In a perilous spiral of assassinations, threats and
counter-threats, the leaders of Washington, Jerusalem and Tehran keep
ratcheting the tension. What is most alarming about the situation, is that the principle
players and their advisors are engaged in an incredibly dangerous three-way
game of blind mans buff.
None of them expresses a real understanding of the others: of
their motives, their concerns, nor their likely reactions. That’s true even
with Israel and the United States: though the U.S. risks being sucked into any conflict between
Israel and Iran, the Obama administration is currently forced to guess what its
supposed Israeli allies are planning.
What would America or Israel --or any country-- do if five
of its scientists were assassinated by an enemy power? How would they react if, at the same
time, the mightiest country on the planet dispatched its forces towards their
borders even as it tightened a blockade to garrote their economy?
Would they kowtow to the demand that they terminate any
activities related to the research or development of nuclear weapons [which, of
course, both Israel and the U.S. possess]--or lash out in violent reprisal?
A lot of people with important sounding titles pontificate
on what lies ahead, but who are they kidding? It’s like we’re watching kids playing
around with vials of highly volatile chemicals. No one’s sure when an explosion
will come, nor how calamitous might be the chain reactions it ignites.
What makes the situation even more perilous is the fact that
the leaders of the three countries involved—Israel, Iran and the U.S.--are all challenged
by strident enemies in their own countries. Since this current dispute plays front and centre, every move
they make is automatically the target of virulent homegrown--and often woefully
ignorant--opponents.
In other words, if the leaders and their advisors were more
secure on their respective thrones, they might all be able to follow a much cooler,
more rational course. They might even be able to sit down and negotiate.
Worse, is the likelihood that the principle actors, their
advisors, intelligence agencies and domestic critics, don’t really comprehend
what the others are up to—where they are coming from and what they want to
achieve.
If it’s not blind-man’s buff, it’s shadow boxing—sparring
with caricatures: In this corner, the deceitful bearded mullahs in Tehran
obsessed with obtaining nuclear weapons to exterminate Israel and establish a
new Caliphate. In that corner, the
grasping imperialists in Washington, who for decades have used the CIA
and American military to put down movements of national liberation, sustain the
Zionist State of Israel and the corrupt oil-rich Arab dictators.
Those caricatures become so deeply embedded that even the
supposedly objective intelligence agencies of each of the combatants—not to
mention the mainstream media--tend to censor, edit out, or shy away from
information that runs counter to official “truth”.
I had a personal run-in with this phenomenon in 1980 when I
was a producer at 60 Minutes covering the on-going revolution in Iran during
the hostage crisis.
Travelling back and forward between Tehran, New York and
Washington, I was struck by the total inability of Americans—even at the highest
level—to understand the emotions and history that drove the hatred of all
things American that had exploded in Iran with the fall of the Shah.
Just up West 57th street from CBS News, for
instance, was a huge billboard with the diabolical image of Khomeini glowering
down on New York.
I suggested we do a report to give Americans a better idea
of what was driving Iran’s revolutionaries and their violent feelings against
the United States.
Though certainly encouraged by radical elements in Tehran, that
hatred was fueled by real facts: the shameful history of U.S. intervention in
Iran, from the CIA’s organizing a coup to oust the democratically elected nationalist
leader Mohamed Mossadegh in 1953 to America’s subsequent backing of the Shah of
Iran.
That support included the closest of relations between the
CIA and the Shah’s infamous secret police, the SAVAK, notorious for torture and
brutality. [In the future, of course, SAVAK’s brutality would pale beside the
horrific prisons and savage repression of Khomeini and the regimes to follow. ]
To give an idea of America’s relations with the Shah and
SAVAK, I stitched together a tough report with Mike Wallace based on a series
of interviews in New York and Washington. “You’d have to be blind, deaf and
dumb and a presidential candidate not to know there was torture going on in
Iran under the Shah,” Jesse Leaf, a former C.I.A. analyst told us.
“We knew what was happening and we did nothing about it and
I was told not to do anything about it. By definition, an enemy of the Shaw was
an enemy of the CIA. We were friends. This was a very close relationship
between the United states and Iran.”
Another former CIA officer, Richard Cottam, also condemned
the U.S. and former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, for turning a blind eye
to the excesses of the Shah, and refusing to have any contact with the
opposition groups.
“What you seemed to be saying, Professor Cottam, “Mike Wallace
interjected, “is that when the question “Who lost Iran?” is finally asked,
Henry Kissinger is at the top of your culprit’s list.”
“I think Henry Kissinger’s idea of diplomacy in this sense
is…is intolerable,” replied Cottam.
We also reported on some of the classified U.S. government
documents divulged by the Iranians who had taken over the American Embassy.
Those documents showed that American diplomats based in Teheran had warned
Washington months earlier of the threat of a possible hostage
taking--particularly if the U.S. allowed the despised Shah to come to America
for medical treatment, as the U.S. ultimately did. Those warnings had been
completely ignored by Washington.
In return for releasing the hostages what the Iranian government
of President Bani-Sadr was demanding was a pledge by the U.S. not to interfere
in the future affairs of Iran and an agreement not to block their efforts to
get back the Shah and the wealth of Iran he embezzled. They also wanted an
admission by the U.S. of past wrongs. In light of that past, we asked, were
those demands so outrageous?
In the context of America’s superheated passions at the
time, however, even posing that question was considered outrageous.
Over the next few days, as we were preparing the report, we
received calls from many Washington officials concerned about the broadcast. This
was capped by President Jimmy Carter himself who called Bill Leonard, the
President of CBS News, to try to convince him not to broadcast report. It
would, he said, undermine U.S. negotiations with Iran at a very delicate time.
To his credit, Bill Leonard refused to back down. The only thing
he requested was to change the title of our report from “Should the U.S. Apologize?”
to a more neutral “The Iran file.”
When questioned by Leonard, we argued that it was difficult
to understand how our report could upset the hostage negotiations. We were not revealing any secrets to
Iran. The Iranians already knew well the role of the U.S. in their own history.
The people we were informing were 20 million Americans—who didn’t understand
what was really roiling Iran.
And still don’t.
Mr.Lando once again is shedding so much light over the amazing fallible US foreign policy towards the Midlle East and the Philippines, Vietnam and Venezuela. The key point as Mr Lando mentioned is:" Those caricatures become so deeply embedded that even the supposedly objective intelligence agencies of each of the combatants—not to mention the mainstream media--tend to censor, edit out, or shy away from information that runs counter to official “truth”.
ReplyDeleteWell you need not any further inventions of conflict resolution or grand diplomacy to solve these issues, only when the political will prvails. Ezz Shawkat
You write "... real facts: ... the CIA’s assassination of the democratically elected nationalist leader Mohamed Mossadegh in 1953...".
ReplyDeleteEr... no. He wasn't assassinated but imprisoned for life, and he wasn't democratically elected by that time. He previously had been, but he had been equally democratically dismissed after his parliamentary coalition broke up, only instead of going to new elections he unconstitutionally dismissed the parliament (Majlis) and started ruling dictatorially. Mossadegh had about as much democratic basis as Napoleon III and even less than Hitler and Mussolini who had observed the constitutional forms (all three of those also used manufactured plebiscites to bolster their position, like Mossadegh). It was as though Herbert Hoover had launched a coup in 1933; the fact that he had once been democratically elected no longer applied. There were no good guys in the Iranian story after 1953.