President
Obama called on the Iranian government to allow protesters to control the
streets in Tehran. Would Obama or any US president allow protesters to control
the streets in Washington, D.C.?
There was
more objective evidence that George W. Bush stole his two elections than there
is at this time of election theft in Iran. But there was no orchestrated media
campaign to discredit the US government.
On May 16,
2007, the London Daily Telegraph reported that Bush regime official John Bolton told the Telegraph that a US military attack on Iran
would “be a ‘last option’ after
economic sanctions and attempts to foment a popular revolution had failed.”
We are now
witnessing in Tehran US “attempts to
foment a popular revolution” in the guise of another CIA-orchestrated “color revolution“.
It is
possible that splits among the mullahs themselves brought about by their rival
ambitions will aid and abet what the Telegraph (May 27, 2007) reported were “CIA
plans for a propaganda and disinformation campaign intended to destabilize, and
eventually topple, the theocratic rule of the mullahs.” It is certainly
a fact that the secularized youth of Tehran have played into the CIA’s hands.
The Mousavi
protests have set up Iran either for a US puppet government or for a military
strike. The mullahs are in a lose-lose situation. Even if the mullahs hold
together and suppress the protests, the legitimacy of the Iranian government in
the eyes of the outside world has been damaged. Obama’s diplomatic approach is
over before it started. The neocons and Israel have won.
The US
intervention and the orchestrated disinformation pumped out by the Western
media are so transparent that it is impossible to believe than any informed
person or government is taken in. One cannot avoid the conclusion that the West
wants the 1978 Iranian Revolution overthrown and intends to use deception or
violence to achieve that goal.
It has
become increasingly difficult to believe that facts and truth motivate the Western
news media. For the record, I would like to point out a few of the most obvious
oversights, to use a euphemism, in the Iran reporting.
According
to a wide variety of news sources (for example, London Telegraph, Yahoo News, The Globe and Mail,
Asbarez.com, Politico), “Before the
polling closed Mr. Mousavi declared himself ‘definitely the winner’ based on
‘all indications from all over Iran.’ He alleged widespread voting
irregularities without giving specifics and hinted he was ready to challenge
the final results.”
Other news
sources, which might not have been aware that the polls were kept open several
hours beyond normal closing time in order to accommodate the turnout, reported
that Mousavi made his victory claim the minute polls closed.
Mousavi’s
premature claim of victory before polling was over or votes counted is clearly
a preemptive move, the purpose of which is to discredit any other outcome. There
is no other reason to make such a claim.
In Iran’s
system, election fraud has no purpose, because a small select group of ruling
mullahs select the candidates who are put on the ballot. If they don’t like an
aspiring candidate, they simply don’t put him on the ballot.
When the
liberal reformer Khatami ran for president, he won with 70 percent of the vote
and served from 1997-2005. If the mullahs didn’t defraud Khatami of his win, it
seems unlikely they would defraud an establishment figure like Mousavi, who was
foreign minister in the most conservative government, and is backed by another
establishment figure, Rafsanjani.
As Mousavi
was seen as Rafsanjani’s man, why is it “unbelievable”
that Ahmadinejad defeated Mousavi by the same margin that he defeated
Rafsanjani in the previous election?
Neoconservative
Kenneth Timmerman let the cat out of the bag that there was an orchestrated “color revolution” in the works. Before
the election, Timmerman wrote: “there’s
talk of a ‘green revolution’ in Tehran.” Why would protests be organized
prior to a vote and announcement of the outcome? Organized protests waiting in
the wings are not spontaneous responses to a stolen election.
Timmerman’s
organization, Foundation for Democracy, is funded by the National Endowment for
Democracy (NED) for the explicit purpose of promoting democracy in Iran.
According to Timmerman, NED money was funneled to “pro-Mousavi groups who have ties to non-governmental organizations
outside Iran that the National Endowment for Democracy funds.”
The US
media has studiously ignored all of these highly suggestive facts. The media is
not reporting or providing objective analysis. It is engaged in a
propagandistic onslaught against the Iranian government.
We know
that the US funds terrorist organizations inside Iran that are responsible for
bombings and other violent acts. It is likely that these terrorist
organizations are responsible for the burning buses and other acts of violence
that have occurred during the demonstrations in Tehran.
A writer on
pakalert.wordpress.com says that he was intrigued by the sudden appearance of
tens of thousands of Twitter allegations that Ahmadinejad stole the Iranian
election. He investigated, he says, and he reports that each of the new highly
active accounts were created on Saturday, June 13. “IranElection” is their most popular keyword. He narrowed the
spammers to the most persistent: @StopAhmadi @IranRiggedElect @Change_For_Iran. He researched further and found that on June
14 the Jerusalem Post already had an article on the new
Twitter.
He concludes
that the new Twitter sites are propaganda operations.
One wonders
why the youth of the world, who do not protest stolen elections elsewhere, are
so obsessed with Iran.
The
unexamined question is Mousavi and his motives. Why would Mousavi unleash demonstrations
that are obviously being used by a hostile West to discredit the government of
the Iranian Revolution that overthrew the US puppet government? Are these the
actions of a “moderate”? Or are
these the actions of a disgruntled man who kept his disaffection from his
colleagues in order to gain the opportunity to discredit the regime with street
protests? Is Mousavi being manipulated by organizations funded with US
government money?
John Bolton
laid out the US strategy. First we try to destabilize the regime. Failing that,
we strike them militarily.
As this
strategy unfolds, Iranians will pay in lost independence or in blood for the
naiveness of its secularized youth and for the mistake the mullahs made in
trusting Mousavi.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has
held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair,
Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.