USADI Commentary
Iran's 1999 Student Uprising Still Resonates
Saturday, July 9, marks the sixth anniversary of the six days of
student-led uprising against the ruling tyranny in Iran in 1999.
The uprising, which shook the regime to its foundations, has
deservedly been viewed as a milestone in the history of Iranian
people’s two decades of struggle to unseat the theocracy ruling
Iran.
With the blessing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and the
outgoing President Mohammad Khatami, uniformed and plainclothes
security forces brutally cracked down on students and thousands
of other Iranians who had joined them. Several thousands were
arrested and hundreds killed or wounded.
If not suppressed, the uprising, which quickly spread to nearly
two dozen other cities, could have had dire consequences and if
sustained might have triggered a chain of events that would have
possibly threatened the mullahs’ survival. In a cover-page
story, The Economist magazine billed the uprising as “Iran’s
Second Revolution” and a commentary in the CBS News said “a
sense of revolution has returned to Iran.”
After nearly two decades of relentless struggle, the movement
for democracy and popular sovereignty - the unfulfilled
aspirations of the1979 anti-monarchic revolution - burst out in
the open six year ago on July 9 for the world to see. The
student movement, always a vanguard in Iranians’ century-long
struggle against despotism, linked up with nationwide resistance
of Iranian people in demanding the overthrow of the clerical
state in its totality. The students, chanting "Death to
despotism, Death to dictators," stormed out of university
campuses and into various neighborhoods where they were joined
by thousands of citizens, particularly younger Iranians.
This year, the ruling mullahs are still reeling from political
and diplomatic fall-out of the June presidential election sham
where a reported hostage-taker, interrogator, assassin and
former commander of the notorious Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps was declared the winner. And since January, uprisings in
several Iranian cities as well as a number of strikes, sit-ins
and sporadic clashes have kept the security forces busy.
Reports from Iran however indicate that the regime, already
fearing a wave of anti-government protests on the anniversary of
1999 uprising, has embarked on taking some pre-emptive measures
by attacking dissidents’ homes or bludgeoning political
prisoners in their cells in Tehran’s infamous Evin prison
The July 9 uprising gave Iranians self-confidence and a sense of
power and legitimacy in their demands for democracy and justice.
It unmasked the bogus reformer, such as Khatami. More
importantly, it strengthened the historic ties between the
student movement and the nationwide struggle for democracy.
Outright crackdown, however, has utterly failed to weaken the
resolve of the democracy movement against the clerical state and
diminish the yearning for democracy in Iran.
Since 1999, Tehran has continued to muzzle dissidents while the
West, particularly Europe, has expanded trade with Iran. Thanks
to advanced anti-riot gear they sold to Iran, the mullahs are
better equipped to crackdown now than they were in 1999,.
Alarmed by the storm on the horizon, Iran’s rulers closed ranks
by giving the Revolutionary Guards, the loyal servants of the
Supreme Leader, control over all levers of power. The move,
culminating in the presidency of former Guards’ commander
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, promises stepped-up repression at home and
a more defiant attitude in the nuclear talks with Europe.
The free world has arrived at a crossroads: To continue to
shamelessly appease the mullahs’ rogue regime or to side with
Iranian people and their struggle to establish an Iran free of
tyranny, terror, and weapons of mass destruction.
This is our chance to be on the right side of history by
supporting Iranians and anti-fundamentalist democratic
opposition forces who are the real actors of change in Iran.
(USADI)
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Sunday Times
July 03, 2005
US agents probe
past of Iran's leader
The murders started in the 1980s. Kazem Sami, who was the first
Iranian health minister after the 1979 Islamic revolution but
fell out with the ayatollahs, was one of the first of dozens of
dissidents to die. He was working in a Tehran clinic in November
1988 when an assailant posing as a patient stabbed him
repeatedly.
The following July, three gunmen burst into a Vienna flat and
opened fire on a meeting of Iranian Kurdish exiles. Among three
people killed was Abdul Rahman Qassemlou, the leader of Kurdish
opposition to the ayatollahs in Tehran. The murders have never
been solved.
Almost a decade later, a clandestine group of Iranian militants
began plotting the murder of Salman Rushdie, the victim of a
fatwa sentencing him to death for supposed blasphemy in his book
The Satanic Verses.
For years there had been only the vaguest allegations of a link
between those events. All that has changed with the election of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the hardline former mayor of Tehran, as
Iran’s new president.
Ahmadinejad’s surprise victory in last month’s poll has
unleashed a flood of accusation, innuendo and investigation of
his militant pedigree. Accused by his enemies of orchestrating a
string of murders in the 1980s and 1990s, Ahmadinejad, 49, is
also being scrutinised by US intelligence agencies over claims
that he participated in the student takeover of the US embassy
in Tehran in 1979.
Opposition websites are buzzing with reports of a leaked
document that purportedly proves Ahmadinejad led a team of
would-be assassins that plotted to murder Rushdie.
The document remained untraceable last week but a prominent
opposition figure, Maryam Rajavi, of the National Council of
Resistance of Iran, denounced Ahmadinejad as a “terrorist,
torturer and executioner”.
In a further twist, an Austrian newspaper claimed yesterday that
the country’s authorities were studying classified documents
suggesting he played a key role in the Vienna killings.
Iranian officials have dismissed many such allegations as
“absurd” and motivated by political malice. Asked by The New
York Times whether he was among the hostage takers in 1979,
Ahmadinejad replied: “It is not true. It is only rumours.”
But a senior Washington official said “a lot of filing cabinets
are rattling” as intelligence and law enforcement agencies
search for clues to the Iranian strongman’s past.
There was also concern in Europe that whatever the truth, a
process of American-led “demonisation” has begun that will
damage European efforts to solve the crisis over Iran’s nuclear
ambitions.
“If he has got that sort of [militant] form, it’s going to be
easy for the Americans to demonise him and the prospects for
doing business with him becomes that much more difficult,” said
one European official.
Amid the political frenzy, it was not easy last week to separate
fact from fantasy. Yet from details provided by US regional
specialists, official Iranian websites and previously reliable
opposition sources, it proved possible to piece together a
sobering account of the new president’s ties to
ultraconservative anti-western factions. These include a unit
long suspected by US intelligence agencies of directing
state-sponsored terrorist activities abroad...
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World Net Daily
July 7,
2005
Iran has 40,000
human 'time bombs'
An Iranian movement says it now has recruited 40,000 human "time
bombs" to carry out suicide attacks against Americans in Iraq
and Israel.
The movement -- called the World Islamic Organization's
Headquarters for Remembering the Shahids [Martyrs] -- says the
volunteers want to carry out "martyrdom operations to liberate
Islamic lands," according to a report broadcast by Al-Arabiya TV
and translated by the Middle East Media Research Institute, or
MEMRI.
Last year, Insight Online magazine reported the movement, which
at the time claimed 10,000 recruits, was signing up members on
the Internet.
In the July 2 television feature, spokesman Mohammad 'Ali Samedi
said that since the movement's beginning a year and a half ago,
he has been busy signing up recruits, organizing conventions and
training members for martyrdom operations.
Supporters of the movement include members of parliament and
Revolutionary Guards officers, but Samedi insists it is not a
government organization and is not supported by the Iranian
regime.
As MEMRI reported last year, however, Iranian political leader
Ali Khamenei and Revolutionary Guards Gen. Shabani praised the
culture of martyrdom and jihad in speeches to students, urging
them to become martyrs themselves in order to resist enemies,
particularly the United States..
The July 2 program includes an interview with a female member
named Vesaly.
"We are first and foremost Muslims and it is our duty to defend
our brothers and sisters throughout the world," she says. "We
don't need permission from anybody. This has to do with our
religious duty and responsibilities. This is our choice, and we
have no fear. We adhere to the legacy of our late leader, Imam
Khomeini."
In the broadcast, the reporter says, "These young women have
forsaken the temptations of life, and have taken the hard way.
Indeed, they have chosen martyrdom as a way of liberating the
Islamic lands. This is what they say."
The group does not distinquish between men and women or between
Sunnis and Shiites, the reporter says over chants of "We all
sacrifice for the sake of Islam."
The reason they are sacrificing, the reporter says, is "what
America has done in the holy places of Najaf and Karbala" in
Iraq…
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Iran Focus
July 6, 2005
Hardliner to lead
Iran’s nuclear talks: daily
Tehran, Jul. 06 – Iran’s secretary of the Supreme National
Security Council (SNSC) and chief nuclear negotiator Hassan
Rowhani will be replaced with a Revolutionary Guards brigadier
general close to the Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei,
according to two influential hard-line dailies.
Jomhouri Islami, once published by Ali Khamenei before he donned
the mantle of the theocratic state’s spiritual leader, reported
Tuesday that Rowhani was to be replaced with Ali Larijani, the
Supreme Leader’s representative to the SNSC, the country’s top
national security body.
“Despite the denials, news of the future resignation of Mr.
Rowhani from the post of Secretary of the Supreme National
Security Council has been confirmed by reliable sources”,
Jomhouri Islami wrote. “These same sources have named Dr. Ali
Larijani as the likely successor”.
The influential hard-line daily Kayhan later confirmed the
report. "With the confirmation of reports that Ali Larijani will
replace Hassan Rowhani as the secretary of the Supreme National
Security Council, it has become certain that Larijani will not
be in Ahmadinejad's cabinet", the daily wrote in its Tuesday
afternoon issue.
Larijani, one of the eight candidates who ran in the June
presidential elections, headed Iran’s state-run television and
radio corporation for a decade. Prior to that, he was the Deputy
Minister of Revolutionary Guards and the Minister of Islamic
Guidance. His older brother, Mohammad-Javad Larijani, is a top
ideologue of the ultra-conservative faction and once caused an
uproar outside Iran by defending the clerical regime’s right to
possess nuclear weapons.
Rowhani has been leading Iran’s negotiating team over the
country’s suspected nuclear weapons program against the European
“big three” of France, Germany, and the United Kingdom. There
was speculation on Sunday that the mid-ranking cleric was
stepping down from his appointed posts, but a spokesman later
denied such reports. Rowhani himself was quoted by the local
press Tuesday as saying that he would remain in that position
“as long as Mr. Khatami’s administration continues”.
European diplomats close to the nuclear talks between Iran and
the EU-3 have said privately that the negotiations might break
down in autumn as a result of Iranian intransigence.
The website Baztab, run by former Revolutionary Guards chief
Mohsen Rezai, wrote on Tuesday, “Certain circles close to the
leadership of the Supreme National Security Council are creating
rumours about the resignation of Dr. Hassan Rowhani and
publishing them in the media in an effort to retain him in his
position”.
Iran Focus reported on Sunday that some analysts suspected that
the sudden announcement of Rowhani’s resignation and the
following denial reflected a heated confrontation behind the
scenes as the ultra-conservative camp wrested control of the
remaining levers of power from the hands of its rivals in the
wake of its recent victory in the presidential elections.
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The US Alliance for Democratic Iran (USADI), is a
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informed policy debate, exchange of ideas, analysis, research and
education to advance a US policy on Iran which will benefit America’s
interests, both at home and in the Middle East, through supporting Iranian
people’s aspirations for a democratic, secular, and
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mass destruction, and terrorism.
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