July 21, 2009 1:35 PM

Iran Unrest Escalates to Clash of Clerics

(CBS/AP)  Iran's election dispute has moved beyond the drama of mass street protests to a new phase: a fight for power within the ruling religious establishment itself.

The conflict escalated as the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, backed by hard-line clerics and the Revolutionary Guard, issued a warning to the opposition in general and powerful cleric Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani in particular.

"The elite should be watchful, since they have been faced with a big test. Failing the test will cause their collapse," Khamenei said Monday in a speech marking a religious holiday. "Anybody who drives the society toward insecurity and disorder is a hated person in the view of the Iranian nation, whoever he is."

The opposition was emboldened when Rafsanjani stepped into the fray with a Friday prayer sermon that sharply criticized the leadership's handling of the postelection crisis. He has re-ignited the opposition, emerging as its leading patron.

"You are facing something new: an awakened nation, a nation that has been born again and is here to defend its achievements," opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi said Monday in comments that appeared pointed directly at Khamenei, in a tone rarely used toward the supreme leader.

Mousavi, whose loss in recent presidential elections triggered mass protests, also derided the claim by Khamenei and hard-line clerics that the protest movement was a tool of foreign enemies. "Who believes that (protesters) would conspire with foreigners and sell the interests of their own country?" he said. "Isn't this an insult to our nation?"

A heavy security crackdown broke the demonstrations that followed the disputed June 12 presidential election, which had President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad trouncing Mousavi. But the opposition has brought thousands into the streets twice in the past two weeks.

On Tuesday, witnesses saw Iranian riot police arrest dozens of opposition supporters in Tehran, according to a Reuters report. Protesters were reportedly chanting "Ahmadinejad - resign, resign" and "Death to the dictator."

On Sunday, a leading pro-reform figure, former President Mohammad Khatami, called for a referendum on the legitimacy of Ahmadinejad's government. That could emerge as a concrete demand for the opposition to rally around. Another demand they will likely focus on is the release of the more than 500 protesters and prominent reform politicians still in prison from the crackdown.

Khamenei has supported Ahmadinejad with unprecedented openness, dismissing opposition claims he won by fraud, and his speech Monday suggested he was digging in against opposition demands. Abandoning the president now to a referendum would be a blow to Khamenei's status as supreme leader.

If the opposition were based solely on street protests or on mainstream reform politicians, it might have eventually withered under the security crackdown and the condemnations of hard-line clerics. The support of Rafsanjani - even though he is mistrusted by many reformists - gives the movement new life and an advocate within the clerical power structures.

There have always been behind-the-scenes power struggles within Iran's leadership, but rarely have they been so open or had such high stakes. The conflict now is in part over the authority of the supreme leader, who sits at the top of the country's political and religious hierarchy and who in the eyes of conservatives is the representative of God's rule.

In his Friday sermon, Rafsanjani sharply criticized the leadership for its handling of the election crisis, saying it should have listened to the people's doubts. He presented himself as a neutral figure with a solution to the crisis that would preserve the Islamic Republic - a role that in theory the supreme leader should play.

Iran's Islamic Republic is supposed to meld democracy and theology. People elect a president and parliament, but those institutions are overseen by Shiite clerics who ensure the system remains adherent to Islam. In practical terms, religious rule is carried out through three main ruling bodies, all dominated by senior clerics.

Rafsanjani's entry into the field has brought those three bodies into open conflict.

Khamenei's center of support is the Guardian Council, which has perhaps the most wide-ranging power. It reviews parliament's laws to ensure they adhere to Islamic principles, and it oversees elections, with the power to remove candidates it considers insufficiently loyal to the system. Its members are predominantly hard-line clerics, who have spoken out strongly since the election, telling the people to fall in line behind Khamenei and Ahmadinejad.

The other two bodies are both headed by Rafsanjani. The Expediency Council's role is to mediate when the Guardians Council and parliament disagree. The Experts Assembly chooses the supreme leader and in theory could remove him - though such a step has never been considered and attempting it would be a nearly unthinkable escalation.

Since Friday, hard-line clerics, politicians and media have been lashing out at Rafsanjani.

Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, a member of the Guardian Council, bluntly said Rafsanjani was "wrong" for contending in his sermon that popular support is the basic condition for the Islamic Republic; he said the system's legitimacy comes from God.

Yazdi accused Rafsanjani of causing rifts in the leadership and warned: "Anybody resisting against the ruling system will be broken."

Rafsanjani may try to use his levers within the system to pressure Khamenei to bend. Khamenei long ruled by balancing factions and by at least keeping an appearance of being above the fray.

Rafsanjani also has another potential tool: the many prominent clerics and theologians who don't hold positions on the ruling bodies. Many of these clerics appear discontent - some speaking out in support of Mousavi, others showing their anger by failing to explicitly back Ahmadinejad. They have wide popular followings and their support is key to the Islamic Republic's legitimacy.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 27 Comments
by curiously1 July 22, 2009 1:17 AM EDT
We have folks who call themselves anti-zionists posting left 'n right here in favor of the ruling thugs in iran.
How much do you have to hate the jews to show love to some thugs who want to nuke you and your family?! Isn't this stupid?
Reply to this comment
by ajayvee July 21, 2009 5:48 PM EDT
My goodness, all these protests must be costing the Mossad and the CIA a small fortune.
Reply to this comment
by YuSoWrong July 21, 2009 5:54 PM EDT
Because we all know that the Iranians are subhumans who don't want or need a secular republic, just to be led-around by mystics all day?

Would you be one of the enlightened ones who could lead them?
by HolyVoice July 21, 2009 5:47 PM EDT
"Ayatollah Mohammad Yazdi, a member of the Guardian Council, bluntly said Rafsanjani was "wrong" for contending in his sermon that popular support is the basic condition for the Islamic Republic; he said the system's legitimacy comes from God."

Well then . . . God may not find the system that legitimate after all. Do they ignore God when the message comes from the general populace.

Few people listen to the Voice of God much; if they did, there would be less violence in the world today.
Reply to this comment
by Questionews July 21, 2009 4:36 PM EDT
I like the picture. Ahmadinejad looks like a kid trying to stay out of a fight between his parents.
Reply to this comment
by SAMTORRES66 July 21, 2009 3:04 PM EDT
Iran clerics is like the US supreme court, they don't have a clue....
Reply to this comment
by YuSoWrong July 21, 2009 4:44 PM EDT
No, what you've been preaching is that it's a good thing; and it is, for psychopaths, victims of religious melancholia, and whatever reinvention Anti-Zionist_110 may be. Like Madonna, always back with a new look.
by hungry1968-16 July 21, 2009 3:02 PM EDT
Obama played the whole situation perfectly, by making sure that we stayed out of Iran's internal problems, and now the problems are STAYING internal, and Iran's theocracy is paying the price for it.

Well played, Mr. President!!!
Reply to this comment
by geewheeez July 21, 2009 3:14 PM EDT
agreed!
by altoman1 July 21, 2009 2:24 PM EDT
Pray to who? What a bunch of Nitwits!
Reply to this comment
by YuSoWrong July 21, 2009 2:20 PM EDT
A police-state is a police-state is a police-state. Doesn't matter which old man has a revelation, when the public is afraid to think.
Reply to this comment
by proud_churchgoer July 21, 2009 1:42 PM EDT
They are fighting each other, my prayers to Jesus are working! Hallejulia!
Reply to this comment
by DaVicar5 July 21, 2009 1:50 PM EDT
Let's pray the wicked destroy one another!
by lovegetpeace July 21, 2009 6:18 PM EDT
If the British were to legalize Public Execution, then you would be the 1st to buy a ticket to the entertainment.
by docpeter1953 July 21, 2009 1:16 PM EDT
This is getting interesting.

We have a situation where someone like the Pope wants to run the world, but a few of his Bishops and Cardinals disagree with him on who should be president.

Keep going Rafsanjani! Many are behind you, waiting and watching to see what happens.
Reply to this comment
by John_Merritt July 21, 2009 1:21 PM EDT
No matter what happens, they will still find time to blame Israel and the U.S. for all the problems in their country and the world. Sign me: Let the games begin.
by lovegetpeace July 21, 2009 6:12 PM EDT
Hello John_Merritt,
You better sign up ASAP because soon the world will be Indifferent to the Jews just like Nazi Germany was before WWII....

According to our US State Department, Anti-Semitics is exploding around the world:
http://www.reuters.com/article/topNews/idUSN1334791720080314?feedType=RSSfeedName=topNews&rpc=22&sp=true

The Jews are getting all the blame for the Holocaust the Zionists and Rabbis are conducting to the Palestinians.
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