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Inside Iran's Intimidation Campaign
Kian Tajbakhsh defends himself during the trial of dozens of opposition activists and protesters in Tehran's Revolutionary Court, Iran, Tuesday, Aug. 25, 2009. (ILNA, Houshang Hadi / AP Photo)
The Ahmadinejad regime just hit an Iranian-American scholar with a 15-year prison sentence. The Daily Beast’s Gary Sick on his role in the case—and why it’s proof of Tehran’s moral bankruptcy.
Last week, an Iranian-American colleague of mine, Kian Tajbaksh, was sentenced in Tehran to 15 years in prison. The indictment included the charges that (1) he was in contact with me; (2) that he was part of the Gulf/2000 network that I manage; and (3) that I am an agent of the CIA.
Normally, I simply ignore silly accusations such as this. They are nothing new. On one hand, it has been intimated that I must be under the influence of Iranian intelligence (by prominent neoconservatives who believe that my views on Iran’s political development and especially its nuclear program are not sufficiently alarmist). I have also been accused (by such worthies as Hossein Shariatmadari, the ultra-radical editor of Iran’s Kayhan newspaper, who is also a representative of the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei) of being a CIA agent. I regard these insinuations as badges of honor, since they merely confirm that I do not subscribe to the ideological extremes of either of these groups. I have always felt that my reputation could speak for itself and required no public defense.
The charges are false, deliberately false. They consist of a series of political fabrications devoid of even the flimsiest effort to verify the truth.
However, this time the accusations are really not about me but about a friend and colleague. Moreover, they are not just newspaper hyperbole by people who have an ax to grind and whose desire to make a political point exceeds their respect for the truth. These assertions are a matter of law—an official indictment by the judicial authorities of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
It is often said that it is impossible to prove a negative. How do I prove that I am NOT an agent of the CIA? How do I prove that the Gulf/2000 Internet project is NOT engaged in overthrowing governments? How do I prove that Kian—a friend and a colleague—was NOT trying to lead a “velvet revolution” against the Islamic Republic of Iran?
• Michael Adler: Iran’s Shell GameLet me simply reverse the questions. I spent 24 years in the U.S. Navy—my only connection with the U.S. government. The Navy sponsored my education at the University of Kansas. It took me to the Persian Gulf for my first exposure to the region that has become my professional specialization. It sponsored my graduate work for a Ph.D. degree at Columbia University. And it paid my salary while I was on the National Security Council staff at the time of the Iranian revolution and the hostage crisis. I never received a paycheck from any other agency of the U.S. government. Do the prosecutors in Iran have evidence to the contrary? If so, please let me know.
There are a number of commentators on Iran, such as Reuel Gerecht, Graham Fuller, and Bruce Riedel, who indeed worked for the CIA. Although their political views disagree sharply, they always identify themselves as former CIA employees. I do not identify myself that way for the very simple reason that I never worked for the CIA.
The prosecutors charge that Kian was in touch with me. Right. We were both academics in New York, and we saw each other from time to time. However, I have gone back over the past 20 years with that in mind, and I am struck by something quite different. Over that period of time, I have known every Iranian ambassador to the United Nations and many members of the staff of the Iranian U.N. mission. I have spent much more time with them than with Kian.









We will always have a problem with Iran and their desire to have nuclear power. Until Iran gets it,.
Our big mistake is always letting Israel have
nuclear power while raising hell about Iran having the same thing.
Israel is very aggressive, the whole world knows this, but the US just stands by and lets Israel do anything they want.
I am not a big fan of Iran... but if I was Iran I would be afraid of Israel. That is why they want nuclear power. Israel is like the US... they see all that money and oil in Iran and their mouths start to water. Who do you think is lobbying the US to attack Iran.... surprise, surprise. Israel!
And why can Israel have nuclear power and Iran cannot???
The world is watching Israel.
Right now the United Nations is holding investigations into war crimes committed in Palestine by the Israelies.
It will be interesting to find out at last what the Israelies are actually doing to the Palestinanians all these years. The blockades,
the bombing of food centers, these are just some of the things Israel is doing to people of Palestine.
Israel is always "accidently" killing poor Palestinanians just for trying to survive.
American newspapers hardly ever report anything that might be derogatory to the Zionists in Israel.
Actually, you can get more decent informtion on this whole mess if you live in Israel than if you read American newspapers. One thing the Jews cannot do is contain ther bragging.
Thank you.
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