Following the announcement of victory for Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad over his main opponent Mir Hossein Mousavi in Irans
presidential election on June 12, the country erupted in turmoil
as supporters of Mousavi flocked to the streets to protest what
they claimed was a fraudulent election, while state security and
militia forces cracked down on dissenters, sometimes violently.
Iran claimed that the unrest was being fueled by foreign interference,
a charge reported but generally dismissed in Western media accounts.
But there is ample reason to believe that the U.S. likely had
a hand in fomenting the chaos that has since plagued the country
many commentators have compared to the 1979 revolution that overthrew
the Shah.
The role of the U.S. in overthrowing the democratically elected
Prime Minister of Iran Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953 and installing
the brutal regime of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi is by now well
known. In his speech in Cairo last month, President Barack Obama
even referenced the CIA-backed coup, acknowledging that In
the middle of the Cold War, the United States played a role in
the overthrow of a democratically elected Iranian government.
The U.S. lost their principle ally in the Middle East, however,
when the Shah was in turn overthrown as a result of the Islamic
revolution that swept the country in 1979, resulting in the clerical
regime that continues to this day under Supreme Leader Grand Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei, who took over the title from the leader of the revolution,
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.
During the Reagan administration, the U.S. illegally sold arms
to the Iranian regime even while supporting Saddam Hussein in
Iraqs devastating war against the Islamic Republic. And
while neoconservatives in Washington had their eye on Iran as
a target for regime change throughout the Clinton years, it wasnt
until George W. Bush came to be president that a strategy for
bringing this about began in earnest. Whether the policy of regime
change implemented under Bush has been quashed or continued by
the administration of President Barack Obama remains to be seen,
but what is incontrovertible is that the U.S. has a long and sordid
history of interference in Iranian affairs.
The National Endowment for Democracy
One mechanism by which the U.S. interferes in the internal political
affairs of other nations is the National Endowment for Democracy
(NED), a quasi-governmental agency with funding from both Congress
and private individuals whose purpose is to support foreign organizations
sympathetic to U.S. foreign policy goals.
NEDs website states that its creation in the early 1980s
was premised on the idea that American assistance on behalf
of democracy efforts abroad would be good both for the U.S. and
for those struggling around the world for freedom and self-government.
The idea behind NED was to create an organization to do overtly
what the CIA had long been doing clandestinely, and the organization
has developed its own history of foreign interference. A
lot of what we do today was done covertly 25 years ago by the
CIA, acknowledged Allen Weinstein, one of NEDs founders.
In Nicaragua, for instance, the CIA provoked opposition activities
in the hopes that it would prompt an overreaction
from the Sandinista government. The NED was there, also, providing
money to opposition groups while the CIA armed contra terrorists
(using money from the sale of arms to Iran, incidentally).
In the Bulgarian elections of 1990, NED spent over $1.5 million
in an effort to defeat the Bulgarian Socialist Party (BSP). When
the effort failed and the BSP won, NED backed opposition groups
that sowed chaos in the streets for months until the president
and prime minister finally resigned.
The NED was in Albania supporting the opposition to the communist
government that was elected in 1991. Once again, turmoil in the
streets led to the collapse of the government, forcing a new election
in which the U.S.-backed Democratic Party won.
Between 1990 and 1992, NED financed the Cuban-American National
Foundation, an anti-Castro group out of Miami that in turn funded
Luis Posada Carriles, a terrorist harbored by the U.S. who was
responsible for the bombing of a Cuban airliner in 1976 that killed
73 people.
NED was present in Mongolia helping to unite opposition parties
under the National Democratic Union to defeat the Mongolian Peoples
Revolutionary Party that had won elections in 1992. With backing
from NED, the NDU won in 1996 and U.S. media lauded the economic
shock-therapy that the new pro-West government would
implement. Under the new government, the National Security Agency
(NSA) also set up shop with listening posts to spy on China.
During the Clinton administration, NED was in Haiti working with
the opposition to ousted president Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
And NED was in Venezuela financing the opposition to President
Hugo Chavez, including groups involved in the attempted coup in
2002 that nearly succeeded in his overthrow.
NED is also active in Iran, granting hundreds of thousands of
dollars to Iranian groups. From 2005 to 2007, NED gave $345,000
to the Abdorrahman Boroumand Foundation (ABF). The group claims
no political affiliation on its website, but is named
for the founder of the National Movement of the Iranian Resistance
(NAMIR), an opposition group to the clerical regime founded in
1980. According to the groups website, Boroumand was murdered
by agents of the Iranian government in Paris, France, in 1991.
The website is registered to the Boroumand Foundation, listed
at Suite 357, 3220 N ST., NW, Washington, D.C.
Another recipient of NED grants is the National Iranian American
Council (NIAC), which received $25,000 in 2002, $64,000 in 2005,
and $107,000 in 2006. The 2002 grant was to carry out a media
training workshop to train participants representing various
civic groups in public relations. The 2005 money was given in
part to strengthen the capacity of civic organizations in
Iran, including by advising Iranian groups on foreign
donor relations. The 2006 grant was similarly designed to
foster cooperation between Iranian NGOs and the international
civil society community and to strengthen the institutional capacity
of NGOs in Iran.
The groups president is Dr. Trita Parsi, whose parents
fled political repression in Iran when he was four. He studied
for his Doctoral thesis at the Johns Hopkins School for
Advanced International Studies under Professor Francis Fukuyama.
Fukuyama wrote in 2007 that Ahmadinejad may be the new
Hitler, but that the use of military force against Iran
looks very unappealing, and that airstrikes would
not result in regime change, which was the only long-term
means of stopping Irans alleged nuclear weapons program.
The NIAC similarly opposes the use of military force against Iran,
and instead supports the idea of resolving the problems
between the US and Iran through dialogue in order to avoid war.
Following the Iranian election and subsequent violence, NIAC
issued a statement saying that The only plausible way to
end the violence is for new elections to be held with independent
monitors ensuring its fairness.
Last November, the Iranian ambassador to the United Nations Mohammad-Javad
Zarif charged the U.S. with attempting to orchestrate a velvet
revolution in Iran. One of the means by which this was being
carried out, he said, was by means of workshops. American
officials have been inviting Iranian figures to so-called scientific
seminars over the past few years, he said. However,
when the Iranians attend these sessions, they realize they have
gathered to discuss measures to topple the Iranian government.
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