Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was declared a decisive winner in Friday's election--65 percent to challenger Mir Hossein Mousavi's 32 percent, according to Iran's state news agency--though Mousavi protested the results, alleging manipulation and fraud.
While it's unclear what the fallout in Iran will be--Mousavi supporters have already been disbursed with tear gas from around his headquarters--U.S. analysts have mixed opinions on what another four years of Ahmadinejad would mean.
Middle East Forum Director Daniel Pipes thinks we're better off with Ahmadinejad in office. The country's real power lies with its supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, not its president, he argues, and a Mousavi presidency would have lulled the world (and President Obama) to sleep in its dealings with Iran. Better to have Ahmadinejad, a hard-liner who more faithfully represents what Khamenei believes, and thus Iran's true nature.
Michael Rubin, an Iran expert with the American Enterprise Institute,
shares that skepticism about the impact of a new president, though he
didn't take sides in the election.
"When it comes to the nuclear program, it's pretty well
acknowledged...that it's under control of the Revolutionary Guard," Rubin says. He cautions that
Iranian diplomats don't always speak for their country--likely because
they don't know what the Revolutionary Guard, and other elements of
power within Iran's government, are up to. The Guard, viewed now as more in line with Ahmadinejad's politics, operates independently.
"'I think that the U.S. press coverage is getting a little bit ahead of itself," he said yesterday. "[There's a] conflation between the Iranian youth's desire for change and the Iranian president's ability to affect change."
Suzanne Maloney of Brookings takes another view. With an
Ahmadinejad win, Iran's democcratic institutions would be discredited
among the public, she says--especially in a landslide victory that's
contested by Mousavi's supporters (which, coincidentally, is what's
happened). It's "a worriesome outcome," she said Friday, when asked
about a potential Ahmadinejad victory.
"The regime would feel more free to act without taking into account potential public reactions," Maloney says.
"It's going to be a lot harder, a lot slower going," she says.
"There'll be a lot more skepticism to overcome, wither it's on the
Hill, or whether it's among Israelis...a harder time in getting any
concessions on the nuclear program."
One thing analysts agree on is that Obama would not have affected the
election's outcome, anyway. After his speech in Cairo, and his video
message to Iran earlier this year, some had speculated that he could
foster support for a moderate candidate--that Iranians would reject Ahmadinejad after witnessing Obama's openness to giving them a seat at the international table.
Maloney and Rubin both agree that's unlikely.
Assuming Ahmadinejad remains Iran's president, and Mousavi does not
succeed in overturning the results, the Obama administratoin will now
begrudgingly engage the hard-liner, with whom it has avoided contact thusfar,
knowing Ahmadinejad would be challenged in June (it's signaled it will engage regardless of the election results), and Obama's foreign policy will
be put to the test with a hard-liner, not a moderate, speaking for Iran.







Conservative incumbent stokes paranoia, inflames populist national pride with incendiary rhetoric, lambastes opponent as "unpatriotic". And wins reelection. Oh dear, Iran. Couldn't you find a better example than America 2004?
Iranian opposition now looking for young, charismatic "anti-fear" candidate for 2014, middle name preference, "Bush".
Ahmadinejad is also popular with the poor in Iran because of his habit of spreading the wealth around through fiscal policy and price controls. He's an economic populist.
And I certainly don't recall Bush lambasting anyone as "unpatriotic" the way that the Obama Administration has smeared Chrysler bondholders and their lawyers as terrorists.
Pipes is a hard-liner Likudnik who wantsa war with Iran. It is unsurprising that he wants a hard-liner to stay in power in Iran. It takes some degree of naivete to quote him as an authority.
OBAMA - the hubris ridden FOOL!!!
PREZ BARACH'incurably-dishonest'OBAMA told us that just his words in a speech at CAIRO would change the election results in IRAN...The NATIONAL ^SSHOLE MEDIA quickly went along with this horsebleep from 'the OBAMA' --- THE RESULT --- the raving nutter AHMADINEAJEAD won in a landslide!!! OBAMA has been shown to be a BLACK PUNK FOOL from CHICAGO full of an excessive load BLEEP&HUBRIS but his sycophants continue to marvel and listen&watch breathlessly the BLACK BOY READ AND SPEAK FROM A TELEPROMPTER!!!
Posted by Jaimot's Jargon at 3:59 AM
"OBAMA told us that just his words in a speech at CAIRO would change the election results in IRAN."
Provide a link to prove this silliness, or STFU, right wing loonie. Can't? Didn't think so.
'the OBAMA' hisself proclaimed "...a robust discussion" would be joined by MUSLIMS because he spoke words in Cairo!!! WHY ARE LEFT-WING LOONIES SUCH 'SCHMUCKS'??? OR IS THAT AN OXYMORON??? Ha.
Ahmadinejad's official title is "president" but he's more like "secretary of state" - a representative of the ultimate authority, appointed apparently. I'd like diplomacy to be given a chance but won't be surprised at all if it all ends up in military action.
birchbeer, you better pray that it doesn't end up in military action, as we are not Iraqi's
We have the reach to project our power right into your trailer park home and grab you by the throat.
Personally I despise conflict, and wish you no harm.
But do not underestimate what is likely to happen to you if you try to interfere with Iran.
There only waits to press the button on the ridiculous regimes you prop up and they will disappear like so many toppling dominoes.
Never forget the personnel you deem to send Crusading around the Middle East are like collateral.
That collateral can be cashed at any instance of our choosing.
Why, Marc, I thought it was considered completely illegitimate for the Bush Administration to treat an election-winning Hamas any different from Fatah. I guess we'll see if it's possible to treat Ahmadinejad exactly the same as Mousavi would have been treated.
John Thacker, your link in your reply to jebuff to the WSJ only displays the first two paragraphs. No mention of "terrorists" in the little bit non-subscribers can see. Also, this post is under Chris Good's name, not Marc's.
I don't follow you at all here. You don't know how Mousavi would have been treated; you no doubt have an idea based on a few pundit's predictions. Plus, the statement seems to me to be more or less noncontroversial: it will be a test for Obama to achieve his aims if he has to deal with Ahmedinejad instead of a more reasonable President.
Anyway, this narrowness on "what Iran means to the U.S. foreign-policy establishment" is pretty boring. Sullivan's covering the real Iran story for the Atlantic. A few other blogs are also real-time reporting the absolutely insane events. I think there's a real question whether the Revolutionary Guard will be able to hold on in the face of opposition ayatollahs and the popular uprising.
Uh, why are you giving a platform to the likes of Daniel Pipes? Let him and his noxious views suffocate in ignominious obscurity.
Saw an article this morning, wish I could “refind” and post the link, but Hitlery Clinton declared that this “win” shows the “will of the people”. Well…we see how she feels about dictators re-electing themselves.
With our current administration, I have doubts America will ever see another truly honest election based on informed voters web design and voters who have to actually show identification and prove they are eligible. Pretty sad.
As for counting votes, dare I even go there? Seems the only votes that matter are those on the left any more.