USADI Commentary (2006)

December 14, 2006: Iran’s Electoral Travesty: Tomorrow, Iran’s ruling tyranny will hold it's theocratic version of “elections” for the Assembly of Experts and the city councils. Although tomorrow’s elections could be viewed as a barometer of factional balance within the theocratic regime, their first and foremost utility for the ruling regime is to give it an aura of popular legitimacy at a time it is faced with mounting dissent at home and diplomatic isolation abroad. As far as being a display of popular sovereignty, elections are meaningless under the mullahs’ rule. The clerical establishment is built on the anti-democratic doctrine of Velayat-e Faqih, the absolute rule of clerics...
 

November 28, 2006: Capitulation by Any Other Name: As Iraq’s President Jalal Talebani arrived in Tehran on Monday, Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad greeted him by pledging that his government “will do anything to help bring peace into Iraq.” Imagine that: Ahmadinejad; the peacemaker. Meanwhile, according to the New York Times, a senior American intelligence official has revealed that Tehran has coordinated the training of up to 2,000 fighters of the Iraqi Mahdi Army and other Shiite militias by Hezbollah.  The Times added that “American officials say the Iranians have also provided direct support to Shiite militias in Iraq, including explosives and trigger devices for roadside bombs, and training for several thousand fighters, mostly in Iran. The training is carried out by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards and the Ministry of Intelligence and Security, they say.” ...
 

October 17, 2006: Tehran’s Iraqi Hit List: True to his repeated pledge to make the theocratic Iran a model for other countries in the region, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is working hard to make his regime’s treatment of the press and free speech a model for Iraq. The systematic closure of news publications and imprisonment of journalists - a common practice during Mohammad Khatami’s eight-year presidency - has only worsened since Ahmadinejad and took office. Human rights organizations have consistently branded Iran as one of the most dangerous countries for journalists...

 

September 26, 2006: The Confidence of a Brute: During his week-long stay in New York, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad performed exactly as a veteran thug turned president would. And he did a good job of being brutish himself. In that sense, he did not at all disappoint his benefactors back in Iran and in the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corp. He was offensive, brazen, abrasive and crass in substance and tone. Wearing a repugnant smile, he, not so implicitly, mocked his interlocutors and persistently accused them of being the mouthpiece of administration by asking the questions of the “others”, as if he was being interviewed by a state-run media in Iran...

 

August 22, 2006: Nothing But Shame: Today the Washington Post reported that “the Bush administration has agreed to issue a visa to former Iranian President Mohammad Khatami to give a public address at the Washington National Cathedral” early next month. Citing Khatami's “commitment to a dialogue between civilizations and cultures,” the Rev. Samuel T. Lloyd III, dean of the Washington National Cathedral, told the Washington Post that, "It will be an honor for the cathedral to provide a platform for President Khatami."...

 

July 29, 2006: Mullahs’ War with Iranians Rages on: Almost two years have past since the barbaric public execution of Atefe Rajabi, the 16-year old teenage Iranian girl, in northern town of Neka. Since then, with ascendancy of the notorious and extremely suppressive Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps’ elite to all levers of power, culminating in Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s presidency last year, the human rights situation and suppression of dissidents have only worsened in Iran.

Ahmadinejad is indeed the clearest declaration yet of the war the clerical regime has waged on millions of Iranians at home, and on the peace and security of the world, since coming to power in 1979. Since then tens of thousands of Iranians have been killed by firing squads and gallows or in torture dungeons of the mullahs. The killings have not stopped.
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July 10, 2006:
Iran’s 1999 Six Days of Uprising: On July 9, 1999, six days of student-led uprising shook the foundations of Iran’s ruling tyrannical regime. The uprising marked a milestone in the history of Iranians’ struggle to overthrow the mullah’s reign of terror and establish a democratic and secular government in its place. With the blessing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and then-President Mohammad Khatami, uniformed and plain-clothes security forces, assisted by a multitude of intelligence agencies, brutally cracked down on students and thousands of other Iranians who had joined them...

 

June 5, 2006: Empowering the “Outpost of Tyranny”: In public policy statements, State of the Union addresses, and congressional hearings, the stated policy of the United States was said to be all about empowering the Iranian people in their quest for liberty and democracy and isolating the ruling tyrants. In practice, however, it appears that the exact opposite has occurred. In the same week the anti-government demonstrations in many Azeri provinces of Iran and at major universities escalated, and at the time Iranians were shouting “death to the dictator” and “down with despots”, Washington bestows Tehran its most sought after concession by offering to join direct negotiations with the cunning mullahs...

May 9, 2006:
Dead on Arrival: Tehran’s advocates on both sides of the Atlantic have been pushing hard for “direct talks” or a "Grand Bargain" with the clerical regime. Their rigorous and delusional campaign could undermine the administration’s diplomatic efforts at the UN Security Council to bring pressure on Iran to halt its nuclear weapons drive. On Monday, Iran's president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad also acted to thwart the UN debate. He sent a letter to President G. W. Bush via the Swiss Embassy in Tehran... Ahmadinejad’s letter fully fits with Tehran's established pattern of diplomatic games to stall for badly needed time. It was clearly timed to complicate the start of a new round of diplomatic efforts at the Security Council: kudos to the administration for swiftly dismissing it...

 

April 21, 2006: At Tehran’s Service: The debate about how Washington should deal with Iran’s rogue rising has heated up amidst reports about planning for a military option and the "realist" policy circles' call for "direct talks" with Tehran. The latest resurrection of the pro-appeasement camp coincides with Tehran's announcement that it had succeeded in enriching uranium and escalating terrorist activities and rising number of executions and public hangings in Iran. There is nothing new about the essence of the case made for the direct talks. It seems, depending on who the president is in Iran, the line of reasoning changes but the policy call remains the same: Begin direct talks with mullahs and sweeten the deal with "broad economic and security concessions." ...

 

April 14, 2006: Tehran’s Yellow Cake Celebration: The “yellow cake celebration” last Tuesday in Iran could not have been more surreal and morbid . Men in a parade-like dance waved a small silver box containing the first enriched uranium. Iran’s radical president and former assassin, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, asserted that Tehran was now a member of “the nuclear club” before a huge mural of white doves and amidst chants of "God is Great”, "Death to America", and “Down with Counter-Revolutionaries.” And with that, Iran’s Supreme Leader Khamenei and his hand-picked president took another step to dare the world community...

 

April 5, 2006: Terrorism Remains Tehran’s Weapon of Choice: Far from being a show of “force”, Iran’s recent week-long third-rate military maneuver in the Persian Gulf, and its laughable claim to “technological advancement”, were just a display of the clerical regime’s belligerence. Boasting about flying boats, radar-evading torpedoes and array of funny sounding missiles, fully fit the pattern of Tehran’s hype and exaggerated claims to military prowess. It serves, among other things, to invigorate the regime’s increasingly shrinking loyal base. Military experts have disputed claims of the indigenousness and sophistication of these technologies and their impact on the balance of power in the Gulf...

 

March 24, 2006: Desperate Clerical Measures: In March 1990, one year into his first term as president, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani mocked President Bush Sr. for taking a telephone call from someone posing as Rafsanjani offering a one-to-one talk between the two countries. “America is very much in need of talking to Iran, and praise be to God, it is deprived of this. Iran is so important that the biggest power in the world, the biggest bully on earth, tries to contact its officials by telephone,” Rafsanjani said. The hoax set up by the clerical regime then sought to embarrass President Bush over the issue of the “talk”. Sixteen years later, one wonders what sort of ploy Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has up in his sleeves with the March 2006 offer of talks with the United States....
 

March 16, 2006: The Rude Awakening of Iraq: It is very encouraging that a growing number of Iraqi politicians, joined by US officials in Baghdad and Washington are talking, in varying tones, about how Iran is fueling and directing the sectarian conflict in Iraq. More encouraging, however, is the rise and consolidation of an anti-fundamentalist front in that country. The terrorist bombing of the sacred shrines in Iraqi city of Samarra was indeed a rude awakening for all those who never thought Tehran would get into the wicked business of blowing up the Shiites’ holiest sites. Welcome to the evil world of Khomeini’s Islamic fundamentalism in which every imaginable act of barbarism is justified when it suits the mullahs' interests...
 

March 9, 2006: Iran’s Nuclear Threat: The Next Phase: At last. It is official; Iran’s nuclear dossier has been referred to the UN Security Council for further action. That’s good news and a strategic step forward, albeit long over-due. Tehran’s ‘Russian dance’ early this week did little to decisive anyone. It grabbed lots of headlines but at the end it was just another episode of the now-familiar eleventh-hour ploy by the clerical regime to sow division and buy time. Iran’s file, however, should have been referred to UN in the fall of 2003; right after the report of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chronicled the 18-years of Tehran’s lies and deception to cover its secret nuclear weapons program. The 30-months delay gave Iran a golden opportunity to further advance its nuclear program...
 

March 3, 2006: Tehran Inflames Iraq’s Sectarian Strife: Early in the week, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei claimed Iraq was the “embodiment” of America’s defeat there. He also said Washington’s goals in Iraq are the “creation of division and insecurity, and an effort to paint the popularly-elected government of Iraq as incompetent”. Repeating his previous accusations, Khamenei added that “the Americans are trying to instigate a sectarian and religious war in Iraq, and the cataclysmic event in Samarra is a case in point.” So, was last week’s bombing aimed at a future democratic national unity government in Iraq? Indeed, it was; with Tehran as the main beneficiary of the attack...
 

February 15, 2006: Of Mullahs, Nukes, and Cartoons: On February 14 1989, Ayatollah Rouhollah Khomeini, the founder of Iran’s fundamentalist regime, issued a fatwa against the British author Salman Rushdie. At the time, the regime having accepted defeat in the eight-year war with Iraq was engulfed in internal conflicts and crumbling under domestic and international pressure. Khomeini had been forced to "drink from the chalice of poison of the ceasefire," as he put it, in war he had insisted was a “divine blessing,” and the gateway to "liberating Jerusalem via Karbala”...
 

January 16, 2006: Tehran’s Nuclear Rising: In August of 2002, the then spokesperson for the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) in Washington DC, Alireza Jafarzadeh, ripped the lid off of Iran’s 18 year old clandestine nuclear weapons program. That revelation included the locations of two nuclear facilities in Arak and Natanz. Prior to that revelation, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) had no knowledge either facility existed. Because the Iranian regime did not voluntarily provide the locations or purpose of these facilities, IAEA inspectors had no mandate to inspect or verify the sites at Arak and Natanz were intended for peaceful nuclear energy production or the production of nuclear war heads...

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The US Alliance for Democratic Iran (USADI), is a US-based, non-profit, independent organization, which promotes informed policy debate, exchange of ideas, analysis, research and education to advance a US  policy on Iran which will benefit America’s interests, both at home and in the Middle East, through supporting Iranian people’s  aspirations for a democratic, secular, and peaceful government, free of tyranny, fundamentalism, weapons of mass destruction, and terrorism.

 

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