Ahmadinejad Says The Iranian ‘Soft Overthrow’ Has Failed

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad says unspecified foes caused the turmoil in which hundreds of thousands of Iranians protested alleged election fraud. A reformist group calls for an end to demonstrations.

Reporting from Beirut — Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, his controversial reelection affirmed by clerical allies a day earlier, on Tuesday hailed his victory as a triumph for the nation as opponents continued to question the legitimacy of the vote.

The hard-line president blamed unspecified “conspiracies” and Iran’s “enemies” for the recent turmoil over the election, which led to a severe crackdown in which dozens of Iranians were killed and hundreds jailed.

After weeks of street clashes, Tehran was calm much of the day without any visible presence of anti-riot police or pro-government Basiji militia except in Jomhouri (Republic) Square. State-controlled television, in between reports about foreign powers stirring up trouble in Iran, interviewed ordinary Iranians who said they were eager for an end to the acrimony created by the June 12 vote.

Speaking before employees of the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, Ahmadinejad said the election served as a referendum on taking the country in the direction he had set for it. That includes, he said, a foreign policy focused on “breaking the monopoly” of world powers.

“The enemies were not able to reach their objectives for the soft overthrow of the system,” he said, according to the semiofficial Iranian Labor News Agency, or ILNA. “The enemy is pursuing the objective of undermining the nation’s capabilities after the 85% turnout at the polls.”

All three of Ahmadinejad’s challengers and hundreds of thousands of Iranians who poured into the streets in protest have decried his reelection as a fraud. The Guardian Council, whose 12 members were appointed directly or indirectly by Ahmadinejad’s patron, supreme leader Ali Khamenei, approved his reelection Monday after recounting ballots that critics said were forged.

The Combatant Clergy Assn., the main reformist clerical group, on Tuesday called for a halt to protests, arguing that taking the conflict to the streets was costing lives and giving Ahmadinejad’s allies in the security forces an excuse to beat and imprison dissidents.

“While we protest the election results, and believe in the right to protest, this should not cost the dear people any more,” said a statement carried by ILNA. “And we expect the officials to make plans for ending the security and military atmosphere, release the prisoners . . . and officially recognize the right for civic protests and freedom of speech.”

Ayatollah Jalaledin Taheri, a reformist cleric and former prayer leader in the city of Esfahan, blasted state-controlled television, which is widely seen as a mouthpiece of Khamenei and Ahmadinejad. In an indication that the rift over the election continued to sharply divide the country’s religious and political establishment, Taheri accused the country’s leadership of abusing the legacy of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who founded the Islamic Republic.

“Did imam [Khomeini] believe that those who should remain impartial during election can take sides publicly in favor of a particular candidate?” Taheri said in a statement issued Tuesday. “Did imam permit using the public treasury for a particular candidate without any limitations?”

Meanwhile, the pro-Ahmadinejad Fars news agency reported that Iranian Canadian journalist Maziar Bahari, a correspondent for Newsweek who had been arrested in the recent unrest and held in Tehran’s Evin Prison without access to a lawyer, had made a videotaped confession in which he admitted to being part of a “velvet revolution” meant to overthrow the Islamic Republic. The alleged statement and its authenticity could not be confirmed.  Article by Borzou Daragahi for The Los Angeles Times.  For more news and information, click the link below for the Los Angeles Times (www.latimes.com).  The L. A. Times is the west coast’s leading newspaper.  Support the L. A. Times and your local newspaper.

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Iran’s president says enemies’ ’soft overthrow’ failed – Los Angeles Times.

Posted by Man In The Middle on Jun 30th, 2009 and filed under Latest News, Military, News, Politics, War, World. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

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