The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Iranian leader’s life mirrored his nation’s

Khomeini’s aide, Contra go-between later was reformer.

- By Nasser Karimi

Iran’s former TEHRAN, IRAN — President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani died Sunday after a decades-long career in the ruling elite, where his moderate views were not always welcome but his cunning guided him through revolution, war and the country’s turbulent politics.

The political survivor’s life spanned the trials of Iran’s modern history, from serving as a close aide to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini during the 1979 Islamic Revolution to acting as a go-between in the Iran-Contra deal. He helped found Iran’s contested nuclear program, but later backed the accord with world powers to limit it in exchange for sanctions relief.

Rafsanjani, who showed ruthlessne­ss while in power but later pushed for reforms, died Sunday after suffering a heart attack, state media reported. He was 82.

Rafsanjani, “after a life full of restless efforts in the path of Islam and revolution, had departed for lofty heaven,” she said.

Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called Rafsanjani an “old friend and comrade,” and said his loss is “difficult and life-decreasing.” The government announced three days of mourning, and a funeral was expected to be held on Tuesday.

Rafsanjani served as president from 1989 to 1997, during a period of significan­t changes in Iran. At the time, the country was struggling to rebuild its economy after a devastatin­g 1980s war with Iraq, while also cautiously allowing some wider freedoms, as seen in Iran’s highly regarded film and media industry.

He also oversaw key developmen­ts in Iran’s nuclear program by negotiatin­g deals with Russia to build an energy-producing reactor in Bushehr, which finally went into service in 2011 after long delays. Behind the scenes, he directed the secret purchase of technology and equipment from Pakistan and elsewhere.

The cleric managed to remain within Iran’s ruling theocracy after leaving office, but an attempt to return to the presidency in 2005 was dashed by the electoral victory of the more hard-line Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d. Rafsanjani was later branded a dissenter by many conservati­ves for his harsh criticism of the crackdown that followed Ahmadineja­d’s re-election in 2009.

But after years of waning influence, Rafsanjani was handed an unexpected political resurgence with the 2013 victory of a fellow moderate, Hassan Rouhani, giving him an insider role in efforts that would culminate in the 2015 nuclear agreement.

Some analysts believe that Rafsanjani was kept within the ruling fold as a potential mediator with America and its allies in the standoff over Iran’s nuclear program. His past stature as a trusted Khomeini ally also offered him political protection. Rafsanjani was a top commander in the war with Iraq and played a key role in convincing Khomeini to accept a cease-fire after years of crippling stalemate.

His image, however, also had darker undertones. He was named by prosecutor­s in Argentina among Iranian officials suspected of links to a 1994 bombing of a Jewish center in Buenos Aires that killed 85 people. Some Iranian reformers accused him of involvemen­t in the slaying of liberals and dissidents during his presidency — charges he denied and that were never pursued by Iranian authoritie­s.

Rafsanjani was born in 1934 in the village of Bahraman in southeaste­rn Iran’s pistachio-growing region of Rafsanjan.

He was jailed for several years under the U.S.backed Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. He then helped organize the network of mullahs that became Khomeini’s revolution­ary undergroun­d. He is reputed to have provided the handgun for the assassinat­ion of Iran’s prime minister, Hassan Ali Mansoor in 1965.

Rafsanjani first met Khomeini in the Shiite seminaries of Qom in the 1950s and later became a key figure in the Islamic uprising that toppled the shah in 1979.

Only months after the revolution, Rafsanjani was shot once in the stomach by gunmen from one of the groups vying for power amid the political turmoil. He was not seriously wounded.

He was elected as head of Iran’s parliament in 1980 and served until 1989, when he was elected for the first of two four-year terms as president.

Here, Rafsanjani began to build his multilayer­ed — and sometimes contradict­ory — political nature: A supporter of free enterprise, a relative pragmatist toward foreign affairs and an unforgivin­g leader who showed no mercy to any challenges to his authority.

Rafsanjani took a dim view of state control of the economy — even in the turbulent years after the Islamic Revolution — and encouraged private businesses, developmen­t of Tehran’s stock market and ways to boost Iranian exports.

He built roads and connected villages to electrical, telephone and water networks for the first time, earning the title of Commander of Reconstruc­tion by his supporters.

There were certain self-interests at play as well.

Rafsanjani was assumed to be the head of a family-run pistachio business that grew to become one of Iran’s largest exporters and provided the financial foundation for a business empire that would eventually include constructi­on companies, an auto assembly plant, vast real estate holdings and a private airline. In 2003, he was listed among Iran’s “millionair­e mullahs” by Forbes magazine.

His economic policies won him praise from Iran’s elite and merchant classes, but brought bitterness from struggling workers seeking greater state handouts. Rafsanjani also faced warnings from the ruling theocracy about pushing too far.

Rafsanjani’s complex legacy also was shaped by the times.

He took over the presidency in a critical time of transition just after the death of Khomeini. He tried to make overtures for better ties with the U.S. after the American-led invasion of Kuwait in 1991 to drive out Iraqi forces, arguing that Iran paid too high a price for its diplomatic freeze with Washington.

But he could not overcome opposition from Iranian hard-liners and failed to win the backing of Khomeini’s successor as supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, for bold foreign policy moves. He also angered the West by strengthen­ing Iran’s ties to armed groups such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah.

“One of the wrong things we did, in the revolution­ary atmosphere, was constantly to make enemies,” he said in a 1987 interview. “We pushed those who could have been neutral into hostility.”

Although Rafsanjani was seen by Washington as a potential ice breaker, his views were far from solidly pro-Western and displayed conflicted positions.

During the 1980s, he used his links with Lebanese Shiite extremists to help secure the release of Western hostages in Lebanon and was a key middleman — identified as “Raf ” in Pentagon documents — in the secret Iran-Contra dealings to funnel U.S. arms to Iran in exchange for money used to fund Nicaraguan rebels.

In February 1994, Rafsanjani survived a second assassinat­ion attempt. A gunman fired at him as he was speaking to mark the 15th anniversar­y of the revolution. Unhurt and unshaken, Rafsanjani continued his speech.

Rafsanjani is survived by his wife, Effat Marashi, and five children.

 ?? EBRAHIM NOROOZI / AP 2015 ?? Influentia­l former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, pictured in 2015, has died at age 82 after having been hospitaliz­ed due to a heart condition, Iranian state media said Sunday. Rafsanjani was president from 1989 to 1997.
EBRAHIM NOROOZI / AP 2015 Influentia­l former Iranian President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, pictured in 2015, has died at age 82 after having been hospitaliz­ed due to a heart condition, Iranian state media said Sunday. Rafsanjani was president from 1989 to 1997.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States