Religious Licence to Rig?
Hossein Bastani h.bastani@roozonline.com - 2008.04.27

Elections for the eight Majlis (parliament) in the Islamic Republic of Iran took place under circumstances in which an unprecedented event took place during the last days prior to voting on March 14, 2008. The leader of the Islamic regime publicly, formally and expressly said that preference among the candidates was for those “who had paved the way for the government”. This was a direct reference to a specific list of candidates, i.e. “Jebhe Motahed Osoolgaran” (The United Front of the Principalists) which comprises of pro-government conservatives.
The suggestion of the leader of the regime for voting to a specific list of candidates at a public rally is something that has never happened since the founding of the Islamic Republic in 1979. So when something like this does happen for the first time it conveys a very clear symbolic message which is indicative of the special and unique importance that the victory of the candidates on that list has for the regime and its leader. The importance is so great that the leader of the regime goes out of his way, sets the norms that have been carefully observed till then aside and bears the political costs of such a departure.
What the impact of such a move is on the electorate and what percent of it is actually influenced by the call and in what manner should be the subject of another analysis. But the effect on the voters is probably not the most important impact of the leader’s beckon: More important is the effect that the leader’s position will have on the administrators and observers of the elections.
One should not forget that the leader of the Islamic Republic is also the religious leader of those who look up to him for inspiration and leadership. All of whom must be loyal to the leader of the Islamic regime, and most of whom – which includes the observers and administrators of the elections – in fact are. Let’s for a moment imagine a situation in which the leader of such a regime steps forward in favor of a specific list of candidates but the candidates are defeated at the polls. The natural conclusive result of such a defeat is that people chose candidates who are in contradiction to the wishes of the leader.* From the perspective of forces loyal to the regime and its leader, such an outcome would be catastrophic and which would have to be prevented by any means.
In such a context, the voting preference of the leader of the regime creates a duty among the loyalists involved in the elections to do anything they can so that the results of the elections would not be in contradiction with the express desires of the leader as the credibility of the regime lies in the untarnished image of its leader. In fact, the announcement of the position of ayatollah Khamenei in voting for pro-government candidates creates a kind of religious divine duty in the eyes of many of its administrators because it is coming from the political and religious apex of the state. The immediate impact of the announcement of his position is that it can be seen as a religious license for the government authorities, who are the administrators of the elections and have an interest in its outcome, to guide the event to the desires of the leader.
In 1998 during the period when serial murders of intellectuals were planned and perpetrated by certain elements of the Ministry of intelligence, and the subsequent arrest of the involved agents, ayatollah Khamenei made a remark that later on brought on unexpected results. In his public talk, the leader said, “You can be certain that those who perpetrated these murders are not from amongst the pro regime forces but agents of foreign powers.”
A few months after that speech and with the revelation of interrogation films of some of the suspects in the serial murders, the horrendous methods (tortures) that the interrogation team used against the suspects to extract “confessions” of “moral corruption” and “cooperation with the CIA and Mossad” became evident. The public disclosure of these interrogation methods, whose result was the derailment of the case because of the hundreds of pages of fake confessions, finally led to the arrest and interrogation of the interrogation team because of the pursuit by the then president seyed Mohammad Khatami. During the latter interrogations, when the team members led by Javad Azadeh were asked on what grounds did they torture their prisoners to get confessions out of them, their response was shocking in that they said when the supreme leader said that the perpetrators were without any doubt agents of foreign powers, the interrogators viewed this as a religious duty to beat the suspects unrelentlessly until they confessed that there in fact agents of foreign powers.
In the context of the relationships that existed within the security forces, this response made sense. In all honesty was it conceivable that interrogators loyal to the regime would report after four or five months of interrogations that the conclusions of their grilling would prove the erroneousness of the views of the leader?
The reality is that the Iranian state system is not similar to a Western democracy where a party leader heads the state. In the Islamic Republic’s model the head of the state is also the commander of the armed forces, the spiritual leader, and the religious source of imitation for his followers. It is under these circumstances that any word the leader utters which is indicative of his desire to prove a position or implement a political action can have very serious practical impact. These words are so powerful that they can even turn any manipulation of the electoral process into legitimate acts.
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* It is in this light that during the elections for the seventh president of the Islamic regime (1997) government authorities tried to dismiss the remarks of the representative of the leader in the Passdaran Revolutionary Guards Corps (who favored presidential candidate cleric Nategh Nouri) and the remarks of the secretary of the Jame-e Rohaniyat Mobarez (who said that his “guess was that the leader favored Mr. Nategh Nouri”) as personal remarks and not that of the leader.
