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Arash

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Jan 27, 2004, 12:55:16 AM1/27/04
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Washington Report on Middle East Affairs
December 2003


Special Report
Neocons Plot Regime Change in Iran

By Andrew I. Killgore

On May 23, 1972, President Richard Nixon and Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger dined in Tehran with Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi. They told the
ruler of Iran that he could buy all the American weapons he wanted, nuclear
arms excluded.

Under Kissinger's influence, America's long-standing policy to limit the
sale of arms was abandoned. The shah,anxious to play a bigger role in the
world, went on an arms-buying orgy that reached $25 billion by 1978, in 1978
dollars.

The years 1972 to 1978 were ones of halcyon alliance between Iran and Israel
as well. The Shah wanted arms (and was obliged by Kissinger), and the
Israelis wanted contracts and oil, which Iran secretly supplied to the
Jewish state in defiance of the Arab oil boycott. Having Iran's huge Muslim,
but non-Arab population as allies gave psychological reassurance to a small
Israel worried by heavily populated Arab neighbors. Mutual dislike between
Persians and Arabs, moreover, held out the hope that the Iran-Israel
alliance would endure.

The Shah, however, grossly overplayed his hand, and the alliance collapsed
in the Iranian political cataclysm of 1978-1979. Ever since, the Zionists
have worked feverishly to change Tehran's Islamist regime, especially as it
continues to give aid to south Lebanon's Hezbollah, which thwarts Israel's
continuing quest for the waters of the so-near-and-yet-so-far Litani River.

Here at home, all the neocon "usual suspects" have thrown themselves behind
Israel's effort to overthrow the Iranian regime now that a democratic Turkey
shows signs of disaffection with its U.S./Israeli alliance.

A few months ago, the late Shah's son, Reza Pahlavi, told an audience at the
National Press Club in Washington, DC that he was working for a democratic
regime in Iran, and that a plebiscite would be held on the monarchy. Now,
according to the Jewish weekly Forward, "administration hawks (read
Israel-leaning neocons), Jewish groups and Iranian supporters of Reza
Pahlavi" are pushing regime change in Tehran. Slippery neo-con Michael
Ledeen of the American Enterprise Institute, for example, argues that the
regime in Tehran is on the brink of collapse and all that's needed from the
outside is a push.

Ledeen's ubiquitous fellow traveler William Kristol, editor of the fervently
pro-Israel Weekly Standard, leads the charge for a more aggressive foreign
policy on Iran. In the May 12 issue of his Rupert Murdoch-funded
publication, Kristol wrote an editorial pushing for covert action and other
steps to trigger a revolution in Iran. Gary Sick, President Jimmy Carter's
Middle East man on the National Security Council and currently director of
the Middle East Institute at Columbia University, was quoted as saying,
"Some people at the Pentagon (where the neocon cabal is clustered) concluded
that the reformists are just mullahs with smiling faces and that regime
change is the only way. They think Iran is ripe for revolution, but I think
this is highly questionable!"

With $20 million, there could be a "free Iran." Ledeen would know how to use
the money.

Two sources quoted in Forward had "Iran expert" Michael Rubin working on
Iran at the Pentagon's "Office of Special Plans" (OSP)-which, with the help
of its counterpart in the Sharon government, got everything wrong on Iraq.
Rubin, previously, a researcher at the Washington Institute of Near East
Policy-a spin-off of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC)-
"vocally" advocated regime change in Iran. He did not respond to Forward's
request for comment.

The (OSP) is the creation of Undersecretary of Defense Douglas Feith, who
presided over the small pro-Israeli group which "planned" the shambles that
Iraq has become. Once Saddam Hussain was overthrown, the OSP reckoned,
American troops would be welcomed as liberators, Iraq's oil would pay for
the country's reconstruction, and Iraq would be shown to have had weapons of
mass destruction and to have cooperated with al-Qaeda. The fact that none of
this proved out has not stopped the totally discredited Israel-firsters from
beating the "attack Iran" drums.

Predictably, AIPAC, Israel's principal lobby in Washington, also joined the
fray. "We support efforts to encourage the people of Iran to cut the regime'
s ties to terrorism and its pursuit of nuclear weapons," AIPAC spokeswoman
Rebecca Dinar said piously. Morris Amitay, a former AIPAC director, said it
would only be "natural" for Jewish groups to want regime change in Iran.
Young Pahlavi was to meet with Iranian Jewish AIPACers, but, since "it could
be seen as inappropriate" the meeting was scuttled.

Ledeen, "involved" but never charged in the Iran-Contra scandal, has joined
Amitay, former CIA director James Woolsey, the Reagan administration's Frank
Gaffney, former Senator Paul Simon and oil consultant Rob Sobhani in setting
up a group called Coalition for Democracy in Iran. CDI is its name and
regime change is its game. In April, Ledeen, speaking to a pro-monarchist
crowd in Los Angeles said that, with $20 million, there could be a "free
Iran." He would know how to use the money, he assured the crowd.

The Zionists (neocons today) have been working since 1994 to paint Iran as a
terrorist nation whose military ambitions threaten American interests. They
persuaded President Bill Clinton to support the AIPAC-written Iran-Libya
Sanctions Act (ILSA), which launched U.S. economic warfare against Iran ($20
million invested in Iran's oil or gas industry triggered-or was supposed to
trigger-sanctions against the violator).

Who's Got the Weapons?

The neocons based their campaign against Iran on the claim that it was about
to develop nuclear weapons. In October, however, Tehran agreed to full
inspection by the International Atomic Energy Agency. That should prove that
the neocons' specter of a "threatening Iran" has always been pure
propaganda-and should end, at least for now, the threat that the United
States will militarily attack Iran, a member of President Bush's "axis of
evil."

Perhaps the necons would like to turn their attention to Israel, which does
produce nuclear weapons, and refuses to allow international inspection of
its facilities.

Perhaps the rest of us should not hold our breaths.

http://www.wrmea.com/archives/December_2003/0312017.html


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