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Posts Tagged ‘trita-parsi’

Washington Times Smears Trita Parsi

Monday, November 16th, 2009

Eli Lake, who covered the neocon beat for the New York Sun before it went belly up, is now in the belly of the beast at the Washington Times.  And he doesn’t disappoint in delivering the goods for the pro Iran war faction in his latest smear of Iranian-American leader, Trita Parsi.  Trita is the founder of the leading Iranian-American political organization, the National Iranian American Council.  He will be speaking at a Seattle conference I’m organizing next month dealing the Iranian nuclear crisis and finding a peaceful way to resolve it.



Why do Trita and NIAC get the right’s dander up?  Because they’re an active, energetic Iranian-American group with opposes the regime but does not support its violent overthrow as the Ledeen-Hoenlein-Aipac-Israel lobby crowd do.  For them Trita is an independent entity and they want to cut such figures down to size in order to render U.S. policy more pliant and malleable in their favor.

NIAC has sued an Iranian, Hassan Daioeslam, for slander.  The case just survived a ruling requiring discovery and depositions.  The defendant in the case is a member of the executive committee of Mujahadeen al-Khalq, an Iranian group named by the U.S. Treasury as a terrorist entity, because it seeks the violent overthrow of the Iranian regime.  Apparently, Daioeslam and his cohort have obtained documents from NIAC which prove…what, I’m not sure.  But neocons will tell you breathelessly that they prove that Trita Parsi is a pawn of the Iranian mullahs, doing their bidding in a valiant effort to allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.  The Daioeslam-FrontpageMagazine crowd goes farther and claims that Parsi is a Revolutionary Guard spy and/or  paid foreign agent working to subvert U.S. policy on behalf of the murderous mullahs.

Here’s a the gist of Lake’s claims (and do note the degree to which quotations are fragmented and truncated and accusations are unsupported):

Shortly before Barack Obama took office, leaders of a prominent Iranian-American group in Washington began to fret.

If the new president were to tap former Middle East envoy Dennis Ross to oversee the nation’s Iran policy, they feared their long-running effort to persuade American officials to lift sanctions could wind up in tatters. Patrick Disney, acting policy director of National Iranian American Council (NIAC), summed up the strategy: “Create a media controversy” concerning Mr. Ross, whose support for a tough line on Iran was well-known.

“Those groups that feel comfortable being more aggressive in opposing Ross publicly (possibly Voters for Peace, [Friends Committee on National Legislation] , Physicians for Social Responsibility, others) will do so,” Mr. Disney wrote in an e-mail obtained by The Washington Times, “while others who may have less latitude on the matter will declare their preference for a more agreeable envoy.”

Mr. Ross was appointed anyway and wound up on the National Security Council. But the episode highlights NIAC’s emergence as a major player in Washington and leading voice for engaging Iran and ultimately lifting U.S. sanctions.

Note the unsupported claim that NIAC supports “lifting sanctions” against Iran.  NIAC opposes any NEW sanctions against Iran.  Frankly, I’m pretty sure NIAC (along with almost every other serious Iran analyst) thinks existing sanctions are counter-productive.  But it does not support “lifting sanctions” as described in Lake’s report.

As for opposed Ross’ entry into the government, welcome to the party.  There were literally scores of organizations, blogs and Middle East experts lobbying furiously against Ross (including me).  Are we all agents of the Ayatollahs.

Another unsupported claim:

Now a lawsuit has brought to light numerous documents that raise questions about whether the organization is using that influence to lobby for policies favorable to Iran in violation of federal law.

There seems to be a willful inability for neocons like Lake to distinguish between a policy that “favors Iran” and one that favors the U.S.  NIAC’s policies are not designed to favor the current Iranian government.  In fact, NIAC is opposed to the current government.  But they oppose violent regime change and that is what irks the necons.  NIAC’s positions favor the best long-term interests of Iran-U.S. relations–that is, the greatest good for the greatest numbers of everyday Iranians (not the mullahs).

In the following passage, Lake actually does accurately characterize Parsi and NIAC’s views in such a way that this directly contradicts his prior breathless statements about NIAC’s agenda of subverting U.S. policy:

Mr. Parsi, a green card holder, has become more critical of Iran’s government since its disputed June 12 presidential elections, urging President Obama to condemn human rights abuses in Iran and to implement a “tactical pause” in efforts to arrange negotiations. But Mr. Parsi’s history suggests a continuing commitment to changing U.S. policy on Iran…

First, Parsi doesn’t want to “change” U.S. policy on Iran.  He wants an effective, productive policy on Iran that resolves conflict, including the current nuclear impasse.  This is precisely what Barack Obama’s policy is.  So there is very little daylight between the two.  The only difference is that NIAC does not support new draconian sanctions against Iran nor does it support a military attack on Iran.  Though Obama doesn’t currently support either option, he hasn’t ruled them out.  That’s it.  Those are the only differences.  So to say that Parsi is committed to changing U.S. policy is at best a distortion, at worst an outright lie.

Lake also mischaracterizes how he obtained the NIAC documents.  He claims they were “made public” as the result of the defamation suit against Daioeslam.  They weren’t “made public.”  They were transferred to Daioeslam who then gave them to Lake.  Actually, Lake is making the documents public out of ideological animus toward NIAC and a desire to support a hard-core neocon position on Iran.

In the following passage, Lake provides little support for the claim that NIAC has violated the Foreign Agents Registration Act:

Law enforcement experts who reviewed some of the documents, which were made available to The Times by the defendant in the suit, say e-mails between Mr. Parsi and Iran’s ambassador to the United Nations at the time, Javad Zarif – and an internal review of the Lobbying Disclosure Act – offer evidence that the group has operated as an undeclared lobby and may be guilty of violating tax laws, the Foreign Agents Registration Act and lobbying disclosure laws.

Lake offers a single internal e mail written by a junior NIAC staffer saying that the latter believed that he and a colleague spent more than 20% of their time lobbying and that therefore they should consider registering as lobbyists.  This is not a memo written by Parsi, the leader of the group.  There is no evidence of what his opinion was on the subject.  And the opinion offered by the junior staffer was not a legal opinion since he is not a lawyer.

The Washington Times muckraker finds further proof of Parsi’s divided allegiance in an entirely different group the latter founded 13 years ago when reformist Mohammed Khatami was Iran’s president.  The earlier group did have as part of its mission to advance Iranian interests and remove U.S. sanctions according to Lake.  Keep in mind, the earlier group’s mission was formulated during an entirely different time in Iran’s political history.  Besides, the earlier group no longer exists.  So Lake would have you believe that Trita Parsi is violating federal law because he is allegedly adhering to the mission of a group that no longer exists and which was created to respond to the reformist movement in Iranian politics which has not been in power for five years.

Here Lake confuses Parsi’s desire to “open up opportunities for trade” with a desire to undermine U.S. sanctions policy:

As early as December 2002, however, Mr. Parsi envisioned that his nonprofit would join with a full-fledged “grass-roots lobby” to push for an end to sanctions on Iran.  He wrote in a memo to Roy Coffee, a former aide to then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush: “Although the mission of the proposed lobby should be to improve relations between the U.S. and Iran and open up opportunities for trade, the initial targets should be less controversial issues such as visas and racial profiling/discrimination.”

In the neocon universe, if you attempt to improve U.S.-Iran relations you are a traitor to U.S. interests and a stooge of Iran.  If you foresee a time when U.S. and Iranian companies would pursue commercial interests, then you’re as good as a smuggler crossing the Straits of Hormuz in a cigarette boat.

This is how Lake describes the lawsuit defendant, who is a confirmed Iranian anti-regime revolutionary:

An Iranian-American journalist from Arizona named Hassan Daioleslam…

How does Daioeslam qualify as a “journalist?”  Why, he writes for Frontpagemagazine don’t ya know.  Why no mention of his affiliation with Mujahadeen al-Khalq?  That would complicate things a bit for Lake, wouldn’t it?  He’d have to explain why he’s relying on an informant who is a leader of an Iranian terrorist group.

Not until the end of his article does Lake say of the evidence for one of his claims, that Parsi arranged meetings between Iran’s UN ambassador and members of Congress:

…The case is not definitive. Two lawyers who read some of the same documents said they did not provide enough evidence to conclude that Mr. Parsi was acting as a foreign agent. Neither of the lawyers agreed to be quoted by name.

A fair journalist would have acknowledged this from the very beginning of the piece and not made such an unequivocal claim in the beginning.  But neither Lake’s nor the Washington Time’s job is to use standard practices of professional journalism like fairness and balance.

Once again at the end of his article he provides this comment from a Congressmember who totally disputes the notion that Parsi was engaging in lobbying when the member met with the Iranian ambassador:

Mr. Gilchrest, a Maryland Republican who left office in 2009, said he remembered meeting with Mr. Parsi but did not consider him a major player in his efforts to meet Iranian officials.

“Trita was one person that we would use as a source of information. But I would not say we viewed Trita as a lobbyist,” Mr. Gilchrest said. “He was a small part of our circle who wanted to meet with Iranians.”

Here, Lake offers further evidence of NIAC’s alleged lobbying activities:

NIAC boasted about the media campaign in a grant application to private foundations for a proposed “U.S.-Iran Media Resource Program.”

The application said NIAC “succeeded in putting Iran’s 2003 Grand Bargain offer onto national headlines,” noting that Mr. Parsi’s efforts had generated 37 “pieces of analysis,” a feature on CNN and 80 newspaper mentions.

The application credits NIAC for thwarting what Mr. Parsi said was “the Bush administration’s push for a military confrontation with Iran.”

So NIAC’s publicizing the Iranian “Grand Bargain” in the U.S. media constitutes lobbying?  I’ve written about the Grand Bargain.  Should I register as a lobbyist?  And you’ll note that the closest Lake gets to proving NIAC actually had any impact on U.S. policy toward Iran is Lake’s characterization of NIAC as “taking credit” for influencing policy.  The reporter doesn’t even provide any documentary evidence or a quotation from the application that supports the claim.

Besides, the Bush administration refused to attack Iran for reasons having little or nothing to do with NIAC.  George Bush decided that such an attack was not in U.S. interests.  Believe me, he didn’t listen to NIAC’s views in making that decision.  There were far more important voices he was listening to like his own father and members of his father’s inner circle like Brent Scowcroft.  Who knows, maybe Condi Rice actually had something sobering to say on the subject to counter the pro-war rumblings of Dick Cheney.

Unfortunately, Lake also neglects to mention that Daioeslam conspired with neocon regime-change hawk, Kenneth Timmerman in a campaign to smear Parsi: The former wrote an e mail to the latter during the presidential campaign with that in mind:

“I strongly believe that Trita Parsi is the weakest part of the Iranian web…I believe that destroying him will be the start of attacking the whole web. This is an integral part of any attack on Clinton or Obama.”

It was their hope thereby to damage the realist approach to U.S.-Iran relations and thereby aid and abet the drumbeat to military force, if not war.  Instead of worrying about whether Trita Parsi is a mullah mole Eli Lake should be asking himself why his neocon friends supporting regime change are conspiring with Iranian dissidents who support terror.

Iran-Israel-U.S.: Resolving the Nuclear Impasse

Monday, November 9th, 2009

My readers will recall a series of posts going back to September criticizing a hawkish Seattle Jewish federation conference on Iran held at Temple DeHirsh Sinai on October 21st, which included speakers from Aipac, the Jerusalem Post, and the Israeli consul general.  I made my opposition to the partisanship of this known here and also published an op ed in the local Jewish newspaper.  It wasn’t easy to get my voice heard locally.  But I think the fact that the conference speakers toned down the message they could have delivered came somewhat as a result of the ”pummeling” they took beforehand from me.

Iran conference FlyerAt any rate, I determined that I would organize a conference to address the same subject from a more pragmatic, realistic perspective.  On December 16th at 7PM at Town Hall, I am organizing a community conference on Israel-U.S.-Iran relations providing a background to the current international crisis over Iran’s nuclear ambitions.  In response to a growing furor in the U.S. Congress, media and specifically in the American Jewish community calling for “crippling sanctions” (Bibi Netanyahu’s phrase) and even a possible military strike against Iran, a coalition of Seattle academic, religious, and peace groups, and individual activists is organizing an event that will feature national Iran experts who present a pragmatic approach to resolving the conflict advocating diplomatic engagement and critiquing military options.

Speakers:

Dr. Trita Parsi, director & founder of the National Iranian American Council
Dr. Ian Lustick, political science professor, Univ. of Pennsylvania
Dr. Keith Weissman, former director of Aipac’s Iran desk
Moderator: Dr. Ellis Goldberg, political science professor, University of Washington

We hope to have an audience of 500 for this event and also to secure media coverage promoting our realist vision for improving relations between these three nations.

I am soliciting donations from my readers and event sponsors to cover costs for the evening which will surpass $6,000.  Please consider as generous a gift as you can afford.  If you need a tax-deduction for your gift, it can be made through American Friends Service Committee.  E-mail me for information on how to do this.  You may purchase tickets for the conference through Brown Paper Tickets.  For further information call 206.632.0662 extension 30.

Among the issues we plan to cover:

1.          What is the best way to approach the issue of Iran’s nuclear program that will secure a positive outcome for those nations opposed to it?

2.         What impact might “crippling sanctions” have on Iran and the overall conflict?  Will they work?

3.         What repercussions might there be from an Israeli military attack on Iran and would such an attack attain its objectives?

4.         If a military attack is ill-advised, how do we work to counter it?

5.         How can the west support the goals of the Iran reform movement?

6.         Is Iran an “existential threat” to Israel?

Event sponsors:

Middle East Center, University of Washington*
American Friends Service Committee
United Nations Association
Network Promoting Peace with Iran
Jewish Voice for Peace
Kadima Reconstructionist Community
American Muslims of Puget Sound

* The Middle East Center’s sponsorship of this event does not imply it endorses the content of the event.

Goldberg Confirms His Own Irrelevance

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

I have good news and I have bad news.  The good news is that Jeffrey Goldberg is so overwrought about the Israel-Palestine bloggers session at the J Street conference that he has devoted a goodly portion of a post to pissing and moaning about us.  The bad news is that the utter banality of his “analysis” confirms even further his utter irrelevance to the debate over U.S. Middle East policy.

Someone who didn’t even attend the session (Goldberg) has determined through his well-placed proxies that it was a silly waste of time.  I always admire people so sure of their own powers of judgment that they don’t even need to have any first-hand knowledge of an issue or event to expound upon it with authority.  Poor Jeffrey,  he writes as if we gave him an ulcer:

I’m telling people who are worried about the hijinks at the unofficial J Street bloggers’ panel not to become overly bothered by it; it was a clownish event, and the people on the panel were marginal figures except in the rather circumscribed universe of anti-Zionists-with-Jewish parents (where they are giants).

Gee, where have I read that same term used to describe our session?  Oh that’s right, our other good friend on the Jewish right, Michael Goldfarb:

The “independent” blogger panel at J Street’s conference can only be described as clownish.

You can tell where Jeffrey Goldberg gets some of his “best” material.  From his partner in pro-Israel journalism, Goldfarb.

I’m going to come right out and call Goldberg a liar.  I wrote him a personal e mail after his last diatribe pointing out the diversity of our panel and that it contained bloggers with many different perspectives on the issues.  Yet he deliberately ignores what the two co-hosts of the session wrote to him, deliberately ignores the fact that I am a progressive Zionist and that Jerry Haber’s blog is titled The Magnes Zionist, for God’s sake.  This is intellectual bad faith.  Goldberg didn’t even have the courtesy to respond to my e mail.  Jerry, by the way, invited Goldberg to join our panel, which he declined to do.  You see, he’d rather take his marbles go home and complain about what nasty people we are than engaging with us in any sort of serious manner.

Goldberg hated the fact that J Street hosted a panel of Iran pragmatists, who he noxiously describes as “apologists.”  Here is what passes for “analysis” from Goldberg:

The panel featured Hillary Mann Leverett, who, with her husband, Flynt Leverett, is an apologist for the Iranian regime. [and] also included Trita Parsi, who also does a lot of leg-work for the Iranian regime…

I find it interesting that the Mujahadeen al Khalq, the radical Iranian anti-clerical group which supports violent overthrow of the regime and is listed as a terror organization, also agrees with Goldberg, calling Parsi a supporter of the regime.  This is a commonality of which Goldberg should be proud.  Any reasonable person who really heard (as opposed to Goldberg relying on second-hand reports) what Parsi said, and who followed the powerful testimony from Parsi and his group NIAC during the civil unrest that followed the fraudulent Iranain elections in June, would know that what Goldberg says is a despicable lie.  In fact, Parsi called those elections fraudulent at the conference.  I, as opposed to Goldberg, was there and in the room when he said this.  Somehow in the twilight world that is Goldbergland, calling the elections a fraud becomes twisted into apologetics on behalf of the regime.  Besides, you’ll notice that Goldberg never provides a shred of evidence for any of these claims.  Typical.

For Jeffrey Goldberg, if you don’t endorse Israel’s vision of an Iran that is an existential threat to Israel and the world, and if you don’t endorse draconian sanctions and the possibility of military attack if they don’t work–then you’re an Iranian apologist.

Here is more distortion from Goldberg:

…The consensus on the panel…was that Iran doesn’t think about Israel, doesn’t care about Israel, and certainly doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.

I blogged yesterday on what Trita Parsi actually said, which was far more nuanced than Goldberg allows.  Parsi, seeking to explain the disconnect among all the players and their delusions about their own importance and their own perceptions of how their enemy sees them, said this:

Israelis think about Iran 90% of the time and think that Iranians think about Israel 90% of the time.  They don’t.

No one on the panel said Iran doesn’t want to obliterate Israel.  No one said it does.  The subject simply was not addressed in that fashion, which would of course annoy Goldberg no end.  Here’s a guy who deals in absolutes who can’t stand when people a lot smarter and better educated on the subject than he, talk in a fashion that allows for far more grey, far more complexity and nuance.

Interestingly, Goldberg also ignores the racism, noted by Hillary Mann Leverett in her presentation on Iran, directed at Iran by pro-Israel apologists:

[They advance] the stereotype of Iranians as chronically duplicitous and unprepared to keep any commitment they enter into. …  Those stereotypes are simply not supported by the historical record. … They are fundamentally racist — if someone were to criticize Israeli diplomacy by referring to rabbis as lying and conspiring behind their beards, as far too many commentators accuse Iran’s mullahs of lying and conspiring behind their beards, we would rightly — and I’d be the first to — denounce that as an anti-Semitic stereotype.

When I first heard Leverett’s comment I thought it was very acute.  Goldberg can’t be bothered to address it.  Instead he misdirects in his response:

Rabbis aren’t in charge of Israel. Mullahs are in charge of Iran. This is a fact that probably does seem relevant to most people, though not to Hillary Mann Leverett.

We might leave aside the fact that fundamentalist rabbis, in fact, ARE in charge of many major aspects of Israeli life, though perhaps not decisions on whether to use nuclear weapons.  But the most important point to note here is, who is to say that Iran’s mullahs are pursuing a policy that is any less rational than Israel is pursuing?  Israel has started two horrific wars in the past three years killing thousands, including many civilians, in two different countries.  It has used sophisticated and powerful weapons of destruction (though not “mass” destruction) that have killed indiscriminately.  It has been sanctioned by international bodies and its own domestic human rights organizations for violations of human rights and international law.

Iran’s record in the past six months hasn’t been pretty either.  Nor are its support for Hezbollah and alleged support for Hamas, laudable.  But if we compare records of the two countries the mullahs appear quite a bit more rational than Israel’s leaders over that same three year period.  How can that be, Jeffrey Goldberg, Zionist champion, Israel’s defender, that Israel has more to answer for than Iran?  You’re worried that Iran wants nuclear weapons, when Israel already has them.  You’re worried that Iran is violating the Non-Proliferation Treaty provisions, when Israel refuses even to sign the Treaty.  Seems to me your concerns are a bit misplaced.  Worry about Iran?  Sure.  Worry about Israel?  Even moreso.

Misunderstanding the Iranian Threat

Friday, October 16th, 2009

The following appeared in today’s JTNews, the newspaper of the Seattle Jewish community.  It was accompanied by an excellent news report by Leyna Crow on the controversy surrounding the Seattle federation co-sponsored conference on the alleged Iranian nuclear threat.  To support the progressive Iran-Israel conference on December 16th, please make a donation here to cover our expenses:

The Jewish federation is hosting a community conference, Understanding the Iranian Threat, on October 21st.  The federation website notes it:

…Will provide a look at Iran’s history and political landscape; an in-depth analysis of the dangers of a nuclear-armed Iran; its strategic threat to Israel, the United States and the world; and, an understanding of how we can prevent it.

While the panel speakers (from Aipac, the Jerusalem Post and Israeli government) are qualified to represent the views of the Israeli government, Aipac and StandWithUs, the sponsors, they are not qualified to discuss “Iran’s history and political landscape” since they likely have never visited Iran, do not speak Farsi, and have no academic expertise in this field.

This event will present a partisan hawkish view of the Iranian crisis.  Expenses for this event will be paid by Aipac and SWU, hardline pro-Israel advocacy groups.  Speakers will advocate “crippling sanctions” (Bibi Netanyahu’s term) and failing them, a possible military attack on Iran.  Katz, in a report in the Post said that such an Israeli military attack on Iran could cause the current hardline government to fall.  In fact, almost every serious Iran analyst believes that a military attack on Iran will unite the nation behind the hardline clerics and doom the reformist movement.  The leader of the opposition, Mir-Hussein Moussavi, has publicly warned that further sanctions will hurt his movement.

We as Jews should think about the long-term impact of U.S. and Israeli actions.  If we really wish a more democratic Iran open to foregoing nuclear weapons, then a pragmatic approach is the only way to go.  As tempting as confronting Iran’s Ahmadinejads is, we should think about the impact of threats and harsh rhetoric on political reality.  Iran’s current hardline leadership is an unsavory lot.  But a policy of confrontation will not attain the goals that we set for eliminating Iran’s nuclear threat.

The federation conference claims to represent the consensus views of the local Jewish community.  But the 2009 American Jewish Committee national survey finds  that about one-third of Jews oppose an attack on Iran.  This minority realist strain in Jewish opinion will NOT (as of the day I write this) be represented by any panelist at the event.

While JTNews originally refused to publish this statement claiming it is unnecessary because the event will not be partisan.  I disagreed and planned to pay for an ad to make views known that should have been readily published.  But I’m pleased to say that the newspaper’s editor finally agreed to publish this as an op ed and recognized the need to present a wider perspective within the pages of the paper.

The Israeli foreign ministry, Aipac and StandWithUs should not control this debate within the Jewish community.  For that reason, a coalition of local community groups including some in the Jewish community will host a conference which will present the alternative views that should have been offered on October 21st.

On December 16th at Town Hall, Keith Weissman, former director of Aipac’s Iran desk, Prof. Ian Lustick of the University of Pennsylvania’s department of politica science, and Trita Parsi, director of the National Iranian American Council will present a pragmatic approach to the Iranian crisis which embraces diplomatic engagement and eschews force.  Unlike the federation event, each of these speakers has academic and direct personal experience of Iran along with deep experience of Israel and its interests.  I invite Seattle’s Jewish community to hear a point of view endorsed by one-third of our fellow Jews.

Jewish Community Leaders Lie Down With Anti-Iranian Dog, Get Up With Fleas

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009

This coming Thursday, the Conference of Presidents, under the guise of a mom and apple pie-named coalition, Stand for Freedom in Iran, will rally against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad outside the United Nations.**  Strangely though, Ahmadinejad is speaking to the General Assembly on Wednesday.  Since he is the Israel lobby’s arch enemy you’d think they protest against him on that day.  I can’t imagine what they were thinking.  The only thing I can figure that deterred them is that most of the Iranian groups protesting will do so on Wednesday.  Perhaps the Israel lobby didn’t want to be lumped together with them.

The Conference’s leadership of the coalition is hidden and its name doesn’t appear on the Stand for Freedom website except through a front group created by it, the National Interagency Task Force on Iran.

Hassan Daioleslam

Hassan Daioleslam, Mujahadeen al Khalq leader, supporter of violent overthrow of Iran and Stand for Freedom in Iran

The only Iranian group sponsoring Stand for Freedom is the Progressive American Iranian Committee (PAIC), which isn’t at all what its name implies.  It is actually a front group for Iranians who seek the violent overthrow of the current Iranian regime by any means necessary.  It has made common cause with the People’s Mujahadeen, a radical Iranian cult which attempted to overthrow the Khomeini regime in 1981 and has been on the U.S. terrorism list for many years.  The connection between the two is via a Mujahadeen executive committee member named Hassan Daioleslam.

Daioleslam is a shadowy character.  His bio conveniently omits his membership in the Mujahadeen.  Also absent (and absent from the PAIC website) is his status as a founding member of PAIC.  He interviewed the “co-founder” of PAIC for this right-wing website and co-wrote this article with him.  The vehemence of Daioleslam’s hatred for the Iranian regime has led him into the arms of some strange bedfellows.  He’s a regular contributor to Frontpagemagazine, American Thinker and other far-right neocon publications.  Of course, the bond is one of convenience and entirely cynical in its motive.  The neocons want to overthrow the Islamic regime using military means.  So do the Mujahadeen.  The neocons claim to support “democracy” for Iran, though not the kind of democracy represented by Mohammad Mosaddeq, has v’chalila.  Rather, they mean a pro-western government with the trappings of democracy.  The Mujahadeen want a dictatorship led by them though I doubt they would put it that way.

Daioleslam has made a cottage industry out of smearing independent Iranian-American groups which oppose Teheran, but do not favor war due to the disastrous consequences it would have for many innocents.  Chief among his targets is Trita Parsi and the National Iranian American Council, which he calls a U.S. front group and lobby for Teheran.  NIAC sued the Mujahadeen leader in 2008 for defamation.  The suit is currently in discovery and has survived legal rulings by Daioleslam to have it dismissed.

What it all comes down to is that on Thursday, the New York Jewish federation along with Malcolm Hoenlein’s Conference of Presidents will be lying down with an anti-Iranian regime dog named Hassan Daioleslam.  If they’re not careful, by the time they get up to leave the rally they’ll have a bad case of fleas.  Though he won’t say it in quite so many words, Hoenlein’s agenda (along with the Israeli government’s) is also to overthrow the Iranian regime.  And he wants the world to believe that American Jews endorse his neocon approach.  But they don’t.  And I hope they’ll open their windows like Peter Finch in Network and shout that they’re mad as hell that people like Malcolm Hoenlein pretend to speak for them.

** Standforfreedominiran.org is registered to the Jewish Community Relations Council, the political lobbying arm of the Jewish community.  So it is possible that the JCRC is the guiding light behind Stand for Freedom.  But the Conference and JCRC are undoubtedly working hand in glove on this project.

Key to Lowering Iran’s Hostility to Israel, U.S.-Iran Rapprochement

Sunday, October 14th, 2007

…Israel’s fear of a U.S.-Iran dialogue is misplaced and…it actually is through a U.S.-Iran rapprochement that the Jewish state best can secure its interest and change Iran’s aggressive behavior towards Israel.
Dr. Trita Parsi, guest blogging at Rootless Cosmopolitan


Now, that’s a refreshing notion. Not endless war, but an actual way out of an impossible impasse. Imagine that. Trita Parsi has done just that in his new book, Treacherous Alliance. He’s taken apart the false rhetoric on all sides of the debate and used hard-headed realism to offer a way out of the mess that Iran, Israel and the U.S. have made for themselves.

Tony Karon is to be commended for giving him this platform in Rootless Cosmopolitan.

The most interesting aspect of his essay is the analysis of Bibi Netanyahu’s hypocritical about-face regarding Iran. Now, he calls the Iranian mullahs mad and pounces on every Ahmadinejad pronouncement as if Hitler has been reborn in Teheran. But once upon a time it wasn’t that way. It was Netanyahu who was the Iran dove, hard as that may be to believe now:

Benjamin Netanyahu would like Americans and Israelis to believe that it’s 1938 all over again: Iran, he tells us, is Nazi Germany; President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is Hitler. And, of course, that means that anyone who advocates diplomacy and engagement with Tehran is simply reprising the tragic appeasement politics of Neville Chamberlain, even as the clock ticks towards catastrophe.

The 1938 analogy is entirely fallacious, but no less powerful because of it – by at once terrifying people and negating the alternatives to confrontation, it paints war as a necessary evil forced on the West by a foe as deranged and implacable as Hitler was.

If Iran is, as Netanyahu and his allies in the U.S. suggest, irrationally aggressive, prone to a suicidal desire for apocalyptic confrontation, then both diplomacy and deterrence and containment are ruled out as policy options for Washington. The “Mad Mullahs,” as the neocons call them, are not capable of traditional balance of power realism. In the arguments of Netanyahu and such fellow travelers as Norman Podhortez and Newt Gingrich, to imagine that war against the regime in Tehran is avoidable is to be as naïve as Chamberlain was in 1938.

However…not only does Netanyahu’s characterization of Iran have little relationship to reality; Netanyahu himself knows this better than most. Outside of the realm of cynical posturing by politicians, most Israeli strategists recognize that Iran represents a strategic challenge to the favorable balance of power enjoyed by Israel and the U.S. in the Middle East over the past 15 years, but it is no existential threat to the Israel, the U.S. or the Arab regimes.

And that was the view embraced by the Likud leader himself during his last term as prime minister of Israel…Netanyahu strongly push[ed back against the orthodoxy of his Labor Party predecessors, Yitzhak Rabin and Shimon Peres, which treated Iran as one of Israel’s primary enemies. Not only that, he initiated an extensive discreet program of reaching out to the Islamic Republic.

Parsi notes that Netanyahu’s outreach to the Iranians failed since they were only interested in rapprochement with Washington, but not Israel. But Parsi maintains that Netanyahu’s first inclination to tone down the rhetoric against Iran was the right one and in Israel’s long-term strategic interest:

Today, Israel is facing a similar situation, but with one big difference. Iran is far more powerful than it was in 1996, while the power of the U.S. to impose its will in the Middle East has diminished considerably. The difficulties confronting the U.S. in Iraq and technological progress in Iran’s nuclear program may compel Washington to recognize that its best interests lie in a grand bargain with Tehran. But the general view in Israel today is the notion that such negotiations must be prevented, because all potential outcomes of a U.S.-Iran negotiation are perceived to be less optimal for Israel than the status quo of intense U.S.-Iran enmity that threatens to boil over into a military clash.

It’s precisely to prevent such engagement between Washington and Tehran that Netanyahu and company are pressing the 1938 analogy.

…Israel’s fear of a U.S.-Iran dialogue is misplaced and…it actually is through a U.S.-Iran rapprochement that the Jewish state best can secure its interest and change Iran’s aggressive behavior towards Israel.)