ahmoud Ahmadinejad has grown in strength following the disputed elections [GETTY]
<><>Ahmadinejad was reelected as the president of Iran last June against a background of an unusually open, divisive and acrimonious election campaign.
The vote was followed by unprecedented levels of street protests and growing international pressure and isolation led by the US, despite the stated intentions of Barack Obama, the US president.
But now, several months on, Ahmadinejad's government appears to have emerged stronger and more self-confident than it was before the contentious elections.
Withering opposition
Not only did he maintain his position on some of the most controversial foreign policy issues, he also made a direct challenge to the power of Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who was the second most powerful man in the country after Ayatollah Khamenei, the supreme leader.
This included the arrest of Rafsanjani's family members, and his subsequent falling in line behind the regime in the face of mass protests.
In the process, Ahmadinejad also continued to elevate the position of the Revolutionary Guards at the expense of the old guards of the revolution, led by the likes of the late Ayatollah Montazeri.
The government and security forces have managed to suppress any serious challenge to the government and what looked like an increasingly popular movement has withered away as a result of a brutal crackdown and political gamesmanship.
This has been greatly assisted by foreign plots against the regime, which made it much easier for the government to rally support in the face of external threats.
A Jundallah suicide attack in October, which killed more than 40 people including six senior commanders of the Revolutionary Guards, marked a turning point for the opposition movement.
The government was quick to point the finger of blame for the attack - the worst of its kind on Iranian soil for decades - at the UK and the US, claiming they backed the group.
Such a challenge to peace and stability inside Iran served to undermine the opposition.
The answer to how this has been possible rests not in the strength of Iran - which is, after all, really quite a small player in the realm of global economic, military and political power games - but with the weakness of the US and her allies.
serve US and Iranian interests [GETTY]
So, the stark reality appears to be that the US is out of options.
The best course of action now may be to eat humble pie and negotiate a deal with Iran as a new nuclear power.
However, internal and external political factors, teamed with a continuing fixation on playing the role of 'sole superpower' make it difficult for the US leadership to adopt the most rational option at this juncture.
Both countries have much to gain from pursuing peace and their interests may be more closely aligned than they imagine.
Official figures for US military aid to Israel currently exceed $3bn a year. In addition, US taxpayers are burdened with long-term aid support to Palestine, Egypt, Jordan and Lebanon; all essentially with the aim of ensuring Israel's dominance in the service of misconceived US 'interests'.
The US taxpayer is also burdened with supporting backbreaking US war efforts in the Middle East to the tune of well over $100bn a year.
But, a peaceful Middle East with a steady and safe flow of oil and gas through the Persian Gulf would serve the interests of the US and Iran.
It would help to reduce the crippling costs of the US' wars and enhance Iran's income and investment potential.
It would also help to reduce Russia's energy influence over the West by opening up a number of new avenues, particularly for gas.
Time to act
Iran and the US shared common enemies in Saddam Hussein and the Taliban, as well as in al-Qaeda, and they have much to gain from closer cooperation on the remaining fronts.
Obama started last year with a promise to negotiate with the Islamic Republic and it is time for him to make good on this promise through actions rather than words.
A good starting point would be for Obama to stop congress funding covert operations in Iran to the tune of $400mn - as set up at the request of George Bush and exposed in a 2008 report by Seymour Hersh.
Repealing this would be seen as a serious gesture of goodwill and would also remove the Iranian government's excuse for suppressing the reformist movement.
Without a Great Satan, the Iranian government would have to be more responsive to and accommodating of the wishes of Iranians.
Massoud Parsi is a development economist and a commentator on Iranian affairs.
1 comment:
yet another of the Mullah's regime. This guy talk as such Ahmedijenad and his bosses are sitting on a very comfortable cushin and are only there to take the country forward. His statistics and comments can only be found in mullah's propaganda machines. The only difference this guy has with IRI propagandist is that he tries to show that he is "ratinoal" and "intelectual" . We have seen them in different colors and forms and now they can only fool very few people.
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