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The Daily Dish - 2006-2011 archives for The Daily Dish, featuring Andrew Sullivan

"Using A Sacred Day"

By The Daily Dish
Jan 6 2010, 12:40 PM ET

The Leveretts continue their campaign to diminish the significance of the Iranian uprising:

Antigovernment Iranian Web sites claim there were “tens of thousands” of Ashura protesters; others in Iran say there were 2,000 to 4,000. Whichever estimate is more accurate, one thing we do know is that much of Iranian society was upset by the protesters using a sacred day to make a political statement.

Vastly more Iranians took to the streets on Dec. 30, in demonstrations organized by the government to show support for the Islamic Republic (one Web site that opposed President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s re-election in June estimated the crowds at one million people). Photographs and video clips lend considerable plausibility to this estimate meaning this was possibly the largest crowd in the streets of Tehran since Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini’s funeral in 1989. In its wake, even President Ahmadinejad’s principal challenger in last June’s presidential election, Mir Hossein Mousavi, felt compelled to acknowledge the “unacceptable radicalism” of some Ashura protesters.

But Iranians were not upset with the brutal violence used by the regime on "a sacred day." Scott Lucas calls the entire op-ed a "confetti of unsupported assertions":



The Leveretts do put a series of challenges, discussed also at EA, about the opposition’s leadership, its strategy, and its objectives, but this is all to prop up the “default” option that the regime (whose political, religious, economic, and ideological position is not examined beyond that claim of a million protesters on its behalf on 30 December) must not only be accepted but embraced in talks. Just as the US Government set aside the inconvenience of Tiananmen Square 20 years ago, so it should put in the closet the trifling annoyance of those Iranians who demonstrate against rather than for the Government.

I might add that there is a clear distinction between government workers told to march and bussed in to demonstrate, at no risk to themselves, and hundred of thousands risking their lives and bodies to demonstrate against a wicked and fraudulently elected regime.

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