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Iran's new president a blow to US foreign policy -25/06/05

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  • Iran's new president a blow to US foreign policy -25/06/05

    Ekklesia, UK
    June 25 2005

    Iran's new president a blow to US foreign policy -25/06/05

    The landslide victory of the conservative mayor of Tehran, Mahmoud
    Ahmadinejad, in Iran's presidential poll has thwarted US hopes of a
    satisfactory resolution to the nuclear standoff between the two
    nations. It has also challenged the effectiveness of America's
    aggressive foreign policy stance in the region.

    Western analysts were caught off guard by the scale of the defeat of
    moderate ex-president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, whose political
    pragmatism and dialogue with progressive students over
    democratisation held out hopes for further change in Iran.

    Mr Ahmadinejad won the run-off in the two-stage election with 62 per
    cent of the 22 million votes cast on a turnout of 47 per cent. The
    average turnout in the two contests was 55 per cent. US commentators
    immediately claimed that this `low poll' questions the legitimacy of
    the result, which was not one they expected or wanted.

    But Tehran has hit back by pointing out that even the comparatively
    high 2004 US federal turnout of 60 per cent was lower than Iran's
    first round figure of 62% - and that the 2000 American election was
    `won' by the presidential candidate with fewer votes amidst
    widespread rigging allegations and a poll of just over 51 per cent.

    Though US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has to some extent
    mitigated her tough ideological image through straight talking
    diplomacy, the overall image of the US - especially in the Muslim
    world - has continued to plummet in recent months.

    President Bush's confrontational foreign policy based on military
    intervention is widely seen as having backfired - with the insurgency
    in Iraq claiming hundreds of lives each week, a recent CIA report
    admitting the emergence of a new breed of mobile Islamic jihadists,
    the Taleban reconfiguring in Afghanistan, and now a serious reversal
    of the reform movement in Iran.

    European nations, many of them sceptical or hostile towards the
    US-led invasion of Iraq, have long been urging a more open and
    pragmatic approach towards Iran on the part of the White House. But
    they have mostly been ignored.

    Regional commentators say that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's victory is due
    to a number of factors - his appeal to poor voters and those opposing
    corruption, his defiance of what is seen as US aggression, and his
    positioning as an Iranian nationalist aligned to conservative Islamic
    forces but not imprisoned by them.

    The US State Department declared a few hours ago that the result was
    `out of step with moves towards democracy in the region.' They are
    also pointing towards 300 complaints about voting irregularities
    raised by Rafsanjani backers.

    A spokesperson for the new Iranian president declared: `The US
    position is unprincipled. To them a country is only democratic if it
    elects people they agree with.'

    Christians and other minority groups in Iran are wondering what the
    future will hold for them under the new, hard-line presidency.

    The majority of Iran's 250,000 Christian population are members of
    the Armenian Orthodox Church, with others belonging to Assyrian
    Church of the East. There are also small numbers of Chaldean
    Catholics, Anglicans and Protestants.

    Persians, Parthians and Medes were among the first new Christian
    converts at Pentecost. Since then there had been a continuous
    minority Christian presence in Iran.

    The Armenian Church has a recognised status, though its activities
    are carefully controlled. Protestant Christianity is seen as
    Western-aligned and treated accordingly.
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