New State Dept. Office To Promote Regime Change In Iran
The office is another fine product from the Cheney family. The Vice President's daughter Elizabeth will be in charge of the effort.
While the United States has marshaled international support for diplomatic pressure on Iran, some Asian and European allies have expressed misgivings about other avenues of pressure, which are seen as aimed at undermining the government in Tehran.
One Asian diplomat said the effort was reminiscent of the subsidies the United States provided to Iraqi exile groups in the 1990's. "They don't call it 'regime change,' but that is obviously what it is," he said. But he had to be promised anonymity before he would discuss it, not wanting to create a public rift between his country and the United States on a significant matter of foreign policy...
To find people to promote change in Iran, the State Department has opened a competition for grant applications. A Web site announcement says that applicants "must outline activities linked to reform and demonstrate how the proposed approach would achieve sustainable impact in Iran."
A State Department official said that numerous applications had come in and that the department would have little trouble spending the $25 million in the next year. But he acknowledged that various groups were squabbling over how best to promote reform and who would be most effective in doing so...
"It sounds good to fund civil society groups, but not when you don't know who the groups are," said Vali R. Nasr, an Iranian-born professor of national affairs at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, Calif. "No real group wants a direct affiliation with the United States. It will just get them into trouble with the government."
Administration officials said a few top American officials had been traveling the country, particularly to Los Angeles, to meet with Iranian exile organizations, many of them supporters of the monarchy of Shah Reza Pahlavi, who was overthrown in 1979. Some of the Los Angeles groups operate satellite radio and television stations that beam programs into Iran.
Lorne W. Craner, president of the International Republican Institute, a foundation linked to the Republican Party, said, "There are plenty of people out there who have a checkered past who you would not want to work with."
The institute, which receives money from Congress and grants from the State Department, has in the last couple of years linked up with groups and individuals in Iran and offered them training at places outside the country. The groups cannot be identified for fear of their safety, he said.
The idea that the Iranian people would buy into the monarchists' agenda is preposterous. Hopefully, very little of the money for this operation will be spent on the Los Angeles emigres.
3 Comments:
Since the U.S. gov't's intentions *appear* honorable here, but they hardly are -- I'm guessing they will attract exactly the same ... and so I doubt the money will be well spent...
Had dinner yesterday with an Iranian friend and her brother - both recent immigrants -- I didn't even dare to bring up the Sy Hersh article, etc. because I know she worries so much about her family in Tehran.
Dena
Dena:
Every charlatan with any tie (however tenuous) to Iran will be vying for some of this money.
The L.A. Iranians are especially vile. Extremely pampered monsters who would be perfectly happy to see American troops spill blood to return them to a new kleptocracy in Persia.
You showed fine tact in not broaching the subject of possible U.S. nuclear intentions for the homeland of your friends.
SK:
No, it's the "normal" one.
;-)
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