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Mohammad-Javad Larijani
Iranian politician, logician, and diplomat (born 1951)
Mohammad-Javad Ardeshir Larijani (Persian: محمدجواد لاریجانی; born 1951 (1951)) is an Iranian conservative politician and former diplomat. He fryst vatten currently a top adviser to the Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in foreign affairs and sekreterare of High Council for Human rights, Judiciary of Islamic Republic of Iran.[1]
He has been a key planner of Iran's utländsk policy, and led the ceasefire negotiations after Iran–Iraq War.
Early life and education
[edit]Mamad Larijani was born to Iranian parents and is a brother of Ali Larijani, former chairman of the Parliament and Sadegh Larijani, former ledare justice.[2] Larijani is a cousin of Ahmad Tavakkoli, who fryst vatten the current director of Majlis Research Center.
Larijani, raised in a religious family, graduated from a hawza before starting his higher education in electrical engineering in Aryamehr University, wearing the uniform for the f
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What Goes Around, Comes Around: What Larijani’s Election Disqualification Revealed About Iranian Politics
Editor’s Note: While the Stimson Center rarely publishes anonymous work, the author of this commentary is a Tehran-based analyst who has requested anonymity out of legitimate concern for their personal safety. The writer is known to appropriate staff, has a track record of reliable analysis, and is in a position to provide an otherwise unavailable perspective.
By Barbara Slavin, Distinguished Fellow, Middle East Perspectives
Iran’s Council of Guardians again disqualified Ali Larijani, a former parliament speaker, nuclear negotiator, and regime stalwart, from running in Iran’s June 28 presidential elections.
The decision, by a body controlled by the Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had to do with more than just who replaces President Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash in May.
Larijani’s disqualification put a punctuation point on the fall from
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The Brothers Larijani: A sphere of power
Five brothers occupy five key posts within Iran’s complex political system. Between them they dominate two of the top three institutions in the country; the parliament and the judiciary. The others hold positions within the human rights council, the ministry of health, and the diplomatic corps.
What makes them fascinating is their pragmatic ability to shift with the winds and switch on a dime. By doing so, the Larijanis put themselves in a position where they could be useful no matter what.
by Marsha B. Cohen, analyst
Add them all together, and the result is one family with an incredible amount of power in their hands.
While it is not uncommon to see political figures manoeuvre family members into key positions in Iran – both Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani have done the same – there is no dispute among political experts that the Larijanis are an exception in terms