Andrew Sprung comments on this post:
A second irony is that while Mousavi insists "it's not about me," the resistance may yet be shaped by his strategy — peaceful pressure to convince the mullahs to step back from the brink, then reform their Islamist regime in order to save it. Events could overwhelm his leadership from two directions — brutal crackdown or a revolution that sweeps away the Islamic Republic. But so far he's something of a dam holding both sides back.
Here's an interesting take about the deep divide within the elite:
As Trita Parsi of the National Iranian American Council, among others, has noted, Rafsanjani is now counting his votes at the Council of Experts (86 clerics, no women) – of which he is the chairman – to see if they are able to depose Khamenei. He is in the holy city of Qom for this explicit purpose. To pull it off, the council would imperatively have to be supported by at least some factions within the IRGC. The Ahmadinejad faction will go ballistic. A Supreme Leader implosion is bound to imply the implosion of the whole Khomeini-built edifice.
That piece by Bill Keller this morning about Ahmadinejad's triumph? How embarrassing was that?