Iran Pledges Continuation of Raisi's Policies Despite Failures

Gholam-Hossein Esmaili, the Iranian President’s Chief of Staff, committed to a continuation of the Ebrahim Raisi agenda following the unexpected death of the late President.

Gholam-Hossein Esmaili, the Iranian President’s Chief of Staff, committed to a continuation of the Ebrahim Raisi agenda following the unexpected death of the late President.
It must continue; there is no question," he asserted, urging the electorate to demand that future officials adhere to the same hardline strategies in spite of the fact that under his watch the economy has collapsed and there have been record numbers of executions amid deepened human rights abuses.
"Not only will we not falter in these 45 days, but we will also strive to accomplish the work of 450 days," Esmaili stated on the sidelines of Raisi's funeral.
The administration's heavy-handed approach to dissent, characterized by internet restrictions and violent suppressions of protests, has not only deepened domestic strife but also resulted in further global sanctions.
Unemployment is sky high with at least one third of Iranians now living below the poverty line. Iran has during his presidency also accelerated its nuclear program and escalated its proxy war across the Middle East, in addition to producing drones for Russia in its war on Ukraine.
Under the 1979 Constitution, Vice President Mohammad Mokhber has stepped into the role of acting president with the approval of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, serving until the snap elections set for June 28.

Leaders from Iran’s proxy groups joined Iran’s allies in Tehran on Wednesday to attend the memorial services for the late Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, who was killed in a helicopter crash.
The Wednesday morning funeral ceremony, held at Tehran University, was attended by Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas, Naim Qassem of Hezbollah, and representatives from other groups backed by Iran, while western leaders were notably absent.
Ahmed Hachani, Tunisia's Prime Minister, along with the Prime Ministers of Iraq and Armenia, and Russian State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, were also among the figures who arrived to attend the ceremony.
Zhang Guoqing, China’s Vice Prime Minister, and Shehbaz Sharif, Pakistan's Prime Minister, are also expected to arrive, signaling regional support for Tehran amidst its international isolation. Moreover, Egypt’s Foreign Minister, Sameh Shoukry, has traveled to Tehran, marking a rare high-level visit historically strained over ideological differences.

After the sudden death of President Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter crash, Iran is strategizing ways to increase voter turnout for the impending snap elections amid mass discontent.
Tuesday's meeting of the heads of state branches, led by interim President Mohammad Mokhber and other top officials, focused on strategies to galvanize a disillusioned electorate suffering the country’s worst economic crisis since the beginning of the Islamic Republic.
A possibly record low turnout in the March parliamentary elections are believed to have seen as few as eight to ten percent of Iranians vote. Similar lows were seen in the 2021 elections which brought Raisi to power.
During the meeting, also attended by Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Judiciary Chief Gholam Hossein Mohseni Ejei, there was a review of recent amendments aimed at decoupling council elections from presidential elections, purportedly to streamline the electoral process.
The upcoming elections are clouded by uncertainty, with no popular candidates on the horizon and skepticism about whether the Guardian Council will allow any non-hardliner contenders to run.
Statements from the meeting stressed the need to continue the system’s policies and maintain a staunch stance against perceived “enemies”, signaling no shift in Iran's political and social controls both at home and on the global stage.
According to the 1979 Constitution, Vice President Mohammad Mokhber has assumed the role of acting president, following approval from Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, until the snap elections scheduled for June 28.
The Guardian Council spokesman, Hadi Tahan Nazif, confirmed that the newly elected president will serve a four-year term.

The Biden administration’s Iran policy came under intense scrutiny Tuesday, as Republican senators grilled Secretary of State Antony Blinken over a message of condolence for Ebrahim Raisi’s death, and the failure to enforce existing oil sanction.
Leading the field in a Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC) hearing was Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) whose simmering and relentless attack seemed to have caught the seasoned diplomat off guard.
“You have presided over the worst foreign policy disaster of modern times,” was Senator Cruz’s opening line. “We now have two simultaneous wars waging: the worst war in Europe since World War Two, and the worst war in the Middle East in 50 years. Both I believe were caused by this administrations’ consistent weakness.”
‘Weakness’, ‘soft’, even ‘appeasement’, are some of the words that have been used more or less regularly by Republicans in Congress when discussing the Biden administration’s foreign policy, especially with regards to Iran.
Joe Biden had made clear before the election in 2020 that he’d scrap Donald Trump’s 'Maximum Pressure' doctrine against Iran, if he won. Many of Biden’s critics believe that that announcement essentially signaled to the Iranian regime that they’d have more breathing space during a Biden presidency. And that’s what many believe has happened, especially with regards to Iran’s oil exports.
Why Iran's oil sales have increased from 300,000 during the Trump administration to 2 million barrels a day today, the Sneator asked Blinken. Because they're determined to try to do that, we're determined to cut them off, Blinken replied. Cruz continued his relentless questions: They weren't determined when Trump was president?
“When you became secretary of state, how much oil Iran was selling a day,” Cruz asked Blinken. He didn’t know. “How much oil are they selling today,” Cruz continued. Blinken didn’t know, or did not want to respond. “It’s gone up from 300,000 [barrels per day] to 2 million,” Cruz put to Blinken, adding that during the same period, Iran’ ghost fleet –which helps the Iranian regime sell sanctioned oil under the radar.
Blinken stated that the Biden administration had in fact added to Iran’s sanctions, explaining the rise in Iran’s oil revenue by its determination to circumvent sanctions. But the answer did not satisfy Cruz, who had a simpler explanation. “This administration desperately wants a new Iran deal,” he wrapped up his remarks addressing Blinken. “You have been showering cash on Iran from day one.”
It is estimated that Iran has sold around $80 billion of oil during Biden’s presidency, far more than what it used to earn during the era of Maximum Pressure. Biden critics say this has happened because existing sanctions have not been enforced, with the hope that a more lenient approach would persuade Iran to cooperate on other issues of interest to the United States, most notably, the nuclear program.
“The administration's policy is fatally flawed,” Senator Jim Risch, Ranking member of SFRC said in the hearing. “Outreach and accommodation have failed… Iran has doubled down on its support for terrorists and flooded Russia with drones and missiles… I’m proud this committee passed the most significant Iran sanctions legislation we’ve seen in years… Is the admin actually going to enforce them? Recent history suggests it won’t.”
Curiously, Blinken did not even mention Iran in his opening statement, perhaps because he anticipated the bumpy road ahead. He also doubled down on his department’s decision to “express official condolences” on Monday for Raisi’s death, stating that it had been done “many times in the past” in various administrations. It was something the US Department of State does as “a normal course of business,” he said, adding that Iranians were “probably better off” without the man known as the Butcher of Tehran.
“It’s shocking that this administration would mourn the death of the Butcher of Tehran,” Senator Barrasso said at the hearing. “He’s responsible for death, rape, torture. [It was] a terrible mistake.”
This is a sentiment that has been echoed by many Iranians who have gradually grown more critical of the Biden administration for what they see as its ‘embrace’ of the regime in Tehran and ‘betrayal’ of ordinary Iranians. Many say the Islamic Republic “responds only to force,” warning the US government that its aversion to confronting the Islamic Republic would blow out in its face –harming others in the region and in the West.

The General Staff of Iran's Armed Forces has officially denied Turkey's claim that its Akinci drone located the crash site of the helicopter carrying the late President Ebrahim Raisi.
In a statement released on Wednesday, it asserted that “the exact location of the helicopter crash was determined by Iranian armed forces' ground rescue teams and drones.”
Despite Turkey sending a drone equipped with night-vision and thermal cameras, Iran insists that due to the lack of "under-cloud point detection and control" capabilities, the Turkish drone failed to accurately pinpoint the crash site and subsequently returned to Turkey.
While Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan declared a day of national mourning in solidarity with Tehran and touted the drone’s success as a demonstration of Turkey's unmanned aerial capabilities, Iranian media and military figures have labeled his claims as "inaccurate."
Over 2.5 million people tracked the operational data and flight path of the Akinci drone involved in the operation in Iran live.
Meanwhile, in response to reports criticizing the safety conditions of President Raisi's flight, Nournews—a website previously affiliated with Iran's Supreme National Security Council—denied any negligence. It highlighted that the aged helicopter dating back decades, had been under the command of an experienced flight crew and had undergone all necessary weather condition checks, asserting that all essential safety measures had been taken to secure the flight.
However, despite all precautions, "unexpected weather conditions overpowered the forecasts based on technical and security protocols," Nournews added, responding to the criticisms raised about the weather conditions on the day of the crash and the decision to allow the flight despite the circumstances.

Iran’s president killed in a helicopter crash Sunday was given a a grand send-off on Wednesday in Tehran with prayers led by the supreme leader.
Thousands of pro-regime supporters gathered in the Tehran University campus to pay their respects to the delegation who were all killed in a freak accident on the Azerbaijan border.
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei led the prayers for the delegation which Included foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian, due to be buried Thursday.
Dressed in black, attendees held photos of Raisi, a president whose tenure was marked by increasing authoritarian measures from hijab crackdowns to internet bans in addition to massive economic decline.
His legacy will remain one of brutality having been responsible for mass state-sanctioned killings in the 1980s. Thousands of dissidents were murdered and later, under Raisi’s presidency, more than 500 protesters were murdered by state forces during the uprising of 2022 and 2023 a record year for executions.
The ceremony saw Raisi and the delegation’s coffins journey from Tabriz to Tehran, and then on to the religious city of Qom before returning to Tehran as the regime paid homage to one of its loyal servants, having given over 40 years to the government as he climbed the ranks.
Raisi was being groomed to become the next supreme leader by the current dictator, Ali Khamenei, but under his failing policies he was increasingly pushed aside in recent months.
Raisi will be laid to rest in the religious city of Mashhad, his hometown, but Amir-Abdollahian will be buried in Shahr-e Rey, southern Tehran on Thursday.
Vice-president Mohammad Mokhber has stepped in as caretaker with presidential elections announced for June 28.






