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Khamenei's Crisis
ByLaura Secor has another must-read:
Who knows what sort of president Mousavi would have been, or could yet
be? He is an entirely different kind of animal from reformist
politicians of the past; he is identified not with students and
intellectuals but with the hardscrabble war years and the defense of
the poor. But as one analyst explained to me, the problem he faces is
that he is perhaps the only person on the Iranian political scene whose
public stature is equal to Khamenei’s. He was a favorite son of
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in the nineteen-eighties. Many Khomeinists
in the power structure respect and support him; within the
Revolutionary Guards, as well as within the upper clergy, he has a
constituency. Traditional, religious people are among his supporters,
too. On the morning of June 12th, he may have been the uncharismatic
compromise candidate for the anyone-but-Ahmadinejad crowd. But to other
voters he was then, and he has increasingly become, something else: the
vehicle both for the memory of the utopia that never came, and for the
hopes of a younger generation that imagines he shares its vision of the
future.
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