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by Heshmat Alavi
Hassan Rouhani reaching a second term
in Iran as the regime’s president should not be interpreted as the vote of the
people seeking a moderate voice over hardline conservatives. In fact, Iranian
Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei sought to repeat the 2009 scenario of engineering
the entire election process to have his preferred candidate declared victor,
not Rouhani.
And yet as we witnessed in 2013 at the
beginning of Rouhani’s first term, and in 1997 and 2005 when Mohammad Khatami
was pulled out of Khamenei’s “election” hat, Western mainstream media have
rushed to the races to describe Rouhani as a “moderate” in a regime comprised
of radicals. Some went as far as claiming 75% of eligible votes taking part,
not clear based on what survey as Iran lacks any atmosphere to conduct an
unbiased review.
“…About 75 percent of Iranian voters turned out to repudiate an
authoritarian populist and re-elect their moderate president, Hassan Rouhani…
Having concluded the historic nuclear agreement with world powers in 2015, he
now emphasized priorities he’d abandoned in his first term: rights, freedoms
and…” said a piece in The New York Times.
It is interesting how one can describe a man as a moderate while
he oversaw over 3,000 executions during four years as president. Amnesty
International has issued numerous reports expressing concerns in this regard,
as explained by The Washington Times.
“Since Mr. Rouhani’s ‘moderate’
presidency, executions in Iran have proliferated, usually at grisly public
hangings. There were 360 executions in 2011, according to Amnesty
International, and by 2014, the number had soared to 734.
The UN special reporter for human
rights put the number of executions in 2015 at 966. Mr. Rouhani’s hangmen
rested in 2016, relatively speaking, with only 567 executions. Moderation ends
where the noose begins,” the article reads. Of course, these are only official
numbers and the regime is known to conduct secret and unreported executions
across the country.
And yet Iranian regime apologists are
seen falling for remarks made by Rouhani during the election season in Iran.
“He directly challenged the abuses of
the judiciary and the political overreach of the Revolutionary Guards Corps,
with which he has vied for authority throughout his presidency,” the Times
piece adds.
Only days into his second term, however, Rouhani’s defense
minister Hossein Dehghan, a senior IRGC commander, shed light on new
provocative military projects sought by Tehran, including a
satellite altimetry calibration system. Iran has long been accused of seeking
to enhance its intercontinental ballistic missiles under the cover of launching
space orbit satellite systems. Rouhani’s first four years, especially following
the highly flawed nuclear deal signing, was riddled with troubling violations.
Iran’s defense minister Hossein Dehqaq |
“Iran has test-fired nuclear-capable ballistic missiles at least
ten times since July 2015, despite a UN Security Council resolution, approved
along with the nuclear accord, which explicitly calls on Iran to refrain from
such activity,” according to reports.
Iranian officials have recently announced a 145% defense budget
increase under Rouhani, parallel to the military undertaking a major effort to
restructure its ranks and files with the objective of upgrading it into a “forward
moving force,” according to reports from
the region.
As Rouhani sets to launch his second tenure, early signs
indicate what is to be expected. The semi-official Fars news agency, known for
its affiliation to the IRGC, reported Thursday of Iran building a
third underground ballistic missile factory.
Evin Rouhani’s rival during the election, Ebrahim Raisi, himself
a conservative figure known for his role in the massacre of tens of thousands of
political prisoners back in the summer of 1988, revealed how the “moderate”
Rouhani also has his hands stained with blood.
As news from inside Iran indicate at
least ten individuals were executed in the first week of Rouhani’s second term,
this “moderate” is known to be the first Iranian regime figure to call for
public executions.
As we are yet again and unfortunately reminded by the wrath of
extremism in the recent attack on Coptic Christians in Egypt,
across the Middle East, Iran, with Rouhani as president, stepped up its support for terrorism, extremism and
proxy groups.
“Let me make it clear. Our money,
meals, arms and missiles all come from Iran. We are well-off as long as Iran
has money,” said Lebanese Hezbollah leader Hassan Nassrallah.
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