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In an Iranian Propaganda Broadcast, the Real Guilty Party Is Clear [Archive] - Iran Defense Forum

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burster
07-19-2007, 07:59 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/07/18/AR2007071802074.html?hpid=opinionsbox1

My Mother's Interrogators

In an Iranian Propaganda Broadcast, the Real Guilty Party Is Clear

By Haleh BakhashThursday, July 19, 2007; Page A19

Yesterday marked 6 1/2 months since masked agents of Iran's Intelligence Ministry robbed my mother, Haleh Esfandiari, of her belongings and passports at knife-point. It had been more than 70 days since her incarceration in Tehran's notorious Evin Prison before I finally saw her this week -- not as a free woman, but in footage of a KGB-style television "confession" broadcast by Iran's state-run television.

The program broadcast nationwide yesterday -- announced with much fanfare by the Intelligence Ministry on Monday and expected to be continued today -- was supposed to show Iran and ostensibly the world my mother's complicity in a plan to undermine the Islamic Republic using, of all things, female activists and academics. But the footage turned out to be a typical secret police job of deception, vicious in intent yet clumsily contrived.
The broadcast began with a lie. My mother was shown sitting on a sofa in what looked like the living room of a house or a pleasant office, a plant next to the couch, a bottle of water on the table in front of her. In reality my mother, head of the Middle East Program at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington and a 67-year-old grandmother of two, has spent the past 10 weeks in a cramped cell that past prisoners have said lacks a cot or even a mat. For being an American Iranian scholar, she has been forced to sleep on the floor. She has been subjected to hundreds of hours of harsh and intimidating interrogations, often while blindfolded, totally cut off from the outside world and without access to her family or lawyer, despite our repeated requests to see her.
The broadcast showed my mother "conversing" with someone off camera in what was meant to appear to be a relaxed setting. Her voice was strong. But I was shocked at her appearance. She has aged several years in just months. She looked gaunt -- she has lost a considerable amount of weight -- and pale.

The bulk of the program was made up of footage of years-old revolutions in Eastern Europe. Also shown was another jailed dual citizen, Kian Tajbakhsh, an urban planner arrested in May. My mother is seen saying that her job was "to identify speakers" and "to organize conferences." These and other statements she made about her work at the Wilson Center were cut off in mid-sentence and spliced with seemingly endless footage of civil unrest in Eastern European countries, as if organizing conferences and talks amounts to revolutionary activity. So it went from one sorry frame to another.
It was obvious from the words she used that much of what my mother said was scripted. Some of the phrases that she and two other prisoners -- Tajbakhsh and a man arrested last year who has since been released -- are shown saying echo statements that Iran's Intelligence Ministry has issued to describe their cases. Her statements, to me, sounded wooden -- unnatural and coerced. But did she say anything incriminating? Certainly not.
What Iran's security authorities, in their infinite wisdom, are presenting to the world and to their domestic audience is a doctored "interview" in which dishonest cutting and splicing unconvincingly attempt to make the most ordinary statement appear to be part of a great "conspiracy," a harbinger of massive subversion.

As I watched my mother, I thought of our family's trauma over the past several months and of the suffering of other families whose parents, children, brothers and sisters have been unlawfully imprisoned in Iran and who cannot be heard.
But I also thought about the fact that our ordeal has been nothing compared with my mother's: nearly seven months of interrogations; more than 10 weeks in solitary confinement; threats of trial and long years of imprisonment; being alone in the hands of brutal men going about their brutal business.

When the television program ended, I felt contempt for my mother's jailers and interrogators. But I was filled with admiration for my mother. In hugely difficult circumstances, she preserved her dignity, held her head high and did not lie. She did not falsely implicate others. It is her jailers, I thought, who have to work in the dark, behind the closed doors of prison interrogation rooms. It is they who hide their faces, who try to manipulate public opinion by controlling the media, smearing reputations and dishonestly splicing film.
My mother has nothing to be ashamed of. They do.

Amir
07-19-2007, 08:42 PM
For being an American Iranian scholar, she has been forced to sleep on the floor

Remember, she is Iranian first. By the way, many Iranians sleep on the floor, not a big deal, try it once in a while.

Last night, Iranian TV showed the second 30 min of the program called " Be Nam e Demokracy" (In the name of Democracy). She can preach her Liberal Democracy in USA, we have seen them a lot in Iraq, Afg, Leb and Pal. Can't bring them to Iran.

payam
07-19-2007, 09:57 PM
This bruster loves american identity so much,i know many of these iranian american that they all say:Well love our america,and they do what ever they can to be a good slave of america against iran and iranians.
about that tv program,it was stupid,and it's not the first time i see an amature movment by iranian governments and tvs...for these is best to stay in mosque and let young generate do thier job...

Kiaar
07-19-2007, 10:23 PM
Remember, she is Iranian first. By the way, many Iranians sleep on the floor, not a big deal, try it once in a while.

Last night, Iranian TV showed the second 30 min of the program called " Be Nam e Demokracy" (In the name of Democracy). She can preach her Liberal Democracy in USA, we have seen them a lot in Iraq, Afg, Leb and Pal. Can't bring them to Iran.

What it sounds like is that she's only guilty of being an Iranian who moved to the US and made the mistake of going back.

burster
07-19-2007, 10:50 PM
Payam,

I don't know if it was your intent or not, but your post makes it appear as if you are equating me, the poster, with the person writing the article. They are not the same people, I assure you. I am not Iranian-American.

This bruster loves american identity so much,i know many of these iranian american that they all say:Well love our america,and they do what ever they can to be a good slave of america against iran and iranians.
about that tv program,it was stupid,and it's not the first time i see an amature movment by iranian governments and tvs...for these is best to stay in mosque and let young generate do thier job...

Oriellien
07-19-2007, 11:40 PM
She went back to Iran to visit her 91 year old mother. All she said on the video is that she asked scholars to discuss Iran, hardly a "US spy".

Amir
07-20-2007, 12:51 PM
What it sounds like is that she's only guilty of being an Iranian who moved to the US and made the mistake of going back.

The only difference is that other citizens are not traitors. Thousands of Iranians outside visit Iran at least once in a year, how come nothing happens to them?

Kiaar
07-20-2007, 01:31 PM
The only difference is that other citizens are not traitors. Thousands of Iranians outside visit Iran at least once in a year, how come nothing happens to them?

How many are Americans that may not agree with the current government? Just because they don't like the current Iranian regime doesn't make them traitors.

Oriellien
07-20-2007, 03:01 PM
The only difference is that other citizens are not traitors. Thousands of Iranians outside visit Iran at least once in a year, how come nothing happens to them?

Discussing and disagreeing the government makes you a traitor? Its obvious these people were arrested only because the US is holding Iranians in Iraq and these people are Americans, not because they are "traitors".

Amir
07-20-2007, 06:10 PM
How many are Americans that may not agree with the current government? Just because they don't like the current Iranian regime doesn't make them traitors.

No matter what regime is in Iran, "Islamic or Kingdom, ..." if few Iranians spy against their motherlands are considered as traitors to their own country.

people are Americans, not because they are "traitors".


They were born in Iran and are considered as Iranians first.

Oriellien
07-20-2007, 08:37 PM
No matter what regime is in Iran, "Islamic or Kingdom, ..." if few Iranians spy against their motherlands are considered as traitors to their own country.



They were born in Iran and are considered as Iranians first.

They werent spying, their held because they are American. Its revenge for the Iranians in iraq.

Amir
07-20-2007, 09:24 PM
They werent spying, their held because they are American. Its revenge for the Iranians in iraq.


If you say so, then it is fair (exchanging diplomats with esfandiyari and...)

Kiaar
07-20-2007, 10:09 PM
If you say so, then it is fair (exchanging diplomats with esfandiyari and...)

Heh, maybe the Americans should start broadcasting their Iranian prisoners on TV giving "confessions." Would be interesting.

And yes, anyone can be made to confess given the right "incentives," and that works both ways.

Amir
07-21-2007, 08:11 PM
Heh, maybe the Americans should start broadcasting their Iranian prisoners on TV giving "confessions." Would be interesting.

And yes, anyone can be made to confess given the right "incentives," and that works both ways.


They are diplomats, There is a big difference

Kiaar
07-21-2007, 09:24 PM
They are diplomats, There is a big difference

How do you figure?

If the US wanted to play that game they could easily drum up charges that the diplomats were helping to feed the insurgency. It wouldn't be hard nor unbelievable.

Amir
07-22-2007, 04:04 AM
How do you figure?

If the US wanted to play that game they could easily drum up charges that the diplomats were helping to feed the insurgency. It wouldn't be hard nor unbelievable.

Iraqi government was aware of them and knew they were diplomats. They need to give evidence to Iraqi government that they were really feeding the insurgency.

Kiaar
07-22-2007, 11:51 AM
Iraqi government was aware of them and knew they were diplomats. They need to give evidence to Iraqi government that they were really feeding the insurgency.

I agree. However, Iran has not given any evidence that the people it arrested were trying to start rebellion or spying either. They've made only very abstract non specific claims with nothing to support them.

Both parties are at fault, but that doesn't mean either is right because "he started it," so to speak.

Jadeite
08-03-2007, 03:05 AM
Heh, maybe the Americans should start broadcasting their Iranian prisoners on TV giving "confessions." Would be interesting.

Or we should just shoot them unless the prisoners Iran has taken are released. At least they'd be somewhat legimitate targets, rather than civilians who made the mistake of visiting a nation run by barbarians. One American life is worth ten Iranian lives to me, or even a hundred.

Kiaar
08-03-2007, 11:04 AM
Or we should just shoot them unless the prisoners Iran has taken are released. At least they'd be somewhat legimitate targets, rather than civilians who made the mistake of visiting a nation run by barbarians. One American life is worth ten Iranian lives to me, or even a hundred.

I get the feeling you're about to start a little friction with that one.

Vladimir80
08-03-2007, 11:06 AM
One American life is worth ten Iranian lives to me, or even a hundred.

Do I feel a ban coming on... :roflmao3:

Jewish-bob
08-03-2007, 02:30 PM
How many are Americans that may not agree with the current government? Just because they don't like the current Iranian regime doesn't make them traitors.

They should let her and most People go,
I do not know why
Let my people Go,,,,.,

Jadeite
08-03-2007, 05:59 PM
Do I feel a ban coming on... :roflmao3:

I'd expect anyone to hold the lives of their countrymen as more valuable than the lives of those in a hostile state.

Behrooz Boonabi
08-03-2007, 06:08 PM
I'd expect anyone to hold the lives of their countrymen as more valuable than the lives of those in a hostile state.

Iran is clearly not the hostile state.

Vladimir80
08-03-2007, 07:25 PM
I'd expect anyone to hold the lives of their countrymen as more valuable than the lives of those in a hostile state.

I hadn't realized you had declared war already... :worried2:

kaiser_tr
08-04-2007, 03:25 AM
i'm not iranian but i agree with them in this one. iran is not hostile to u.s.a however u.s.a is the one which is increasing the tension in the region.