Everything You Need to Know about Iran But the Mass Media, the Republicans and Hillary Clinton Wouldn't Tell You
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However, this accord has been violated numerous times by the United States. Investigative journalist Seymour Hersh wrote in the New Yorker that in late 2007, Bush requested and received from Democratic congressional leadership $400 million reprogrammed from previous authorizations to fund a presidential finding that substantially increased covert activities designed to destabilize Iran's religious leadership. These covert actions involved support for the Ahwazi Arab and Baluchi groups and other dissident organizations. Hersh wrote that since 2007 United States special operations forces had been conducting cross-border operations from southern Iraq, with presidential authorization, including seizing members of Al Quds, the commando arm of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard and taking them to Iraq for interrogation, and pursuing "high-value targets" who could be captured or killed. Hersh said operations by the Central Intelligence Agency and the Joint Special Operations Command were significantly expanded in 2007 by this authorization.
Iran's Nuclear Program
Iran has had a nuclear program for almost 50 years, having purchased a research reactor from the United States in 1959 during the reign of the Shah Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi. The Iranian government states that its nuclear energy program will allow increased electricity generation to reduce consumption of gas and oil to allow export of more of its fossil fuels. The U.S. National Intelligence Estimate made public on Dec. 3, 2007, concluded with "high confidence" that the military-run Iranian nuclear weapons program had been shut down in 2003 but that Iran's enrichment program could still provide enough enriched uranium to produce a nuclear weapon by the middle of the next decade, a time frame unchanged from previous estimates.
Virtually everyone with whom we spoke said they believe their country has a right to have a nuclear-enrichment program and to produce nuclear energy. Many questioned why Iran would ever need a nuclear weapons program, unless as leverage against the United States' 30-year antagonism toward their country. They reminded us that Iran is a signatory of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (unlike Israel, North Korea, India and Pakistan, which refused to join the NNPT and developed nuclear weapons purposefully outside the treaty). Additionally, they insist that Iran is in compliance with the International Atomic Energy Agency standards, according to the November 2008 IAEA report, despite interpretations of the report by the United States and Israel.
Some reminded us that on Aug. 9, 2005, at the IAEA meeting in Vienna, 60 years after the U.S. atomic bombing of Japan, Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei announced that he had issued a fatwa, or religious mandate, forbidding the production, stockpiling and use of nuclear weapons. Importantly, the supreme leader controls the Iranian military and the nuclear program of Iran, not the president, Ahmadinejad.
Iran, Israel and the United States
Iran, Israel and United States have had a disturbing, but fascinating, history over the past 30 years. Iran's current relationship with Israel and Western countries seems to be defined by Ahmadinejad's October 2005 statement -- widely reported, but tragically and dangerously mistranslated and misinterpreted -- that "Israel should be wiped off the face of the earth." According to highly respected Middle Eastern scholar Juan Coles, Ahmadinejad was "not making a threat, but was quoting a saying of Khomeini's that urged pro-Palestinian activists in Iran not give up hope -- that the occupation of Jerusalem was no more a continued inevitability than had been the hegemony of the shah's government." Whatever this quotation from a decades-old speech of Khomeini may have meant, Ahmadinejad did not say that "Israel must be wiped off the map" with the implication that phrase has of Nazi-style extermination of a people.
But the history of Iranian-Israeli relationships is more than just Ahmadinejad's misinterpreted statement. Israel, like the United States, had a long history of selling arms to the shah, which Iran's revolutionary government was willing to exploit secretly, despite its public animosity toward the state of Israel. In the early years (1980-82) of the Iranian Revolution and during the war with Iraq, Khomeini's government sold oil to Israel in exchange for weapons and spare parts. Even during the American hostage crisis (1979-1981) in which 52 U.S. diplomats were held for 444 days, Israel made weapons deals with Iran. President Ronald Reagan's Secretary of State Alexander Haig gave permission to Israel to sell U.S.-made military parts for fighter planes to Iran in early 1981.
See more stories tagged with: iran, ann wright
Ann Wright is a 29-year Army/Army Reserves veteran who retired as a colonel, and a former U.S. diplomat who resigned in March 2003 in opposition to the war on Iraq. She served in Nicaragua, Grenada, Somalia, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Sierra Leone, Micronesia and Mongolia. In December 2001, she was on the small team that reopened the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, Afghanistan. She is the co-author of the book Dissent: Voices of Conscience.
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