Waking Up to Iran’s Real History
by David Swanson
WarIsACrime.org
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According to
one theory, U.S.-Iranian relations began around November 1979 when
a crowd of irrational religious nutcases violently seized the U.S.
embassy in Iran, took the employees hostage, tortured them, and
held them until scared into freeing them by the arrival of a new
sheriff in Washington, a man named Ronald Reagan.
From that day
to this, according to this popular theory, Iran has been run by
a bunch of subhuman lunatics with whom rational people couldn't
really talk if they wanted to. These monsters only understand
force. And they have been moments away from developing and
using nuclear weapons against us for decades now. Moments
away, I tell you!
According to
another theory a quaint little notion that I like to refer
to as "verifiable history" the CIA, operating out of that
U.S. embassy in Tehran in 1953, maliciously and illegally overthrew
a relatively democratic and liberal parliamentary government, and
with it the 1951 Time magazine man of the year Prime Minister
Mohammad Mossadegh, because Mossadegh insisted that Iran's oil wealth
enrich Iranians rather than foreign corporations.
The CIA installed
a dictatorship run by the Shah of Iran who quickly became a major
source of profits for U.S. weapons makers, and his nation a testing
ground for surveillance techniques and human rights abuses.
The U.S. government encouraged the Shah's development of a nuclear
energy program. But the Shah impoverished and alienated the
people of Iran, including hundreds of thousands educated abroad.
A secular pro-democracy
revolution nonviolently overthrew the Shah in January 1979, but
it was a revolution without a leader or a plan for governing.
It was co-opted by rightwing religious forces led by a man who pretended
briefly to favor democratic reform. The U.S. government, operating
out of the same embassy despised by many in Iran since 1953, explored
possible means of keeping the Shah in power, but some in the CIA
worked to facilitate what they saw as the second best option: a
theocracy that would substitute religious fanaticism and oppression
for populist and nationalist demands.
When the U.S.
embassy was taken over by an unarmed crowd the next November, immediately
following the public announcement of the Shah's arrival in the United
States, and with fears of another U.S.-led coup widespread in Tehran,
a sit-in planned for two or three days was co-opted, as the whole
revolution had been, by mullahs with connections to the CIA and
an extremely anti-democratic agenda.
They later
made a deal with U.S. Republicans, as Robert Parry and others have
well
documented, to keep the hostage crisis going until Carter lost
the 1980 presidential election to Ronald Reagan. Reagan's
government secretly renewed weapons sales to the new Iranian dictatorship
despite its public anti-American stance and with no more concern
for its religious fervor than for that of future al Qaeda leaders
who would spend the 1980s fighting the Soviets with U.S. weapons
in Afghanistan.
At the same
time, the Reagan administration made similarly profitable deals
with Saddam Hussein's government in Iraq, which had launched a war
on Iran and continued it with U.S. support through the length of
the Reagan presidency. The mad military investment in the
United States that took off with Reagan and again with George W.
Bush, and which continues to this day, has made the nation of Iran
which asserts its serious independence from U.S. rule
a target of threatened war and actual sanctions and terrorism.
Ben Affleck
was asked by Rolling Stone magazine, "What
do you think the Iranians' reaction is gonna be?" to Affleck's
movie Argo, which depicts a side-story about six embassy
employees who, in 1979, avoided being taken hostage. Affleck,
mixing bits of truth and mythology, just as in the movie itself,
replied:
"Who the
FUCK knows – who knows if their reaction is going to be anything?
This is still the same Stalinist, oppressive regime that was in
place when the hostages were taken. There was no rhyme or reason
to this action. What's interesting is that people later figured
out that Khomeini just used the hostages to consolidate power
internally and marginalize the moderates and everyone in America
was going, 'What the fuck's wrong with these people?' You know,
'What do they want from us?' It was because it wasn't about us.
It was about Khomeini holding on to power and being able to say
to his political opponents, of which he had many, 'You're either
with us or you're with the Americans' – which is, of course, a
tactic that works really well. That revolution was a students'
revolution. There were students and communists and secularists
and merchants and Islamists, it's just that Khomeini fucking slowly
took it for himself."
The takeover
of the embassy is an action virtually no one would advocate in retrospect,
but asserting that it lacked rhyme or reason requires willful ignorance
of Iranian-U.S. relations. Claiming that nobody knew what
the hostage-takers wanted requires erasing from history their very
clear demands for the Shah to be returned to stand trial, for Iranian
money in U.S. banks to be returned to Iran, and for the United States
to commit to never again interfering in Iranian politics.
In fact, not only were those demands clearly made, but they are
almost indisputably reasonable demands. A dictator guilty
of murder, torture, and countless other abuses should have stood
trial, and should have been extradited to do so, as required by
treaty. Money belonging to the Iranian government under a
dictatorship should have been returned to a new Iranian government,
not pocketed by a U.S. bank. And for one nation to agree not
to interfere in another's politics is merely to agree to compliance
with the most fundamental requirement of legal international relations.
Argo
devotes its first 2 minutes or so to the 1953 background of the
1979 drama. Blink and you'll miss it, as I'm betting most
viewers do. For a richer understanding of what was happening
in Iran in the late 1970s and early 1980s I have a better recommendation
than watching Argo. For a truly magnificent modern
epic I strongly encourage getting ahold of the forthcoming masterpiece
by M. Lachlan White, titled Waking Up in Tehran: Love and Intrigue
in Revolutionary Iran, due to be published this spring.
Weighing in at well over 300,000 words, or about 100,000 more than
Moby
Dick, Waking Up in Tehran is the memoir of Margot
White, an American human rights activist who became an ally of pro-democracy
Iranian student groups in 1977, traveled to Iran, supported the
revolution, met with the hostage-takers in the embassy, became a
public figure, worked with the Kurdish resistance when the new regime
attacked the Kurds for being infidels, married an Iranian, and was
at home with her husband in Tehran when armed representatives of
the government finally banged on the door. I'm not going to
give away what happened next. This book will transport you
into the world of a gripping novel, but you'll emerge with a political,
cultural, and even linguistic education. This is an action-adventure
that would, in fact, make an excellent movie or even a film
trilogy. It's also an historical document.
There are sections
in which White relates conversations with her friends and colleagues
in Iran, including their speculations as to who was behind what
government intrigue. A few of these speculations strike me
as in need of more serious support. They also strike me as
helpful in understanding the viewpoints of Iranians at the time.
Had I edited this book I might have framed them a little differently,
but I wouldn't have left them out. I wouldn't have left anything
out. This is a several-hundred-page love letter from a woman
to her husband and from an activist to humanity. It is intensely
romantic and as honest as cold steel. It starts in 1977.
On November
15, 1977, at the White House, our human rights president, Jimmy
Carter, was holding an outdoor press conference with his good friend
the Shah. The police used pepper spray tear
gas on the protesters, including Margot White, in front of the White
House. But then the wind shifted. Carter and the Shah
ended up in tears as their wives fled indoors. Later that
day, White and an Iranian friend were attacked with a knife, chased
by spies, and occupied with hiding the wallets of anti-Shah protesters
in a D.C. hospital from pro-Shah forces eager to identify them.
In December, White was off to Iran to meet with the opposition,
including those who had backed Mossadegh a quarter century before.
She learned the size and strength of the movement and came to understand
its power to overthrow the Shah better than did the U.S. government
or the U.S. media. White was followed by the Shah's secret
police, SAVAK, during her stay.
In 1978 White
spoke in Europe and the United States about the growing revolution
and its members' certainty that the Shah would be thrown out.
She returned to Iran. She met with greedy Americans there
who believed the Shah secure on his throne. She met with the
opposition, including a grandson of Mossadegh, who believed the
Shah was doomed and who saw the revolution as secular. He
saw the mullahs as a danger and as a force susceptible to U.S. manipulation.
White was followed
and chased by SAVAK. The NSA (yes, the one based in Maryland)
had wiretapped the whole country (yes, the Iranians' country)
an abuse that would later come home to the United States, as such
things do. White met with torture victims. She visited
Eagle City, a colony of the U.S. military industrial complex and
its spouses and children. She met with many activists in the
revolutionary movement, all of whom, in the summer of '78, saw the
movement as secular. No one ever brought up the Ayatollah
Khomeini, and if she brought him up (responding to his prominence
in the U.S. media) they attributed no importance to him. White
described the state of U.S. media coverage:
"The 'benevolent
monarch' image was fast disappearing as the reality of the Pahlavi
police state became widely exposed. Unfortunately, despite this,
Iran's protestors were being referred to as 'mobs,' instead of
the courageous, unarmed, exhausted and determined citizens that
they were. Their demands for social justice and political participation
were barely mentioned, leaving the impression the protests were
senseless and inexplicable, some sort of collective 'over-reaction'
to the Shah's 'excesses.'"
The movement
was depicted as Islamic. White quotes one of her friends'
reactions at the time:
"We think it's
a conscious decision, from several sources. It makes the Revolution
seem 'anti-West' instead of 'anti-US/Shah.' It blurs the significance
of Washington's responsibility for most of the repression in Iran.
It makes it sound like an 'ideological' movement, instead of a political
one, like Iranians have some abstract, philosophical problem with
Western 'culture,' rather than very concrete problems with jailing
writers, torturing teenagers, and condemning millions of children
to an early death from lack of clean water!"
White learned
that Khomeini's senior advisor in his exile in Paris was an Iranian-born
American citizen named Dr. Ibrahim Yazdi, a close friend of Richard
Cottam of the CIA.
By January
1979 the Shah was gone, and that spring White was back in Iran where
Khomeini was consolidating power and turning against the movement
that had toppled the Shah. There were huge protests on Women's
Day and May Day and on the anniversary of Mossadegh's death.
When one of the largest newspapers in Iran reported that the Islamic
Republic was being run by men with ties to the CIA, the government
shut down the newspaper. It banned the pro-democracy groups
that had led the revolution. It sent U.S.-made airplanes to
bomb Kurdistan. Activists began organizing within the Iranian
military to resist orders to attack the Kurds.
After the embassy
was seized in November, a crowd of reporters gathered daily outside
the gates, many of them new to Iran. White spoke to some of
them and tried to educate them about Iran's past and present.
They encouraged her, as an American living in Iran, to hold a press
conference and express her views. She did so, and hundreds
of reporters came. She pointed out that the students said
they had seized the embassy as a protest against current, not just
past, CIA presence and interference. She noted the "elaborate
cameras, surveillance technology and radar equipment" they had found
in the embassy, photographed, and publicized. She said Iranians
had good reason to want "no further CIA presence in their country,
having suffered years of political repression, torture and surveillance
carried out by CIA-trained SAVAK state police."
White's statements
were front-page news in the International Herald Tribune
and big news around the world. The next day, Walter Annenberg,
a wealthy Republican backer, placed a full page ad in the New
York Times denouncing her. Also that day, the students
in the embassy asked to meet her.
White was allowed
into the embassy, where she met the students but not the hostages.
Some of the students had studied in the United States and very much
liked the United States, just not its government's interference
in Iran. During her meeting with the students, a mullah came
into the room briefly. He clearly exercised authority over
the students without actually holding their loyalty. The relationship
fit with accounts of the mullahs having co-opted an action they
did not initiate. The students told White they wanted the
Shah returned to stand trial. They wanted his money returned.
They gave White some of the many documents they were piecing back
together following their shredding by the embassy staff. In
Argo we see photographs of the six employees who escaped
being pieced back together. In Waking Up in Tehran
we learn that the documents given to White included U.S. plans to
bring the Shah to the United States three months before he was actually
brought there for medical care, as well as documenting the CIA's
presence in the embassy.
The hostage-takers
in White's telling were, among other things, an early version of
WikiLeaks. They "continued to publish reconstructed Embassy
documents, eventually producing 54 volumes of evidence of CIA operatives
... manipulating, threatening and bribing world leaders, rigging
foreign elections, hijacking local political systems, shuffling
foreign governments like decks of cards, sabotaging economic competitors,
assassinating regional, national and tribal leaders at will, choreographing
state-to-state diplomacy like cheap theater."
White had herself
become a news story. She stumbled upon "a life-size photo
of me near the gates at the front of the U.S. Embassy, looking rather
baffled, my fist raised tentatively into the air. I felt awkward
about it, not least because an American reporter had urged me to
strike that pose. I'd asked the desk clerk where he'd gotten such
a thing. He told me that someone had apparently enlarged the news
photo into life size billboards that were being posted all around
Tehran at bus stations, the railway station, the Bazaar,
and various other spots all the way from Shoosh Square in
the south up to Damavand. I'd begged the Manager to take it down
and he had obliged."
I asked White
about Argo, and she said she'd watched it three times and
taken notes. "As history," she told me, "it's worse than sloppy.
The depiction of the students at the embassy is way off, as are
several other thing. Public hangings were over with long before
November 1979. They occurred mostly in February 1979, and
were mostly the upper echelons of SAVAK. The six Americans
were being rescued in January 1980, almost a year later. Those
things were not happening. Just the opposite the Resistance
was underway."
White finds
fault with other details: "Even the suggestion that the students
were using 'kids' or 'sweat shop children' to piece together the
shredded embassy documents is wrong. They had high school and college
students doing it, mostly their own younger brothers and sisters.
Kids of the age shown would not yet have been able to read Farsi,
much less English! There is no way such children could piece
together those documents."
White objects
to the general depiction of ordinary Iranians in the film: "Most
troubling is the depiction of people in the Bazaar going after the
Americans. That would never happen. Anyone visiting
Iran would be treated as a 'guest.' The tradition of 'the
guest' is so deep in Persian culture dating back to the caravans
of the silk road that it reaches almost absurd proportions.
But it precludes any such behavior as that depicted in the Argo
Bazaar. Iranians, unlike Americans, don't blame the people
for their government's policies. Iranian men, in particular,
would never approach an American woman that way, with such aggression,
and speak about politics. They might politely inquire why
they were in Iran, what they thought of the country, and they might
even offer them tea! They would never behave as depicted.
"Likewise,
the banging on the car windows. On the contrary, cars were
so thick in Tehran that crowds could not be in the streets at
the same time. Also, the burning cars were long gone by
January of 1980! In Argo, the crowds are shown
shouting 'down with the Shah' long after the Shah was overthrown.
The crowds in the streets were, increasingly as in
my book from the Resistance!"
White continued:
"There's another troubling depiction in Argo that I question,
but I have no way to prove this. It's the scene showing mock
executions. I doubt they happened. The reason I doubt
this is that when the hostages were released, they had one ticker
tape parade (as noted in my book) and virtually disappeared
no talk shows, no endless interviews, no lecture circuits.
Why? Wouldn't Washington have wanted to publicize the worst
features of their ordeal? If the hostages had really been
subject to that level of torture, why keep silent about it?
A) Reagan's deal with the Ayatollahs? B) they weren't tortured.
Both A and B would be my guess. The students voted on their
policies. They were a mixed group, but torture had been ruled
out. I believe that is the case. Captivity, obviously,
is a human rights violation, but torture is something else.
Again, however, I have no way to prove this definitively."
In the spring
of 1980 Iran began bombing the Kurds in northern Iran with U.S.-made
planes, and soldiers began deserting to the Kurdish side.
The Iranian military attacked Tehran University, killing unarmed
students, advancing a plan to islamicize the curriculum. The
hostage crisis dragged on. President Carter launched an unsuccessful
rescue mission.
"Interestingly,"
writes White, "most people suspected the truth even though they
couldn't prove it: that the hostage situation was being
deliberately prolonged and not by the students inside,
but by those unseen forces typically referred to as 'they.' Why
were the negotiations taking so long? The students had continued,
of course, to print and publicly display copies of the embassy's
classified documents, many of them meticulously re-assembled,
pieced together strip by shredded strip. They revealed decades
of clandestine CIA operations throughout Eurasia and the Middle
East, conducted primarily out of this particular embassy in Tehran
precisely the interventions and atrocities against Third
World peoples described by John Stockwell's book. They also
revealed ties with CIA on the part of certain powerful Iranian
clerics dating back to the 1953 coup …. The students boldly
sought publicity for the documentary evidence, but their efforts
were repeatedly blocked by the regime. ... [I]f such documentary
evidence existed and was published, it would destroy the current
regime's credibility overnight. The students were being
subjected to a news 'blackout,' and no wonder. Western media,
for the most part, however, continued to refer to the embassy
takeover as an action of Iran's government, something done by
the regime, rather than by its critics, or by 'Iranians' as a
whole. Negotiations to resolve the crisis were necessarily
between the two governments, reinforcing the perception that the
regime had initiated and endorsed the action instead of
frantically trying to block it at every turn, fearing what would
be revealed."
The next unusual
request for a meeting that White received came from Khomeini's grandson.
She agreed to meet with him. He asked her if Carter would
lose the coming election if the hostages were still not freed.
"We don't like Carter," the grandson told her.
The day Reagan
was inaugurated, the hostages were freed. That week massive
roundups of activists began in Iran. Crackdowns targeted anyone
and anything "insufficiently Islamic." Arbitrary arrests were
followed by executions of "infidels," including poets and leaders
of the revolution. A May Day rally in 1981 was attacked.
Pro-democracy and anti-Shah activists were going to prison in large
numbers.
That summer,
two men began standing all day, every day on White's street and
watching her house. She and her husband made plans to leave
for the United States. They attended one more protest, an
anti-Khomeini rally on June 20th. Then things really
got interesting. I'll leave it to you to read the book.
I'll mention only this: White herself was the victim of a mock execution.
She knows in a very direct way that mock executions happened and
how and by whom they were employed.
She also knows
what war is and what sacrifices in the struggle against war involve.
The reason the United States should stop threatening war against
Iran today is not that the United States has mistreated and abused
Iran in the past. It is not related to the quality of Iran's
current government. It is entirely related to the evil of
war. There is nothing worse than war that war can be used
to prevent not even greater war, something that war has always
made more not less likely. Stephen Kinzer, in
his book All
the Shah's Men, relates a conversation he had with another
grandson of Mossadegh:
"He told
me that a few weeks before the 1953 coup, he attended a reception
at the home of an Iranian diplomat in Washington and overheard
the wife of Colonel Abbas Farzanegan, a military attaché who was
on the CIA's secret payroll, boast that her husband was involved
in a plot that would soon make him a cabinet minister. The
next morning Mahmoud Mossadegh cabled this intelligence home to
his grandfather. 'Later on, after the coup, I asked him
if he had received my cable. He said, "Of course I did."
When I asked him why he hadn't done something about it, he told
me there was nothing he could have done. He said he knew
full well that this coup was coming. His choice was to surrender
or arm his supporters and call them out to civil war. He
hated to think about giving up everything he believed in, but
the other alternative was out of the question.'"
Shirin Ebadi
was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003 for her work on behalf
of human rights, women's rights, and children's rights in Iran.
She is a critic of the current Iranian government, and lives in
exile. In a
message written for RootsAction.org, Ebadi opposes any attack
on Iran:
"Not only
military attack but even threat of military attack would slow
down the progress of democracy in Iran because the government,
under the pretext of safeguarding national security, would further
intensify its crackdown on pro-democracy activists and critics.
Moreover, such an eventuality would incite people's nationalist
sentiment, which would cause them to forget their criticisms of
the government."
If we cannot
learn from our own history or this kind of common sense, let us
learn from Mossadegh. War is not a solution. War is
not a tool of public policy. War is not the first option,
the second option, or the last resort. War is out of the question.
Reprinted
with permission from WarIsACrime.org.
February
4, 2013
David Swanson
is the author of the new book Daybreak:
Undoing the Imperial Presidency and Forming a More Perfect Union
by
Seven Stories Press. Visit his
website.
Copyright ©
2013 David Swanson
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