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Posts Tagged ‘iranian opposition’

"… Lubrani oversaw a four-man team that quietly supported the Iranian opposition and sowed unrest inside Iran …"

March 10th, 2010 Arab News No comments

“b”, previously of Moon of Alabama, flagged this story in the WSJ/ here


“……. Today, Israel’s political and military establishment appears to be tilting toward one of his long-ignored views: Israeli support for Iran’s opposition movement—and not a miltary strike—is the best way to combat the regime in Tehran…..

“A military strike will at best delay Iran’s nuclear program, but what’s worse, it will rally the Iranian people to the defense of the regime,” says Mr. Lubrani, who was ambassador to Iran from 1973 to 1978 and is now a special adviser to Israel’s minister of defense. “We must do everything possible to help (the protest movement) do the job.”

Rafi Eitan, an adviser to Mr. Netanyahu, says the protests “changed people’s attitudes here. They started to understand that this should be done the way Lubrani has been saying it should be done.”…….. even hawkish officials interviewed in recent months stressed they were aware of the risks of military action. Officials expressed support for sanctions, and said they weren’t eager to attack……

Heading Israeli government activities in Lebanon since 1983, he was one of the first to warn of Iran’s growing influence among the country’s Shiites. His recommendations were largely neglected and Hezbollah soon emerged as one of Israel’s most potent foes.

Lubrani was one of the few, the very few, to identify that Israel should find a way to the Shiites before Iran did,” recalls retired Brig. Gen. Shimon Shapira, who was an intelligence officer in Lebanon at the time.

More recently, as Iran’s nuclear program grew and Washington and Israel hardened their views, Mr. Lubrani’s calls to support what appeared to be a beaten-down opposition seemed out of touch.

Mr. Lubrani says that witnessing the Iranian revolution gave him faith in the power of the Iranian people to affect change. From a remote seventh-story ofge in an old Ministry of Defense building, he oversaw a four-man team that quietly supported the Iranian opposition and sowed unrest inside Iran’s borders…”

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‘Iranian opposition websites under cyber attack’

February 9th, 2010 Arab News No comments

iranian.com, Iranian opposition websites under cyber attack, 7 Feb 2010 "Amir Kabir Newsletter and Advar News, two independent student websites in Iran were attacked by internet hackers, the Iranian Cyber Army. The two sites are amongst the few remaining sites that report from within Iran, independent from the government. The organizers of the two sites have been amongst the many targets of
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Iran opposition leader ‘jailed’

February 8th, 2010 Arab News No comments

An Iranian opposition leader is jailed for six years over unrest following June’s disputed presidential election, reports say.
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“Regime-change” in Iran, right now, is more likely to be reflected in a change in the balance of power within the system rather than its replacement.

February 2nd, 2010 Arab News No comments

Tony Karon in the National/ here


“…. A regime collapses only when it has become so isolated that its soldiers and police find themselves deployed against their next-door neighbours. In Iran, the regime and its security forces can still count on support from millions of people. Betting on a successful insurrection in Iran right now is just plain daft.

… Iran seems to be in a stalemate where the regime can’t destroy the opposition, but the opposition is unable to topple the regime. “Regime-change” in Iran, right now, is more likely to be reflected in a change in the balance of power within the system rather than its replacement. It’s hard to see how this changes the nuclear equation because the opposition has repeatedly made clear its own rejection of the key western nuclear demand that Iran must end its enrichment of uranium.

Moreover, despite the “regime change” clamour in Washington, it’s not clear that there’s much the US can do to help the Iranian opposition. But leaving the nuclear question up to Iran’s opposition does create political cover for stepping away from a policy of threats and ultimatums that was going nowhere. After all, there may be little prospect of imminent success in stopping Iran’s nuclear programme, but that nuclear programme does not present any imminent threat.”

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Concern in Iranian ‘Green’ circles that neocons & allies … are highjacking the movement for "regime change"….

January 14th, 2010 Arab News No comments

Via RFI/ here


This piece is by Farid Marjai, an Iranian-Canadian who, among other things, has published several pieces in reformist newspapers in Iran over the years. … Farid is someone deeply sympathetic to the Green Movement, but who is also concerned about the risk that “émigré circles, neoconservatives, and elements of Iranian opposition linked with the neoconservative cliques” would hijack the movement as a “strategic vehicle for this regime change”. From this perspective, he offered what we judged were exceptionally thoughtful comments about our Op Ed. We are pleased to present them to our readers, and grateful to Farid for granting his permission for us to do so.

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Because the op-ed piece written by the Leveretts in The New York Times departs from the official line in Washington, it has elicited a chorus of response from many different individuals and quarters. However, often, it is precisely this kind of critical, bold and courageous analysis that unlocks diplomatic deadlocks, and that eventually may lead to political developments. So in that sense, the Leveretts’ overall analysis and critique of policy have quite a bit of significance, and is a welcome departure from the usual.

The central themes of the OpEd piece are somewhat lost on many observers—the two dominant subjects—that the US can consider engaging the Iranian government despite domestic difficulties, and that the Iranian regime is not about to implode.

It seems to me that the assessment and the exact magnitude of the Green anti-government and pro-government street demonstrations (Dec. 27, and Dec. 30 respectively) became the dominant themes of the critics of this OpEd piece. But those comparisons are not critical to
the above mentioned conclusions. One can only take issue with the Leveretts’ opinion piece if one is against “engagement,” or if one firmly believes that the State in Iran is about to fall; and, lastly, if one hopes (plans) to encourage an affirmative US policy so the crisis is deepened, to eventually help bring about that collapse of the system. In other words, there are policy preferences (and critics of the OpEd piece) that have “implosion” in mind as a strategic objective and not an eventuality. So, this background may provide a prism and a framework to decode some—only some—of the responses to the Leveretts’ piece.

On the other hand, understandably, a number of Iranian scholars and journalists feel personally very connected to the Green movement. And to a varying degree each identifies with the more radical or more moderate demands of the Green wave, depending on his/her political orientation.But, is it fair to expect the Leveretts to act as mere Green activist partisans for our benefit, with no objective policy analysis of their own?

Ironically, some academics criticized the Leveretts for their quantitative/qualitative assessment of the pro-government demonstrations, as if they themselves could provide any verifiable numbers and tangible evidence of their own. These critics consider their own data as “terra firma,” and the Leveretts’ quantitative analysis as arbitrary!

Some in the Green movement may be against “engagement,” (and pursue the overthrow of the State) but many don’t see engagement at the international level and dialogue domestically as hurtful to the overall objectives of the Green movement. There should not be any assumptions about that.

When it comes to “engagement” and those who recommend serious engagement, the neoconservatives have an ax to grind. Clearly, they have certain agenda and strategic objectives for the region—the example of Condoleezza Rice mentioned in the Leveretts’ response comes to mind with respect to dialogue with President Khatami. However, neoconservatives cloak their attacks with criticism that the Leveretts don’t care about “Iranian democracy” and that they are apologists, and that they are accommodating!

President Ronald Reagan’s administration was not too long ago. The neoconservatives in that government were not anti-apartheid activists. As a matter of fact, they came up with the policy of “Constructive Engagement” with the South African Apartheid regime. In terms of Latin America (Gene Kirkpatrick, Elliot Abrams, State Dept.) they were supporting military juntas and, consequently, the death squads that were devastating the civil societies of Central America. Neoconservatives have a selective view of “engagement”, democracy and idealism.

In their op-ed, the Leveretts make the point that there are those who prefer a military strike against Iran. Many observers don’t think this is good for Iran or the Green civil movement. Those who follow the insider discussions of the Green wave may concur with the Leveretts’ observation that the ones who advocate regime change receive considerably more Western press coverage. As with the Leveretts, many Iranian activists caution us that the events of today are not necessarily analogous to the events of the 1978-79 period (i.e. the leading voice, Ezzat Sahabi cautioned against this “shabih-sazi“).

–Farid Marjai

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Iran’s Karroubi defies ‘threats’

January 11th, 2010 Arab News No comments

Iranian opposition figure Mehdi Karroubi says he is defiant in the face of threats, and he and his family are “prepared for disaster”.
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Iran’s Mousavi loses public post

December 23rd, 2009 Arab News No comments

Iranian opposition leader Mir Hossein Mousavi is fired as head of Iran’s Arts Institution, one of two public posts he holds.
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Mousavi challenges regime on Students Day

December 7th, 2009 Arab News No comments

Iranian opposition leader dares authorities as they move to prevent protests near Tehran University.
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"… to delegitimize any Iranian-American voices that are insufficiently hawkish for the neocons’ liking …"

November 15th, 2009 Arab News No comments

In Faster Times, via War in Context

“The campaign against the National Iranian-American Council and its president, Trita Parsi, intensified today with the publication of a long hit piece in the Washington Times by neoconservative journalist Eli Lake. The piece’s unusual length may be an attempt to disguise the thinness of the allegations it contains. Most of the claims are based on hearsay and speculation, and only two-thirds of the way through the meandering 3000-word article does Lake actually discuss whether any of the evidence actually shows that NIAC has lobbied for the Iranian government. At which point we get this brief sentence:

Two lawyers who read some of the same documents [on which the allegations are founded] said they did not provide enough evidence to conclude that Mr. Parsi was acting as a foreign agent.

One might be forgiven for thinking that this fact is relevant enough to be included in the first few paragraphs. Similarly, despite the thousands of pages of documents that were leaked to him, Lake is unable to show any evidence of a financial relationship between NIAC and the Iranian government…….

The campaign against NIAC should be seen for what it is — an attempt to delegitimize any Iranian-American voices that are insufficiently hawkish for the neocons’ liking. Hawks in Washington and Jerusalem are faced with the inconvenient fact that few Iranians, even those harshly critical of the regime, desire to see their country get bombed or invaded, or for Iran’s most vulnerable citizens to die under the weight of sanctions that do nothing to help the cause of the Green Movement. Hence the attempt to portray any Iranian who opposes sanctions or war as a stooge of the regime — and the hawks’ recent turn against the Iranian opposition itself, for refusing to play Chalabi and tell them what they want to hear. As the battle over Iran continues in Washington, it is likely that the attacks on NIAC and other dovish voices in the Iranian-American community are only going to get worse rather than better.”

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Kind Words About the Blog: New Sidebar for Good Reviews

November 4th, 2009 Arab News No comments

As I noted in passing earlier, Marc Lynch was kind enough to use the word “wonderful” about this blog today, and as someone who’s in his first year of blogging (though white of beard and long of tooth), kind words from a veteran like Abu Aardvark are like praise from a Jedi Master (and I don’t mean Walid Bek, or even the hero of the Iranian opposition, Obi-Wan Karroubi), and I’m also grateful for the equally kind words many others have used in linking to me. I’ve started a little “Kind Words from Others” over in the sidebar, for those who may be coming to the blog for the first time and wondering about its bona fides. Thank you for the friendly comments. It’s on the right sidebar below the feed and Twitter buttons and above the links, blogroll, archives and categories. I may move it around if that doesn’t work. And I may change the title (does it sound too much like Blanche DuBois?).

(Modestly clears throat.) I can make room for more if need be.


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