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Ex-student hailed as Iran's hope

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  • Ex-student hailed as Iran's hope

    An Iranian student leader who was imprisoned and tortured before fleeing to the United States in May is to meet Vice-President Dick Cheney and deliver his message about the need for "regime change" in Teheran.

    Amir Abbas Fakhravar, 30, has become the poster child of some of the leading neo-conservatives in Washington and, less than two months after leaving Iran, the former medical student who spent five years in jail and still bears the scars on his youthful face, is being championed as the person who can unite his country's fractious opposition.

    He is adamantly opposed to nuclear negotiations with Teheran, which were offered by President George W. Bush in a policy U-turn last month after Condoleezza Rice, the Secretary of State, prevailed over Mr Cheney.

    "The world has to do something - whatever it takes - so that [President] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad does not become another Hitler," Mr Fakhravar told The Sunday Telegraph in his office at the Foundation for the Defence of Democracies in Washington.

    When asked whether military action would be desirable, he replied: "Whatever the world does against the Iranian regime, the Iranian people will be supportive."

    Mr Fakhravar's most prominent sponsor is Richard Perle, a former Reagan administration official who later served as chairman of the Pentagon's defence policy board.

    Mr Perle was among figures who once hailed Ahmed Chalabi, leader of the Iraqi National Congress, as the natural successor to Saddam Hussein. However, Mr Chalabi later fell out with the Bush administration amid allegations of links to Iranian intelligence.

    Mr Perle met Mr Fakhravar in Dubai in May after the latter had left Iran, fearing that he was about to be murdered. The Iranian, leader of the Confederation of Independent Iranian Students, was guest of honour at a recent American Enterprise Institute (AEI) lunch attended by key Pentagon and State Department officials.

    The AEI, a conservative think-tank, has helped to develop many of the foreign policy positions adopted by the administration and was a major voice calling for Saddam to be toppled.

    Michael Ledeen, an AEI scholar and Iran expert who co-hosted the lunch with Mr Perle, said of Mr Fakhravar: "He's a unifying figure. He's strong physically and psychologically. I think he's extraordinarily smart. He's one of the few Iranian opposition figures I've met who can think through the way Westerners look at Iran and help them understand."

    Others who are said to have been impressed by his credentials are Professor Bernard Lewis, the Middle East historian, and James Woolsey, a former CIA director.

    Prof Lewis, whose arguments helped to underpin the neo-conservative philosophy of spreading democracy, supporting Israel and projecting American power in the Middle East, is understood to have encouraged Mr Cheney to meet Mr Fakhravar. The former student walks with a slight limp, the result, he said, of being viciously kicked in the left knee by the judge who sentenced him to eight years in 2002 for criticising Iran's supreme leader in his novella This Place is Not a Ditch.



    Mr Fakhravar has ambitious plans to bring the larger Tahkim Vahdat student organisation, which favours reform rather than regime change, under his group's wing and also to find common cause with the broader opposition movement.

    But some Iran hardliners in Washington have distanced themselves from Mr Fakhravar. "This is no Ahmed Chalabi," said one. "I know that my well-intentioned friends are desperate to find a single figure to rally around but it's not the same as Iraq. It won't work."

    Mr Fakhrahar said ordinary Iranians had become increasingly pro-American and even pro-Israeli because of Mr Ahmadinejad's bloodthirsty rhetoric about both countries. "They are growing to like Israel now. It's natural to feel the opposite of what he says."

  • #2
    I am sorry to hear of the plight of Mr. Fakhrahar and I am opposed to the horrible treatment he received while in jail for his opinions on the government in iran, but I am a bit worried about the true intentions of him being supported by US politicians. He is not the first person, or first student for that matter to be jailed, yet he is being termed "poster child" for changing the regime in Tehran. The US uses people for its own needs, and here would be a good example. What did the US do for the likes of akbar ganji or zahra kazemi? nothing, it never got involved. What about when this same Amir Fakhrahar was in jail? I dont recall the US doing anything to get him out of jail, but i do see him here now so I'll contend that that must hold some weight and the weight is that they need someone iranian to push for a regime change, but its not because the US gives a damn about the welfare of iranian people, its just so the US can have more control in Iran and so that it can further its own needs. Its noteworthy that he agrees with the way westerners, in particular, the way US politicians supporting him think (against US budging to meet irans demands when it comes to nuclear weapons). I believe he is being used, and while he thinks he is working for the good of his people and to get the word out about iran and its opressive leaders, i dont think Mr. Fakhrahar realizes that he is being used as merely a puppet.

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    • #3
      So, let’s see if I have it correct; Amir Abbas Fakhravar (Siavash) is a “student” leader who has caused all sorts of devastation on the carcass of the failing regime in Iran and as such has been jailed a few times. Okay, I’ll buy that. This year, in the midst of serving his latest sentence (he received 8 years in November of 2002), he unexpectedly appears in Dubai, apparently after being on the run for 10 months and finally escaping the country in fear of an imminent assassination.

      Hmmm. Twenty four short hours after his arrival, he is greeted in UAE by Prince of Darkness, Richard “Ahmed Chalabi is the natural successor to Saddam Hussein” Perle himself. Amir Abbas is then whisked away to DC, where he suddenly has an office at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies (FDD) to “plead to US to ‘liberate’ Iran” and is the guest of honor at an American Enterprise Institute (AEI) luncheon.

      Alrighty then. His primary promoters and supporters so far are “Iran expert” Michael Ledeen, “Mid-East historian” and Neo-Con ideologue Bernard Lewis and finally James Woolsey, a former CIA director. Speculations persist that he is also scheduled to meet with Dick Cheney. Enough said? No? Here’s more:

      A peak at some of his recent observations:

      “The world has to do something - whatever it takes - so that [President] Mahmoud Ahmadinejad does not become another Hitler”. Also, ordinary Iranians had become increasingly pro-American and even pro-Israeli because of Mr. Ahmadinejad’s bloodthirsty rhetoric about both countries. “They are growing to like Israel now. It’s natural to feel the opposite of what he says.”

      “The regime wants to have a nuclear bomb so it can wipe out a country it doesn’t like ... We don’t understand why the rest of the world doesn’t understand this.”

      “It was Saturday [February 4] that the people here found out that Iran was going before the [U.N.] Security Council, and there was celebration all over Tehran. I heard from my own family, the families of my friends, that it was one of the busiest days of the year for the pastry shops -- that people were buying pastries and cookies and candies in the streets of Tehran and going to each other to celebrate.”

      “If you [supposedly U.S. -- added by writer] overthrow the regime, we will welcome you with open arms and open hearts.”

      “When I go to underground meetings of fellow students and friends of mine, I see that my statements, my books, all the things I and other dissidents have been saying are on the walls of their bedrooms.”

      “The people of Iran, especially the youth, are so admiring of Bush and his administration for siding with the people of Iran rather than the government of Iran. No other leader of any government, even the Europeans, took this stand. All the youngsters support him and love him, and we want to express our deepest gratitude for him and his administration and what they are doing to liberate us.”

      In Iran, Bush is regarded as a liberator, Fakhravar said. “People are afraid to express what is in their hearts, but in small, private gatherings, they see him as a saviour.”

      Perhaps he missed the last few years while serving in Qasr (not Evin) prison, or being on the run, or whatever else he was doing. Maybe he should start re-connecting to how the current administration is viewed in Iran by reading Azadeh Moaveni’s latest report from Tehran. Then again, he couldn’t have been that out of touch during those years. Even in prison he was apparently allowed to make contentious phone calls to Canadian journalist Jane Kokan, pose for artistic pictures in his prison uniform and even take a few days off to attend his university exams and go hiking with friends from the Netherlands.

      My advice to Perle and Ledeen? Keep looking. This one is a few truck loads of credibility short of convincing even the most recreational observers.

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      • #4
        Amir Abbas Fakhravar meeting President George Bush during a conference in Prague, June 2007. "Fakhravar is a writer, a journalist and a law student who has devoted his life to the fight for freedom and democracy in his native Iran..." >>> fakhravar.com


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        • #5
          che jaleb
          نه غزه نه لبنان جانم فدای ایران


          صادق هدايت؛ بوف کور

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          • #6








            نه غزه نه لبنان جانم فدای ایران


            صادق هدايت؛ بوف کور

            Comment

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