Are You Ready for War with a Demonized Iran? June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Ahmadinejad, CIA, Iran, MoUSAvi, Nuclear, USA, War.add a comment

How much attention do elections in Japan, India, Argentina, or any other country, get from the U.S. media? How many Americans and American journalists even know who is in political office in other countries besides England, France, and Germany? Who can name the political leaders of Switzerland, Holland, Brazil, Japan, or even China?
Yet, many know of Iran’s President Ahmadinejad. The reason is obvious. He is daily demonized in the U.S. media.
The U.S. media’s demonization of Ahmadinejad itself demonstrates American ignorance. The President of Iran is not the ruler. He is not the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He cannot set policies outside the boundaries set by Iran’s rulers, the ayatollahs who are not willing for the Iranian Revolution to be overturned by American money in some color-coded “revolution.”
Iranians have a bitter experience with the United States government. Their first democratic election, after emerging from occupied and colonized status in the 1950s, was overturned by the U.S. government. The U.S. government installed in place of the elected candidate a dictator who tortured and murdered dissidents who thought Iran should be an independent country and not ruled by an American puppet.
The U.S. “superpower” has never forgiven the Iranian Islamic ayatollahs for the Iranian Revolution in the late 1970s, which overthrew the U.S. puppet government and held hostage U.S. embassy personnel, regarded as “a den of spies,” while Iranian students pieced together shredded embassy documents that proved America’s complicity in the destruction of Iranian democracy.
The government-controlled U.S. corporate media, a Ministry of Propaganda, has responded to the re-election of Ahmadinejad with non-stop reports of violent Iranians protests to a stolen election. A stolen election is presented as a fact, even thought there is no evidence for it whatsoever. The U.S. media’s response to the documented stolen elections during the George W. Bush/Karl Rove era was to ignore the evidence of real stolen elections.
Leaders of the puppet states of Great Britain and Germany have fallen in line with the American psychological warfare operation. The discredited British Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, expressed his “serioU.S. doubt” about Ahmadinejad’s victory to a meeting of European Union ministers in Luxembourg. Miliband, of course, has no source of independent information. He is simply following Washington’s instructions and relying on unsupported claims by the defeated candidate preferred by the U.S. Government.
Angela Merkel, Chancellor of Germany, had her arm twisted, too. She called in the Iranian ambassador to demand “more transparency” on the elections.
Even the American left-wing has endorsed the U.S. government’s propaganda. Writing in The Nation, Robert Dreyfus’s presents the hysterical views of one Iranian dissident as if they are the definitive truth about “the illegitimate election,” terming it “a coup d’etat.”
What is the source of the information for the U.S. media and the American puppet states?
Nothing but the assertions of the defeated candidate, the one America prefers.
However, there is hard evidence to the contrary. An independent, objective poll was conducted in Iran by American pollsters prior to the election. The pollsters, Ken Ballen of the nonprofit Center for Public Opinion and Patrick Doherty of the nonprofit New America Foundation, describe their poll results in the June 15 Washington Post. The polling was funded by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and was conducted in Farsi “by a polling company whose work in the region for ABC News and the BBC has received an Emmy award.”*
The poll results, the only real information we have at this time, indicate that the election results reflect the will of the Iranian voters. Among the extremely interesting information revealed by the poll is the following:
“Many experts are claiming that the margin of victory of incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was the result of fraud or manipulation, but our nationwide public opinion survey of Iranians three weeks before the vote showed Ahmadinejad leading by a more than 2 to 1 margin — greater than his actual apparent margin of victory in Friday’s election.
“While Western news reports from Tehran in the days leading up to the voting portrayed an Iranian public enthusiastic about Ahmadinejad’s principal opponent, Mir Hossein Moussavi, our scientific sampling from across all 30 of Iran’s provinces showed Ahmadinejad well ahead.
“The breadth of Ahmadinejad’s support was apparent in our pre-election survey. During the campaign, for instance, Moussavi emphasized his identity as an Azeri, the second-largest ethnic group in Iran after Persians, to woo Azeri voters. Our survey indicated, though, that Azeris favored Ahmadinejad by 2 to 1 over MoU.S.avi.
“Much commentary has portrayed Iranian youth and the Internet as harbingers of change in this election. But our poll found that only a third of Iranians even have access to the Internet, while 18-to-24-year-olds comprised the strongest voting bloc for Ahmadinejad of all age groups.
“The only demographic groups in which our survey found Moussavi leading or competitive with Ahmadinejad were university students and graduates, and the highest-income Iranians. When our poll was taken, almost a third of Iranians were also still undecided. Yet the baseline distributions we found then mirror the results reported by the Iranian authorities, indicating the possibility that the vote is not the product of widespread fraud.”
There have been numerous news reports that the U.S. government has implemented a program to destabilize Iran. There have been reports that the U.S. government has financed bombings and assassinations within Iran. The U.S. media treats these reports in a braggadocio manner as illustrations of the American Superpower’s ability to bring dissenting countries to heel, while some foreign media see these reports as evidence of the U.S. government’s inherent immorality.
Pakistan’s former military chief, General Mirza Aslam Beig, said on Pashto Radio on Monday, June 15, that undisputed intelligence proves the U.S. interfered in the Iranian election. “The documents prove that the CIA spent 400 million dollars inside Iran to prop up a colorful but hollow revolution following the election.”
The success of the U.S. government in financing color revolutions in former Soviet Georgia and Ukraine and in other parts of the former Soviet empire have been widely reported and discussed, with the U.S. media treating it as an indication of U.S. omnipotence and natural right and some foreign media as a sign of U.S. interference in the internal affairs of other countries. It is certainly within the realm of possibility that Mir Hossein Moussavi is a bought and paid for operative of the U.S. government.
We know for a fact that the U.S. government has psychological warfare operations that target both Americans and foreigners through the U.S. and foreign media. Many articles have been published on this subject.
Think about the Iranian election from a common sense standpoint. Neither myself nor the vast majority of readers are Iranian experts. But from a common sense standpoint, if your country was under constant threat of attack, even nuclear attack, from two countries with much more powerful military establishments, as is Iran from the U.S. and Israel, would you desert your country’s best defender and elect the preferred candidate of the U.S. and Israel?
Do you believe that the Iranian people would have voted to become an American puppet state?
Iran is an ancient and sophisticated society. Much of the intellectual class is secularized. A significant, but small, percentage of the youth has fallen in thrall to Western devotion to personal pleasure, and to self-absorption. These people are easily organized with American money to give their government and Islamic constraints on personal behavior the bird.
The U.S. government is taking advantage of these westernized Iranians to create a basis for discrediting the Iranian election and the Iranian government.
On June 14, the McClatchy Washington Bureau, which sometimes attempts to report the real news, acquiesced to Washington’s psychological warfare and declared: “Iran election result makes Obama’s outreach efforts harder.” What we see here is the raising of the ugly head of the excuse for “diplomatic failure,” leaving only a military solution.
As a person who has seen it all from inside the U.S. government, I believe that the purpose of the U.S. government’s manipulation of the American and puppet government media is to discredit the Iranian government by portraying the Iranian government as an oppressor of the Iranian people and a frustrater of the Iranian people’s will. This is how the U.S. government is setting up Iran for military attack.
With the help of Moussavi, the U.S. government is creating another “oppressed people,” like Iraqis under Saddam Hussein, who require American lives and money to liberate. Has Moussavi, the American candidate in the Iranian election who was roundly trounced, been chosen by Washington to become the American puppet ruler of Iran?
The great macho superpower is eager to restore its hegemony over the Iranian people, thus settling the score with the ayatollahs who overthrew American rule of Iran in 1978.
That is the script. You are watching it every minute on U.S. television.
There is no end of “experts” to support the script. For one example among hundreds, we have Gary Sick, who formerly served on the National Security Council and currently teaches at Columbia University:
“If they’d been a little more modest and said Ahmadinejad had won by 51 percent,” Sick said, Iranians might have been dubious but more accepting. But the government’s assertion that Ahmadinejad won with 62.6 percent of the vote, “is not credible.”
“I think,” continued Sick, “it does mark a real transition point in the Iranian Revolution, from a position of claiming to have its legitimacy based on the support of the population, to a position that has increasingly relied on repression. The voice of the people is ignored.”
The only hard information available is the poll referenced above. The poll found that Ahmadinejad was the favored candidate by a margin of two to one.
But as in everything else having to do with American hegemony over other peoples, facts and truth play no part. Lies and propaganda rule.
Consumed by its passion for hegemony, America is driven prevail over others, morality and justice be damned. This world-threatening script will play until America bankrupts itself and has so alienated the rest of the world that it is isolated and universally despised.
Paul Craig Roberts
Counterpunch
White House: US not meddling in Iran’s affair June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Ahmadinejad, CIA, Iran, MoUSAvi, USA.add a comment

The US has dismissed the remarks made by Iran that the White House is interfering in the country’s internal affairs by commenting on the election dispute.
US President Barack Obama’s Spokesman Robert Gibbs said on Wednesday that the president discussed universal principles such as the right to peacefully demonstrate and stressed that they should be observed in Iran.
“The President will continue to express those concerns and ensure that we are not meddling,” he said.
Earlier, Iran summoned the Swiss envoy to Tehran, who represents US interests, to protest against “interfering remarks” by US officials on last week’s presidential election, Iran’s state-run television reported.
Obama said on Tuesday that he had concerns about the conduct of last week’s election and the subsequent violence, but said that US “meddling” in Iran’s affairs could be counterproductive.
SG/SME/RE
Over 250 saboteurs arrested across Iran June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Ahmadinejad, CIA, Iran, MoUSAvi, USA.add a comment

Iranian authorities report that dozens of saboteurs have been arrested in the recent post-election violence that erupted in some cities across the country.
“Some of the arrested individuals — elements of vandalism in recent days in Isfahan Province — created chaos in the public rallies by destroying public properties and setting them on fire,” Isfahan Province Prosecutor Mohammad Reza Habibi told ISNA News Agency on Wednesday.
Habibi said that some 200 rioters have been arrested in the city in recent days, stressing that some of them were linked to foreign media.
He said that many of these individuals were released on bail but added that others charged with hefty crimes were still in custody. Youngsters, who accounted for a considerable number of the arrested, were also returned to their families.
Isfahan’s prosecutor also reported that the recent unrest has so far resulted in the injury of 30 to 40 individuals including police officers, Bassij forces and some of the supporters attending the rallies; no deaths, however, has been reported.
Regarding the recent chaos in Isfahan University of Technology on Saturday night, following the announcement of the election results, Habibi noted that police would not interfere in the case unless they receive a demand from the university authorities.
Meanwhile, Jaber Baneshi, the head of the supreme court of the Islamic Revolution in Shiraz, told Mehr News Agency that the students who were arrested there in connection with the post-election unrest have been released.
Baneshi added that no one had died in the recent rallies in Fars Province; however, there are reports of injuries.
Amir Ullah Shamqadri, the deputy head of the law-enforcement and security in Khorasan Razavi Province, told ISNA that some 53 rioters were arrested on Monday rallies, bringing the total number of the arrests in the province to 88.
He urged political parties to speak out their discontent through legal means, stressing they had not received many demands for rallies in Mashhad in the recent days.
Similar to many authorities, Shamqadri warned the supporters of defeated candidates to distance themselves from anti-Revolution forces, enemy agents and those who disrupt public order.
“The epic and unprecedented participation of Iranians in the election has frightened the enemies of the country, making them plot against Islamic regime through developing dissension between the unified Iranians,” warned Shamqadri.
The Leader of the Islamic Revolution had warned on Tuesday about certain groups — who are against the unity of the Iranian nation and the solidarity of the Islamic system — saying that vandalizing public property is not an act committed by presidential candidates or their supporters.
In a meeting with representatives from the four candidates in Iran’s presidential election and officials from the Guardian Council and the Interior Ministry, Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei called on all political figures to take a clear position against the post-election violence and urged the Iranian nation to withstand those committing crimes in the streets.
PKH/MMN
IRGC hunts for post-election cyber saboteurs June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Ahmadinejad, CIA, Iran, MoUSAvi, USA.add a comment

With post-election street protests turning violent, Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) steps up efforts to hunt down political web activists behind the unrest.
In a statement released on Wednesday, the IRGC warned that it would identify and arrest those who use the internet as a platform to create mayhem in the country.
“Over the past few days, cyber saboteurs have intensified civil unrest through a number of provocative news sites and weblogs,” read the statement.
“They encourage people to take to the streets and cause mayhem by casting doubt on the democratic process of the Iranian elections,” the statement added.
The IRGC said it has proof that the web-based campaign against the Iranian election results is in fact masterminded by ‘intelligence organizations in the US and Canada’.
The June 12 presidential election, which saw incumbent Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad re-elected for a second term in office, has caused mass protests across in the past three days.
The rallies, which often lead to disorderly conduct, have grabbed the headlines of foreign media outlets.
IRGC warned that foreign media outlets play an important role in the unprecedented post-election chaos.
SBB/MMN
‘Main agents’ behind Tehran unrest arrested June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Ahmadinejad, CIA, Iran, MoUSAvi, USA.add a comment

Iran’s Intelligence Ministry says that it has arrested a number of ‘main agents’, who masterminded the recent post-election violence in Tehran.
“The Intelligence Ministry has identified and arrested a number of the main agents and elements behind acts of vandalism in recent days in Tehran,” said Intelligence Minister Gholam-Hossein Mohseni Eje’i.
He added that the Intelligence Ministry has a responsibility to arrest and prosecute members of ’some groups which enter public rallies and attempt to cause unrest and chaos’.
Earlier Wednesday, the Intelligence Ministry provided the country’s parliament with a report of the recent unrest, which has so far resulted in the death of eight people.
In Tehran, Anti-riot police have clashed with supporters of defeated presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who reject the election as fraudulent. The clashes spread to the Tehran University dormitory on Sunday.
Iran’s parliament Speaker Ali Larijani has blamed the Interior Ministry for the raid on the dorm and attacks on civilians.
On Wednesday, Iran’s Interior Minister, Sadeq Mahsouli, ordered an investigation into the attacks.
AKM/MMN
Pakistan general: US interfering in Iran affairs June 17, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in CIA, Iran, USA.2 comments

Former Pakistani Army General Mirza Aslam Beig claims the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has distributed 400 million dollars inside Iran to evoke a revolution.
In a phone interview with the Pashto Radio on Monday, General Beig said that there is undisputed intelligence proving the US interference in Iran.
“The documents prove that the CIA spent 400 million dollars inside Iran to prop up a colorful-hollow revolution following the election,” he added.
Pakistan’s former army chief of joint staff went on to say that the US wanted to disturb the situation in Iran and bring to power a pro-US government.
He congratulated President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on his re-election for the second term in office, noting that Pakistan relationship with Iran has improved during his 4-year presidency.
“Ahmadinejad’s re-election is a decisive point in regional policy and if Pakistan and Afghanistan unite with Iran, the US has to leave the area, especially the occupied Afghanistan,” Beig added.
RZS/MD
Ahmadinejad close to a landslide victory June 13, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Election, Iran.add a comment

Partial results show that Iran’s incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is close to winning the elections in a landslide victory, gaining 65.96 percent of the votes.
According to Press TV’s correspondent at the Election Commission Headquarters, Amir Mehdi Kazemi, the latest statistics were announced by the Iranian electoral officials. The results are based on 68 percent of the votes that have been counted so far.
Former prime minister, Mir Hossein Mousavi, who had earlier claimed victory with 54 percent of the votes, has so far gained 31.19 percent of the votes that were counted up to 3:15 a.m. local time (24:45 GMT).
The latest results show that former IRGC Commander, Mohsen Rezaei, won 1.95 percent of the votes and two-time parliament (Majlis) speaker Mehdi Karroubi (1989-1992 and 2000-2004) grabbed 0.88 percent.
More than 32 million people cast their ballots in the presidential election that saw a massive turnout on Friday June 12.
AGENCIES
Iran wraps up tight election race June 12, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Election, Iran.add a comment

Polls have officially closed in Iran’s hotly contested elections, with supporters of both Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the current president, and Mir Hossein Mousavi, his main rival, saying they had enough votes to claim victory.
Officials several times extended the polling deadline on Friday due to the heavy turnout of voters in the Islamic Republic flocking to cast their ballots.
Sadegh Kharazi, one of Mousavi’s senior backers, said surveys made by reformers showed that Mousavi was getting about 58-60 per cent of the votes.
But Ali Asghar Zarei, Ahmadinejad’s representative on a polling supervisory body, said Ahmadinejad was ahead with about the same level of support, the semi-official Mehr News Agency reported.
In Washington, Barack Obama, the US president, said his administration was excited about the debate taking place in Iran as part of the elections.
“Whoever ends up winning, the fact there has been a robust debate hopefully will advance our ability to engage them in new ways,” he said.
Atomic dispute
A victory for Mousavi might improve the chances of engagement between Iran and the US and could also ease tensions with the West, which fears Iran is trying to build a atomic bomb as part of its nuclear programme.
Iran has said its nuclear ambitions are aimed at using nuclear material for purely civilian purposes.
Mousavi rejects Western demands that Iran halt uranium enrichment, but analysts say he would bring a different approach to Iran-US ties and talks on Tehran’s nuclear programme.
Observers doubt that a change of president will bring major alterations to Iran’s foreign policy or its alleged pursuit of a nuclear weapon as the country’s policies are largely controlled by unelected religious leaders.
Also running in the elections are Mahdi Karroubi, a reformist and former parliamentary speaker, and Mohsen Rezai, a former commander of the Revolutionary Guard, Iran’s elite military force.
But it is Mousavi who is though to be Ahmadinejad’s main opponent.
Long queues were seen at numerous voting centres and some people said they had waited more than two hours to cast their ballots.
Officials said they expected a turnout of about 70 per cent.
Observing the crowd at one polling station in Tehran, Sadegh Zibakalam, a professor of political science at Tehran University, said the official prediction looked likely to be too conservative.
AGENCIES
Iran fully prepared for 10th presidential polls June 11, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Election, Iran.add a comment

The Islamic Republic of Iran’s Election Headquarters in a statement announced that the nationwide campaign of the tenth presidential candidates is forbidden from 8:00 a.m on Thursday.
Meanwhile Iran’s Election Supervisory Committee has officially started its work from Wednesday.
The Constitutional Guardian Council’s Spokesman, Abbas-Ali Kadkhodaei said that the council’s supervisors along with elections executives will strictly supervise the elections process adding 3 to 7 supervisors will oversee the balloting at each polling station.
The Head of the Foreign Ministry’s office for Iranian residing abroad also said Iran’s embassies, agencies and consulates in other countries including Malaysia, India, Pakistan, Armenia, Italy, Britain, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan have made special arrangements for Iranian expatriates.
Meanwhile, Iran Telecommunication Company’s spokesman reported that the number of Short Message Services (SMSs) sent for the electoral campaigns have been increased by 35 percent, adding the figure on Wednesday reached 110 million SMSs which was a new record.
Voting will kick off at 8:00 local times on June 12th in Iran as well as 130 countries all over the world and is due to be closed at 18:00.
IRIB
March 14 group claims Lebanon win June 7, 2009
Posted by محمد الحسن in Lebanon.add a comment

The leader of Lebanon’s March 14 coalition has declared victory over Hezbollah’s coalition in the country’s closely-contested parliamentary elections.
“Congratulations to Lebanon, congratulations to democracy, congratulations to freedom,” Saad al-Hariri, the son of slain former prime minister, Rafiq al-Hariri, said in a televised address from Beirut early on Monday.
Unofficial results projected al-Hariri’s anti-Syrian coalition, which held the majority in the outgoing parliament, would win 70 seats in the new
128-seat assembly and the Hezbollah alliance 58 seats.
Al Jazeera’s James Bays, reporting from Beirut, said the results were not official but all the political parties seemed to be accepting them.
Hezbollah, while not making any official statement yet, had privately conceded defeat, our correspondent said.
Ziad Baroud, the interior minister, said he would begin announcing official results within a few hours, but already March 14 supporters were celebrating in the streets.
Saying “the only winner is democracy and Lebanon”, al-Hariri called on supporters of the rival camps to refrain from any provocation.
Security sources said one person was wounded by gunfire in the northern city of Tripoli and there were brawls between rival supporters elsewhere, but no reports of serious fighting.
Preliminary figures showed a turnout of more than 54 per cent, exceeding the 45 per cent total recorded in the 2005 election.
The figure is high for Lebanon, where hundreds of thousands of the 3.26 million eligible voters live abroad.
Long queues had formed outside polling stations during the day, with some people complaining that they had to wait for up to three hours to cast their ballots.
AGENCIES


