Son varios los
que aseguran que las manifestaciones recientes en Irán forman parte de una
estrategia de “Revolción de color” orquestada por el Imperio en aquél país. Así
lo cuenta el periodista Finian Cunningham para el sitio web Information
Clearing House:
Título: Iran
'Ground Zero' for US Regime Change
Texto: There seems little doubt that the surge in
New Year protests across Iran was, at least in part, following a regime-change
agenda set by the United States.
Public statements
issued by US President Donald Trump and his senior officials all made strident
calls in support of protesters while denigrating the Iranian government as a
"brutal oppressor." Arguably, that amounts to audacious incitement of
sedition in a foreign state, and such American misconduct should be legally
sanctioned.
What’s remarkable
too is just how close the recent turmoil in Iran seemed to follow a well-worn
US formula for regime change, including political statements of condemnation;
biased media coverage to undermine the legitimacy of the target government; and
the apparent hijacking of peaceful protests by violent provocateurs.
Such a formula
has been used by Washington and its allies in dozens of countries over the
decades, including more recently in Syria during the 2011 unrest that led to an
all-out war.
What is acutely
resonant is the historical background. Iran was probably the first nation to
have been subjected to American regime-change operations in the post-Second
World War period, with the CIA-led coup carried out in 1953.
But first, let’s
look at the flagrant attempts by the US to destabilize the Iranian government
through highly pejorative and misleading public statements.
Last week, the
American ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley even claimed that "the Iranian
people are crying out for freedom against their dictators." A senior
official in the US State Department also admitted that his government was
communicating via social media with demonstrators in Iran.
Washington’s top
diplomat, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, openly said in a media interview
this weekend that his government is seeking "political transition” in Iran
– or, in other words, regime change.
Also this
weekend, the US called an emergency meeting of the UN Security Council in an
attempt to censure the Iranian government for the dozens of deaths incurred
during the week-long protests. Haley declared: "The world is watching what
Iran does."
Iran, Russia, and
China have berated the US for violating Iranian sovereignty by interfering in
the country’s internal affairs. The brazen attempt by the US to fuel protests
in Iran is indeed a serious breach of the UN Charter forbidding interference in
any nation’s political matters. US regime-change policy is arguably criminal
conduct.
It remains to be
seen just how actively involved on the ground US agencies were in stoking the
recent protests in Iran. The initial demonstrations that first broke out on
December 28 in the city of Mashhad quickly spread to dozens of other urban
centers. Iranian authorities have blamed the US and other foreign enemies for
being behind the disturbances.
A legitimate part
of the rallies was motivated by genuine economic grievances among the
population. But at the same time, the rapid escalation of violence and armed
attacks on police stations suggest that a subversive plot was being
orchestrated.
The role of the
US news media, and to lesser extent European, in covering the Iranian unrest
was also indicative of a geopolitical agenda. The American media, in
particular, tended to portray the protests in a benign light as an uprising
against an autocratic regime.
Nikki Haley, the
US envoy to the UN, dismissed Iranian claims of foreign subversion. Haley’s
dismissal contradicts the public statements and admissions of the US president
and other senior officials.
However, Iran has
sound reason to suspect a pernicious agenda seeking to exploit social protests.
In 2013, some 60
years after the 1953 coup in Iran, the CIA was obliged to disclose classified
documents that prove the agency was behind that infamous event. The CIA worked
covertly with its British counterpart MI6 to carry out Operation Ajax to
overthrow the elected government of Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh.
Mosaddegh intended to nationalize Iran’s oil industry, thereby threatening
American and British interests.
The coup ushered
in the rule of the pro-Western Shah Pahlavi who opened up Iranian oil fields to
American and British companies. The CIA and US military were lynchpins in the
Shah’s regime and its brutal repression of Iranians until he was finally
overthrown in the Islamic Revolution of 1979. For this reason, Washington has
never forgiven the Iranian people and is why the US political establishment is
driven by regime-change obsession in Tehran.
What is telling
are the similarities between events then and now. The CIA-led coup in 1953
involved a propaganda campaign using news media outlets to undermine the
government. The New York Times labeled Mosaddegh a “dictator” and compared him
to “Hitler” and “Stalin”. Britain’s state broadcaster, the BBC, was also
involved in the campaign to undermine the Iranian authorities, as Mark Curtis
recounts in his book Web of Deceit.
Back in
Washington and London, the political leaders implemented an economic embargo on
Tehran and denounced it as a Soviet stooge.
When the coup got
underway, the CIA is now on record admitting that it paid thugs and
provocateurs to launch street violence in Tehran, which was blamed on the
authorities ostensibly showing a heavy-hand.
From the CIA and
MI6’s point of view, the coup was a stunning success. The regime change opened
up big oil interests. For the Iranian people, it meant years of vicious
repression under the Shah and his CIA-trained SAVAK secret police.
In 1953, the CIA
was only newly formed in the aftermath of the Second World War. What the Iran
coup marked was a fateful turning point for the agency, and the nature of
American governments ever since, with global repercussions. In its original
formation, the CIA was only intended to serve as an “intelligence gathering”
service to aid US presidents to formulate foreign policy.
What the coup in
Iran marked was the beginning of a "secret government" within the US;
one that was above the law and unaccountable. US presidents would come and go
in elections, but the "deep state" of the CIA would remain. It
assumed the powers to carry out regime change against any foreign government
regardless of international law. Subversion and political assassination would
become tools of this new US statecraft.
Once the CIA got
the habit of regime change in Iran it could not stop. Since 1953, the American
“secret government” has gone on to conduct dozens of such dirty operations
around the world with deadly and horrific consequences for masses of people.
While the recent
social protests in Iran have subsided, nevertheless there also seems to be
another, more sinister dimension to the Iranian disturbances – an illegal
agenda of regime change promoted by Washington.
Given that Iran
is "ground zero" for America’s historical worldwide practice of
regime change, the threat to national security from foreign interference is an
understandable concern.
Russia and China
have taken the correct position in warning the US to cease adding instability
in Iran. The Iranian people must be safeguarded from external meddling to
resolve their own internal problems. The laughable irony is that while American
politicians and media complain hysterically about others meddling in their country,
they have no qualms about brazenly poking into Iran.
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