Hassan rohani is the iranian barack obama


Hassan rohani is the iranian barack obama

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Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free _Mother Jones Daily_. Matt Duss and Lawrence Korb write today that we should be restrained


about what the election of the “reformist” Hassan Rohani means for the future of U.S.-Iranian relations: > One shouldn’t have any illusions about what the election of Rohani > 


represents. He is a dedicated member of the Iranian regime, and a > strong supporter of Iran’s nuclear rights. Negotiations between > the Iran and the P5+1 will not suddenly become 


easy. But the fact > that the most moderate choice prevailed in Iran’s presidential > election reveals that there is an important debate taking place > amongst Iran’s ruling elite 


over the nature of Iran’s relations > with the world. Given the level of distrust that still exists > between the U.S. and Iran, there’s little the U.S. can do to > empower its 


favored interlocutors. But, as the past has shown, > there’s a lot the U.S. can do to empower those most opposed to > conciliation and compromise. Given the high stakes, the U.S. 


should > be as careful as possible to do no harm, as a heightened > Congressional debate over the use of force against Iran would almost > certainly do. For obvious reasons, this


inspired me to modify Duss and Korb’s paragraph slightly: > One shouldn’t have any illusions about what the election of Barack > Obama represents. He’s a dedicated member of the 


bipartisan > mainstream consensus on national security, and a strong supporter of > America’s intelligence community. Foreign military interventions > will not suddenly be 


abandoned, nor will intrusive surveillance > programs be shut down. But the fact that the most moderate choice > prevailed in America’s presidential election reveals that there is >


 an important debate taking place amongst the U.S. ruling elite over > the nature of America’s relations with the world. Hassan Rohani is, more or less, the Barack Obama of Iranian


politics: better than the alternatives, but not likely to represent any kind of sharp, fundamental change. Nor should that come as any suprise. People who truly represent sharp, fundamental


change are very rarely elected national leaders. Not in America, and not in Iran.