Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hard-line ex-leader stuns with election bid

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TEHRAN, Iran — Stunning Iran and disregardi­ng the words of its supreme leader, former President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d registered Wednesday to run in the country’s May presidenti­al election and upended a contest largely expected to be won by its moderate incumbent.

Though Ahmadineja­d still might not be approved for the ballot by Iran’s clerically overseen government, merely the mention of the Holocaust-questionin­g populist might energize discontent­ed hard-liners who want a Persian answer to U.S. President Donald Trump. Ahmadineja­d’s candidacy also comes as Trump has threatened a reappraisa­l of Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers and as fissures still linger inside Iran after his contested 2009 re-election, which brought massive unrest.

Associated Press journalist­s watched as stunned election officials processed Ahmadineja­d’s paperwork on Wednesday. Asked about Ahmadineja­d’s decision, one Tehranbase­d analyst offered a blunt assessment.

“It was an organized mutiny against Iran’s ruling system,” said Soroush Farhadian, who backs reformists.

Ever the showman, a smiling Ahmadineja­d made “V for Victory” hand signals and walked his former vice president Hamid Baghaei through the process of registerin­g first. Just when it appeared Ahmadineja­d would be leaving, he turned around and returned to the Interior Ministry’s registrati­on desk, pulling out his identifica­tion documents with a flourish in front of a melee of shouting journalist­s.

Ahmadineja­d’s decision shocked Iran as Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei offered a thinly veiled warning in September that his candidacy would be a “polarized situation” that would be “harmful for the country.”

That referenced Ahmadineja­d’s disputed re-election in 2009, which sparked massive protests and a sweeping crackdown in which thousands of people were detained and dozens were killed.

Ahmadineja­d on Wednesday described comments by the supreme leader as “just advice” in a news conference shortly after submitting his registrati­on.

“His advice does not prevent me from running,” he said. “There is extensive pressure on me from dear people of different walks of life as their small servant to come to the election.”

There was no immediate reaction from the supreme leader’s office. While Khamenei has final say on all state matters, Ahmadineja­d’s relationsh­ip with him had strained by the end of his time in power.

“It’s in clear defiance of what the supreme leader had stated very openly and very publicly,” said Ellie Geranmayeh, a policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. “What Ahmadineja­d has done is quite crushing … but he also had a habit of doing this while he was president in his second term.”

Ahmadineja­d previously served two fouryear terms from 2005 to 2013. Under Iranian law, he became eligible to run again after four years out of office, but he remains a polarizing figure, even among fellow hard-liners.

 ??  ?? Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d
Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d

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