Abbas Milani
- The opposition Green Movement emerged spontaneously two years ago to challenge results of the disputed 2009 presidential election. What is the status of the movement today?
The  Green Movement was then, as it is now, part of Iran’s more inclusive  and enduring democratic movement. Its emergence was only spontaneous in  the unexpected trigger from a contested presidential election. Some  observers, long before the June demonstrations, had predicted an  eruption of a democratic movement. But the size and discipline of the  demonstrations—estimated at up to three million in Tehran-- were a  surprise to everyone.
Two  years later, the Green Movement’s claims have been more than validated.  The regime itself is questioning the validity of the 2009 election. And  some 100 members of parliament (Majles) have signed a petition asking  authorities to look into allegations that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  and his allies used millions of dollars to purchase nine million votes.  Iran today is a veritable volcano that could erupt any time. Yet the  Green Movement, with its desire to bring change within the current  constitutional framework, is unlikely to play a leading role when that  eruption comes,
- What are the movement's demands two years later? Have they changed?
The  Green Movement is currently in a state of hibernation waiting for the  next opportunity to make its presence felt. The only demand that is  accepted by all factions within the Green Movement and the larger  democratic movement  is freedom for all political prisoners,  particularly the leadership of the Green Movement. 
- Have the opposition's strategies or tactics changed since the house arrest of its two most vocal leaders--Mehdi Karroubi and Mir Hossein Mousavi--in February 2011?
The  Green Movement suffered from a failure to develop a sufficiently robust  and representative strategic vision. It relied on tactics that proved  ineffective, including waiting for a permit to demonstrate in the  streets and occasional acts of defiance in which peaceful demonstrators  had to face armed thugs and security agents. Its strategic failure was  compounded by the lack of hierarchical leadership and the prevalence of a  network of leaders.
- Is the Green Movement still viable or effective, given the arrests of top leaders and thousands of supporters? Is it realistic to think that either Karroubi or Mousavi, both presidential candidates in 2009, will be able to win prominent positions again soon. If not, who is likely to emerge to assume leadership of the largest political opposition?
The  Green Movement, and the larger democracy movement, had no effective  leadership to begin with. Mousavi and Karubi were both nominal leaders,  vessels to shape the inchoate demands of Iran’s democratic movement.  Both the weakness and the power of the movement has been its  non-ideological, non-hierarchical, non-violent, non-utopian nature. It  is rooted in the simple desire for dignity and jobs, a chance to live in  the twenty-first century and without constant government harassment.
For  Iran, as a nation, the days of political messiahs—in the uniform of a  general, a cleric, or a totalitarian political party—are ending. The  reason for the tortured, prolonged, complex but inevitable path to  democracy is due to the now ingrained distrust of false messiahs. But  without centralized leadership, transitions are hard to manage.
- In May 2011, former President Mohammad Khatami called for a national dialogue on forgiveness. How were Khatami's words interpreted by the regime and the opposition? Will he or any mainstream politician be able to bridge the widening political gap?
Former  President Mohammad Khatami’s words were met with chilling indifference  by both sides. Loyalists to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei  lambasted the former president for implying that either the people or  the opposition experienced injustice. And the opposition was openly  incredulous at the idea that the man whose forces terrorized millions  should be forgiven. Khatami’s words were largely seen as a Quixotic  effort to save the regime.
- Given the conservative dominance of government, do reformers have any prospect of genuine choice in the March parliamentary election? And what does that election mean for Ahmadinjad's allies and future?
Iranian  politics is currently undergoing upheavals. Over the past few months,  President Ahmadinejad has boldly stood up to the supreme leader, while  forces loyal to the supreme leader have just as daringly tried to  isolate, weaken, and embarrass their once anointed president. They now  consider Ahmadinejad and his coterie to be a deviationist line, arguably  the greatest challenge to decades of Islamic rule as well as centuries  of Shiite history.
In the regime’s own words, part of the fight today is over the future elections, which Ahmadinejad’s team hoped to hijack. But the steady attacks on Ahmadinejad by forces loyal to Khamenei put into question whether the president will even still be in office by the next election. The Green Movement’s aura continues to haunt the regime, in spite of reports about its premature death.
Read Abbas Milani's chapter on the Green Movement in "The Iran Primer"
Abbas Milani, author of “The Myth of the Great Satan,” is director of  Iranian Studies at Stanford University, where he is also a co-director  of the Iran Democracy Project at Hoover Institution.
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