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Iran's Most Wanted
As Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is inaugurated in Iran, as many as 50 Iranian journalists are languishing in prison cells-victims of his administration's brutal post-election crackdown. Reza Aslan names names.
Momentum Shifts to Iran's Reformers
Tehran's opposition has regained its edge with smarter, more creative protests and even some senior army officers. Reza Aslan on why the regime is beginning to fear a repeat of the 1979 revolution.
Former Iranian President Blasts Government
Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani spoke at Friday Prayer and delivered pointed criticism of the handling of the Iranian election and the arrest of protesters. Demonstrators took to the streets. Reza Aslan says the revolution may not be over.
An Iranian Icon on Today's Protests
A decade before the massive demonstrations of the last month, a young Iranian became a symbol of student protests-and spent years in prison for it. Ahmad Batebi, now 32 and living in Washington, talks to The Daily Beast's Reza Aslan on the 10th anniversary of the uprising known as 18 Tir.
The Mullahs' Secret Battle
The uprising's power struggle has shifted from the streets to the backrooms of the government. But The Daily Beast's Reza Aslan writes that, despite rumors, demonstrators are hardly giving up.
The Thugs Who Lead Iran's Supreme Leader
Iran's supreme leader may have the most exalted title, but Gary Sick says the Islamic republic's real engine is the Revolutionary Guard. They run the economy, own major industries, and brutalize their foes-and Khamenei almost never contradicts them.
Mousavi's New Revolutionary Manifesto
The Iranian protest movement reached a tipping point today, writes Gary Sick, the key White House official during the 1979 hostage crisis, and what has emerged is nothing short of a platform for a true Islamic democracy.
Ahmadinejad Is No Hitler
The Iranian incumbent's not the next Adolf, and Iran is no Nazi Germany. Former Council on Foreign Relations consultant Nazee Moinian on why Ahmadinejad won't attack Israel, why he doesn't want a nuclear bomb-and why, ultimately, his rants are more nuanced than the West believes.
Iran's Riveting Political Drama
No matter who wins on Friday, this election season has been unlike any other in Iran, with Twittering political rallies, rancorous televised debates-and a challenger that has Ahmadinejad lifting pages from Obama's playbook. The Daily Beast hits the streets in Iran to gauge the mood.




















