Naomi Klein: In 2013, Raphsanjani ran again but was disqualified. His protégé Hassan Rouhani ended up winning the presidency of Iran. Was Rouhani part of the Qatami tradition or did he represent another current of Iranian politics entirely? Naomi Klein: I think in 2013, when Rassanjani is disqualified, this is obviously, again, just another chapter in the long divorce between Raffi Kharmani and Rafizadeh Jafari.
Featuring Eskandar Sadeghi-Boroujerdi and Golnar Nikpour on the history of modern Iran. This is the fifth and final episode in what is now a FIVE-part series. We begin this episode in 1997, with reformist cleric Mohammad Khatami’s surprise landslide election to the presidency. Then we cover the reformists running into hardliner repression and George W. Bush's War on Terror, the 2005 election of hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, his 2009 reelection and Green Movement protests, Hassan Rouhani and the nuclear accord that Trump then tore up, the 2019 mass working-class protests, and the election (but really more coronation) of right-winger Ebrahim Raisi. We end with the death of Zhina Mahsa Amini in the custody of morality police and the current mass protest movement that erupted in response.
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