July 04, 2009
How Could Iran's Hard-Liners Choose The Next Supreme Leader?
by Mazyar Mokfi, Charles Recknagel
The Islamic Republic of Iran has only had two supreme leaders in its 30-year history.
For the first 10 years, the Islamic Revolution's founder, Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was the supreme leader and was unquestionably accepted as such by the ruling clerical establishment.
For the last 20 years, the supreme leader has been Ali Khamenei, a man who has never enjoyed such unquestioned status.
Khamenei's problems stem from the fact that he was an unlikely choice from the beginning. He did not have the religious preeminence that underpinned Khomeini's central concept for an Islamic state: that it be led by the country's most learned Islamic jurist.
His announcement as successor came only after the Khomeini's death, making him appear to be a last-minute choice.
Now, with Khamenei ailing, the succession question looms again. But there is no charismatic revolutionary founder to tell the electoral body -- the Assembly of Experts -- what to do, and the assembly itself is riven by factional divides.
How Much Of A Voice?The greatest divide is over how much of a republic the Islamic republic should be. Or, in other words: How much of a voice should the people have in a country that officially is a constitutional theocracy?
In Qom, the heart of the clerical establishment, there is considerable sentiment that the theocracy should be subordinate to the constitution and sovereignty of the people.
For this reason, some prominent clerics have defended the right of opposition supporters to challenge the June 12 presidential results even though the supreme leader endorsed Mahmud Ahmadinejad as president-elect the moment the Interior Ministry announced the results.
On July 4, what is arguably the most important organization of religious leaders in Iran, the Association of Researchers and Teachers of Qom, took the defense of the opposition's rights much further.
both the disputed presidential election and the new government illegitimate because of the concerns over voting fraud.
"The New York Times" quoted Abbas Milani, director of Iranian studies at Stanford University, as calling the development "the most historic crack in the 30 years of the Islamic republic."
The statement came the same day that hard-liners dramatically upped their attacks on opposition leaders.
One of the supreme leader's close advisers, Hossein Shariatmadari, publicly accused presidential candidate Mir Hossein Musavi of being a foreign agent.