From FPRI:
Footnotes
The Newsletter of FPRI's Wachman Center
Iran's Internal Dynamics
by Amin Tarzi
Vol. 16, No. 10
December 2011
Amin Tarzi is the Director of Middle East Studies at the
Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia. This essay is
based on his lecture at FPRI's History Institute for
Teachers, Oct. 15-16, 2011, on "Teaching the Middle East:
Between Authoritarianism and Reform." Videofiles and other
materials from the conference are available at:
http://www.fpri.org/education/1110middleeast/
Available on the web and in pdf format at:
http://www.fpri.org/footnotes/1610.201111.tarzi.iran.html
Audio and Video of Is the Green Movement Dead?: Political
Dissent Iran available at:
http://www.fpri.org/multimedia/20111015.tarzi.iran.html
Iran's Internal Dynamics
by Amin Tarzi
Since its establishment in 1979, the Islamic Republic of
Iran has never been free of political intrigue. However,
since the disputed June 2009 presidential election, the
level of intrigue has increased. And the recent pubic rift
between the two highest office holders-the unelected supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the elected president,
Mahmud Ahmadinejad-may very well be pushing Iran and the
Islamic Republic regime close to the brink. While the
denouement of this latest political wrangling has yet to be
written, the "writing on the wall" suggests that the results
will be anything but anti-climactic.
Prior to the 2009 presidential election and the internal
fallout that ensued, the Islamic Republic's leadership
structure, while perplexing and labyrinthine, was
intelligible. The office of the supreme leader was, both on
paper and in fact, the final arbiter, an impartial entity
external to and above the governing administrative
structures. The person of Khamenei and his position served
as the source of ultimate legitimacy within the Islamic
Republic regime and as the regime's guardian. That all
changed with the supreme leader's blatant and unquestioned
support of Ahmadinejad prior to the election and after his
controversial victory. This action removed any lingering
sense that the office of the supreme leader and the person
of Khamenei were impartial and above political machinations
and manipulations.[1]
While most of the world's attention was focused on the
activities of the popular opposition and its Green
Revolution after the controversial electoral outcome, a rift
emerged between the Supreme Leader and his chosen candidate,
the reelected president. The alliance formed for political
expediency prior to the 2005 presidential election to keep
the pragmatist and reformist camps from political position
and strengthened in the run-up to the 2009 election now
seemed to be unraveling. The confident, newly reelected
president began asserting his independence and, in the minds
of the conservatives aligned with Khamenei, deviating from
the correct path of the Islamic Revolution. In boxing terms,
the gloves came off. In July 2009, the president appointed
Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei as the first vice president, but
Khamenei pressured Ahmadinejad to reverse the appointment.
While caving to this demand of the Supreme Leader,
Ahmadinejad challenged Khamenei by appointing Mashaei as his
chief of staff. Furthermore, in December, Ahmadinejad,
reportedly per insistence of Mashaei, fired his foreign
minister, Manouchehr Motaki while the latter was on an
official visit to Africa. Motaki's dismissal was regarded as
a rebuke to Khamenei for preventing Mashaei's appointment to
the post of first vice presidency. The tensions between the
office of the president and that of the supreme leader
continued to escalate, and mostly in public, until the two
offices came to blows over Ahmadinejad's dismissal and his
forced reinstatement of intelligence minister, Haydar
Moslehi, in April 2011. The growing animosity between the
two men and their respective offices is evidence of the
widening crack in the Islamic Republic's governing regime,
something not seen since the very early days of the
revolution.
IRGC FLEXES ITS MUSCLE
Lieutenant General Mohammad Ali Jafari, Commander of Islamic
Republic Guard Corps (IRGC), declared in a July 2011
interview that the IRGC, acting as commissars of Iran's
judicial branch, arrested a number of deviant individuals on
charges of economic and moral violations.[2] These
individuals also happened to have close ties to supporters
of Ahmadinejad and Mashaei, or the true figures of the
"digressive current," as Jafari insinuated. What this
announcement suggests is that the IRGC is seeking to expand
its authority within the Islamic Republic regime. Yes, the
IRGC has in the past warned former president Mohammad
Khatami not to stray too far off the path of the Islamic
Revolution; however, it was done via private correspondence,
not via the press and not without the usual deference to the
office to which the IRGC is subservient. The IRGC's main
mission is to safeguard the Islamic Revolution, including
the office of the supreme leader. Throughout the existence
of the Islamic Republic, the powers of the judiciary have
been kept, at least ostensibly, outside the authority of the
IRGC. Jafari's public declaration that his forces are in
fact acting as enforcers of the law is a potential game
changer and is an affirmation of what was anticipated in the
first issue of the Middle East Studies Insights, in January
2010, that "as the Iranian leadership continues to scramble
to regain order and legitimacy, the door has been opened for
the_ IRGC to step in amid the power struggle with clinched
fists to fill the power vacuum-leaving the hardliners in the
IRGC ranks as the powerbrokers and eventual deciders of the
course of action for the Islamic Republic."[3] The power
balance has shifted. With Khamenei's unprecedented overt
support of Ahmadinejad and the subsequent public sparring
between former allies, Khamenei and his office lost much
credibility, becoming more dependent on the IRGC for
safeguarding the Islamic Republic regime and thus, changing
the relationship between the supreme leader and the IRGC
from one of leader and follower to that of interdependency
for mutual survival.
ELIMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL SYSTEM?
Khamenei in a recent speech reinforced the elevated position
of his office, stressing that the role of the office of the
supreme leader was to manage not administer and that he, as
leader, was charged with overseeing the administrative
branches of the government and guarding the general
direction of the Islamic Republic regime. He also hinted
during that speech that if necessary the Islamic Republic
might change the current presidential system into a
parliamentary system of government.[4] This was no veiled
threat. Through this speech, Khamenei issued a warning to
Ahmadinejad and his supporters that they as individuals as
well as the top elected administrative branch of government
could be sacrificed if required to safeguard the Islamic
Republic regime and that he, Khamenei, has the authority to
carry this out. But does he?
END OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC?
The question remains whether Khamenei and the office of the
supreme leader enjoy the level of support that they had
prior to 2005, especially in light of the 2009 election and
ensuing political maneuvering. If not, then that leaves room
for the IRGC to "insert self" as the true guardian of the
administrative systems of the Islamic Republic and to
sideline the office of the supreme leader or to alter its
authorities if the Islamic Republic regime or the IRGC
itself requires it. This would end the Islamic Republic of
Iran as we know it since 1979. In a twist of irony,
Ahmadinejad, the man who has come to personify all that is
negative about the regime in Tehran, may in fact be the
albatross that is now hanging on the neck of the Islamic
Republic.
*This article has been reprinted with the permission of the
author from: Amin Tarzi, "Iran's Internal Dynamics," MES
Insights, Volume 2, Issue 5 (November 2011),
www.mcu.usmc.mil/Middle%20East%20Studies%20Documents/MES%20Insights/MES%20Insights%20Vol%202,%20Issue%205.pdf
----------------------------------------------------------
Notes
[1] Amin Tarzi and Adam Seitz, "Iran at a Crossroad," MES
Insights, Volume 1, Issue 1 (January 2010).
[2] "Sepah zabet-e dastgah-e qazayi dar barkhord ba jaryan-e
enherafi ast," Mehr News Agency, July 5, 2011,
www.mehrnews.com/fa/NewsPrint.aspx?NewsID=1351670, accessed
November 3, 2011.
[3] Tarzi and Seitz, "Iran at a Crossroad."
[4] "Bayanat-e rahbar-e muazam-e enqelab dar didar ba
daneshgahyan-e ostan-e Kermanshah" The Office of the Supreme
Leader Sayyid Ali Khamenei, October 16, 2011,
www.leader.ir/langs/fa/print.php?sec=bayanat&id=8729,
accessed October 31, 2011.
----------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Foreign Policy Research Institute
(http://www.fpri.org/).
Footnotes
The Newsletter of FPRI's Wachman Center
Iran's Internal Dynamics
by Amin Tarzi
Vol. 16, No. 10
December 2011
Amin Tarzi is the Director of Middle East Studies at the
Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia. This essay is
based on his lecture at FPRI's History Institute for
Teachers, Oct. 15-16, 2011, on "Teaching the Middle East:
Between Authoritarianism and Reform." Videofiles and other
materials from the conference are available at:
http://www.fpri.org/education/1110middleeast/
Available on the web and in pdf format at:
http://www.fpri.org/footnotes/1610.201111.tarzi.iran.html
Audio and Video of Is the Green Movement Dead?: Political
Dissent Iran available at:
http://www.fpri.org/multimedia/20111015.tarzi.iran.html
Iran's Internal Dynamics
by Amin Tarzi
Since its establishment in 1979, the Islamic Republic of
Iran has never been free of political intrigue. However,
since the disputed June 2009 presidential election, the
level of intrigue has increased. And the recent pubic rift
between the two highest office holders-the unelected supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and the elected president,
Mahmud Ahmadinejad-may very well be pushing Iran and the
Islamic Republic regime close to the brink. While the
denouement of this latest political wrangling has yet to be
written, the "writing on the wall" suggests that the results
will be anything but anti-climactic.
Prior to the 2009 presidential election and the internal
fallout that ensued, the Islamic Republic's leadership
structure, while perplexing and labyrinthine, was
intelligible. The office of the supreme leader was, both on
paper and in fact, the final arbiter, an impartial entity
external to and above the governing administrative
structures. The person of Khamenei and his position served
as the source of ultimate legitimacy within the Islamic
Republic regime and as the regime's guardian. That all
changed with the supreme leader's blatant and unquestioned
support of Ahmadinejad prior to the election and after his
controversial victory. This action removed any lingering
sense that the office of the supreme leader and the person
of Khamenei were impartial and above political machinations
and manipulations.[1]
While most of the world's attention was focused on the
activities of the popular opposition and its Green
Revolution after the controversial electoral outcome, a rift
emerged between the Supreme Leader and his chosen candidate,
the reelected president. The alliance formed for political
expediency prior to the 2005 presidential election to keep
the pragmatist and reformist camps from political position
and strengthened in the run-up to the 2009 election now
seemed to be unraveling. The confident, newly reelected
president began asserting his independence and, in the minds
of the conservatives aligned with Khamenei, deviating from
the correct path of the Islamic Revolution. In boxing terms,
the gloves came off. In July 2009, the president appointed
Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei as the first vice president, but
Khamenei pressured Ahmadinejad to reverse the appointment.
While caving to this demand of the Supreme Leader,
Ahmadinejad challenged Khamenei by appointing Mashaei as his
chief of staff. Furthermore, in December, Ahmadinejad,
reportedly per insistence of Mashaei, fired his foreign
minister, Manouchehr Motaki while the latter was on an
official visit to Africa. Motaki's dismissal was regarded as
a rebuke to Khamenei for preventing Mashaei's appointment to
the post of first vice presidency. The tensions between the
office of the president and that of the supreme leader
continued to escalate, and mostly in public, until the two
offices came to blows over Ahmadinejad's dismissal and his
forced reinstatement of intelligence minister, Haydar
Moslehi, in April 2011. The growing animosity between the
two men and their respective offices is evidence of the
widening crack in the Islamic Republic's governing regime,
something not seen since the very early days of the
revolution.
IRGC FLEXES ITS MUSCLE
Lieutenant General Mohammad Ali Jafari, Commander of Islamic
Republic Guard Corps (IRGC), declared in a July 2011
interview that the IRGC, acting as commissars of Iran's
judicial branch, arrested a number of deviant individuals on
charges of economic and moral violations.[2] These
individuals also happened to have close ties to supporters
of Ahmadinejad and Mashaei, or the true figures of the
"digressive current," as Jafari insinuated. What this
announcement suggests is that the IRGC is seeking to expand
its authority within the Islamic Republic regime. Yes, the
IRGC has in the past warned former president Mohammad
Khatami not to stray too far off the path of the Islamic
Revolution; however, it was done via private correspondence,
not via the press and not without the usual deference to the
office to which the IRGC is subservient. The IRGC's main
mission is to safeguard the Islamic Revolution, including
the office of the supreme leader. Throughout the existence
of the Islamic Republic, the powers of the judiciary have
been kept, at least ostensibly, outside the authority of the
IRGC. Jafari's public declaration that his forces are in
fact acting as enforcers of the law is a potential game
changer and is an affirmation of what was anticipated in the
first issue of the Middle East Studies Insights, in January
2010, that "as the Iranian leadership continues to scramble
to regain order and legitimacy, the door has been opened for
the_ IRGC to step in amid the power struggle with clinched
fists to fill the power vacuum-leaving the hardliners in the
IRGC ranks as the powerbrokers and eventual deciders of the
course of action for the Islamic Republic."[3] The power
balance has shifted. With Khamenei's unprecedented overt
support of Ahmadinejad and the subsequent public sparring
between former allies, Khamenei and his office lost much
credibility, becoming more dependent on the IRGC for
safeguarding the Islamic Republic regime and thus, changing
the relationship between the supreme leader and the IRGC
from one of leader and follower to that of interdependency
for mutual survival.
ELIMINATION OF THE PRESIDENTIAL SYSTEM?
Khamenei in a recent speech reinforced the elevated position
of his office, stressing that the role of the office of the
supreme leader was to manage not administer and that he, as
leader, was charged with overseeing the administrative
branches of the government and guarding the general
direction of the Islamic Republic regime. He also hinted
during that speech that if necessary the Islamic Republic
might change the current presidential system into a
parliamentary system of government.[4] This was no veiled
threat. Through this speech, Khamenei issued a warning to
Ahmadinejad and his supporters that they as individuals as
well as the top elected administrative branch of government
could be sacrificed if required to safeguard the Islamic
Republic regime and that he, Khamenei, has the authority to
carry this out. But does he?
END OF THE ISLAMIC REPUBLIC?
The question remains whether Khamenei and the office of the
supreme leader enjoy the level of support that they had
prior to 2005, especially in light of the 2009 election and
ensuing political maneuvering. If not, then that leaves room
for the IRGC to "insert self" as the true guardian of the
administrative systems of the Islamic Republic and to
sideline the office of the supreme leader or to alter its
authorities if the Islamic Republic regime or the IRGC
itself requires it. This would end the Islamic Republic of
Iran as we know it since 1979. In a twist of irony,
Ahmadinejad, the man who has come to personify all that is
negative about the regime in Tehran, may in fact be the
albatross that is now hanging on the neck of the Islamic
Republic.
*This article has been reprinted with the permission of the
author from: Amin Tarzi, "Iran's Internal Dynamics," MES
Insights, Volume 2, Issue 5 (November 2011),
www.mcu.usmc.mil/Middle%20East%20Studies%20Documents/MES%20Insights/MES%20Insights%20Vol%202,%20Issue%205.pdf
----------------------------------------------------------
Notes
[1] Amin Tarzi and Adam Seitz, "Iran at a Crossroad," MES
Insights, Volume 1, Issue 1 (January 2010).
[2] "Sepah zabet-e dastgah-e qazayi dar barkhord ba jaryan-e
enherafi ast," Mehr News Agency, July 5, 2011,
www.mehrnews.com/fa/NewsPrint.aspx?NewsID=1351670, accessed
November 3, 2011.
[3] Tarzi and Seitz, "Iran at a Crossroad."
[4] "Bayanat-e rahbar-e muazam-e enqelab dar didar ba
daneshgahyan-e ostan-e Kermanshah" The Office of the Supreme
Leader Sayyid Ali Khamenei, October 16, 2011,
www.leader.ir/langs/fa/print.php?sec=bayanat&id=8729,
accessed October 31, 2011.
----------------------------------------------------------
Copyright Foreign Policy Research Institute
(http://www.fpri.org/).
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