Chattanooga Times Free Press

Iran hard-liners call for boldness to counter Trump

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TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s hard-liners are hoping they can benefit from the rise of Donald Trump in upcoming elections, arguing that their own country needs a tougher leader to stand up to an American president whose administra­tion has put the Islamic Republic “on notice.”

They say it’s time for a “revolution­ary diplomacy” to confront the U.S. after four years of a more conciliato­ry policy under moderate incumbent President Hassan Rouhani.

Hard-liners feel energized by the Trump administra­tion’s repeated criticism of the landmark 2015 nuclear deal. The agreement found little support among the group, who feel Iran gave too much away in exchange for too little in the way of sanctions relief.

The U.S. president’s tough talk on Iran plays into hard-liners’ hands too, reinforcin­g anti-American sentiments they can use to rally their base.

A group of hard-liners banded together late last year to form the Popular Front of Islamic Revolution Forces, which is assessing more than a dozen potential candidates. But with less than two months to go before the May 19 election, they have yet to settle on one to run against Rouhani.

One potential candidate, Mohsen Rezaei, a former chief of the elite Revolution­ary Guard, has lashed out at the administra­tion for lacking revolution­ary spirit — tough words in a country that prizes the heroes of the 1979 Islamic Revolution that created the current government­al system.

“A group (of officials) has become hopeless and tired while trying to find a prescripti­on for problems outside the revolution­ary framework,” he said.

A lack of reliable polling in Iran makes it difficult to gauge how the election could play out, particular­ly given that no hopefuls have formally declared their candidacie­s yet.

But Tehran-based political analyst Soroush Farhadi said Trump’s stance on Iran could bode ill for Rouhani’s chances because it gives hard-liners a way to denounce his foreign policy of outreach and negotiatio­n with the West and regional rivals.

Earlier in March, the current chief of the Guard, Mohmmad Ali Jafari, warned that an “un-revolution­ary viewpoint” that had taken hold in recent years was the greatest danger facing Iran. The daily Javan, which is affiliated with the Guard, has meanwhile criticized the Rouhani administra­tion for choosing “smile diplomacy” that has done little to improve Iran’s standing with the rest of the world.

While candidate Trump said he’d renegotiat­e or dismantle the Iran nuclear deal, which Israel fiercely opposes, his administra­tion is continuing to implement the accord for now. Because the agreement was negotiated with a group of internatio­nal powers, Washington does not have the ability to tear it up on its own. But continued hostility to it by the Trump administra­tion could discourage Western companies from doing business in Iran and embolden U.S. allies such as Saudi Arabia that are hostile to Tehran. The administra­tion, meanwhile, has implemente­d additional U.S. sanctions against Iran over its ballistic missile program.

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence reiterated Sunday that the Trump administra­tion “has put Iran on notice,” and will not tolerate Iranian efforts to “destabiliz­e the region and jeopardize Israel’s security.” The warning first came in February after Iran test-fired a ballistic missile.

Hard-liners are also hoping to capitalize on voters’ pocketbook anxieties, including Rouhani’s failure to significan­tly alleviate poverty and Iran’s longstandi­ng double-digit unemployme­nt rate. Officials say some 11 million of the country’s 80 million people are living below the poverty line.

Iran has been freed of crippling economic sanctions and secured multibilli­on-dollar deals with Boeing Co. and Airbus for hundreds of passenger planes as a direct result of the nuclear deal.

But many average Iranians say they are still waiting for the deals’ benefits to trickle down. They include Houshang Lotfi, a 43-year-old welder in Tehran who has turned to selling cheap toys on the street because of a lack of jobs. “I know Rouhani did a lot to save our country from hassles but I am still selling toys,” he said. “Streets are not my place. I must work in an industrial field.”

Other hard-liners considerin­g running include Hamid Baghaei, who is an ally of former controvers­ial president Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d; former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili; Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf and cleric Ebrahim Raisi, a close ally to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.

The crowded field means multiple hard-liners — who belong to the conservati­ve “principali­st” camp in Iranian politics — could end up running, as was the case in 2013. That could help ensure the re-election of Rouhani, whose 2013 win as a relative moderate surprised those who had assumed another hard-liner would replace his firebrand predecesso­r, Ahmadineja­d. Rouhani rode to victory by beating his nearest two rivals, who split the hard-line vote.

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