By Phil Wilayto
(source: CASMII)
Iran's response to a supposedly conciliatory
address March 20 by U.S. President Barack Obama has been met with a torrent of
"we-told-you-sos" by the U.S. media.
The Los Angeles Times reported
that Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had simply "dismissed
President Obama's extraordinary Persian New Year greeting ..."
The Christian Science Monitor
said the president's gesture had been "greeted coolly" by Khamenei.
And an Associated Press report
carried by, among others, The New York Times, called Khamenei's response a
"rebuff" that "was swift and sweeping."
Was it?
President Obama used the
occasion of Norooz, the Iranian New Year, to issue a message to both the Iranian
people and its government that was noteworthy both for its tone and much of its
substance. Implicitly rejecting the arrogant bellicosity of the Cheney-Bush
years, the president stressed that his administration "is now committed to
diplomacy that addresses the full range of issues before us, and to pursuing
constructive ties among the United States, Iran and the international
community."
Specifically, Obama reiterated
his already stated preference for diplomacy over the threat of military force.
"This process [pursuing constructive ties] will not be advanced by threats," he
said. "We seek instead engagement that is honest and grounded in mutual
respect."
President Obama's remarks were
considered highly unusual for several reasons. First, instead of attempting,
like President George W. Bush before him, to go over the heads of Iran's
government and talk "directly" to the Iranian people, Obama pointedly directed
his remarks to both the Iranian people and their government. And he referred to
the country by its official name, the Islamic Republic of Iran, implicitly
recognizing the legitimacy of that government. And he stated that the U.S. wants
Iran "to take its rightful place in the community of nations," acknowledging
that "You have that right ..."
So why was Iran's response so
negative?
Well, first of all, it wasn't.
The office of Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was among the first to respond to Obama's "overture."
In a statement to Press TV,
Iran's English-language television channel, presidential aide Ali-Akbar
Javanfekr said, "If Mr. Obama takes concrete action and makes fundamental
changes in U.S. foreign policy towards other nations, including Iran, the
Iranian government and people won't turn their back on him."
As reported by the Iranian
Fars News Agency, Iran's Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki commented on
Obama's address, saying that "We are glad that Norooz has been a source for
friendship and we are pleased that Norooz message is a message for coexistence,
peace and friendship for the whole world."
Press TV itself reported on
President Obama's address in a March 20 online article titled "Obama scores
points with Iran message," noting that "his remarks, a significant departure
from the tone of the previous administration, were well-received around the
globe." The news channel also carried a link to Obama's address.
The U.S. media generally
focused on the response by Iran's Supreme Leader, currently Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, who is not only the country's top religious leader but also its
military commander-in-chief.
Addressing a large crowd on
March 22 in his home town of Mashhad in northeastern Iran, the ayatollah touched
on Obama's remarks, noting that "Of course, we have no prior experience of the
new president of the American republic and of the government, and therefore we
shall make our judgment based on his actions."
Not exactly a ringing
endorsement, but neither was it a cold rebuff or dismissal.
Khamenei went on to list
some of the major Iranian complaints against the U.S., including 30 years of
sanctions that include the seizure of important Iranian assets; supporting
Saddam Hussein in his 1980 invasion of Iran, an act of aggression that led to an
eight-year war and "300,000 Iranian martyrs;" the U.S. government's continuing
unconditional support for Israel; the loss of nearly 300 civilian lives in the
1988 downing of an Iranian airbus by the USS Vincennes warship, an air disaster
the U.S called an accident but one for which it has never apologized; and
alleged U.S. support for anti-Iranian terrorist attacks along the Iran-Pakistan
border.
"Could the Iranian nation
forget these tragedies?" Khamenei asked his audience.
The Fars agency reported that "Ayatollah Khamenei
noted that the American new government says that it has stretched its hands
towards Iran, and we say if cast-iron hands have been hidden under a velvety
glove, so this move would be in vain."
Then, according to Fars, came the nub of the
Iranian response: "Pointing to the America's message over the new Iranian year,
Ayatollah Khamenei said they even had accused Iran of supporting terror and
seeking nuclear weapons. He asked if it [Obama's Norooz greeting] is a
congratulation or continuation of the same accusations."
Good point. In his address,
President Obama wrapped this chestnut in the soothing message of conciliation:
"The United States wants the Islamic Republic of Iran to take its rightful place
in the community of nations. You have that right - but it comes with real
responsibilities, and that place cannot be reached through terror or arms [my
emphasis - P.W.], but rather through peaceful actions that demonstrate the true
greatness of the Iranian people and civilization.
So President Obama, like
Bush before him, is still accusing Iran of promoting terrorism and relying on
"arms," an obvious reference to charges that Iran is attempting to develop
nuclear weapons, charges Iran has repeatedly rejected.
Like the ayatollah asked,
was Obama's Norooz greeting "a congratulation or continuation of the same
accusations"?
And is it unreasonable to
declare, as Khamenei did in his speech in Mashhad, that Iran will evaluate the
Obama administration based on its actions?
Some of those actions are
already clear.
Earlier in March, President
Obama formally extended by one year a set of unilateral sanctions against Iran
that were first imposed in 1995 by President Bill Clinton. Not exactly a
confidence-building measure for the Iranians.
But not a departure from
Obama policy, either. In his Senate confirmation hearing, then-Treasury
Secretary-designate Timothy Geithner came out strongly in favor of the Bush
policy of increasingly repressive sanctions against Iran.
"I agree wholeheartedly
that the Department of the Treasury has done outstanding work in ratcheting up
the pressure on Iran," Geithner told members of the Senate Finance Committee,
"both by vigorously enforcing our sanctions against Iran and by sharing
information with key financial actors around the world about how Iran's
deceptive conduct poses a threat to the integrity of the financial system."
Interesting. So it was Iran
whose actions were threatening the financial system - not AIG, Citicorp or
Bernard Madeoff.
"If confirmed as secretary
of the Treasury," Geithner continued, "I would consider the full range of tools
available to the U.S. Department of the Treasury, including unilateral measures,
to prevent Iran from misusing the financial system to engage in proliferation
and terrorism."
Then there's Obama's
Secretary of State, Hillary Rodham Clinton. During her run for the Democratic
presidential nomination, Clinton felt it necessary to say she would "obliterate"
Iran if it were to attack Israel.
During his campaign, Obama
himself repeatedly stated that, in dealing with Iran, military force would
always be an option.
Further, Obama's point man on
Iran at the State Department is Dennis Ross, a longtime supporter of Israel who
subscribes to the neocon belief that Iran's president "sees himself as an
instrument for accelerating the coming of the 12th Imam - which is preceded in
the mythology by the equivalent of Armageddon." 1
Ross, by the way, is a
co-founder of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, which includes on
its board of advisors such luminaries as former secretaries of state Alexander
Haig and Henry A. Kissinger, former Assistant Secretary of Defense Richard Perle,
former Director of Central Intelligence R. James Woolsey and, at its founding,
former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Jeane Kirkpatrick.
The Institute recently
released a "Presidential Study Group Report" titled "Preventing a Cascade of
Instability: U.S. Engagement to Check Iranian Nuclear Progress." The report
calls for increasing pressure on Iran to force it to end its nuclear program:
"If engagement fails to produce an agreement, a strategy of tightening economic
sanctions and international political pressure in conjunction with all other
policy instruments [Emphasis added - P.W.] provides a basis for longterm
containment of Iran's nuclear ambitions." 2
Of course, the report
doesn't mention that Iran has a sovereign right to develop nuclear power for
peaceful energy purposes, a right recognized by the United Nations because Iran
is a signatory to the U.N.'s Non-Nuclear Proliferation Treaty, or NPT. The NPT's
inspection arm, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has carried out repeated
and extensive inspections of Iran's nuclear program and each time has concluded
that Iran is not trying to develop nuclear weapons. That evaluation was seconded
on November 2007 by the 16 U.S. intelligence agencies in their annual National
Intelligence Estimate, their annual evaluation of potential threats to the U.S.
And yet the charge of a
secret nuclear weapons program continues under the Obama administration, as it
did under Bush.
It's a charge heavily aided
by the media.
The Associated Press, the
only U.S.-based, nationally oriented news service, produces and/or circulates
news stories published by more than 1,700 newspapers, plus more than 5,000
television and radio broadcasters. It also operates The Associated Press Radio
Network, which provides newscasts for broadcast and satellite stations.
In other words, it has
juice.
And this is how the AP,
which regularly refers vaguely and therefore deceptively to "Iran's nuclear
ambitions," covered the Iranian reaction to Obama's Norooz greetings:
"... Supreme Leader Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei's response was more than just a dismissive slap at the outreach. It
was a broad lesson in the mind-set of Iran's all-powerful theocracy and how it
will dictate the pace and tone of any new steps by Obama to chip away at their
nearly 30-year diplomatic freeze."
That's supposed to be a news
report, by the way, not an op-ed piece.
The AP report, by longtime AP
reporter Brian Murphy, went on to quote a series of "experts" on Iran, including
Patrick Clawson, deputy director of the Washington Institute for Near East
Policy, and Ilan Berman, vice president for policy at the American Foreign
Policy Council.
We've already discussed the
Washington Institute.
Ilan Berman has consulted for
both the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency and the U.S. Department of Defense.
He's also a member of the reconstituted, Cold War-era Committee on the Present
Danger, which includes among its illustrious roster former Commentary editor
Norman Podhoretz, a "leading writer and ideologue of the nonconservative
political faction since the group began to emerge in the late 1960s." 3
So what can we conclude from
all this?
The Obama administration, just
like the Bush regime before it, is demanding that Iran end its pursuit of
nuclear power, an effort it claims is a cover for producing nuclear weapons. It
provides no evidence for its accusation, and neither can the U.N.'s nuclear
proliferation inspection agency or any of the 16 U.S intelligence agencies. And
Iran, as a signatory to the U.N.'s NPT, has every right to pursue nuclear power
for peaceful energy purposes.
But yet the Obama
administration demands that Iran end that legal program. To which Iran's leaders
say, not surprisingly, "No."
So what was the real purpose of
President Obama's Norooz's message to the Iranian people and its government?
A March 21 Wall Street Journal
story on the Norooz address offers one possible explanation:
"Senior U.S. officials say
[Obama's] administration wants to persuade the world that it is different from
President George W. Bush and is going the extra mile to give Iran a chance. If
Tehran rebuffs the overtures and sticks to its nuclear program, Washington can
more easily seek broad support for coercive measures, such as financial
sanctions or even potential military action, they say. 4
In light of all this, Ayatollah
Khamenei's "rebuff" of Obama's olive branch might seem eminently reasonable.
###
1 "A
New Strategy on Iran" By Dennis Ross, May 1, 2006, The Washington Post
2
Washington
Institute for Near East Policy
3
Political Research
Associates
4
The Wall
Street Journal
... Payvand News - 03/24/09 ... --