Sunday, December 27, 2009
Video: "Iran protest December 27 2009"
Sunday, December 13, 2009
"The Peace Prize goes to the commander-in-chief of invading armies in Afghanistan and Iraq"
Is this the best the world can deliver?
A hypocrite who unsuccessfully tries to justify war and aggression on the starved and brutalized people of Iraq and Afghanistan?
In a silent America, Obama is unchallenged and does all he can to strengthen U.S. ties with Israel (as the rest of the world contemplates boycotts of various kinds to deter Israel from committing more crimes). A year into his presidency, not only are the wars against the people of Iraq and Afghanistan going strong, but Obama is sending 30,000 more soldiers to Afghanistan.
The American brand of "peace" has surely made a mockery of the word. No one in the Middle East is foolish enough to believe, for a second, that America wants "peace" when all that America, and her handsome new president, does is to reinforce its devastating military presence in countries where they are not welcomed.
More troops for Afghanistan, by Carlos Latuff
An Iraqi mother who lost every child she had (4 boys) as a result of the U.S. invasion in 2003 said: "don't utter that word, it has brought us nothing but death and destruction".
She was referring to the word "peace".
No doubt Palestinian, Lebanese, and Afghan mothers have similar sentiments about this peculiar word that is on the lips of every invading army and colonialist power. But those who live under the brutal occupations of the U.S. and Israel, or those of us still unoccupied (Iranians, Pakistanis, etc) still suffer the political and economic brutality of this "world order" in the form of unemployment and political repression. For us, the word "peace", as spoken by Americans, is void of credibility.
In the Middle East, everyone knows that the U.S. has been involved in covert actions to destabilize the area and control the political arena for decades. In Iran, the 1953 CIA coup d'état has been well documented and disseminated, but still many in the U.S. do not know that the hated dictator of Iraq (Saddam Hussein) was in fact a trained U.S. puppet until he fell out of favor with the State Department.
Even fewer Americans know that the U.S. has been nurturing the most genocidal militias, people who destroyed the nation, from the 1970's until this decade. Colonialist campaigns to dominate the local population, and to install puppet governments to serve the interests of the West, is a familiar scenario for all who live the reality of life in the Middle East. Even in Iran, which has never been militarily occupied, thanks to the resistance of its neighbors to invasions and occupations, the society has continuously been suffering under U.S. covert actions to destabilize the civil society and to stifle democratic development (i.e., the U.S.-instigated war with Iraq and the fueling of this war for 8 years, and constant economic pressure in the form of sanctions).
Mainstream media constantly warns Americans about the wrath that may come to them from their victims. If you ask me, what really "threatens" American is its indifference, as it devastates humanity.
Think about it. Overall, 300,000 American soldiers and private security personnel (heavily subsidized by U.S. government) rampage through every street in Iraq, and no clear statistics are available on how many armed Americans roam the streets of Afghanistan. Life's necessities (electricity and clean water among other things) are often lacking, and deadly bombings kill the occupied population almost daily.
The common denominator to all this is the American military and private security presence.
With no serious "anti-war" movement in sight, in America, what most Americans contemplate is not the miserable reality they have created for people under U.S. occupation; Americans wonder why Iraqis and Afghans are so "ungrateful"!
"Before stabbing your neighbor with a knife, stick a needle in your OWN arm", says the old Iranian proverb. Would YOU be grateful to an invading force whose presence has meant massive violence and wholesale robbing of your resources?
If Obama is given ten more prizes for his "peace" efforts, it would make no difference to those who can clearly see he is just a more attractive invader than Bush Jr. ever was. Unfortunately, the liberal "peace-loving" America seems to be OK with that brand of world war. Obama is the commander-in-chief of invading armies in Afghanistan and Iraq, and his record shows that he has no intention of ending American colonial wars. Believe him when he says it, and shows it.
This being the case, local resistance to unjust wars and corrupt U.S.-installed governments, that only function to siphon oil and other resources to Western companies, will continue unless Americans see through the constant smokescreen and realize that complacency and disinterest, regarding the people they help to subjugate, is literally threatening survival of our species.
"Iranians still oppose foreign intervention in the Middle East: U.S. / Israeli military aggression prevents any democratic development"
http://www.tlaxcala.es/pp.asp?reference=9492&lg=en Iranians demand no foreign intervention in the Middle East. If there is no change in U.S. / Israeli military aggression, then the region will continue to be ruled by a deadlock. That deadlock is imperial power fighting homegrown resistance. Iranians and others fight the empire directly, and also indirectly: by resisting the local dictators who are unable or unwilling to get the empire off of the people’s backs. Seven months after the start of the Green rallies in Iran, Iranian students are still filling the streets of their cities to oppose dictatorship and demand democracy. December 7th is a significant day in the history of Iranian people’s resistance against oppression. On December 7th 1953, just fifty days after the CIA coup d'etat, which had removed the democratically elected government of Dr. Mossadegh, and installed the dictatorial regime of the Shah, Nixon’s arrival was announced to the public. This gesture was perceived by an overwhelming majority of Iranians as putting salt on the wounds of a coup d'etat that had humiliated them a few weeks earlier. To oppose Nixon’s visit, public demonstrations were organized which were brutally put down by the U.S.-backed government of the Shah. Three students were shot and killed on that day. Since then, student organizations across Iran honor their fallen friends on December 7th while at the same time continuing their demands for a democratic Iran. Demanding a home-grown democracy is what these non-violent demonstrations are all about. Earlier in November 2009, millions had come out chanting "Neither East-leaning, Nor West-leaning, Regimes: A National Democratic State in Iran". The people of Iran believe that the current government has stolen the last election (June 2009) and that a repeat of the election is in order; this time with trustworthy observers, and with independent oversight to assure a healthy, honest election process, which will yield accurate results. No Iranian wants a "regime change" imposed by the U.S. and Israel ever again. Iranians know, full well, the devastating effects of war-- they were forced to endure an 8-year war with Saddam's Iraq, imposed by Saddam's ally, the United States. At the time, Saddam’s regime had full U.S. military and political support, while Iran was just emerging from a popular revolution which had overthrown the Shah's U.S. puppet regime. The Shah's regime, with full support of the U.S. and Israel, had brutalized and tortured the Iranian nation for almost 30 years. To weaken the new revolutionary Iran, the United States encouraged and supported an Iraqi invasion of Iran, and continued to support this so-called "Iran-Iraq war" for years. The U.S. offered Saddam chemical and biological weapons to use against people of the region, Iraqis and Iranians alike. The losers of this war were the Iranian and Iraqi people, who lost over a million lives and are still enduring massive public health problems such as cancers, loss of limbs, and psychological disorders inflicted on them by that U.S.-sponsored war. The Iranian people are also well aware of the fact that the U.S. (despite Obama's pretending to oppose the wars on Iraq and Afghanistan), and despite his "change you can believe in" rhetoric, is still imposing crippling sanctions on Iran. Furthermore, the U.S. has not made a single move to end the illegal occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. The people of Iran are encircled by deadly American military power, which has so far claimed millions of lives in the Middle East and made many more millions refugees. The people of Iran feel that the way to real stability and peace for their country, and for the whole of the region, is peaceful, nonviolent, democratic change that will allow functioning of the civil society without abrupt upheavals that would disrupt life and potentially invite unwanted foreign powers into their land. So, in answer to President Obama's "We have heard for 30 years what the Iranian government is against; the question, now, is what kind of future it is for": It must be said that: What the current government in Iran wants, and has been pushing for, is a prolonged verbal cat-fight with the U.S. and Israel, to create an atmosphere of crisis, so that the Iranian public will not protest its illegitimate power grab. This verbal cat-fight is a dangerous game, because the U.S. and Israel keep maneuvering to "obliterate" Iran, a land of 76 million people. After Hillary Clinton threatened to "obliterate" Iran, Obama chose her to be his Secretary of State. The Iranian people, however, want home-grown democratic rule, a demilitarized Middle East, and an independent Iraq and Afghanistan without U.S. intervention. This will guarantee that the people of the Middle East (Iranian, Iraqi, Afghan, etc.) will have the ability to organize their elected governments and build a future THEY see fit for themselves and their children. The best way that you, Mr. Obama, can help is by taking your hundreds of thousands of military personnel out of Iraq and Afghanistan, to give people breathing space. You can also help by halting U.S. funding of the violently racist state of Israel. Israel has hundreds of nuclear weapons and a history of constantly bombing and invading Middle Eastern nations. Saying "change you can believe in" is a mockery, when you continue sending soldiers to sustain the occupation of millions of peoples' lands across the Middle East and Afghanistan. A change of perspective, an acknowledgment of past wrongdoings by the U.S., is essential if any change is to come to this violent world order that literally threatens life on earth. |
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Article on the Demonstrations of 4 November 2009:
"Neither East-leaning, Nor West-leaning, Regimes: A National Democratic State in Iran"
November 4, 2009
On Tlaxcala at:
http://www.tlaxcala.es/pp.asp?reference=9191&lg=en
Today, November 4th 2009, in the few hours that a public demonstration was declared legal by the government of the Islamic Republic, Iranians poured into the streets, crying, "Neither East-leaning, Nor West-leaning, Regimes: A National Democratic State in Iran"
Demanding a home-grown democracy is what this recent wave of demonstrations in Iran is all about.
The people of Iran believe that the current government has stolen the last election (June 2009) and that a repeat of the election is in order; this time with trustworthy observers, and with independent oversight to assure a healthy, honest election process, which will yield accurate results.
No Iranian wants a "regime change" imposed by the U.S. and Israel.
Iranians know, full well, the devastating effects of war-- they were forced to endure an 8-year war with Saddam's Iraq, imposed by Saddam's ally, the United States. At the time, Saddam's regime had full U.S. military and political support, while Iran was just emerging from a popular revolution which had overthrown the Shah's U.S. puppet regime. The Shah's regime, with full support of the U.S. and Israel, had brutalized and tortured the Iranian nation for almost 30 years. The Shah had been installed by a U.S. coup d'etat in 1953 which removed the democratically elected government of Dr. Mossadegh.
To weaken the new revolutionary Iran, the United States encouraged and supported an Iraqi invasion of Iran, and continued to support this so-called "Iran-Iraq war" for years. The U.S. offered Saddam chemical and biological weapons to use against people of the region, Iraqis and Iranians alike. The losers of this war were the Iranian and Iraqi people, who lost over a million lives and are still enduring massive public health problems such as cancers, loss of limbs, and psychological disorders inflicted on them by that U.S.-sponsored war.
The Iranian people are also well aware of the fact that the U.S. (despite Obama's pretending to oppose the wars on Iraq and Afghanistan), and despite his "change you can believe in" rhetoric, is still imposing crippling sanctions on Iran. Furthermore, the U.S. has not made a single move to end the illegal occupations of Iraq and Afghanistan. The people of Iran are encircled by deadly American military power, which has so far claimed millions of lives in the Middle East and made many more millions refugees.
The people of Iran feel that the way to real stability and peace for their country, and for the whole of the region, is peaceful, nonviolent, democratic change that will allow functioning of the civil society without abrupt upheavals that would disrupt life and potentially invite unwanted foreign powers into their land.
So, in answer to President Obama's "We have heard for 30 years what the Iranian government is against; the question, now, is what kind of future it is for"
It must be said that: What the current government in Iran wants, and has been pushing for, is a prolonged verbal cat-fight with the U.S. and Israel, to create an atmosphere of crisis, so that the Iranian public will not protest its illegitimate power grab. This verbal cat-fight is a dangerous game, because the U.S. and Israel keep maneuvering to "obliterate" Iran, a land of 76 million people. After Hillary Clinton threatened to "obliterate" Iran, Obama chose her to be his Secretary of State.
The Iranian people, however, want home-grown democratic rule, a demilitarized Middle East, and an independent Iraq and Afghanistan without U.S. intervention. This will guarantee that the people of the Middle East (Iranian, Iraqi, Afghan, etc.) will have the ability to organize their elected governments and build a future THEY see fit for themselves and their children.
The best way that you, Mr. Obama, can help is by taking your hundreds of thousands of military personnel out of Iraq and Afghanistan, to give people breathing space. You can also help by halting U.S. funding of the violently racist state of Israel. Israel has hundreds of nuclear weapons and a history of constantly bombing and invading Middle Eastern nations.
Saying "change you can believe in" is a mockery, when you continue occupying millions of peoples' lands across the Middle East and Afghanistan.
------------------------------------------------
Iran says:
"Neither East-leaning, Nor West-leaning, Regimes: A National Democratic State in Iran"
See the videos here:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2009/nov/04/iran-protest-mousavi
The article and some videos are here:
"Iran protesters hijack 30th anniversary of US embassy seizure"
Guardian (U.K.), 4 November 2009
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/nov/04/iran-protests-embassy-30th-anniversary
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
People power
Khonak an qomarbazi keh bebakht har cheh budash,
Benamand hichash ella havas e qomar e digar.
[Lucky that gambler who lost all he had,
Left with nothing but the urge for yet another game]
-- Anonymous Persian poet
* The writer is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
A response to Paul Craig Roberts’s: “Threatening Iran”
"The bankrupt rulers are losing more each day.
July 22, 2009
On the Web at:
http://palestinethinktank.com/2009/07/22/the-people-have-already-won-in-iran-the-bankrupt-rulers-are-losing-more-each-day/
The dreams, aspirations, and accomplishments of millions of Iranians (youth and others), who have filled the streets of every city in Iran for a month, did not even get as much as a sentence in Mr. Roberts’ long article (“Threatening Iran”). His article reflects the attitudes of his public career at the service of an infamous American warmonger, Ronald Reagan.http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts07202009.html
Wielding real and imagined war plans against Iran, which he claims are coming from Russia, China, the U.S., and Israel, Mr. Roberts is waving a scary-looking club to threaten sincere domestic dissent in Iran.
Mr. Roberts completely forgets the main lesson which Palestinians, Lebanese, Iraqis, and Afghans have taught U.S. and Israeli warmongers: Imperial militarism does not cut the mustard any more. In the words of Iranians, who are resisting foreign and domestic bullies every day, “Bombs, tanks, and machine-guns are no longer effective!”
Mr. Roberts believes that the U.S. and Israel will “dominate” the region, because, in his words, “they have effective Psychological Operations (PSYOPS).” However, if Mr. Roberts had taken so much as a weekend trip to the area, and if he had the ability to talk to the objects of these Psychological Operations, he would have easily been able to detect people’s pride in having confined Israel, through decades of successful struggle, to its present minuscule size.
To date, according to Congressman John Dingell of Michigan, $300 billion U.S. dollars have been poured into Israel, all from the U.S. Congress. This loot was used to extinguish Palestinian resistance, through massive violence and terror. Yet, it does not take a genius to see that resistance continues in Palestine, and, what is more, the international community has increasingly backed boycotts against the apartheid state of Israel. Lebanon, too, struggling under a corrupt U.S.-backed government, has managed to drive Israel out of its territories; a similar situation has also transpired in Syria.
The upshot of it all is that because of successful local resistance to Israel and the U.S., Israel has not grown an inch in size. With the 4th largest army in the world at its brutal command, with hundreds of atomic weapons at the ready, Israel cannot even control the West Bank or Gaza.
The Israeli siege of Gaza is challenged constantly by the international community. Israel is humiliated before the whole world, as it is forced to make a show of allowing medical supplies or food to enter Gaza. The people of Gaza are suffering tremendously, but they know they are withstanding the most ferocious military in the area (second only to the U.S.). The cluster bombs, the white phosphorous, the uranium bombs, all $300 billion worth of it, have crumbled in the face of Palestinian and Lebanese popular resistance.
Proudly we acknowledge that dreams of freedom and democracy have not been extinguished even after decades of massive military invasions and occupations by the most openly racist warmongers ever known to mankind, U.S. /Israel.
You, Mr. Roberts, from your post in Reagan’s White House, wrote the checks to finance those invasions and occupations, for years.
Mr. Roberts asks, “Why does anyone in Iran doubt that Iran is on her way to becoming another Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan...?”
Here is the answer: not a single Iranian (there are 75 million Iranians) believe Iran will be the next Iraq. That is because Iranians have not only won a revolution in recent history, they have also managed to withstand the U.S.-instigated, U.S.-fueled, eight-year war with Iraq, as well as thirty years of suffocating U.S. sanctions. Throughout all the pressures that U.S. has imposed on them, Iranians have managed to keep their schools and universities open, their hospitals running, their transportation system functional, and their water and electrical plants in order. Their ability to maintain basic services (despite crippling sanctions) has enabled them to raise a literate young population with enough time on its hands to think and dream of a better world.
As if that was not enough accomplishment for a people on top of the U.S.’s “kill em” list, Iranians decided to make the most of what democratic rights they had. They are stretching and breaking all the limits on their freedom to rule themselves. Faced with this magnificent spectacle, Mr. Roberts can only take pot-shots from the sidelines.
While you may not see this, Mr. Roberts, in the eyes of Iranians, they have already won a lot and they have the stamina to fight for more. Imagine Iran’s example, of mass protest, catching on in the streets currently ruled by U.S. and Israeli puppets (in Cairo, in Baghdad, in Beirut, in Kabul, in Karachi, and in Riyadh.)
If you knew Farsi, and if you were interested in the people and their aspirations to determine their own destiny, you would easily be able to decipher all of that by looking at them march on the streets with their children and their elderly on their side. And you would be able to figure out that people of Iran are united in one thing; they want to establish a home-grown democratic system in their country to enable them to exercise full power over their own fate. Iranians know full well that neither Mr. Rafsanjani, nor Mr. Khamenei, can deliver that.
All these butchers have to show, for their decades in office, is an under-served public, and a fat foreign bank account.
Mr. Rafsanjani is said to have accumulated close to $600 million dollars (a sum that puts Master Butcher Rumsfeld’s capital achievement of only $250 million to shame). Unlike Americans, who see amassing of such personal wealth as a legitimate right, who are taught that they, too, can become as rich as their butcher politicians, Iranians see this as a sign of corruption and decay.
Iranians are now working toward a system-change: a real democracy, articulated by the people and responsive to the people’s long-neglected needs.
For now, Iranians have settled on Mousavi, who had to follow the people’s demands and had to show up at rallies he never intended to participate in. As Mr. Roberts states, Rafsanjani may be the perfect person for Washington. However, Mr. Roberts, Rafsanjani has zero credibility with the people of Iran. As a president, he exhibited his lust for money and his total disregard for the will of the nation. Rafsanjani’s support for Mossavi only became fully public late in the process, since that would hinder, not help, Iranians’ enthusiasm for Mousavi.
While you, Mr. Roberts, see doom and gloom descending onto Iran, Iranians continue to pour into the streets every single day, at great personal risk, demanding their dignity and civil rights. Are you really unable to see that Iranians are demanding real democracy, real people’s participation in decision-making on all aspects of life in Iran? What Iranians want, what we will get, will not be wiped off our minds by Israeli bullying, by U.S. bullying, or by Mr. Roberts’ scary scenarios, designed to make us all hide under our beds.
Even without Mr. Roberts’ help, we will never forget that Israel trained SAVAK torturers, for the Shah, when Iran looked like a permanent captive of the U.S. and Israel. Mr. Roberts is not protecting Iran from Israel by siding with those who shoot Iranian human rights marchers in the streets.
The illegitimacy of both Israel and the U.S., and their desperate economic condition, does not allow any more bloodbaths to be created in the region. Iraqis and Afghans are not exactly silent. It has taken all of America’s military might, just to hide behind thick fortified walls in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Simply put, Iraq and Afghanistan have NOT been a “cakewalk” for the U.S. occupation forces.
An Iranian physician recently said: “Everything has a price. Many bad things are happening but the trend is toward the light.” Light is a commonly used metaphor for Iranians, whose roots are in Zoroastrianism (the religion of fire and light).
“We are standing to the end”, says the chant on the streets of Iran. We are telling the U.S. and Israel, the most bankrupt and racist powers of our times, that Iranians do NOT want wars and that we WILL stand for democracy “...to the end”, whatever the price may be. We already know that the price of hiding, under our beds, is far higher.
_______________________________________
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Left is wrong on Iran
Photos from protest outside of University of Tehran on Friday 17 July 2009.
Slogans of the day: "political prisoners must be freed", "government of coup d'etat: resign, resign", and "shameless Russia, let go of my country".
weekly.ahram.org.eg/2009/956/
Left is wrong on Iran
By: Hamid Dabashi
Who are and who promoted these leftist intellectuals who question the social uprising of the people in Iran, asks Hamid Dabashi*
----------------
When a political groundswell like the Iranian presidential election of June 2009 and its aftermath happen, the excitement and drama of the moment expose not just our highest hopes but also our deepest fault lines, most troubling moral flaws, and the dangerous political precipice we face.
Over the decades I have learned not to expect much from what passes for "the left" in North America and/or Western Europe when it comes to the politics of what their colonial ancestry has called "the Middle East". But I do expect much more when it comes to our own progressive intellectuals -- Arabs, Muslims, South Asians, Africans and Latin Americans. This is not a racial bifurcation, but a regional typology along the colonial divide.
By and large this expectation is apt and more often than not met. The best case in point is the comparison between what Azmi Bishara has offered about the recent uprising in Iran and what Slavoj Zizek felt obligated to write. Whereas Bishara's piece (with aspects of which I have had reason to disagree) is predicated on a detailed awareness of the Iranian scene, accumulated over the last 30 years of the Islamic Republic and even before, Zizek's (the conclusion of which I completely disagree with) is entirely spontaneous and impressionistic, predicated on as much knowledge about Iran as I have about the mineral composition of the planet Jupiter.
The examples can be multiplied by many, when we add to what Azmi Bishara has written pieces by Mustafa El-Labbad and Galal Nassar, for example, and compare them to the confounded blindness of Paul Craig Roberts, Anthony DiMaggio, Michael Veiluva, James Petras, Jeremy Hammond, Eric Margolis, and many others. While people closest to the Iranian scene write from a position of critical intimacy, and with a healthy dose of disagreement, those farthest from it write with an almost unanimous exposure of their constitutional ignorance, not having the foggiest idea what has happened in that country over the last 30 years, let alone the last 200 years, and then having the barefaced chutzpah to pontificate one thing or another -- or worse, to take more than 70 million human beings as stooges of the CIA and puppets of the Saudis.
Let me begin by stating categorically that in principle I share the fundamental political premise of the left, its weariness of US imperial machination, of major North American and Western European media (but by no means all of them) by and large missing the point on what is happening around the globe, or even worse seeing things from the vantage point of their governmental cues, which they scarcely question. It has been but a few months since we have come out of the nightmare of the Bush presidency, or the combined chicaneries of Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz and John Ashcroft, or of the continued calamities of the "war on terror". Iran is still under the threat of a military strike by Israel, or at least more severe economic sanctions, similar to those that are responsible for the death of hundreds of thousands of Iraqis during the Clinton administration. Iraq and Afghanistan are burning, Gaza is in utter desolation, Northern Pakistan is in deep humanitarian crisis, and Israel is stealing more Palestinian lands every day. With all his promises and pomp and ceremonies, President Obama is yet to show in any significant and tangible way his change of course in the region from that of the previous administration.
The US Congress, prompted by AIPAC (the American Israel Political Affairs Committee), pro-war vigilantes lurking in the halls of power in Washington DC, and Israeli warlords and their propaganda machinery in the US, are all excited about the events in Iran and are doing their damnedest to turn them to their advantage. The left, indeed, has reason to worry. But having principled positions on geopolitics is one thing, being blind and deaf to a massive social movement is something entirely different, as being impervious to the flagrant charlatanism of an upstart demagogue like Ahmadinejad. The sign and the task of a progressive and agile intelligence is to hold on to core principles and seek to incorporate mass social uprising into its modus operandi. My concern here is not with that retrograde strand in the North American or Western European left that is siding with Ahmadinejad and against the masses of millions of Iranians daring the draconian security apparatus of the Islamic Republic. They are a lost cause, and frankly no one could care less what they think of the world. What does concern me is when an Arab intellectual like Asad AbuKhalil opts to go public with his assessment of this movement -- and what he says so vertiginously smacks of recalcitrant fanaticism, steadfastly insisting on a belligerent ignorance.
On his website, "Angry Arab", Asad AbuKhalil finally has categorically stated that he is "now more convinced than ever that the US and Western governments were far more involved in Iranian affairs during the demonstrations than was assumed by many." He then tries to be cautious and cover his back by stipulating, "Let us make it clear: the US, Western and Saudi intervention in Iranian affairs does not necessarily implicate the Iranian protesters themselves. And even if some of them were involved in those conspiracies, I do believe that the majority of Iranian protesters were motivated by domestic issues and legitimate grievances against an oppressive government." This latter stipulation is in fact worse than that categorical statement about the conspiratorial plot behind the movement, for it seeks to play fancy speculative footwork to cover up a moral bankruptcy -- that he dare not take a stand, one way or another. AbuKhalil's final edict: "I was just looking at US and Western media coverage of Honduras, where the situation is rather analogous, and you can't escape the conclusion that the US media were involved with the US government in a conspiracy the details of which will be revealed years from now." In other words, since the US media is not covering the Honduras development as closely as it does (or so AbuKhalil fancies) the Iranian event, then the US media is in cahoots with the US government in fomenting unrest in Iran, and thus this movement is manufactured by US imperial designs with Saudi aid; and though we may not have evidence of this yet, we will learn of its details 30 years from now, when a Stephen Kinzer comes and writes an account of the plot, as he did about the CIA- sponsored coup of 1953.
One simply must have dug oneself deeply and darkly, mummified inside a forgotten and hollowed grave on another planet not to have seen, heard and felt for millions of human beings risking their brave lives and precious liberties by pouring into the streets of their cities demanding their constitutional rights for peaceful protest. Thousands of them have been arrested and jailed, their loved ones worried sick about their whereabouts; hundreds of their leading public intellectuals, journalists, civil and women's rights activists, rounded up and incarcerated, harassed and even tortured, some brought to national television to confess that they are spies for "the enemy". There are pregnant women among those leading reformists arrested, as are such leading intellectuals as Said Hajjarian, who is paralysed having barely survived an assassination attempt by precisely those in the upper echelons of the Islamic Republic who have yet again put him and his wheelchair in jail. Three prominent reformists, all heroes of the Islamic revolution (Khatami, Mousavi, and Karrubi: a former president, a former prime minister, and a former speaker of the house to this very Islamic Republic) are leading the opposition, charging fraud, declaring Ahmadinejad illegitimate. The senior most Grand Ayatollah of the land, the octogenarian Ayatollah Montazeri, has openly declared Khamenei illegitimate. The Iranian parliament is deeply divided and in turmoil. A massively militarised security apparatus has wreaked havoc on the civilian population: beating, clubbing, tear gassing, and plain shooting at them. University dormitories have been savagely raided by plainclothes vigilantes and students beaten up with batons, clubs, kicks, and fists by oversize thugs. Millions of Iranians around the globe have taken to the streets, their leading public figures -- philosophers like Abdul-Karim Soroush, clerics like Mohsen Kadivar, public intellectuals like Ata Mohajerani, filmmakers like Mohsen Makhmalbaf, pop singers like Shahin Najafi, footballers of the Iranian national team, countless poets, novelists, scholars, scientists, women's rights activists, ad infinitum --coming out to voice their defiance of this barbarity perpetrated against their brothers and sisters.
Not a single sentence, not a single word that I utter comes from CNN, The New York Times, Al-Arabiya or any other sources that Asad AbuKhalil loves to hate. None of these people means anything to Mr AbuKhalil? Can he really face these millions of people, their best and brightest, the mothers of those who have been cold- bloodedly murdered, tortured, beaten brut ally, paralysed for life, and tell them they are stooges of the CIA and the Saudis, and that CNN and Al-Arabiya have put them up to it? AbuKhalil has every legitimate reason to doubt the veracity of what he sees in US media. But at what point does a legitimate criticism of media representations degenerate into an illegitimate disregard for reality itself; or has a sophomoric reading of postmodernity so completely corrupted our moral standards that there is no reality any more, just representation?
Asad AbuKhalil dismisses a mass social uprising that is unfolding right in front of his eyes as manufactured by Americans and the Saudis. What else does AbuKhalil know about Iran? Anything? Thirty years (predicated on 200 years) of thinking, writing, mobilising, political and artistic revolts, theological and philosophical debates -- does any of it ring a bell for Professor AbuKhalil? Do the names Mahmoud Shabestari, Abdul-Karim Soroush, Mohsen Kadivar, among scores of others, mean anything to him? Has he ever listened to these young Iranians speak, cared to learn the lyrics of their music, watched the films they make, gone to a photography exhibition they have put together, seen any of their art work, or perhaps glanced at their newspapers, journals, magazines, weblogs, websites? Are all these stooges of America, manipulated by CIA agents, bought and paid for by the Saudis? What depth of intellectual depravation is this?
In his most recent posting, AbuKhalil has this to say about Iran: "For the most reliable coverage of the Iran story, I strongly recommend the New York Times. I mean, they have Michael Slackman in Cairo and Nazila Fathi in Toronto, and they have 'independent observers' in Tehran. What else do you want? If you want more, the station of King Fahd's brother-in-law (Al-Arabiya) has a correspondent in Dubai to cover Iran. And according to a report that just aired, Mousavi received 91 per cent of the vote in 'an elite neighbourhood'. I kid you not. They just said that." The Iranians have no reporters, no journalists, no analysts, no pollsters, no economists, no sociologists, no political scientist, no newspaper editorials, no magazines, no blogs, and no websites? If AbuKhalil has this bizarre obsession with the American or Saudi media that he loves to hate, does that psychological fixation ipso facto deprive an entire nation of their defiance against tyranny, their agency in changing their own destiny?
What a terrible state of mind to be in! AbuKhalil has so utterly lost hope in us -- us Arabs, Iranians, Muslims, South Asians, Africans, Latin Americans -- that it does not even occur to him that maybe, just maybe, if we take our votes seriously the US and Israel may not have anything to do with it. He fancies himself opposing the US and Israel. But he has such a deeply colonised mind that he thinks nothing of us, of our will to fight imperial intervention, colonial occupation of our homelands, and domestic tyranny at one and the same time. He believes if we do it then Americans and the Saudis must have put us up to it. He is so utterly lost in his own moral desolation and intellectual despair that in his estimation only Americans can instigate a mass revolt of the sort that has unfolded in front of his eyes. What an utterly frightful state for an intellectual to be in: no trust, no courage, no imagination and no hope. That we, as a people, as a nation, as a collective will, have fought for over 200 years for our constitutional rights has never occurred to AbuKhalil. What gives a man the authority to speak so cavalierly about another nation, of whom he knows nothing?
Ten years I spent watching every single Palestinian film I could lay my hands on before I opened my mouth and uttered a word about Palestinian cinema. I visited every conceivable archive in North America and Western Europe, travelled from Morocco to Syria, drove from one end of Palestine to another, was blessed by the dignity of Palestinians resisting the horror of a criminal occupation of their homeland, walked and showed bootlegged videos on mismatched equipment and stolen electricity from one Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon to another; then I went to Syria and found a Palestinian archivist who knew infinitely more about Palestinian cinema than I did, and I sat at his feet and learned humility, and I still did not dare put pen to paper or open my mouth about anything Palestinian without asking a Palestinian scholar -- from Edward Said to Rashid Khalidi to Joseph Massad -- to read what I had written before I dared publishing it. This I did not out of any vacuous belief in scholarship, but out of an abiding respect for the dignity of Palestinians fighting for their liberties and their stolen homeland, and fearful of the burden of responsibility that writing about a nation's struggles puts on those of us who have a voice and an audience.
For people like Zizek, social upheavals in what they call the Third World are a matter of theoretical entertainment. It is an old tradition that goes back all the way to Sartre on Algeria and Cuba in the 1950s, down to Foucault on Iran in the 1970s. That does not bother me a bit. In fact, I find it quite entertaining -- watching grown up people make complete fools of themselves talking about something about which they have no blasted clue. But when someone like AbuKhalil indulges in cliché ridden leftism of the most banal variety it speaks of a culture of intellectual laziness and moral bankruptcy so outrageously at odds with the struggles of people from which we emerge. Our people are not to conform to our tired, old, and cliché-ridden theories. We need to bypass intellectual couch potatoes and catch up with our people. Millions of people, young and old, lower and middle class, men and women, have poured in their masses of millions into the streets, launched their Intifada, demanding their constitutional rights and civil liberties. Who are these people? What language do they speak, what songs do they sing, what slogans do they chant, to what music do they sing and dance, what sacrifices have they made, what dungeons have they crowded, what epic poetry are they citing, what philosophers, theologians, jurists, poets, novelists, singers, song writers, musicians, webloggers soar in their souls, and for what ideals have their hearts and minds ached for generations and centuries?
A colonised mind is a colonised mind whether it is occupied by the European right or by the cliché-ridden left: it is an occupied territory, devoid of detail, devoid of substance, devoid of love, devoid of a caring intellect. It smells of ageing mothballs, and it is nauseating.
* The writer is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York.
Sunday, July 12, 2009
Students sing "Yare dabestani" on Kashan University campus, in Iran.
Video posted, July 3, 2009, at:
http://linkthe.com/2009/07/03/protest-in-kashan-university-july-2009/
This video shows students at Kashan University forming a human chain, singing "Yare dabestani" (“My fellow schoolmate"), a classic revolutionary song that every Iranian knows by heart. The song was written in 1980, right after the revolution.
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Another video, with the same song, includes a brief photo history of student protests against tyranny:
یار دبستانی
The video is on YouTube at:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iatN6BjifI0&NR=1
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(Rough translation of the same song, "Yare dabestani"--)
My old school chum,
You’re with me and alongside me.
When the alphabet stick is wielded over our heads,
You choke up and cry with me.
Our names have been carved
On the body of this blackboard.
The scars and lashes of injustice and tyranny
Still remain on our body.
This desolate and uncultured plain of ours--
All these shrubs are just weeds,
This is what we've got,
For better or for worse,
Dead is the heart of its people.
My hand and yours
Should tear up these curtains.
Who can, except you and I,
Cure our pain?
My schoolmate,
You’re with me, and going along with me;
The alphabet stick is above our heads.
Our names have been carved
On the body of this blackboard
The marks of injustice and tyranny
Still remain on our body.
_____________________________
یار دبستانی من ، با من و همراه منی
چوب الف بر سر ما، بغض من و آه منی
حک شده اسم من و تو، رو تن این تخته سیاه
ترکه ی بیداد و ستم ، مونده هنوز رو تن ما
دشت بی فرهنگی ما هرزه تموم علفاش
خوب اگه خوب ؛ بد اگه بد ، مرده دلای آدماش
دست من و تو باید این پرده ها رو پاره کنه
کی میتونه جز من و تو درد مارو چاره کنه ؟
یار دبستانی من ، با من و همراه منی
چوب الف بر سر ما ، بغض من و آه منی
حک شده اسم من و تو ، رو تن این تخته سیاه
ترکه بیداد و ستم ، مونده هنوز رو تن ما
یار دبستانی من ، با من و همراه منی
چوب الف بر سر ما ، بغض من و آه منی
حک شده اسم من و تو ، رو تن این تخته سیاه
ترکه ی بیداد و ستم ، مونده هنوز رو تن ما
دشت بی فرهنگی ما هرزه تموم علفاش
خوب اگه خوب ؛ بد اگه بد، مرده دلهای آدماش
دست من و تو باید این پرده ها رو پاره کنه
کی میتونه جز من و تو درد مارو چاره کنه ؟
یار دبستانی من ، با من و همراه منی
چوب الف بر سر ما ، بغض من و آه منی
حک شده اسم من و تو ، رو تن این تخته سیاه
ترکه ی بیداد و ستم ، مونده هنوز رو تن ما
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Saturday, July 11, 2009
"We are standing to the end."
(Tehran, July 9, 2009)
No to U.S. sabotage in Iran:
Demands for home-grown democracy continue on the streets of Iran.
by Mozhgan Savabieasfahani
July 11, 2009
Published in TLAXCALA, at:
http://www.tlaxcala.es/pp.asp?reference=8147&lg=en
We have to say no to U.S. sabotage in Iran. We have to respect the demands for home-grown democracy on the streets of Iran.
Thousands of protesters risked everything, again, in many locations in Tehran, and in the other cities of Iran, on Thursday July 9th , to continue demanding freedom of expression and human rights on the 10th anniversary of major student resistance in Iran.
Protesters were carrying fewer signs this time, to more easily escape the police. Some of the signs said:
* "We are the children of Cyrus the Great, the world’s ambassador of human rights",
* "Iranian women want equality, justice, and freedom in peace and solidarity",
* "Free education for all and employment for all",
* "Injustice against women is injustice against society and humanity",
* "Death to Islamic dictatorship",
* "Free all political prisoners", and
* "We are standing to the end."
Iranian students have traditionally been the engine behind anti-government resistance and protest as far back as the 1950’s, throughout the Shah Regime (installed by a CIA coup d'état in 1953). On December 7th 1953 (the 16th of Azar), Iranian students came out in large numbers, like they did this week, to demonstrate against the visit of the American vice-president Richard Nixon to Iran after the CIA-supported military coup of August 1953. Three students were shot dead by the Shah's U.S.-installed regime and that day became known as “Students’ Day” ever since.
After the success of the 1979 revolution, the U.S. and its allies pushed a genocidal war on Iran. Over a million Iranians and Iraqis were killed, which dramatically strengthened the Islamic regime. The regime used the excuse of war to “cleanse” the universities of every rebellious student, and made it very difficult for student organizations to function. As the Islamic regime weakened, and student organizations became more popular, the government cultivated goon squads called "Basij", together with plain-clothes vigilantes, to suppress student activism on all campuses across Iran.
On July 9th 1999, under the cover of darkness, several government-supported vigilante groups (led by the Basij) broke into a Tehran University dormitory. These vigilantes beat the students, trashed their belongings, and called them immoral enemies of Islam. Drunk with hate, shouting Allah hu Akbar, two by two, Basijis hoisted struggling and pleading students to the high windows of the dorm. The vigilantes actually threw the students out of the windows of the tall building, killing them. Many students were killed and wounded on that summer night. Since that day, Iranian students have been coming out every year, to remember their fallen friends and to stand against oppression and harassment by the government's Basij thugs.
The mass mobilization for this July’s protest was carried out despite seemingly impossible restrictions on communication. The government severely restricted text messaging, cell phone service, and the Internet. Virtually all journalists have been cleared off the streets of Iran, leaving the reporting to those who participate in the protests. Carrying cameras and mobile phones is prohibited. Such items, if found, are confiscated and severe punishments ensue.
Despite all such threats by the authorities, participants in recent rallies have managed to document their actions and send their message for the rest of the world to hear. “We don’t want war,” said one 27-year-old man, “We just want freedoms.”
This is a world where international solidarity is scarce, where many can be fooled into believing democracy can be installed by illegal occupations. The U.S. tells us that an imposed “democracy” ought to be endured by the occupied. Today, dignity is denied to millions of occupied Palestinians, Iraqis, and Afghans. The occupied populations' inability to establish self-rule has severe consequences. Iranians know this well, and they are fighting for democracy come hell or high water.
Iranians can only be harmed by foreign interference, by foreign sabotage, and by Israeli bombardment, which Vice President Biden is practically endorsing.
Iranians' unbreakable resolution, to win their own democracy, is apparent in their chant: “We are standing to the end”.
Real democracy, people’s participation in decision making on all aspects of social life, is what Iran wants and needs. An Iranian physician recently said: “Everything has a price. Many bad things are happening but the trend is toward the light.” Light is a commonly used metaphor for Iranians, whose roots are in Zoroastrianism (the religion of fire and light).
As Iran protests and resists dictatorship, as we join our Arab neighbors in opposing occupations and U.S. puppet rulers, the American and Israeli leadership is contemplating an attack on Iran. Such an attack, by the U.S. and Israel, on the only country in the Middle East where people have forced an opening for democracy, would mean total devastation for any democratic change in the Middle East. Unfortunately, the U.S. and Israel see democracy as a direct threat to their continued occupations across the Middle East. It is.
There is a reason why Iranians believe that war is a way of life for Israel. Israel has always been a violent settler state, with endlessly expandable borders.
While struggling to resist U.S.-imposed sanctions, which have tightened their grip on all aspects of Iranian life, for 30 years, Iranians have nevertheless found the strength to march in the streets. They are telling the U.S. and Israel, the main war-mongers of our times, that Iranians do NOT want wars and that they WILL stand for democracy “...to the end”.
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Sunday, July 5, 2009
For 25 years, the Shah, "with his Israeli-trained SAVAK torturers, murdered and tortured the nation into silence."
"Real democracy is the only path for Iranians"
ANN ARBOR NEWS (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Sunday, July 5, 2009
On the Web at:
http://www.mlive.com/opinion/ann-arbor/index.ssf/2009/07/other_voices_real_democracy_is.html
By Mozhgan Savabieasfahani
In a wounded and burning Middle East, aching under U.S. and Israeli military boots, with constantly expanding invasions by Israel (Lebanon, 2006; Gaza, 2009), with close to 2 million dead Iraqis just next door, with millions more Iraqis wounded, made homeless and poisoned by uranium, with daily Israeli threats of nuclear bombing of Iran and Iranians; in an Iran where U.S. sanctions constantly tighten its grip on all aspects of life, making it impossible to get necessities to treat and maintain close to 80 million people, where food prices are on a par with the U.S. while the average income of an Iranian family is a small fraction of that of an American family; at a time when unemployment and drug abuse are at unimaginable heights; when prostitution is destroying the fabric of an ancient society, Iranians are demanding dignity and freedom, and a new Iran is being born.
A new Iran shines in the faces of those marching peaceably with their daughters on their shoulders, and with their grandparents using wheelchairs. To attribute this monumental nonviolent popular movement to Western instigation is to dishonor those millions who showed up on the streets for two weeks - despite the threat of government-backed "Basiji" hooligans beating them mercilessly, despite the threat of being expelled from their jobs and universities, despite having their homes attacked at night by the Basiji, despite their family members being kidnapped by the various security personnel.
The 2009 coup d'etat, against more than 40 million Iranian voters, was an inside job.
The day after the election results were announced I talked to a friend in Iran who told me "if they (President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's camp) won fair and square, why aren't they celebrating on the streets?" The streets of Isfahan (and all other big cities in Iran) were desolate after the announcement.
People were dumbfounded.
The very next day, people organized and took to the streets again, carrying their children on their shoulders and pushing wheelchairs for the elderly.
Iranians know what a foreign coup d'etat looks like, and feels like. One of the most humiliating instances in our history was the 1953 CIA coup that removed the democratically elected government of Mohammad Mosadegh from office and installed the shah.
For the next 25 years, the shah, with his Israeli-trained SAVAK torturers, murdered and tortured the nation into silence. Iranians still remember "the hired help," the U.S. and Israeli collaborators who got paid only pennies to roam the streets of Tehran (and other large cities); the vigilantes who swung metal chains in the air; metal chains that had bashed many young skulls and ripped through soft tissue of people's stomach. No, Iranians have not forgotten the shah's "Shaboon-Bi-Mokh" (brainless Shaboon) and his other brutal gangs.
That was a revolution ago, many political fights back, and long before many large and small civil victories.
Iranians of 2009 expect more from life and demand more of their government. After all, the most significant popular revolution of this century succeeded in Iran. We survived a brutal U.S.-instigated war, between Iran and Iraq, for eight years. Over a million died, throughout the 1980s.
Every Iranian knows that, were it not for the U.S.-fueled war with Iraq, a million Iranian and Iraqi youths would have been spared. Every Iranian knows that, were it not for the war with Iraq, democratic forces in Iran would have survived. Every Iranian knows that the new bullies, of the new regime, were strengthened by that war (this is admitted by current leaders of the regime itself).
Every Iranian knows that democracy was the real casualty of war inflicted on them by the U.S.
And Iranians know, in their bones, that what has already happened to Iraq and Afghanistan could easily have happened to them.
Real democracy (the people's ability to install social mechanisms to protect freedom of speech, freedom of writing, freedom of gathering, etc.) is now the only path that Iranians will accept, if we are to protect ourselves against further U.S. and Israeli wars. Knowing this in our bones, Iranians poured onto the streets in the millions, to cry for freedom.
May all people of the Middle East hear our call and answer with similar nonviolent rallies. Resistance to occupation, to invasion; to undemocratic regimes is our only hope for a safe Middle East where our children can grow to become painters and poets and mathematicians.
Remember your Iranian sisters and brothers who overcame their fear of bullets and tanks by chanting, "Don't be afraid, don't be afraid, we are all together"; and remember the revolution's 1979 chants, which also echoed in Iran after the 2009 elections: "Bullets, tanks and machine guns will not work anymore."
Nothing but solidarity between Iran and its neighbors will protect us from U.S. and Israeli drones, and from uranium bombs. May all the people of the region hear Iran's call and answer with comparable nonviolent rallies, especially in the occupied nations.
Iran is calling you: "Don't be afraid, don't be afraid, we are all together."
Dr. Mozhgan Savabieasfahani, a native of Iran, is an environmental toxicologist based in Ann Arbor. Her new book is "Pollution and Reproductive Damage: Pollution Induced Cell-death and Reproductive Damage in Fish and Mammals" published by DVM publishers (Germany). She has written on the effects of plasticizers and pesticides on the female reproductive cycle, and on pollution related to wars and invasions in the Middle East.
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