• NOVEMBER 21, 2009
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The New Hostage Crisis

Why Iran's rulers imprison people they know are innocent.  

BY KARIM SADJADPOUR | OCTOBER 23, 2009

My friend, the Iranian-American scholar Kian Tajbakhsh, was recently sentenced to 15 years in Tehran's Evin prison. For those familiar with the ways of authoritarian regimes, the charges against him will ring familiar: espionage, cooperating with an enemy government, and endangering national security.

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Since his arrest last July -- he was accused of helping to plan the post-election uprisings -- Kian's family and friends have made countless appeals for clemency to the Iranian government, written letters to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad pleading his innocence, and signed dozens of petitions. All to no avail.

I've come now to realize that the regime probably thinks we're obtuse. Indeed, they know better than anyone that Kian is an innocent man. As the expression goes in Persian, "da'va sar-e een neest," i.e. that's not what this fight is about.

Allow me to explain.

Kian was first arrested in 2007. His crime was having previously worked as a consultant for the Open Society Institute (OSI), a U.S.-based NGO. Though his work was nonpolitical, focused on educational and developmental projects, and had received the explicit consent of the Iranian government, he was accused of trying to foment a "velvet revolution" on behalf of U.S. intelligence agencies.

While in solitary confinement in Evin, he was subjected to countless hours of interrogation. Had the authorities found any evidence for the above charges during all this, Kian certainly would not have been freed after four months.

He was permitted to leave the country after his release, but chose to remain in Tehran with his wife and newborn daughter. He reassured his worried family and friends that he was now an open book to the Iranian government and there could be no further rationale or pretext to detain him.

Over the last two years, he regularly met with his minder from the Ministry of Intelligence. Aware of the fact that the government was monitoring all of his activities and communications -- including e-mail and telephone conversations -- he kept a very low profile and exhibited great caution.

During this period, Kian and I regularly exchanged e-mails. He urged me to read his favorite book, Polish writer Czeslaw Milosz's brilliant novel, The Captive Mind, which examines the moral and intellectual conflicts faced by men and women living under totalitarianism of the left or right.

On the 30th anniversary of the fall of the shah we debated the successes and failures of the 1979 Islamic Revolution, and he told me he believed that the former outweigh the latter. Hardly the worldview of a subversive counterrevolutionary.

Even amid the massive popular uprisings following the tainted June 2009 presidential elections, Kian remained cautious and unmoved, steering way clear of any political activity and continuing to meet with his minder.

On June 14, two days after the election, he wrote me an email saying, "I'm keeping my head down ... I have nothing to add to all the reports that are here." In the same e-mail, Kian even expressed skepticism about the opposition's accusations of electoral fraud, saying he had seen "little hard evidence."

A few weeks later he was arrested, bafflingly, on charges of helping to plan the post-election unrest.

Given the government's intimate familiarity with the benign nature of Kian's activities and communications, it appeared he was simply needed as an unfortunate pawn in the regime's campaign to portray indigenous popular protests as orchestrated by foreign powers. Though the unrest gradually subsided, we went from counting Kian's detention in days to weeks to months.

Along with dozens of other prisoners, dressed in pajamas and sandals, he was forced to participate in humiliating show-trials that were broadcast on official state television. Hard-liners used Kian to attack their reformist opponents, inventing fantastic claims that he was the link between former President Mohammed Khatami and OSI founder George Soros.

Though his face looked visibly different, haggard, his two-year old daughter Hasti ran and kissed the television screen when she saw his image. His wife sobbed.

When our courageous mutual friend, Canadian-Iranian Newsweek reporter Maziar Bahari, was finally released from Evin after four months, we thought it boded well for Kian. These hopes were dashed by Tuesday's almost comically harsh sentence. 15 years!

The over-the-top severity of the sentence makes it eminently clear that this case really has little to do with Kian, and everything to do with Iran's negotiating posture toward the United States. A disaffected contact in the Iranian foreign ministry -- the vast majority of whom were thought to have voted for Mir Hossein Mousavi -- bluntly confirmed my suspicions. "Eena daran bazi mikonan," he told me. "These guys are just playing."

While neighboring Dubai and Turkey have managed to build thriving economies by trading in goods and services, Iran, even 30 years after the revolution, remains in the business of trading in human beings. In addition to Kian, Iran is now holding at least five other American citizens against their will, including three young hikers -- Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd, and Josh Fattal (an outspoken Palestinian-rights activist) -- detained in June along the Iran-Iraq border in Kurdistan.

What, if anything, Tehran seeks in return for these human subjects is unclear, and frankly it's a difficult issue for Iran to broach, given that it undermines the accusations the regime has concocted. That said, the official line can often change abruptly, and for no apparent reason. After Iranian-American journalist Roxana Saberi was sentenced last year to eight years in prison (on preposterous charges of espionage), she was summarily released a few weeks later.

Until recently, it was accepted wisdom that the uptick in Tehran's repression of its own citizenry and detention of U.S. nationals was merely a reaction to the hostile policies of the Bush administration. This thesis is being quickly disproven as the Obama administration's hands-off approach to human rights in Iran proves equally unsuccessful in getting the regime to improve its practices.

Whether Republican or Democrat, U.S. officials are often puzzled by the detention of dual nationals, and unsure how to react to them. Do U.S. statements and/or diplomatic efforts help or hurt the cause of the detainees?

Based on the experience of several Iranian-Americans who have served time in Evin -- including esteemed scholar Haleh Esfandiari, Saberi, and peace activist Ali Shakeri -- we know that thoughtful public statements from U.S. officials coupled with behind-the scenes intervention were helpful to their cause.

But these are individual cases. What U.S. policy measures could help improve the overall human rights situation in Iran, and prevent further detentions from taking place in the future?

Broadly speaking, I support the argument -- made mostly by the American left -- that expanding and improving ties between Washington and Tehran would help mitigate the detention of innocents in Iran -- whether Iranian or American.

I also agree with the counterargument, made mostly by the right, that Tehran's hard-liners use continued enmity with the United States in order to blame Washington when, among other things, their population rises up, economic malaise worsens, or a terrorist attack happens in Baluchistan.

Unfortunately, the difficulty of potential engagement has increased significantly in recent months as any remaining moderates and pragmatists have essentially been purged from the Iranian government's power structure. The color spectrum of the regime now ranges from pitch black to dark grey. And insofar as the continued detention of U.S. citizens in Tehran decreases the likelihood of a diplomatic breakthrough with Washington, the interests of at least some of these hard-liners will be served.

Sadly, languishing in Evin prison, my friend Kian understands this dynamic only too well.

Shortly after President Obama's speech in Cairo last June, Kian wrote, "Iranians might ponder Barack Obama's challenge to Iran to articulate ‘not what it is against, but what future it wants to build.' Each Iranian will wonder how much thought our rulers or our fellow countrymen have given to this critical question and why answers to it are so vague and so few."

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AFP/Getty Images

 

Formerly based in Tehran, Karim Sadjadpour is an associate at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

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 (7)

HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE

JAHANSHAH88

6:20 PM ET

October 23, 2009

Great piece

Thoughtfully done

  REPLY
 

DEPETRIS@WORDPRESS.COM

10:07 PM ET

October 24, 2009

I hope students and scholars

I hope students and scholars of international relations are beginning to understand the extent of the Islamic Republic’s increasingly radicalized behavior. Thankfully, Karim Sadjadpour (through his diligent research on Iranian affairs and his personal contacts with Iranian dissidents) is one such academic that is slowly exposing Khamenei and Ahmadinejad for the type of people they truly are: Islamic ideologues that will use every state-tool at their disposal to weed out moderates.

If last June's presidential election was not evidence enough- a scene that included scores of young Iranian protesters being beaten, rounded up, and detained by the many branches of Tehran's security service- then Iran's campaign of state-sponsored show trials will hopefully add to the hypothesis. And for some reason still unknown to me...despite the purging of pragmatics from government and military positions- the United States under President Barack Obama still believes that open-ended engagement is the long-term policy option.

Last summer's election fiasco, as well as the criminal charges that are so-often trumped up by the Iranian Government, both demonstrate one unfortunate fact; Iran's ultraconservatives are winning in the political sphere. In fact, this comes at the same time that President Ahmadinejad is bolstering the political, economic, and social authority of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard. Contrary to what many believe, the Guardian Council, the office of the president, and even the Supreme Leader himself are all pressured by the country's most elite military wing.

Given the fact that Ahmadinejad was a former officer in the IRGC, this transformation may not be a surprise to many. Certainly, if we all possessed Sadjadpour''s Islamic credentials, this religious-turned-military autocracy would have been perceived as an expected development (many authoritarian governments go through a similar path). However, to the White House and to the majority of Americans who possess an ignorant understanding of the Islamic Republic and the way it operates, an IRGC-controlled government is beyond frightening.

Is the Islamic Republic actually evolving into a more militaristic direction, much the same way that Pakistan drifted towards a military dictatorship under General Pervez Musharraf? Geneive Abdo seems to think so (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/10/07/the_rise_of_the_Iranian_dictatorship).

Nuclear weapons and belligerent rhetoric aside, we could very well be witnessing a new generation of Shia radicals with a tendency for aggression. In a way, I think some analysts would actually prefer Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's traditional vision for the Islamic Republic than the confrontational outlook that so many Iranian hardliners are currently advocating. Compared to today's ultra-fundamentalists, even his strict Islamic belief can be labeled as somewhat reasonable and arbitrary.

-Daniel R. DePetris
http://depetris.wordpress.com

  REPLY
 

IRAN FREEDOM

4:07 AM ET

October 25, 2009

Next protest day in Iran , November 4th 2009

Next protest day in Iran , November 4th 2009

The green movement is still alive.

  REPLY
 

GRANT

4:56 PM ET

October 25, 2009

Well what does the world

Well what does the world want? When the United States does try to build democracies we are accused (unfairly) of building empires and not understanding the situation (more fairly). When we make efforts to negotiate we're accused of giving in to dictators and supporting undemocratic governments.

  REPLY
 

DAVE1995

2:51 PM ET

October 26, 2009

"Iran's New Hostage Crisis": unadulterated sensationalism

The article's title is meant to conjure up memories of the old hostage crisis. What are the similarities between the old and the new crises?.

Recall that in the old "hostage crisis", Iranian students with Khomeinei's backing took 52 American diplomat as hostages.

In the new "hostage crisis", according to the author:

"In addition to Kian, Iran is now holding at least five other American citizens against their will, including three young hikers -- Shane Bauer, Sarah Shourd, and Josh Fattal (an outspoken Palestinian-rights activist) -- detained in June along the Iran-Iraq border in Kurdistan."

Note that among the six Americans that "Iran is now holding... against their will" are "three young hikers" who had illegally crossed into Iran from Kurdish region of Iraq -- a region that is the base for the Kurdish terrorist group, PYJAK. Also, since 2003, the Kurdish region of Iraq has become a playground for Mossad agents. Also worthy of note is that US forces in Iraq had taken five Iranian diplomats as prisoners (hostages?) and held for over two years prior to their unavoidable release subsequent to the transfer of sovereignty to Iraq earlier in the year

I assume that the three remaining "new hostages", including Karim Sadjadipour, are all Iranian-Americans. From the perspective of the Iranian authorities, however, the three are Iranians. The three must have entered Iran with their Iranian passport and were allowed to stay and work there as Iranians They were arrested and imprisoned along with hundreds of other Iranians after the fraudulent presidential election. The three are as much "hostages" as hundreds of other political prisoners in Iran. Ironically, a great number of the "opposition" leaders that were arrested and imprisoned after the June election were "hostage-takers" in the "old hostage crisis".

It is difficult to discern what the author wishes to gain from such a sensational article. He is smart enough to know that such a sensational article will not help free his friend, Karim Sadjadipour. Who are his audience? Would such an audience use this sensational article to promote US-Iranian reconciliation? I have my doubts.

  REPLY
 

BENJAMINFRANKLIN

12:15 PM ET

October 29, 2009

Fascists abuse the innocent because they can

A search for deep meanings in the actions of fascist thugs such as the current government of Iran is pointless. Fascist thugs abuse the innocent because they can. To the fascist mind, only those who wholeheartedly support the regime should be allowed to exist, and all others should be broken or killed.

  REPLY
 

RICH SOL

4:03 AM ET

November 4, 2009

3 bigots getting a taste of their own medicine

Bauer, Shourd, and Fattal are the usual left-wing anti-Israel bigots, constantly attacking Israel for defending itself while ignoring the real and severe human rights abuses of their patron, Syria, and even endorsing the regime! The Syrian regime cuts people up limb from limb, like they did to Salim Al-Lawzi, yet Shroud falsely claims that Israel is oppressing the Golan Heights - in reality the Druze are afraid of Syria getting the Golan Heights, as both Obama and Bush have pushed for.

Nor is it likely they just happened to be hitchiking in Iran. The fact is these 3 backers of the left-wing, antisemitic totalitarian regime of Syria fell afoul of the theocratic, even more antisemitic regime of Iran. It is poetic justice that they were arrested, and even so they haven't suffered the agonies that their friends the Assads have inflicted on the innocent.

  REPLY
 
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