13 CET

It is handbags at the moment in the Iranian leadership, with the president taking an unannounced week off cabinet meetings in a sulk after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reinstated an intelligence chief he had sacked.

Lest Mahmoud Ahmadinejad get too big for his boots, the message from the theocratic heirarchy was sent out during Friday prayers:

“I’m sure our government and president and nation are aware of the issue of the Supreme Leader’s complete authority, and will pay the highest attention to it,” said Kazem Sedighi. conservative cleric and prayer leader at Tehran university.

Ahmedinejad must step carefully, as Iran’s clerics say to disobey Khamenei is equal to apostasy, as he is “God’s representative on Earth.”

At the heart of the battle is the president’s closest advisor, a secularist who wants a weaker role for the clergy in Iran.

Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei has been accused by some of using sorcery and supernatural powers to advance government policies. Khamenei and his allies would dearly love to see him brought down a peg or two, or failing that, his boss.

Copyright © 2011 euronews
 

Housecarl

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May 7, 2011
Iran: The Purge of the Hojatieh Society

Showdown in the Shia Corridors of Power

Gary H. Johnson, Jr.

“A nation from the East will rise and prepare the way for the coming of the Mahdi”

-Prophet Muhammad, Hadith tradition


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s defiance of Ayatollah Khameini, Iran’s Supreme Leader, is no laughing matter. An 11-day strike by President Ahmadinejad has ended with the arrest of 25 of his associates on the charge of sorcery – a charge which carries the penalty of death.

Ahmadinejad’s Chief of Staff, Esfandiar Rahim Masheia, lies at the heart of the controversy. Rumor has it that “Mashaei allegedly occasionally enters a trance-like state to communicate with the Twelfth Imam or will sometimes randomly say ‘hello’ to no one at all and then explain that the Twelfth Imam just passed by.”

Ayandeh, an Iranian news website, described one of the arrested men, Abbas Ghaffari, as "a man with special skills in metaphysics and connections with the unknown worlds".

Following the 2009 elections, Ayatollah Khameini rejected Ahmadinejad’s decision to raise Mashaei to the position of First Vice President. Ahmadinejad eventually relented and made him Chief of Staff.

The rift between President Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khameini came to a head in late April. President Ahmadinejad asked the Minister of Intelligence, Heidar Moslehi, to resign due to concerns that Moslehi was stoking criticism of his Chief of Staff.

President Ahmadinejad accepted the resignation of Minister Moslehi on April 17th. However, Ayatollah Khameini refused to accept the resignation. The Iranian news website Azad Negar noted that the Intelligence Minister’s resignation followed Moslehi’s decision to replace the chief of the Intelligence Ministry’s Bureau of Planning and Budget. Notably, the chief of the bureau was a political ally of Ahmadinejad’s Chief of Staff, Mashaei.

The Ayatollah ordered Moslehi to remain in his position. President Ahmadinejad then staged a strike for 11 days that placed the future of his administration in question. Ahmadinejad refused to return to the Presidential Palace to reside over his cabinet meetings with Moslehi present. A sulking Ahmadinejad also canceled an official visit to Qom, a place often described as Iran’s holiest city. These two moves caused 12 Ministers of Iran’s Parliament to call for President Ahmadinejad’s impeachment.


President Ahmadinejad’s political gyrations in support of his Chief of Staff were read as a breach of the traditional power-sharing agreement in Iran. In response Ayatollah Khameini, as the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Establishment of Iran, has apparently chosen to purge the propaganda arm of a millennial cult known as the Hojatieh Society. The Hojatieh’s influence in Ahmadinejad’s inner circle is well documented.

Dore Gold captures the essence of the Hojatieh Society’s political drive for power in his recent release The Rise of Nuclear Iran:

Founded in 1954, its twofold mission was to fight the Bahai faith and pave the way for the reappearance of the Mahdi. It did not accept Khomeini’s doctrine of velayat-e faqih, the rule of the jurisprudent, since the arrival of the Mahdi make a cleric to represent him in the interim unnecessary.

Mubarak’s fall from power in Egypt on February 11th 2011 prompted the Iranian President Ahmadinejad to remark on the Arab Spring,

“This is a global revolution, managed by the imam of the ages.”

Ahmadinejad’s speech in Tehran’s Azadi Square sent alarm bells through the Qom Establishment. If the Mahdi, the Hidden Imam, had indeed returned from his occultation as Ahmadinejad was suggesting, than the institution of the vilayet-e faqih, the beating heart of the Khomeini Revolution, was no longer the source of authority in Iran. The release of an Ahmadinejad-sponsored documentary in mid-March advanced the notion that the Mahdi was orchestrating the Arab Spring.

Conservative clerics in Iran were critical of President Ahmadinejad’s disobedience of the Ayatollah in the wake of Moslehi’s reinstatement.

Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi, a hardline cleric close to Khamenei, warned that disobeying the supreme leader – who has the ultimate power in Iran – is equivalent to "apostasy from Allah".

Reports indicate that the Ayatollah has told Ahmadinejad to either accept Minister Moslehi’s reinstatement or resign from the presidency. The stand-off has placed Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei at the center of the storm.

"Currently Mashaei is the real president," said Hojjat ol-Eslam Mojtaba Zolnur, the Supreme Leader's representative in the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC).

Further Zolnur remarked, “Mr. Ahmadinejad has held on to a decaying rope by relying on Mashaei.”

The row over Minister Moslehi’s reinstatement is further complicated by the release of the March documentary about the Hidden Imam’s return. Conservative clerics have accused Ahmadinejad’s inner circle, including Mashaei, of releasing the video. The return of the twelfth Imam is a sacred event in Shia Islam that velayat loyalists believe cannot be predicted. The fact that the documentary claims to predict the coming of the Mahdi is seen by Khomeinist clerics as proof of a “deviant current” within the ranks of Ahmadinejad’spower brokers.

Ahmadinejad returned to the Presidential Palace on May 1st to contemplate the path forward. By May 5th, the Guardian revealed the Ayatollah Khameini’s moves to place pressure on Ahmadinejad to support the velayat-e faqih:

Since Ahmadinejad's return this week, at least 25 people, who are believed to be close to Mashaei, have been arrested. Among them is Abbas Amirifar, head of the government's cultural committee and some journalists of Mashaei's recently launched newspaper, Haft-e-Sobh.

President Ahmadinejad is not eligible for re-election in 2013. It is believed that President Ahmadinejad is grooming Esfandiar Rahim Masheia to take the keys to the Presidential Palace.
Tradition holds that the Mahdi will return to the earth in a time of great chaos. The Hojatieh Society believes this chaos can be engineered. In that strain, the forced resignation of Larijani on the nuclear negotiation front in October 2007 as well as the firing of Foreign Minister Mottaki in December 2010 foreshadowed the attempt to kick Minister Moslehi to the curb in April 2011.

According to Dore Gold, the belief that the Mahdi’s return was imminent rather than an end-times construct amounted to “an enormous irrational factor” in the Iranian Nuclear question.

The recent death of Osama bin Laden has introduced an unexpected wrinkle in the activities of Islamists in the Arab Spring; however, the ouster of Ahmadinejad would dramatically alter the geopolitical picture of the Greater Middle East.

The U.S. Special Representative of the Central Region, Dennis Ross, has led the way to a U.S.-Muslim Engagement which began in a June 2009 Cairo address which witnessed an open hand of American negotiations slapped aside by Ahmadinejad’s crack down on the Iranian Green Movement. The foundation of the Ross statecraft of engagement was defining Iran as a “rational” actor. After over a year of diplomatic overtures and sanctions activities, in an October 2010 address to AIPAC, Dennis Ross noted:

Iran’s own behavior over the past two years…has demonstrated that it prefers defiance and secrecy to transparency and peace.

In addition to unilateral sanctions from the United States, Ross highlighted the international community’s push to isolate the Iranian Regime:

UNSCR 1929 bans a wide range of Iranian activities including ballistic missile activity, Iranian investment in nuclear industries abroad, and the export of certain heavy weapons to Iran, which the Russians in particular have used as the basis for canceling the sale of an advanced air defense system to Iran.

The resolution provides mechanisms for inspecting Iranian cargo and seizing contraband, and requires member states to exercise vigilance when conducting business with any Iranian entity, including the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps and Iran’s shipping firm IRISL.

The combination of international pressure and a challenge to the supremacy of the Khomeinist doctrine of the velayat-e faqih has led to the Ayatollah Khameini’s recent push to purge the “irrational” Hojatieh elements from the Tehran regime.

Ironically, in order to establish a presence as a “rational” actor in a bid to claim the title of Superpower of the Middle East, Ayatollah Khameini has chosen to embark on a literal witch hunt.

Ahmadinejad may survive the purge. Indeed, the purge may be nothing more than a dramatic hoax to satisfy Western criticism of Iran’s colorful past in the industry of state-sponsored terrorism. Only a revisionist history of Iran can dismiss the Islamic Establishment of Iran’s support of organizations ranging from Hezbollah to Hamas to Al Qaeda.

At present, the only certainty is that any and all aspirations of Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei to win the Iranian Presidency have been sacrificed to the geopolitics of regional hegemony.

The Western world is now witness to the spectacle of the Islamic Establishment of Iran achieving the status of “rational” actor by charging upstarts within its administration of sorcery.

Family Security Matters Contributing Editor Gary H. Johnson, Jr. is the Senior Advisor for International Security Affairs at the Victory Institute and is host of The Elemental Struggle on the Radio Jihad Network at 6pm every Wednesday.
 

Housecarl

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May 6, 2011
Power Struggle in Iran Enters the Mosque
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR

The unprecedented power struggle between the two most powerful leaders in Iran deepened Friday, spilling out into Tehran’s public prayers where the mullah leading the service indirectly criticized President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad while the crowd chanted “Death to opponents of the supreme leader!”

The split started about two weeks ago after the president tried to dismiss the head of the intelligence ministry, the powerful government branch that exerts widespread control over domestic life. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader, ordered that the minister, Heydar Moslehi, keep the post.

Mr. Ahmadinejad then stayed home for 11 days, according to reports from Iran, engaging in a visible fit of pique that threatened to undermine the staunch alliance the two had forged since Mr. Ahmadinejad was first elected president in 2005.

The spat dragged into the open several factional fights, analysts said, particularly the efforts by Mr. Ahmadinejad’s conservative opponents to prevent his faction from dominating the parliamentary elections next March and even the presidential vote in 2013.

Even before the chants at Friday Prayer, a signature event since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, important conservative factions had pronounced their support for the supreme leader, including the government’s primary enforcers, the Revolutionary Guards. Ayatollah Khamenei’s infallibility was the subject of Friday Prayer in at least half a dozen large cities besides Tehran, according to media reports.

“It is quite astounding in a way where on a daily basis people are coming out and saying that Khamenei has the constitutional right and the religious right to do what he wants to do,” said Farideh Farhi, an Iran expert at the University of Hawaii. “Ahmadinejad has effectively lost the support of the base. If you do not have the support of Khamenei, you are nobody.”

Under Iranian law, the president has the right to hire and fire cabinet ministers, Iran experts said. But the supreme leader, as the title suggests, is the nation’s ultimate authority.

Last December, Mr. Ahmadinejad unceremoniously dumped Manouchehr Mottaki, the foreign minister and a Khamenei ally, while Mr. Mottaki was on a mission to Senegal.

He has also replaced the intelligence minister before, but this time Ayatollah Khamenei intervened to protect what he called the “maslahat,” or public interest. But in a video posted online, a Parliament member quoted Mr. Ahmadinejad as telling him that the supreme leader issued an ultimatum to accept the decision or resign.

Some analysts, however, doubt the choice would have been so stark. If the president left under a cloud, they said, it would reflect badly on the supreme leader, given their previous closeness.

Analysts suggested various possible reasons that the fight may have deepened. Mr. Khamenei prides himself in getting involved in the smallest details of running Iran, and the intelligence ministry is a favorite. Also, the president’s controversial chief of staff, Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaei, said to harbor presidential ambitions, reportedly initiated the move, they said.

Government opponents accuse the Intelligence Ministry of rigging the election that won Mr. Ahmadinejad a second term, a power Mr. Khamenei may not have wanted him to have again, analysts said. In another conjecture, the supreme leader’s son, Mujtabah Khamenei, who heads intelligence for the Revolutionary Guards, is said to have designs on the ministry.

Whatever the reason, the supreme leader has made his wishes clear. This week, his office released pictures of a religious ceremony with Mr. Ahmadinejad conspicuously absent while Mr. Moslehi sat close by.

Artin Afkhami contributed reporting from Washington.
 

Housecarl

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Arrests show Ahmadinejad under increasing pressure from Iran’s clerics

By Thomas Erdbrink, Published: May 6

TEHRAN — Several associates of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s closest adviser have been arrested in the past few days, Iranian Web sites reported Friday.

Among them is the cleric who leads the prayers at the presidential mosque, Abbas Amirifar, as well as a person accused of sorcery, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.

The arrests follow increasing pressure by clerics, politicians and commanders on Ahmadinejad to cut ties with Esfandiar Rahim Mashaee, the closest adviser of the president, but a man hated by Iran’s clerics for advocating the importance of Iranian culture over Islamic tenets.

Many of those arrested are said to have a connection with Mashaee and with a movie, distributed though millions of DVDs, that claims the Shiite Messiah will appear in January. Predicting the exact date of the coming of the 12th imam is regarded as superstition in the Islamic Republic. Ahmadinejad often says the coming of “Imam Mahdi,” as the Messiah is called, is “near.”

Several influential ayatollahs, politicians and officials referred to Mashaee in terms normally used for Iran’s worst enemies, labeling him a foreign spy, a freemason and a leader of an effort to overthrow the Islamic Republic.

Despite frequent calls for Mashaee’s resignation from official posts, Ahmadinejad has continued to protect him. Mashaee’s daughter is married to the president’s son.

The arrests seem connected to increasingly tense relations between Ahmadinejad and Iran’s clerical leaders. He recently tried to oust his intelligence minister, Heydar Moslehi, but last month Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei publicly revoked Moslehi’s forced resignation.

In turn, Ahmadinejad did not go to his office for eight days. He returned to work Sunday, publicly pledging his allegiance to Khamenei, who holds final power in state matters in Iran.

But when the cabinet met Wednesday, the president and Moslehi apparently avoided being in the same room, Web sites reported, citing “busy schedules” as their reason for not meeting. That evening, Ahmadinejad was not present during an important religious ceremony, while most other representatives of Iran’s power circle were.

A speaker and an influential religious chanter openly criticized Ahmadinejad in front of the leader, who for years had supported the president, according the Entekhab Web site, which has ties to Iran’s parliament head, former nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.

A close associate of Ahmadinejad, Morteza Agha-Tehrani, also the morals teacher of the cabinet, was caught on cellphone camera saying that the Supreme Leader had given the president a deadline to publicly accept the reinstatement of the intelligence minister or resign, the Ayandeh news Web site reported. The site has links to Iran’s intelligence service. There has been no official confirmation of such a deadline.

Parliament members are warning Ahmadinejad that if he does not listen to the Supreme Leader, he could be called in for questioning, which theoretically could lead to impeachment. In another public threat, Tehran prayer leader Ayatollah Kazem Seddighi warned Ahmadinejad on Friday that in the beginning of Iran’s Islamic revolution, governments were easily swept aside when they “acted against the system.”

“We must not be fooled by the nice words and false vows of hypocrites,” Ayatollah Mohammad Taghi Mesbah Yazdi said Thursday, according to the Entekhab Web site, in a comment aimed at the president. Yazdi for years was known as a key supporter of Ahmadinejad. “People must not be fooled by false claims of following the Leader,” he said. “They must accept his orders.”

But last week, Khamenei in a speech stressed that the case of his reinstatement of the intelligence minister was not of “much importance” and said there was no “rift” among Iran’s leaders.
 

Housecarl

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http://www.foxnews.com/world/2011/0...ads-exorcist-fuels-concerns-irans-leadership/

Reports of the Arrest of Ahmadinejad's 'Exorcist' Fuel Concerns About Iran's Leadership


By Amy Kellogg

Published May 06, 2011 | FoxNews.com
Comments

A mysterious man known by some as the Iranian president’s “exorcist” has been arrested, in the latest sign that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s involvement with purveyors of the so-called “dark arts” is raising concerns among Iran’s leadership.

Abbas Ghaffari, described as Ahmadinejad’s “exorcist” or “jinn (genie) catcher” is reportedly among a number of people in Ahmadinejad’s circle who have been arrested lately, amid reports of continuing strains between the president and Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. As is typical in Iran, details on the timing and specific charges behind the arrests are somewhat murky.

It’s also not clear from what or whom Ghaffari was protecting the president, and what he may have been doing to accomplish that aim. What does is clearer is that a particular target in the arrests is Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, the president’s right-hand man, who has been marginalized more recently by Khamenei. Most of the arrests are said to be Mashaei associates within Ahmadinejad’s inner circle.

In a fiery speech Tuesday in the Iranian holy city of Qom, Mojtaba Zolnour, Khamenei’s representative in the Revolutionary Guard, said he asked Ahmadinejad: “What do you see in this Mashaei, other than links to exorcists, soothsayers and fortune tellers? … They come and gurgle on about his prophecies, and Mr. Ahmadinejad thinks he has divine knowledge.”

Ahmadinejad has also frequently raised concerns with what some see as his obsession over the concept of the “12th Imam,” a belief among some Muslims that a leader who has been in hiding since 869 will return and unite the world under the banner of Islam.

Believers say the 12th Imam will only appear during a time of worldwide chaos, however, leading some to fear Ahmadinejad would deliberately act to destabilize the international situation in the hopes of sparking the imam’s return. Ahmadinejad has reportedly stabilized a rift with Kahmenei, following a nearly two-week sustained sulk that kept him out of his office.

But the same apparently can’t be said for those arrested. Superstition and mysticism are to an extent vestiges of pre-Islamic Iranian culture. And while the Islamic system officially shuns them, a significant number of Iranians may share some of these unorthodox beliefs.

Nor do many Iranians think such beliefs exist only within the their own culture.

“The reality of conjuring ‘jinn’ is not exclusive to our society,” said Morteza Nabavi, a member of the Expediency Council, which mediates between the Iranian parliament and the Guardian Council and who is also managing director of Resalat newspaper. “In other places too, catching jinn and eliciting their help is also relevant.”

But that doesn’t mean the proponents of such beliefs should be running a government, according to Nabavi. “The deviant group that have recently been mentioned have reached out to others … and they have even influenced the president and gained his support.” Despite the fact that Ahmadinejad is at the center of this controversy, there are limits to how seriously others in the regime are willing to damage him.

He remains the most visible public face of the Islamic Republic. But by arresting and humiliating those around him, particularly Mashaei, the president’s detractors cause chaos without toppling the country’s political foundations.

It’s not the first time Ahmadinejad and his circle has been cast under the shadow of “dark arts.”

A campaign film for the reformist candidate Mir Hossein Mousavi, from whom many Iranians believe the 2009 election was stolen, plays up the mystic bogeyman.

Mousavi says in the ad, “The next government will be the government of reason. Not a government of soothsayers and palm readers.”
 

Hfcomms

EN66iq
As long as they are busy fighting each other that minimizes the chance of them meddling elsewhere. I posted about this rift a week or so ago. The real power in Iran has been with the Islamic Ruling Council and the mullah's and not Ahmadinejad as he is finding out. Interesting indeed!
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
As long as they are busy fighting each other that minimizes the chance of them meddling elsewhere. I posted about this rift a week or so ago. The real power in Iran has been with the Islamic Ruling Council and the mullah's and not Ahmadinejad as he is finding out. Interesting indeed!

There were other reports a few weeks ago of about 38-40 odd IRGC ranking officers being arrested reportedly for planning a coup d'etat along the lines of either ECOMCON or Valkyre.
 
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