Internal conflicts escalate in Iran with approaching presidential elections

With the approach of the Iranian presidential elections scheduled to take place in June, political conflicts are escalating between the reformist and hardline currents, while disputes within each stream are also escalating. The reformists who represent the current government headed by President Hassan Rouhani accuse their hardline counterparts of deliberately failing them and scoring points against them.
Iranian Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri told the parliament
and the Expediency Council that his government was failing because of the
deliberate delay in ratifying the country's laws to join the International
Financial Action Task Force (FATF).
“They obstruct the government's work and then say: Why don't
you work?” Jahangiri said, accusing the hardliners of inventing flimsy excuses
to obstruct the matter, adding, “There are some parties that have not dealt
with simple issues to solve people's problems, but on the other hand they have
been spinning tales and fabricating stories about the topic for six or seven
years.”
Jahangiri also criticized the interference of some bodies
controlled by the hardliners in the work of the government, saying, “They
restrict the work of the government and mortgage the lives of people, then they
say: Why does the government not work?”
“It is not correct for anyone to insult another’s
responsibility. It is not permissible to be in a position and then want to
practice the work of the president of the republic. Everyone who wants to be
president of the republic must run and present himself to the people,” he
added.
A number of reformist names are on the list of potential
presidential candidates, led by current Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif,
as President Rouhani has no right to run again for a third term, according to
the constitution.
With regard to the hardliner current, Saeed Mohammad, a
leader in the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), announced his
resignation in order to run for the presidency. However, the political
assistant in the IRGC, Yadollah Javani, announced on Sunday, April 4, that the
dismissal of Mohammad from the leadership of the Khatam al-Anbiya Construction
Headquarters was due only to “violations and lack of commitment to laws.”
Javani published statements in the media, saying, “The
violations that I have referred to are the emergence of political-electoral
behavior that contradicts the current laws of the Revolutionary Guard.”
Javani confirmed in a statement to Fars News Agency that the
IRGC’s entry into the elections or supporting individuals or electoral lists
“contradicts the laws,” adding that Saeed Mohammad did not present his
resignation from his post, but was dismissed because of his legal wrongdoing.
Following Javani’s interview and some reactions on social
media, Mohammad issued a statement denying that he had committed any violation
of the law, confirming that Javani is not a spokesman for the IRGC and that he
“gave his personal analysis” in this regard.
In a move that reflects the extent of the disagreement
within the institution, IRGC spokesman Ramazan Sharif confirmed that “Saeed
Mohammad did not commit any violations based on official IRGC laws, and the
Revolutionary Guard’s political assistant may recant his accusations,” adding,
“Everyone who says that there is a violation must explain precisely what the
violation is.”
Hossein Salami, commander-in-chief of the IRGC, dismissed
Saeed Mohammad from his post a month ago and appointed Hossein Hoshi to succeed
him in leading the IRGC’s Khatam al-Anbiya Construction Headquarters.