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Entries in Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (3)

Thursday
Nov202008

Iranian Intrigue: Interpreting The Derakhshan Arrest

This analysis comes from an Enduring America reader and specialist observer of Iranian affairs:
According to Jahan News, which is close to Iran's Intelligence community, Hossein Derakhshan, an Iranian-Canadian journalist who has been described as the father of Persian blogging has been arrested in Tehran.  Hossein returned to Iran about three weeks ago and in his most recent post on Twitter, published 27 days ago, he said he was "hanging out in Tehran, frustrated by slow Internet connection, but generally impressed," adding that he "LOVES living in Tehran again" (his emphasis).  Moreover, a quick look at his weblog reveals that he believed that if arrested it would be through violating "the rule of law" by going to Israel.  However he felt reassured that he would not go to jail for more than three months- since he was coming back to the arms of his forefathers for no other reason but to be at their service.

According to what the Jahan article says are "credible sources," Hossein has apparently admitted to spying for Israel, a charge that if pursued, is perhaps more serious than he expected.  Jahan news talks about Hossein's participation in a number of conferences in Israel. It says that Haaretz news paper described him as a friend of Israel.  It then quotes Jerusalem Post and Haaretz as saying that Hossein had described Israel as a model of democracy, and that the Israeli and Turkish system of governance, and participation of religion in government was a good model for Iran.

However, there has been surprise that, according to rumours, Hossein simply handed his laptop over to officials upon return to Iran.  Among the blogging community there has been questions raised whether he has actually even been arrested and his family has refused to comment on the whole affair. Moreover, a spokesman for the Permanent Mission of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations, told NPR that he had no information about the incident. Hossein has posted nothing on his Farsi blog or Facebook site since October 30, i.e. 20 days' silence. Earlier in October he was posting every few days.

It is open knowledge that Hossein visited Israel on two separate occasions.  During his June 2006 visit he stated that he went to Israel as a personal attempt to start a dialogue between Iranian and Israeli people.  However after his second trip there, he suddenly changed his opinion and started becoming vehemently anti- Israeli in his blog. He also became a strong supporter of President Ahmadinejad and came out justifying the arrests of scholars Ramin Jahanbeglou, Hale Esfandiari and businessman Ali Shakeri and condemned Iranian journalist Akbar Ganji. In a slightly ironic twist, he wrote a controversial article in which he asserted that Jahanbegloo's own "confession" was authentic - indeed even "the possibility of it being imposed on him by his interrogators" was, according to his logic, "ruled out".  He also accused Jahanbegloo of indirectly "helping the Bush administration in its plans for regime change in Iran through fomenting internal unrest and instability."

It is true Derakhashan began to make fairly regular vitriolic remarks on his blogs and alienating almost everyone who works on Iran, regardless of ideology.  Prior to his return to Iran, he also started attacking Ayatollah Rafsanjani in his blog. There have been suggestions that he fell foul of a power struggle within Iran.  However. it gets even more interesting when right-of-the centre conservative news websites like Parsineh also report that, according to the "rumours", Derakhashan was due to work for Press TV and collaborate with President Ahmahdenijad's government endorsed newspaper.

Some Iranian specialists speculate that Derakhshan's arrest will result in increased scrutiny of the many organizations he has had links with, including Radio Farda, Radio Zamaneh, Rooz Online and VOA.  One specialist stated the arrest would result in "a new genre of conspiracy and soft-regime change literature which will overwhelm the Iranian political milieu in the near future."  Another stated it would not be a surprise if he gave a long confession, with endless names informing the Iranian masses of years of brewing velvet revolution, anti-IRI activism, working as agents of World Zionism and other similar juicy stuff.  If Iran wants to stir up anti-Western hysteria (e.g. the PressTV item today) in order to sabotage any possible reconciliation with the US, this might be a way to do it.

Following this line, the IRNA has just posted the first of what is called in the Iranian political vocabulary "Tak-nevisi", which is a "single-liner serialised confessions".  The text refers to a man called Hossein D, which I can only presume is Hossein Derakhshan.  A very rough translation has some worrying quotes: "As of three years ago, many of my friends who were involved in the reformist press as writers and journalists were encouraged to leave the country, and write against the Velyate Faqih, the Hidden Imam, and lack of freedom in Iran, and were deceived by financial incentives...Now, they live under the worst financial conditions." According to Hossein D. many of these "misled people use tranquilising drugs, and some of them have attempted suicide once or twice... Westerners kept asking us to always write against a few things: Velayate Faqih, belief in the Hidden Imam, and fundamentalists. And if people do not write what the Westerners want, they try to blackmail them by threatening that if do you do not write what we want we will publish the evidence that we have against you. Some of my friends live in very bad financial and psychological conditions and may even wish their own death all the time."

Definitely a situation to be watched.
Tuesday
Nov112008

I like the poodle best

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U-A-KcMiVtc[/youtube]

Amnesty International reveals the hitherto unknown talents of monsieurs Putin, Bush and Ahmadinejad. [via Very Short List]
Friday
Nov072008

Blue State Iran

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has congratulated Barack Obama on Tuesday's victory. In a letter mercifully much shorter than the 18 page missive he sent to Bush in 2006, Ahmadinejad implores Obama to "leave a good name behind for yourself":
People expect an immediate and clear response to the pressure for fundamental change in the American government's policies, both foreign and domestic. This is the desire of all the world's nations and of the American nation as well, and it should be the objective and basis of all your future government's programs and actions.

...

In the sensitive Middle East region, in particular, the expectation is that the unjust actions of the past 60 years will give way to a policy encouraging full rights for all nations, especially the oppressed nations of Palestine, Iraq and Afghanistan.

The really interesting part for me is when the Iranian President confesses that, "Iran would welcome major, fair and real changes, in policies and actions, especially in this region." What's to stop Obama taking taking his advice? The world wants to believe that Obama's ready to move away from Bush's hawkish policies, and Obama has more political capital to spend than any recent US president. Suggestion- in January Obama takes Ahmadinejad at face value and promises 'major, fair and real changes, in policies and actions' in the region, in exchange for a halt to Iranian nuclear development. He'll be making those sorts of promises anyway- why not put them to good use in Iran?