CapelDodger
Penultimate Amazing
Perhaps. But here's my dilemma:
On the one hand, I have Ahmadinejad, who is backed by the military and the Supreme Leader, who will hold power by virtue of force, and which exposes Iran for the brutal dictatorship it has always been. Or I have Mousavi, who is backed by the mullahs and the new aristocracy, who can lay claim to democratic mandate, but who in fact is simply perpetuating the carefully orchestrated rigged elections whose facade only briefly peeled away in the last weeks because the folks on top couldn't agree on whose victory to rig.
So you're asking me to choose between a despot we all know is a despot, or the figurehead of a behind-the-scenes despot, whose veneer of democracy is entirely fabricated.
I'm not so certain which choice is better. It's like saying, half the voters preferred actual crap to manufactured crap. That means we all get to eat crap!
We all have to eat crap, the question is how much. In this case the question is of greatest relevance to Iranians present and future. Great efforts are made to present Iran as a threatening bogey-man but it's not there in the evidence. Revolutionary rhetoric counts for nothing and if a nuclear Pakistan doesn't frighten people why should a nuclear Iran?
The Iranian protestors aren't calling for a new revolution, but they do want a change of direction and Mousavi offers that. There may well have been election-rigging but it was hardly carefully orchestrated, lets face it. Elections haven't been fixed before which explains a lot of the outrage this time, even with the perception of rigging. And there were certainly many things done differently and suspiciously.
One great resentment of the urban post-Revolution/post-war generations is the Basij (uneducated peasant bullies in the main) and under Mousavi they might well be reined-in and put under the rule of law. That would be a great step. The Revolutionary Guard's role might also be reduced. There would certainly be a different rhetoric towards the West; nuclear power would still be pursued but that's a matter of national pride, not religious.
It's thirty years since the Revolution and the old men are dropping off the perch. This is the sort of period in a revolution when the future is gradually formed, not in a revolution but in a re-moulding.
