No recent election has received as much attention in the Western media as has Iran’s. The leaders of the U.S., France, U.K, Germany. and Italy have made no secret of their dislike of the declared results: President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was given another four-year term.

Why the fuss, given that the U.S. did not comment on the results of the recent Lebanese parliamentary elections, in which over a billion dollars was spent to pay for charter flights and free trips for Lebanese in Canada and other countries to go home and vote? Besides, irregularities and election security in every election are common.

We all remember, as should President Barak Obama, the electoral fraud of the 2000 U.S. presidential election. George W. Bush stole the highest position in the nation, and that led millions of Americans to call for taking back control of the democratic process, exposing the corruption in election security, and real election reform. I don't remember Mr. Obama saying a word at that time.

Let us first state some facts about Iran:

Now we ask: who among the Iranians is not happy with the declared results and is demonstrating inside and outside Iran? They belong to one of these groups:

"The election was free and there is no document proving these charges," said Ahmadinejad in his first press conference following his re-election. "It is really ridiculous that the loser of the election claims that majority of the votes belong to him. This is really absurd."

Ahmadinejad said there was no crisis in the country, and he compared the protestors to football fans whose team has lost and could not tolerate defeat. "That is natural; these are short-term emotional reflections," he said, claiming that freedom in Iran was "almost at a maximum level" and therefore opponents still have the right to express their standpoints.

Helene Cooper of The New York Times reported that the continuing street protests in Tehran are emboldening a corpus of conservatives-read pro-Israel lobby-in Washington to demand that Mr. Obama take "a more visible stance" in support of the protesters.

Ahmadinejad’s re-election was a test of Mr. Obama’s foreign policy. He got an F.