https://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/20835/iran-desperately-seeking-gorbachev
Gorbachev had a thin resume as an apparatchik who had risen in the party by doing nothing, in fact, by being nobody.
When he came to London to be promoted by Margaret Thatcher, his 10-line resume introduced him as the Central Committee’s agricultural tsar who had risen to be party boss and later president of the USSR.
He was a blank face on which one could draw one’s ideal face for a Soviet leader.
Iran’s President Pezeshkian offers that kind of blank face. His thin resume inspires a variety of fanciful images.
Could Pezeshkian be Iran’s Gorbachev?
Referring to President Masoud Pezeshkian, the question was headlined in a Tehran daily Tuesday and triggered a torrent of comments.
The paper’s commentator described Pezeshkian as a man trusted by the system and thus capable of introducing unspecified reforms to save Iran from unspecified dangers.
This is not the first time that regime insiders call for adjustments in its trajectory.
The first to do so was Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic, who issued an 8-point reform manifesto which, had it been implemented, would have made Iran a Scandinavian-style democracy minus the monarchy.
Needless to say, that didn’t happen.
Instead, the nation witnessed mass executions, the pursuit of an unwinnable war against Iraq and flood-like spread of corruption.