Iranian leadership row weakens Ahmadinejad camp

TEHRAN, (Reuters) – A power struggle between Iran’s  top leaders could shake the Islamic Republic to its foundations,  with no sign that its hardline president can regain the trust of  conservative politicians and clerics, analysts say.

The unprecedented public intervention of Ayatollah Ali  Khamenei in reversing President Mahmoud Ahma-dinejad’s decision  to dismiss the intelligence minister last month has put Iran’s  Supreme Leader in the forefront of a power struggle that could  harm the legitimacy of the Iranian government.

Khamenei’s status as lofty arbiter had already eroded when  he quickly endorsed Ahmadinejad’s disputed 2009 re-election.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

Now, he has shown no willingness to back off even after  Ahmadinejad stayed at home for 10 days, boycotting cabinet  meetings, in an apparent protest over the minister’s  reinstatement. The president returned to work last Sunday.

The dispute has heightened the anger felt by conservatives  over efforts by Ahmadinejad to wrest more control over security  and foreign affairs from the clerical establishment. Now  conservatives may take off the gloves, analysts say.

Many Shi’ite clerics and politicians have warned Ahmadinejad  over his bucking of Khamenei’s authority. Chants of “death to  opponents of the Supreme Leader” have been heard at Friday  prayers and sermons.

Even Ahmadinejad’s own religious mentor, Ayatollah Mohammad  Taqi Mesbah-Yazdi, cautioned that disobedience towards the  Supreme Leader was tantamount to “apostasy from God”.

The president’s official website (president.ir) has  dismissed reports of a deadline given to Ahmadinejad to publicly  accept the reinstatement of Heydar Moslehi or resign.

Under Iranian law, the president has the right to dismiss  ministers. But Khamenei is Iran’s ultimate wielder of power.

And conservative parliamentarians have warned Ahmadinejad he  could face impeachment if he refused to obey Khamenei. The votes  of at least one third of parliament’s 290 lawmakers are required  for impeachment of the president.

Some MPs argued that Ahmadinejad’s allies wanted to control  the intelligence ministry to secure a majority in the 2012  parliamentary elections, since the intelligence ministry is in  charge of checking backgrounds of potential candidates.

The Islamic Republic’s first president was impeached in 1981  for attempting to undermine the authority of Ayatollah Ruhollah  Khomeini, revered leader of Iran’s Islamic revolution.

ARAB PRO-
DEMOCRACY REVOLTS CAST SHADOW

Analysts say the outcome of Iran’s power struggle is  uncertain but that it could have been kindled in part by  concerns over any spillover effect of popular uprisings against  dictatorial leaders in the Arab world.

“Khamenei feels compelled to confront Ahmadine-jad to  preserve his own authority and the system,” said analyst Hamid  Farah-vashi. “Khamenei might want to use Ahmadinejad as a  scapegoat if the regional popular crisis spreads into Iran.”

Iran’s leaders maintain that the Arab world revolts have  been inspired by its 1979 Islamic Revolution, although analysts  abroad say the unrest has been generally secular, not religious.

In any case, Iranian leaders are worried about any revival  of anti-government protests that buffeted the country after the  re-election of Ahmadine-jad. The opposition says the vote was  rigged. State authorities deny this.

Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards, who quelled  anti-government outpourings in the streets after the 2009 vote,  have also distanced themselves from Ahmadinejad.

“The Islamic Republic cannot survive without the existence  of the Supreme Leader,” the Sharq newspaper quoted Guards  commander-in-chief Mohammad Ali Jafari as saying.

There is no clear political constellation aligned against  Ahmadinejad yet but it might yet crystallise, analysts say, if  conservatives decide that Ahmadinejad’s actions threaten the  stability of the Islamic Republic.

“Khamenei is Iran’s most powerful spiritual, political and  military leader … Without his backing Ahmadinejad will become  a very weak president even if he stays in office,” said analyst  Mohsen Sedaghati.

Conservatives say Ahmadinejad is surrounded by “deviants” in  his inner circle, including his controversial chief of staff,  Esfandiar Rahim-Mashaie, who is accused of undermining the  central role of Shi’ite clerics in Iranian politics by touting  the nationalist strain of Iranian history and culture.

Many clerics and conservative politicians accused Mashaie  and his allies recently of using supernatural powers in pursuing  government policies. At least 25 allies of Ahmadinejad and  Mashaie have been arrested and several websites affiliated to  them have been blocked in the past days.

Some Iranian media reports said Ahmadinejad backed a Mashaie  candidacy to succeed him in the 2013 presidential vote.

Abbas Amirifar, the head of prayers at the presidential  palace, was also arrested over his alleged role in making a film  called “Reappearance Is Imminent”.

The film depicts Khamenei and Ahmadinejad as two close  companions of the hidden Imam Mahdi, who devout Shi’ite Muslims  believe will reappear some day to spread justice in the world.