“As
long President Bush stands with the Iranian people, the
Iranian people
will stand with him.” By Slater
Bakhtavar
The BBC world service website recently
released the results of their 2004
presidential poll. Of the sixteen linguistic ethnical groups
surveyed,
Persians were overwhelmingly the most supportive of President
Bush. In
fact, over fifty two percent of Iranians preferred Republican
George W. Bush
to challenger John Kerry who’d received a minuscule
forty two percent of the
vote. Thus, surprisingly, unlike in the United States where
the
presidential race was relegated to a couple of percentage
points, in Iran -
President Bush won by a landslide.
Numerous other sources of plausible
acclaim have confirmed these results.
Renowned intellectuals, as well as award-winning journalists
have written
pieces on this critical issue. For instance, Pulitzer Prize
winner Nicholas
Kristof of the New York Times who spent an entire week
in the country
recently wrote, “Finally, I’ve found a pro-American
country. Everywhere
I’ve gone in Iran, with one exception, people have
been exceptionally
friendly and fulsome in their praise for the United States,
and often for
President George W. Bush as well.” Thomas Friedman
another Pulitzer Prize
winner and ardent critic of the war in Iraq wrote “young
Iranians are loving
anything their government hates, such as Mr. Bush, and
hating anything their
government loves. Iran . . . is the ultimate red state.”
The well-documented emphatically pro-Bush
leaning in Iran, which is
relatively widespread, has perplexed many western technocrats.
Part of the
answer may be that Iran is changing at such a rapid rate
that the media has
had a difficult time reporting and/or understanding the
situation inside the
country. Also, Friedman may be right that “young
Iranians are loving
anything their government hates, such as Mr. Bush and hating
anything their
government loves”, but there are even deeper social
as well as geopolitical
reasons such as the availability of satellite dishes and
the internet.
Millions of Iranian homes receive illegal
satellite television beamed in by
Iranian-American expatriates in California. With a mix
of pop music,
political discussion and international news these stations
have had a
profound impact on the cultural, and political situation
inside of Iran. The
Iranian dictatorship has repeatedly tried to crackdown
on these dishes as
well as the Internet, but they’ve been largely unsuccessful.
Presently, it
is estimated that between five to seven million homes receive
satellite
television and an estimated three million have Internet
access. Hence, to
the dissatisfaction of the reigning ayatollahs Iranians
do not live in a
closed off cave.
Due to the availability of satellite
television, millions of Iranians were
able to hear President Bush’s State of the Union
speech. The Persians were
once again encouraged by the President’s vision when
he said “To the Iranian
people, I say tonight: As you stand for your own liberty,
America Stands
with you.” thereby reiterating his support to the
Iranian freedom fighters
inside of the Islamic Republic. Several political analysts
have confirmed
that this was in direct reference to the pro-democracy
movement in Iran.“ The President was sending a message
to the people of Iran that if they rise
up America will stand by their side,” said political
analyst Charles
Krauthammer.
Of course, President
Bush’s
declaration of support to the Iranian youth does
not mean military intervention for the purpose of regime
change. According
to a recent poll by the National Iranian American Council
a non-profit civic
organization in the United States over ninety percent of
Iranian-Americans
are against any type of military attack on Iran. In fact,
although Iranians
are openly pro-American any type of military attack by
the United States
and/or Israel will turn the nationalist population in Iran
immediately
anti-American.
The political ideology
advocated by the Republican Party for a free,
democratic Iran is one of a peaceful transition to democracy.
For example,
Republican Senator Rick Santorum recently introduced the
Iran Freedom and
Support Act, legislation that commits America to “actively
support a
national referendum in Iran with oversight by international
observers and
monitors to certify the integrity and fairness of the referendum.” The
act
further calls for financial and moral support to pro-democracy
groups as a
means towards a peaceful transition to regime change. There
is no mention of
military intervention, nor has there ever been any such
mention.
Many questionable organizations have
promoted a theory originally initiated
by Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani dubbed the ‘Nationalistic
Tactic.’ This theory rallies
nationalistic feelings around a fictional military
invasion of Iran as a final survival tool for the dying
regime in Iran. The
strategy calls for the suffocation of the free exchange
of ideas within the
Iranian community and for the luring of naïve apolitical
Iranians with
nationalistic pride. In the end, the theory calls for barraging
the truth
to such a degree that anyone speaking otherwise is regarded
as an enemy of
Iran. Unfortunately these groups are far from doing a service
to the people
of Iran and should not be regarded as friends of freedom.
Luckily, in spite
of their propaganda campaign polls from within Iran show
that people of Iran
have not been fooled.
As evidenced by a Tehran University
student who said, “The
Iranian people
support President Bush because he supports our cause. As
long President Bush
stands with the Iranian people, the Iranian people will
stand with him.”
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