Like a giant
piece in an intricate, if ugly, jigsaw puzzle, the aircraft carrier,
the USS Nimitz, and its strike group are now sailing toward
the Persian Gulf. On arrival, they will join the strike groups of
the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower (which it is officially replacing)
and the USS John C. Stennis patrolling the region, as stunning
an example of "gunboat diplomacy" as we've seen in our lifetimes.
I think it's a fair guess that, like most Americans, few, if any,
of the Nimitz strike group's 6,000
sailors and Marines, who may become part of a massive Bush administration
air assault on Iranian nuclear and other facilities, know much about
modern Iranian history. Most may be unaware of the CIA/British
coup d'état in Iran, in 1953, that overthrew the government
of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh (which had just carried out
the nationalizing of Iranian oil), reinstalled the Shah, and ushered
in a long, contentious relationship between the two countries
with all the "unintended consequences" that may end, whether through
miscalculation or cold
calculation, in a devastating war.
It was this
very "success" to which CIA operatives first applied the term "blowback,"
for those unintended consequences of covert Agency operations which,
when they finally land on Americans, are not recognized as such.
Just this week, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad bragged to the world
that Iran was on its way to industrial-scale
uranium enrichment. But who today knows that the first seeds
of the present Iranian "peaceful" nuclear program came from the
United States? Under Dwight D. Eisenhower's Atoms
for Peace program, one of the planet's first nuclear proliferation
engines back in the 1950s and 1960s, the Shah's Iran gained its
initial nuclear technology, including a U.S.-supplied 5-megawatt
nuclear research reactor. At the time, it was believed, the Shah
was dreaming of something far more ambitious than a peaceful nuclear
program.
Ah, but that
was then, this, of course, is now; and not making historical connections
is a great American talent. As it happens, it's not an Iranian one.
When covert "operations" occur at your expense, you tend to remember
for a long, long time. Fortunately, Behzad Yaghmaian, author
of Embracing
the Infidel: Stories of Muslim Migrants on the Journey West
and a Tomdispatch
writer, is here with his remarkable memoir of a life lived in
and between two worlds, Iranian and American. His is a tale that
can both help us remember how it all began and think more clearly
about what an attack on Iran might actually mean in human terms.
~ Tom
Bonded
at Birth: How
a CIA Coup d'État in Iran and My Life Became One
By Behzad
Yaghmaian
I am a child
of the coup d'état, born in Iran a few days after the CIA
helped overthrow the popular, democratic government of Prime Minister
Mohammad Mossadegh in 1953.
Not long
before my birth, facing nationwide protests, the Shah of Iran
was forced to abdicate his power and flee the country. My mother
used to tell me how men and women celebrated in the streets, how
strangers gave flowers and sweets to each other. "The Shah left,"
they cried with joy. However, the celebration did not last long.
In just a few more days, the political landscape changed again.
Men paid by the U.S. government began to roam the streets of Tehran,
armed with truncheons and chains, assaulting Mossadegh's supporters.
Soon the Shah returned and Mossadegh was put under house arrest.
That was when I was born.
A witch-hunt
for the followers of Mossadegh, communists, anyone who opposed
the Shah and the coup d'état now began. Many were jailed
and tortured. Some opposition figures went underground
or left the country; the rest lived in fear of the Shah and, within
a few years, the SAVAK, his brutal secret police (also set up
with CIA help).
Even as
a child, I knew about the SAVAK. I remember adults whispering
about it at family gatherings. The fear was palpable. I drew the
obvious conclusion: The SAVAK was more powerful and far more horrible
than Zahhak, a legendary Iranian monster with snakes growing
out of his shoulders that I feared as a child.
My family
did not respect the Shah or America; they feared them.
My father forbade us to mention them at family gatherings. "Politics
is not any of our business," he would say. It was his mantra.
He feared being spied on by the SAVAK, our neighbors, or strangers.
Later, I learned how the Americans helped create the SAVAK, trained
the Shah's torturers, advised the Shah, and closed their eyes
to everything that happened in his political prisons. I was told
how young men and women were tortured in these jails and I came
to agree with my father; politics was not any of my business.
When I was
in the fifth grade, I first saw tanks, soldiers, and angry protesters
at the intersection by my home. Sticks in their hands,
and throwing stones, these men broke the windows of our local
phone booth and of the stores around the intersection. They were
shouting, "Death to the Shah," "Death to America." I heard the
gunshots many of them. Scared, yet curious, I went to the
rooftop of my house to watch the chanting men. "Come downstairs,"
my father shouted. "This isn't any of our business."
My home
was near the main army barracks in Tehran, the elementary school
I attended only a short walk away from the scene of serious street
riots. The school was somehow an extension of my family: my uncle
was the principal, my mother and aunt teachers. I understood the
seriousness of what was happening on the streets only when, in
the middle of taking an arithmetic exam, I noticed the vice principal
and my aunt in our classroom, whispering to my teacher and glancing
at me. I was only half-done when the teacher walked over, examined
my test papers, and whispered the remaining answers to me.
Joining
my aunt, I raced home through the tense, half-deserted streets
of my neighborhood, leaving the other students struggling with
the exam. "Too dangerous to be out. Everyone was worried for you,"
my aunt said. I did not leave home again that day or the next.
In the streets
in those days it was 1963 people talked about a
man they called Ayatollah Khomeini. Some liked him; others did
not. I was too young to understand any of the adult discussions
around me, but I could grasp the meaning of the tanks on our streets.
Later, I learned that they were in my neighborhood to quell a
rebellion by Khomeini's supporters. As a result, he was exiled
to Iraq.
In high
school, I would see police officers in helmets, swinging their
truncheons outside the campus of Tehran University; sometimes
I even saw them beating protesting students. But I would walk
away, staying out of trouble just as my elders had advised me.
Onto
the Streets
Then, one
day in February 1970, I didn't walk away.
At six in
the morning, my mother woke me and sent off on the chore I hated
most, buying fresh bread for breakfast. In the neighborhood bakery,
I was dawdling, enjoying the heat of the fire from the glowing
oven, the intoxicating aroma of fresh bread, when a young man
in black trousers, a suit jacket that didn't match, and a brown,
hand-knitted V-neck sweater pulled over a shirt of a different
color approached me. Short and unassuming, he had an instantly
forgettable face that I remember vividly to this day.
"Sorry for
intruding," he said politely, introducing himself as a student
from Tehran University. I can't claim to recall the details of
our conversation, only his question, the one that intrigued me,
but left me uncomfortable and scared.
"Do you
know about the student strike over the bus-fare hike?" he asked.
I did not, I told him, but I certainly knew about the Shah's recently
announced plan to increase fares by 150%. Everyone did. This threatened
to make my life far more difficult. I was born to a lower middle-class
family and the fare hike would have meant taking the bus to school,
but walking forty-five minutes to get home. Like many in my school,
I was, until that moment, prepared to do exactly that. End of
story.
Quietly
but passionately, the young man told me of the student decision
to force the government to retract its new policy. "Will you come
out and join us?" he asked, encouraging me to boycott my high-school
classes that day and do just what I had always feared: protest.
Although there were no other customers in the bakery, the pervasive
fear of being watched by the SAVAK left me feeling uncomfortable.
As soon as my bread had been slipped out of the oven, I paid the
baker, shook the young man's hand, and rushed home not,
of course, mentioning a word about my unexpected encounter.
I took the
bus to school that morning and was attending a lecture in physics
when a sudden uproar in the hallway disrupted my peace. Stamping
feet, banging on doors, hundreds of students were marching through
the corridors, shouting, inviting everyone to join them in the
school courtyard. The teacher, hoping to maintain order, continued
his lecture, but his students simply packed up their books and
stormed from the classroom. Following them without hesitation,
I joined the protest. For a brief moment, my fears, it seemed,
had vanished.
From that
courtyard, we poured into the streets against the Shah,
against America, against everything that had once terrified me
disrupting traffic, joining others from nearby schools.
Rumors circulated in the crowd. Arrests had been made at Tehran
University. Students had attacked the Iran-America Society Cultural
Center, breaking windows and chanting anti-American slogans. Later
that day, we rode the bus home free. The next day, the
government announced a policy reversal: The bus fares would be
left unchanged.
A World
of Silences
In college
in the early 1970s, some of my classmates would disappear for
weeks or months at a time. No one asked why. Everyone knew they
had been taken away by the SAVAK. When they returned, we still
did not ask questions.
This happened
to a classmate I respected. Like the young university student
I met at that bakery, he was provincial. Most of the other students
in the school wore jeans or more stylish Western outfits; he wore
trousers and suit jackets, the typical outfit of provincial folks.
Different as we were, he often engaged me in conversations about
life and our studies.
One day,
he stopped coming to school. A week passed, then another and another;
still, his seat remained empty. There were whispers about his
whereabouts, but no one discussed his absence openly. Soon, other
students began disappearing: a petite woman, a tall bearded fellow,
and a youth from a far-away province.
Three months
passed… and then, one morning, I saw him sitting alone on a bench
in the main lobby of our school, thin and frail. I embraced him,
said a few words, and departed. I wanted to ask questions; I did
not. He wanted to tell me stories; he did not. And life went on
in that silence.
"No Gas
for Iranians"
I left Iran
for graduate studies in the United States in 1976. On February
9, 1979, an Islamic government replaced the Shah's regime. I watched
the mass protests and shootings in Tehran from New York on television.
Once again, there were those tanks in the streets and people chanting
"Death to the Shah," "Death to America." Once again, they were
joyously shouting "Long Live Khomeini." The Shah fled the country.
I was happy to see him go, happy Iran was free of America.
I read how
students and ordinary citizens stormed the Shah's prisons, unlocking
every cell, freeing all political prisoners. Some had been in
jail since the 1953 coup d'état. Those opening the prisons
fancied turning them into museums, which would educate future
generations in the wrongdoings of the Shah and his American supporters.
No longer, they dreamed, would Iranians be tortured for opposing
them.
Such hopes,
unfortunately, did not last. By the time I returned to Iran in
the summer of 1979, the country was already facing life under
a repressive theocratic state, albeit an anti-American one. Iranians
who took part in the mass movement in the streets which, miraculously,
overthrew the Shah were now dealing with a government that wished
to control every aspect of their lives. It promptly banned all
music, foreign movies, and theater; subjected women to what it
considered an Islamic hijab, forcing them to cover their
hair and wear baggy robes in dark colors; it had no hesitation
about shutting down newspapers and magazines that questioned its
policies. Government militias and paid thugs raided the headquarters
of oppositional political organizations, attacked bookstores,
and burnt books.
By that
fall, the Shah's political prisons were once again being used
to jail and torture Iranians. Many of the freed political prisoners
had been returned to their cells. Ironically, this time around,
they were charged with being friends of America, aka "the
Great Satan." Anyone who challenged the government was accused
of helping the United States to undermine the Islamic Republic,
the cold war with the Great Satan was now a convenient pretext
for imprisoning journalists, writers, and student activists
anyone, in fact, who dared to disagree with the reining theocrats.
They were labeled "enemies of the state," "agents of America."
It was the beginning of a new era.
And yet
much remained eerily the same. With many still being jailed and
tortured, this time for liking America or being considered its
voice in Iran, we Iranians remained hostages to the strange, entangled,
never-ending relationship between the two countries.
In the U.S.,
Iran now underwent a similar transformation from ally to enemy
after a group of student backers of Khomeini seized the U.S. Embassy
in Tehran, holding 50 of its residents hostage for 444 days. I
was back in the Bronx, attending Fordham University, when, during
that crisis, Ronald Reagan termed Iranians "barbarians." If I
was hurt by the label, the Iranian government welcomed it as the
best proof of America's "animosity towards the Islamic Revolution."
The hostage
crisis opened a new chapter in the Iranian-American relationship,
evoking anger among some of my fellow students at Fordham. A long
banner, for instance, hanging from a wall of one of the dormitories
read: "Save Oil, Burn Iranians." Hoping to offer a sense of the
Iranian grievances against the U.S. that lay behind these events,
I agreed to be interviewed by the student paper. I explained the
way the effects of the CIA's covert action in the 1953 coup had
rippled down to our moment, how Iranian democracy had been a victim
of American support for the Shah.
A few days
after the interview was published, in a letter to the paper's
editor, a group of students wrote, "The Iranian student must watch
his back when he walks home alone late at night." Similar threats
continued, along with occasional physical harassment. Meanwhile,
Iranian students in southern states were reportedly denied service
at restaurants and gas stations "No Gas for Iranians,"
was a gas-station sign of the times; some were even beaten up.
The Reagan
administration only increased its rhetoric against Iran in this
period, matched phrase for phrase by the Iranians, as the war
of words between the two countries became ever more intense. Action
replaced words after Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Iran
in 1980, starting an eight-year bloodletting between the two countries
that would leave hundreds of thousands dead and wounded.
Hoping to
weaken, or perhaps topple, the Islamic Republic, the U.S. and
its regional allies Saudi Arabia and the Arab Emirates
aided the Iraqi war effort, providing Saddam with large
grants and credit. Later in the conflict, the Pentagon provided
Iraq with invaluable operational and planning intelligence as
well as satellite information about the movements of Iranian forces,
even when it knew that Saddam would use nerve gas against them.
Meanwhile, the besieged Iranian government continued to persecute
its domestic critics, accusing them of being the agents of the
"Great Satan."
Loving
the Great Satan
Like many
Iranians studying in universities in the West, I stayed away from
Iran, later applying for U.S. citizenship and making this country
my new home. In May 1995, after sixteen years, I returned as a
visiting university lecturer, part of a special United Nations
program. The Iran of my childhood was all but gone. Large murals
of the "fallen martyrs" of the Iran-Iraq War, and anti-American
posters were everywhere. The security forces and the bassij
the "moral police" patrolled the streets in their
jeeps and station wagons. The war with Iraq had long ended, but
Tehran remained visibly under its shadow a city of martyrs
and anti-American warriors, the authorities proclaimed.
Even the
street names had changed; many were now named after the martyrs
of that brutal war. There was nothing left of my old neighborhood.
My home, the bakery, my elementary school, everything had been
razed. In their place were a freeway and new residential projects.
I recognized only four homes at the far end of the alley where
I grew up. On a discolored and bent plaque nailed to a wall was
the name of one of my childhood playmates: "Martyr Ali Sharbatoghli."
Inside Tehran
homes, behind closed doors, lay another Iran, startlingly unlike
the façade so carefully constructed by the government. In the
streets, women covered their hair and wore long, baggy robes to
disguise their curves; inside they wore Western clothes
jeans and revealing dresses. They lived two lives.
A version
of America, as filtered through Hollywood (and Iranian exiles
in Southern California), was in every home. Through bootlegged
music from LA, or the songs of Pink Floyd, Metallica, Guns N'
Roses, and other Western rock icons of the time, Tehranis embraced
what the government called "the infidel." They danced to his music
and imitated the lifestyle they absorbed from satellite TV and
pirated Hollywood films. Tapes of American movies sometimes made
it to the Iranian capital before they were commercially released
in the U.S. Even those who opposed the U.S. politically and could
not forgive or forget its role in the 1953 coup and the Shah's
prison state found joy in American pop culture. In private conversations,
relatives, friends, even absolute strangers inquired about my
life in the States or the possibility of somehow escaping to America.
It appeared
that Iranians could not live without America. Even the government
needed the Great Satan to repress its opponents, while Tehranis
took refuge in American pop culture to escape the life created
for them by that very government.
In 1997,
two years after my visit, a smiling reformist cleric, Mohammad
Khatami, became president. Iranians were energized. Hope returned.
And when I visited in July 1998, it seemed that a new Iran was
truly emerging. Khatami was but one of many original architects
of the Islamic Republic who were now calling for a change in direction:
a reversal of foreign policy, a freer press, and the expansion
of civil liberties.
Khatami
himself championed a radical change in Iran's foreign policy,
advocating what was called a "dialogue of civilizations." He set
a new tone, calling, in fact, for a rapprochement between Iran
and the West, especially the United States. Khatami's presidency
helped bring into the open deep divisions inside the country:
between the government and the people as well as within that government
itself. It also highlighted the touchstone role the U.S. continued
to play in Iranian politics and society.
Now, however,
for the first time in a quarter-century, many believed an opportunity
existed to end the hostility that had only hurt the Iranian people.
Young and old, Iranians seemed to welcome this chance. Even some
among the former Embassy hostage-takers expressed regrets and
became a part of the growing reform movement, while advocating
rapprochement with America. Four years after Khatami was elected
president, a poll administered by Abbas Abdi, one of the student
leaders of the hostage-taking, revealed that 75% of Iranians favored
dialogue with the American people. Abdi was subsequently jailed.
Despite
resistance from conservatives, an independent press was emerging;
old taboos were being questioned. There were political rallies
that not long before would have led directly to jail; there were
informal meetings, debates, protests, art exhibits, theater openings,
and a burst of other forms of political and artistic expression.
The fear and anxiety I had sensed everywhere two years earlier
seemed to have abated. Young men and women openly defied the government
through their body politics, their recurring protests, their fearless
confrontations with the police. They broke taboos, expressed their
feelings openly, and risked beatings and arrest. I encountered
a small group of such young Iranians during my overnight detention
in Tehran a vision of what a new Iranian society might
have felt like and a painful reminder that the forces of the old
order were still alive and all too well.
My Night
in Jail
It was a
mild evening in February 1999. I was sitting on a park bench with
a female friend when two members of the security forces walked
towards me. By the time the thought of escaping crossed my mind,
it was already too late. I imagined the worst. There I was in
the park in the dark with a woman not related to me by blood or
marriage. In those days, that was still a crime in the Islamic
Republic of Iran.
"Get up,
get up, let's go," one guard demanded.
I asked
for an explanation.
"Shut up.
Let's go," he insisted, demanding my identification card. All
I had was my faculty ID from Ramapo College in New Jersey. Uneducated,
the guards could not read the card.
"What is
this?"
I responded
that I was a professor from America visiting my ailing father
in Tehran.
"America…"
the guard repeated the word, still holding my card, but now staring
at me. Had I thought about it, I would have realized that an American
ID card would be used against me, and my appearance I was
wearing a fashionable winter coat and a long scarf a cause
of envy and anger.
My friend
and I now had no choice but to follow the guards to a building
on the north end of the park. We were ushered into a room where
there were other arrested young men and women, a few uniformed
officers, and a middle-aged man in plainclothes behind a desk.
"Against
the wall! Stay right there!" shouted the arresting guard.
The man
in plainclothes asked about us and the guard showed him our identification
cards. "A professor from the United States," said the guard.
"Get over
here!" the man shouted.
Approaching
his desk, I began, "Why am I …?" but his heavy hand crashing into
my face cut my question short. I hit the wall behind me.
"What's
that fuzz under your lips?" the interrogator asked, pointing to
the small patch of hair. "Did your mommy tell you to grow this?"
Laughter erupted.
"I'll break
you into pieces before I let you go," said the man. "Do you think
this is Los Angeles? We'll show you where you are. This is Iran
not America. We'll show you!" And he struck my face again with
that heavy hand. Having nearly lost my balance, I leaned against
the wall.
"I'll show
you where you are," he kept repeating, staring at my faculty ID
card, then turning and hitting me. By now he was smiling triumphantly,
while armed, uniformed men kept wandering into the room to stare
at me, inspect me from head to toe. "American," they would
say, with a mixture of wonderment and contempt, looking at each
other, laughing. My face was throbbing, my ears literally ringing
from the repeated strikes. I remained silent, wishing this were
a bad dream.
Two hours
of insults and beatings followed before the interrogation ended.
I was then handcuffed and two soldiers took me to a nearby temporary
jail for those committing "moral deviance." A metal door opened.
I entered. "Take off your belt and shoelaces," said the prison
guard. I handed him my keys and other sharp objects. The metal
door closed behind me. I was officially jailed.
"This is
your home for the night," the guard said, opening the door to
a small, stuffy, windowless cell. It was packed with young men,
sitting on the dirty carpet, leaning against the wall. "Welcome,"
a number of them said.
"Please,
here…" a thin man in his early twenties squeezed aside to open
a space for me.
"What are
you doing here? You don't seem to belong," said another
man. Without hesitation, I told my story. Intrigued and excited
by the presence of a visitor from America, they seized the moment.
In no time, I was flooded with questions about life, music, girls,
about all that was officially forbidden in Iran.
"Have you
been to Los Angeles?" a talkative young man inquired. "I would
do anything to go there!" Others floated the names of Iranian
singers living in Los Angeles the exiled singers of the
Shah's time and new pop stars. "Have you ever seen Sandy in person?"
a very young inmate asked about a singer I had never heard of.
"How many times have you gone to Dariush's concerts?" he asked
about the most popular singer among the young before the Islamic
revolution. "How does he look in person? Give him my regards."
Another
young inmate quietly inquired about Pink Floyd and Santana. "Have
you ever gone to a Pink Floyd concert?" he asked in an awed whispered.
I remembered my own youth, those long hours listening to Pink
Floyd and Dariush, that same longing for a chance to see them
in person. A generation later, in an Islamic republic, what had
changed?
"How can
I emigrate to America?" a man, who hadn't said a word, asked from
across the room.
Suddenly,
an older inmate began singing a popular song associated with Hayedeh,
an icon from the Shah's time. She had died in exile in Los Angeles
five years earlier. The cell fell into silence.
My night
in prison ended and I was taken to court the next morning. As
I left the cell, the inmates embraced me one by one, promising
to remain in touch. "Say hello to Los Angeles," an inmate said
jauntily. "Write about us in the newspapers. Tell people about
our conditions. Don't forget us."
I was handcuffed,
put in a van, and driven away to court. Later that day, I was
released on bail; many of the men in my cell undoubtedly didn't
have the same luck, remaining behind closed doors, dreaming of
their favorite singers in America. My moment among them was a
reminder of the gulf that separated our worlds. Soon enough
far sooner than I wanted I would return to the U.S.; they
would remain in embattled Iran, only dreaming about America.
How I
left
My departure
was unexpected. It came after a week of nationwide protests against
the government. On July 8, 1999 just as in my youth
a small contingent of students left the housing compound of Tehran
University, marching in protest this time against the closure
of the reformist newspaper Salam. It was a peaceful demonstration
which ended without a confrontation with the authorities as the
protesting students returned to their rooms that evening. In the
early morning hours of July 9, however, the anti-riot police and
plainclothes thugs burst into the housing compound, assaulting
sleeping students with chains and batons, even setting rooms on
fire. One student was killed; many were injured and taken away
to jail.
By midday,
news of the attack had reached university campuses all across
the city; hundreds now joined the embattled students of Tehran
University, setting up barricades, occupying the housing compound.
By the time I arrived, ordinary citizens had already joined in,
while the student protest had moved out of the university and
been transformed into a full-blown street riot.
On July
10, thousands of students and youths gathered at the entrance
of Tehran University, chanting slogans against the Supreme Religious
Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, shouting "Death to the Dictator"
and "Freedom Now." In the streets around the university's historic
entrance, scenes reminiscent of the 1979 revolution were taking
place. Stores were shut down for fear of violence.
On July
12, Ayatollah Khamenei responded by calling the protesters "agents
of America" and ordering a clampdown. "Our main enemies in spying
networks are the designers of these plots," he declared. "Where
do you think the money that is allocated by the U.S. Congress
to campaign against the Islamic Republic of Iran is being spent?
No doubt that that budget and a sum several times larger are spent
on such schemes against Iran."
Two days
later, swinging their truncheons and thick chains, anti-riot police
and bearded men in slippers attacked the demonstrators. More than
two thousand of them were jailed. The student uprising was put
down. Soon after, I received a call from a journalist friend.
"Do you
have an exit visa on your passport? Leave Iran quietly and soon,"
he said.
A cell within
the Ministry of Intelligence, he informed me, had compiled a "thick
file" about my activities in Iran. The government was now looking
for scapegoats, people they could blame for the student protests.
My profile fit the bill perfectly for the Islamic Republic. After
all, I was an American citizen, gave lectures on political economy,
wrote weekly columns for reformist papers, traveled in and out
of Iran, and had close ties with the students. "Spying for America"
was a common charge for people like me in those days. I was to
be framed and displayed to the public as an enemy of the state.
Fearing
for my life, I went into hiding and, on July 19, flew to Dubai.
A week later, I was back in New York. My short rendezvous with
even a limited democracy in Iran had ended.
Dreams
of War, Dreams of Peace
Many things
have changed in Iran since 1999. The reformists have largely been
pushed out of the government. The new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad,
and the people around him have been working hard to reverse whatever
progress was made in the areas of foreign policy and civil liberties
during Khatami's presidency.
Changes
no less important occurred in the United States, which, of course,
got its own fundamentalist government in 2000. In 2002, President
George W. Bush declared Iran an official member of his "Axis of
Evil," and, in the past few years, the anti-Iranian rhetoric has
only escalated. Iran is now viewed by the current administration
as the main threat to American interests in the Middle East, the
premier rogue state in the region, a supporter of international
terrorism, and enough of a menace to warrant war planning on a
major scale. Officials in Iran have been using similar rhetoric
about America. The war of words has reached dangerous levels.
A real war seems conceivable.
For two
years now, respected investigative journalists like the New
Yorker's Seymour Hersh have been reporting on the existence
of elaborate Bush administration preparations for a full-scale
air campaign on Iran, possibly including the "nuclear option."
The administration's obsession with Iran's nuclear ambitions,
its rhetoric about the danger of a nuclear Iran to Israel and
to world security, and its orchestrated efforts (and relative
success) in referring Iran's case to the Security Council all
seem like the prelude to a war against Iran. Adding to this impression
are the administration's drumbeat of claims about Iranian "interference"
in Iraq, its contribution to American casualties by supposedly
supplying advanced elements for the making of roadside bombs to
the Iraqi insurgency, as well as its support for terrorist movements
in Lebanon and Palestine (as Mr. Bush repeated in his 2006 State
of the Union Address). In addition, the dispatching of more aircraft
carrier task forces to the Persian Gulf and the arrest of Iranian
diplomats in Iraq only increase my fears of war. Is it truly possible
that this administration could launch such a war against my childhood
home, creating a new, more horrific version of 1953, another half-century-plus
of bitterness, another half-century-plus of an Iranian obsession
with America?
The specter
of war is haunting me now. Recurring nightmares interrupt my sleep.
I see those last houses in my old neighborhood reduced to rubble
and dust, bridges destroyed, homes burned to the ground. In my
solitude, I wonder how my neighbors in New York will treat me
if a war breaks out. Will they display American flag decals on
their windows? Will they tie yellow ribbons to trees? I think
of my students, and wonder whether they will see me as an enemy
the day the United States begins bombing Iran or will they think
to consol me, to ask how my family is coping with the war? Will
they sooner or later be dispatched to Iran to aim their guns at
my loved ones?
I wish to
tell my students and neighbors of the dream I have been carrying
with me for years. I dream, someday, of returning to the place
I've kept so close to my heart, of breathing the fresh air in
the mountains surrounding Tehran, of drinking tea in the humble
teahouses on the bank of the narrow stream that gives life to
those barren hills. I dream of buying fresh parsley and tomatoes
from the old man on the street corner next to my mother's home,
greeting the baker with a smile.