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How Iran Sees the
US Primaries
By Scott MacLeod
Time Magazine
Apr. 21, 2008
From President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's office and
the sitting rooms of high-ranking mullahs to university campuses
and the Farsi-language blogosphere, Iranians are following the American
presidential race more avidly than ever before. That's partly because
they're eager for the exit of President Bush, who branded Iran part
of an "Axis of Evil" and implicitly raised the possibility
of a military strike against the country over its alleged nuclear
weapons program. But the Iranians' interest is also driven by a
sense among many Iranians that the candidacy of Barack Obama offers
real hope for repairing the U.S.-Iranian relationship. Commenting
on the Iranian preference for a Democrat in the White House, Sergei
Barseghian, a columnist for the reformist Etemad Meli newspaper
noted that in Farsi, the words Oo ba ma would translate as "He's
with us."
Senator Obama would be the first to disagree with
that, of course, but the sympathy his candidacy has aroused among
many Iranians stems from a variety of factors, including his African
heritage, his partly Muslim family ties, and a belief that Obama
would move to end Washington's 30-year Cold War with Tehran —
or at least reduce the prospect of a U.S. military attack on the
Islamic Republic. "I think people want him to win," Shi'ite
cleric Mehdi Karroubi, the reformist former parliament speaker defeated
by Ahmadinejad in Iran's 2005 presidential contest, told TIME.
But Obama isn't the only candidate drawing careful
scrutiny in Tehran. Some Iranians are also intrigued by John McCain,
pointing out that Henry Kissinger, a "realist" McCain
adviser, recently called for "direct negotiations" between
the U.S. and Iran. Nonetheless, many consider McCain a hawk and
fear his experiences as an American POW in the Vietnam War may hardwire
him for hostility towards revolutionary governments. All Iranians
seem aware of McCain's "Bomb bomb bomb, bomb bomb Iran"
Beach Boys imitation, and many take it as an indication of his inclinations.
Yet many anti-regime Iranians are praying — albeit quietly
— for a McCain victory. Some Iranians believe that Ahmadinejad
also favors McCain, in the belief that continued confrontation with
the U.S. — as long as it stops short of all-out war —
will enable Iranian hard-liners to rally popular backing against
reformists who seek to improve ties with the West.
Iranians are divided on Hillary Clinton, largely
basing their views on the record in the Middle East of her husband,
who Iranians expect would effectively be her senior foreign policy
adviser. Mohammed Atrianfar, an adviser to former President Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani, argues that Bill Clinton has a "peace-seeking
image" among Iranians. Then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright,
now a Hillary adviser, publicly accepted American responsibility
for involvement in the 1953 coup in Iran and subsequent support
for the repressive regime of the Shah. Iranian diplomats complain,
however, that Clinton also imposed economic sanctions on Iran.
It's not only the policy expectations that account
for Obama's popularity: his Third World ethnic background and the
Muslim faith of his father's Kenyan family — even his middle
name, Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad and a revered
figure in the Shi'ite Islam practiced in Iran — offer points
of affinity that some analysts believe could give Iran's Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the political cover to make a gesture
of reconciliation to the country long decried in Tehran as "the
Great Satan."
But it's Obama's declared willingness to engage
in "aggressive personal diplomacy" with the Iranian leadership
that has generated the most interest among senior officials in Tehran,
since this would mark a sea-change in Washington's approach. "Obama
is a man of engagement, a man of negotiations," one Iranian
official told TIME. Amir Mohebbian, an analyst close to Iranian
conservative politicians, argues that "the mentality of Iranian
decision makers is ready for that." He adds: "I think
that the coming of Obama — maybe, maybe — helps to solve
this problem, but it needs bravery, from both sides."
There are doubts, however. Many Iranians feel
that the American political establishment would put the brakes on
any rapprochement until Iran ended its hostility toward Israel.
There's also concern in Iran that Obama's inexperience in foreign
affairs may prompt him as President to actually take a harder line
on Iran rather than risk appearing to be a weak leader.
And precisely because of the attributes they find
most positive in Obama, many Iranian leaders believe he's unlikely
to be elected. Iran's Vice President Esfandiar Rahim Mashaee, whose
daughter married President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's son last week,
told TIME that Obama "seems not a bad person" and said
that, if he were an American voter, he might even cast a ballot
for the Illinois Senator. But Mashaee thinks Iran will more likely
be facing McCain or Clinton in the White House. "It's far-fetched
that he will be allowed to become President," Mashaee insisted.
Pressed to elaborate, Ahmadinejad's deputy declined to specify whether
it was because of Obama's race or other factors. He just laughed
and exclaimed, "Let's make a bet on it!"
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