Bush Policy Detained in Iran
by
Tom Engelhardt
and Karen J. Greenberg
by Tom Engelhardt and
Karen Greenberg
DIGG THIS
Just when you
think the roiling relations between the U.S. and Iran might be quieting
down they heat up again. In the last week, while two U.S.
aircraft-carrier strike forces continued to patrol the Persian Gulf
(after "exercises" that took the carriers directly through
the Straits of Hormuz and off Iran's coast), American accusations
against the Iranians have only escalated. Just as, last month, American
officials continued to insist that the Iranians were supplying
sophisticated roadside bombs to Iraqi insurgents (who are the enemies
of their Shiite allies), so, this week, Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates "tied
Iran's government to large shipments of weapons to the Taliban
in Afghanistan and said Wednesday such quantities were unlikely
without Tehran's knowledge."
Similarly,
Undersecretary of State Nicholas Burns told CNN: "[T]here's irrefutable
evidence the Iranians are now doing this." (Forget the fact that
the Iranians have long been fierce enemies of the Taliban and that
the Afghan Defense Minister dismissed
such claims out of hand.) In Baghdad, General David Petraeus,
head of President Bush's surge operation, also lashed
out at the Iranians. ("The Iranian influence has been very,
very harmful to Iraq. There is absolutely no question that Iranians
are funding, arming, training, and even in some cases, directing
the activities of extremists and militia elements.") And three
Iranian diplomats were briefly detained and questioned by the
U.S. military.
For the Bush
administration, it seems, Iran has become the explanation for everything
that has gone wrong (even, last week, in the Gaza Strip), the equivalent
of Ronald Reagan's Evil Empire reduced to a regional scale. According
to Brian Ross of ABC News, the CIA has already helped launch secret
terror operations inside Iran and President Bush has signed
a "non-lethal presidential finding" to "mount a covert ‘black' operation
to destabilize the Iranian government." In addition, the administration
has been waging a complex, partly covert, "financial
war" against Iran ("The aim is to squeeze the Iranian economy
so that the nation's leaders will decide the price of developing
nuclear weapons is just too high."); and it also has a $75 million
fund at its command to "promote democracy" or a "velvet revolution"
in that country.
In the meantime,
Helene
Cooper and David Sanger of the New York Times report
that a struggle continues within the administration about whether
or not to launch an air attack against Iranian nuclear facilities
before President Bush leaves office. Vice President Cheney and his
supporters, as well as beleaguered neocons now increasingly outside
the government, continue to push for this, organizing conferences
around the world as reporter Jim Lobe wrote recently at his
Lobelog blog
to brand Iran "Public Enemy Number One" and call for the
Bush administration to strike now. ("Mr. President, the truth is
that one of the most evil regimes in the world as we know it is
on the verge of acquiring the most powerful weapon in the world
as we know it.")
In the meantime,
the Iranians, who previously captured (and then, with much fanfare,
released) a boatload
of British sailors, now seem to be rounding up and imprisoning any
American citizen in this case, four Iranian-American scholars
and activists with dual nationality who can be found in Iran
and, in the last week, angrily
linked their fate to that of five
Iranian consular officials taken by American soldiers in a raid
in Iraqi Kurdistan this January and held uncharged and largely incommunicado
ever since. ("‘We
will make the U.S. regret its repulsive illegal action against
Iran's consulate and its officials,' state-run Mehr News quoted
Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki as saying.") All this is happening
in the context of a massive crackdown on intellectuals, activists,
union leaders, and academics, a grim, fundamentalist "cultural revolution"
aimed in part at the Bush administration's planning for that
"Velvet revolution." According to the Washington
Post's Robin Wright, the result has been:
"arrests,
interrogations, intimidation and harassment of thousands of Iranians
as well as purges of academics and new censorship codes for the
media. Hundreds of Iranians have been detained and interrogated,
including a top Iranian official.... The move has quashed or forced
underground many independent civil society groups, silenced protests
over issues including women's rights and pay rates, quelled academic
debate, and sparked society-wide fear about several aspects of daily
life."
In addition,
Admiral Ali Shamkhani, a key military advisor to Iranian supreme
leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, warned
that, within an hour of an American attack on the country's nuclear
facilities, the Iranians would be lobbing "dozens, maybe hundreds"
of missiles into the Gulf states that host U.S. bases (and enormous
oil reserves). "The U.S.," he said ominously, "will be as surprised
with Iranian military capabilities as the Israelis were with Hezbollah
in last summer's war in Lebanon."
And this list
only scratches the surface of the ever-widening set of disputes
and face-offs between the two ill-matched powers. This dangerous
dance of fundamentalist regimes remains one of the more potentially
explosive situations on the planet, whether either side actually
plans to attack the other or not. It involves heavily armed forces
in at least three countries (and at sea), endless possible flashpoints,
and riven administrations, shakily governing two hostile lands involved
in ongoing conflicts in two other lands, Afghanistan and Iraq, themselves
in bloody chaos. If that isn't a formula for disaster, what is?
In the midst
of this, at the moment, are those four American citizens, under
arrest in Iran and, tragically, pawns in a far larger struggle.
Karen J. Greenberg, co-editor of The
Torture Papers, executive director of the Center on Law and
Security at the NYU School of Law, and Tomdispatch
regular explores the particular dilemma the Bush administration
finds itself in when demanding their release one that gives
the old phrase, "hoist by one's own petard," new meaning. ~ Tom
Blowback,
Detainee-style
The Plight of American Prisoners in Iran
By Karen J.
Greenberg
For Americans,
it should be startling to see the word "detainee" suddenly appear
in a different country, on a different continent, and referring
not to alleged jihadi terrorists but to a group of Americans.
After all, "detainee" is the word the Bush administration coined
to deal with suspected terrorist captives who, they argued, should
be subjected to extra-legal treatment as part of the Global War
on Terrorism. Now, that terminology is, as critics long predicted
might happen, being turned against American citizens. I am referring
to the current detention of Americans in Iran.
President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's government currently holds in custody Haleh
Esfandiari, Kian Tajbakhsh, Parnaz Azima, and Ali Shakeri, Iranian-American
scholars and activists accused of being spies and/or employees
of the U.S. government intent on fomenting dissent and disruption
within Iran. (A fifth American, Robert Levinson, a former FBI
agent engaged in business of an unknown nature in Iran, disappeared
on March 8th.) The four are apparently behind bars at Tehran's
Evin prison, notorious for its special wing for political prisoners
and, among human rights activists, for being the location of the
lethal beating of a Canadian-Iranian journalist in 2003. Evin
and other Iranian prisons are cited by Human
Rights Watch for frequent torture and mistreatment of arrested
Iranian dissidents.
The Iranian
government has said that the detained are threats to "national
security," despite protests that they were visiting their families
and/or engaged in purely peaceful work. The U.S. Government has
been denied information on their treatment and the possible accusations
against them.
The Bush
administration is naturally incensed over the incarceration of
these Americans. As well its officials should be. "It is absolutely
incredible to us," said
State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey, "to think that
there could be any possible doubt in the Iranians' minds that
these individuals are there simply to conduct normal, basic human
interactions, including family visits." President Bush himself
has insisted that "their presence in Iran poses no threat."
The Associated Press reported that Bush was also "‘disturbed'
by the fact that Iran has still not provided any information about
the welfare and whereabouts" of the missing Levinson and has condemned
Iran for being "defiant as to the demands of the free world."
President
Bush is correct. These detentions represent a travesty of justice
and a violation of the rules of conduct among nations. It is horrifying
that these Americans, who are engaged in foreign affairs at non-governmental
and scholarly levels, are held, seemingly without recourse to
law and certainly without respect for international rights.
But there
is another disturbing reality here which must be faced. In numerous
ways, the U.S. has robbed itself of the right to proclaim the
very principles by which these prisoners should be defended. Though
President Bush and his spokespersons may not see it, their past
policies have set a trap for the government and for Americans
generally. More than five years after setting up Guantanamo, and
then implementing national security strategies based upon torture,
secret prisons, and illegal detentions, the Bush administration
has managed to obliterate the moral high ground they now seek
to claim in relation to Iran.
The new
American prisoners in Iran belong, in part, to a broader diplomatic
game of chicken now raging between the two governments that began
with the U.S. capture in January of five Iranian officials in
Irbil in Iraqi Kurdistan, prisoners the U.S. continues to hold
somewhere in Iraq without charges. The more telling context, however,
is that of Bush administration detention policy from the moment
in 2002 when it set up its prison in Guantanamo, Cuba, offshore
from American justice, to this day.
At the inception
of the war on terror, the Bush administration broke the very rules
it now accuses the Iranians of breaking. As part of a high-stakes
stand-off with countries associated with Islamic fundamentalism,
it was the Bush administration that first collected individuals,
some guilty of crimes, some simply swept up in the chaos
initially off the Afghan battlefield and then off the global one.
Often, they did so with very little knowledge of, or care about,
whom they were rounding up. They incarcerated these prisoners
for long periods without releasing their names or, often, their
whereabouts; they refused to give them the established rights
of prisoners of war; they defied the united protests of allies
around the world; and they sought to justify this whole policy
with the term "detainee."
In fact,
uncomfortable parallels between notorious Guantanamo and grim
Evin abound. At Gitmo, as at Evin, information about "detainees"
has often been difficult to obtain. At Gitmo, as at Evin, the
government has been a champion of denying prisoners access to
lawyers. At Gitmo, as at Evin, "national security" concerns invariably
trump the need to produce evidence or to indict prisoners. At
Gitmo, as at Evin, there have been repeated reports of coercive
interrogations and the mistreatment, as well as torture, of prisoners.
At Gitmo,
as at Evin, authorities deny such accusations despite obvious
evidence to the contrary. One year ago, journalists were invited
to assess conditions at Evin for themselves. Allowed to see only
the women's section of the prison, they were shown the medical
facilities and told about the excellent food the prison serves
self-evident proof of the fair treatment of prisoners.
So, too, media tours of Guantanamo stress the quality of the food
and the superior medical treatment available in the prison complex.
At Gitmo, suicide is an ever-present threat. At Evin, according
to a BBC
journalist on the tour, authorities boasted of only
one suicide in six months as if that were a record to be
proud of. Iranian authorities refused to discuss "political prisoners"
because "Iran does not recognize this as a category." So, too,
the most suitable term for those held at Gitmo, "prisoner of war,"
has been forbidden on the premises.
In all these
ways, but especially by wielding their chosen term "detainee,"
and by defining "detainees" as essentially without rights as Americans
would understand them, the Bush administration has stripped the
United States of its traditional standing as the foremost champion
of human rights. It has relinquished its bona fides to
express the kind of moral outrage that could indeed buttress international
support and legal due process for Americans who have been illegally
imprisoned. Even more surprising, when administration officials,
including the President, denounce the Iranians, they are tin-eared.
The hypocrisy in their own words just doesn't register. When George
W. Bush shows his outrage at the imprisonment of Americans without
cause, evidence, or due process, it's as if he has no sense that,
in much of the rest of the world, these are exactly the charges
that ring out against his own administration.
Essentially,
a frantic, fear-filled, information-impoverished, but stubbornly
defended policy has finally blown back on America's own citizens.
This was something former Secretary of State Colin Powell
who last weekend called for the closing
of Guantanamo predicted in
January 2002 might well happen to captive U.S. troops, if
not citizens, if the United States refused to classify its detainees
in the Global War on Terror as prisoners of war.
Whether
or not President Bush hears the hypocrisy in his own pleas, the
fact remains that his detainee policy has deprived the government
of a means of defending its own citizens on the international
stage. It has, in effect, amputated the very legs it would need
to stand on to protest against the Iranian detentions.
Try
as they might, Bush administration officials can only cry foul by
calling attention to their own systematic violations of justice
and the law. In their mouths, the appeal to fundamental rights rings
hollow indeed, depriving Americans of the protections afforded by
once-accepted standards of decency and justice. Here, as on so many
other fronts, the President's fierce "national security" policy
has created an ever more insecure future for this country.
June
19, 2007
Tom
Engelhardt [send him mail]
is editor of TomDispatch.com,
a project of the Nation
Institute. He
is the author of several books, including The
Last Days of Publishing: A Novel, The
End of Victory Culture, and most recently, Mission
Unaccomplished (Nation Books), the first collection of Tomdispatch
interviews. His new blog is The
Notion. Karen J. Greenberg, the Executive Director of the Center
on Law and Security at the NYU School of Law, the co-editor of The
Torture Papers: The Road to Abu Ghraib, and the editor of
The
Torture Debate in America. She recently took a Pentagon-guided
tour of Guantanamo.
Copyright
© 2007 Karen J. Greenberg
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