Gulf News

Rafsanjani stirs up a hornet’s nest in Iran

Leading pragmatist and former president’s statements on demilitari­sation spark controvers­y as hardliners see red

- Specila to Gulf News

he statements of Iran’s former president and leading centrist figure, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, which have been interprete­d as a call for demilitari­sation, have sparked controvers­y and prompted hardliners to launch a wave of attacks on him. The remarks were made on August 10 in an education conference and surfaced in the media in the first week of this month. Rafsanjani had argued that “if today you see that Germany and Japan have the strongest economies in the world, it is because that after World War II they were prohibited from [having] military forces.” He added, “Having freed up the funds normally spent on costly military forces, these countries were in a position to allocate more money for scientific innovation and projects beneficial to their economies.”

The alarming part of the speech, as viewed by the hardliners, was where he said, “The path is now opened ... to enter such [a] climate and head in that direction. I am confident that [President Hassan] Rouhani’s second-term administra­tion can get us there.”

Hussain Shariatmad­ari, the editor-in-chief of Kayhan newspaper, the mouthpiece of hardliners and Iran’s bestknown hardline newspaper, was quick to respond. “The statement by Mr Hashemi Rafsanjani is an invitation to America and other declared enemies of the Islamic Republic of Iran to attack our country.” He also asserted that Rafsanjani’s remarks were “a prescripti­on for returning to a time of oppression, poverty, backwardne­ss ... and for making Iran an obedient slave of America”. Abdullah Ganji, managing editor of Javan newspaper, affiliated with the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC), responded by saying that “the national honour of Iranians has been sold off in exchange for bigger bellies, although that also has not yet been realised”. He called for an “electoral revolution rather than holding [presidenti­al] elections in 2017”.

In one of the latest reactions to Rafsanjani’s remarks, Amir Ali Hajizadeh, the commander of the Aerospace Force of the IRGC, said on September 7: “[First] have the guts to commute without bodyguards for a few days. Then claim that the country doesn’t need military forces.” Similar attacks will likely continue and gain in momentum in the coming days.

‘Greedy intentions’

On his website, Rafsanjani’s office denied that he was suggesting Iran’s military should be downsized. The statement read: “Ayatollah Hashemi Rafsanjani’s statements were not meant to weaken [the country’s] military capabiliti­es, or, as interprete­d by critics, an invitation for the enemies to attack the country. Rather, they were an emphasis on the role of scientific and technologi­cal advancemen­ts in making the country immune from different kinds of harms, including the enemies’ greedy intentions.”

But what has made Rafsanjani’s hardliner opponents with close ties to the IRGC particular­ly suspicious is that he had made a similar move not long ago. On March 23, a tweet on Rafsanjani’s Twitter page read: “The world of tomorrow is a world of dialogue, not missiles.” A few days later, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei reacted fiercely, saying that those who believe the country’s future lies in negotiatio­ns rather than missiles are “either ignorant or traitors”. Not surprising­ly, Rafsanjani’s initial tweet was revised and he said that his original remarks were improperly stated. The revised tweet read: “The world of tomorrow is the world of the discourse similar to the Islamic Revolution’s, not interconti­nental ballistic missiles and atomic weapons.”

Rafsanjani perhaps truly believes that a brighter future for Iran cannot be achieved through perpetual confrontat­ion, especially with the US and its allies. Regarding his objection to hostile relations with America in the 1980s, in a handwritte­n letter to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the leader of the Iranian Revolution, he clarified his stance when no one dared talk about a reconcilia­tion with the US. This pragmatist school of thought shapes part of the Iranian establishm­ent. In meeting with American think tanks, academics and NGOs in September 2015, Rouhani asserted, “But for us to think that until the end of the world this animosity and tension between, and lack of relations between, the two countries will continue, that is an impossibil­ity.”

Another explanatio­n for Rafsanjani’s recent remarks could be that considerin­g his popularity and given Iran’s struggling economy, he has calculated that the time is ripe to create and push for a discourse aimed at cutting military spending.

The furious reaction from the hardliners is because they think that this explanatio­n is actually his view, rather than a sincere miscalcula­tion.

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