Prelude to War
When he first provoked a confrontation with the United Nations over Iran's nuclear programme, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was visibly counting on a sharp but short clash that would strengthen the Islamic Republic in the long run. In defiant mood, the firebrand leader based his policy on the Nietzschean dictum: What cannot kill me makes me stronger! |
the Islamic Republic must stop uranium enrichment and place its centrifuges under the control of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). It is clear that Ahmadinejad cannot agree to such a move. For him to do so would be tantamount to committing political suicide. |
But removing Ahmadinejad from power is not easy. Nor is it certain that the star-chambre of Khimeinism in Tehran could prevent the firebrand president from winning a second term. Whether anyone likes it or not, and I certainly don't, Ahmadinejad remains popular with that shrinking constituency that still believes in the Khomeinist revolution. In the absence of normal freedoms, it is hard to establish the actual strength of that constituency. |
Regimes that lack domestic mechanisms for policy change are bound to have change imposed on them by external force. |
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Labels: Ahmadinejad, Iran, Sanctions
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