The Iranian uprising and Trita Parsi’s disarray

Aug 26th, 2009

Hassan Daioleslam

The uprising in Iran has taken many by surprise. However, for Trita Parsi, it supersedes surprise and borders on total disarray.  He is the president of NIAC (National Iranian American Council). The governmental press in Tehran labeled NIAC the Iranian lobby in the US.1

To understand Mr. Parsi’s true state of mind, let’s revisit the post election days when millions of Iranians poured to the street braving bullets, batons, torture and rape. With millions shouting anti regime slogans, government’s ruthless repression and a fractured regime, the absolute majority of Iran experts concluded that this time around, the movement is irreversible and the regime’s future is uncertain.  As a result, they concluded that the Iranian regime can not and will not enter any serious engagement with the West over its nuclear program.  But, Trita Parsi, refusing to come in terms with the failure of his decade long pro-Iranian advocacy, found a genuine bizarre explanation. In an interview with Laura Rozen of “Cable” news website he declared2: “A possible motive for the alleged vote fix was to preserve a united hard line regime that could engage with the U.S., without the internal rifts that plagued Iran the last time it had a Reformist president split from the harder-line clerical establishment“.

How could someone possibly present this fractured regime as a united power? Parsi’s outlandish imagination did not stop here. He has also discovered that the uprising is approaching an early demise. In a peculiar article titled: “The end of the beginning” (making a mockery of the commonly used term “the beginning of the end” of mullah’s theocracy) he wrote:3

“Iran’s popular uprising, which began after the June 12 election, may be heading for a premature ending. In many ways, the Ahmadinejad government has succeeded in transforming what was a mass movement into dispersed pockets of unrest. Whatever is now left of this mass movement is now leaderless, unorganized — and under the risk of being hijacked by groups outside Iran in pursuit of their own political agendas.”

Several weeks have passed and the uprising has not died yet.  Moreover, it became clear that the regime is far from the “united power” that Parsi proclaimed. It was time for a 180-degree reversal; this time he discovered the risk of engagement with Iran. In an article titled “The case for a tactical pause with Iran” he explains the reason of his anguish: 4

“No one said diplomacy with Iran would be easy. And now, before it even started, the Iranian election crisis has left Tehran politically paralyzed and Washington without a clear diplomatic path ahead… Opening talks with Iran’s current government at this decisive moment could backfire severely. Indeed, now is the time for a tactical pause with Iran.

Iran currently is not in a position to negotiate. Some in Washington believe that the paralysis in Tehran has weakened Iran and made it more prone to compromise. But rather than delivering more, Iran’s government currently couldn’t deliver anything at all. The infighting has simply incapacitated Iranian decision makers.

The worst scenario is another one: where the parties begin talks according to the set timetable, but fail to reach an agreement due to an inability to deliver. If talks fail, U.S. policymakers will be left with increasingly unpalatable options as a result.”

What a reversal! For more than a decade, Parsi has led a campaign presenting the Iranian regime as the victim of a hostile US policy that refuses to have a civil dialogue with Tehran.  In 2006, he and a group of peace organizations and their affiliates claimed that the US has refused to engage in a dialogue with Iran for the past 26 years.5 According to Parsi, Israel is responsible for US-Iran impasse: “Israel is playing hardball to prevent Washington from cutting a deal with Tehran that could benefit America, but deprive Israel of its military and strategic supremacy.” 6

Now, a baffled Trita Parsi is telling that the US should not to go to the negotiation table because the Iranian regime is unable to deliver and this failure could lead the US to the “wrong” conclusion that engaging Iran is useless.

Could it be that the reason for Mr. Parsi’s peculiar and confused prophecies is the fear that the spirally downward fate of Khamenei’s regime is accelerated? Or probably the US would finally realize that engaging Iran has been merely a mirage, fabricated and made up by the pro-Tehran lobby?

Notes:

1.       Ghuds Daily, April 21, 2007 http://www.qudsdaily.com/archive/1386/html/2/1386-02-01/page61.html

2.       Laura Rozen Blog, June 26, 2009 http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2009/06/26/the_iran_chessboard_as_seen_by_team_obama

3.       Foreign Policy, June 26, 2009 http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/06/26/the_end_of_the_beginning

4.       Foreign Policy, July 39, 2009, Make them wait, Case for a tactical pause  http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/07/30/make_them_wait

5.       Statement signed by Parsi and several anti-war groups, 3.8.2007 http://www.downsizedc.org/blog/no_war_with_iran_coalition_570

6.       Parsi: “A challenge to Israel’s strategic primacy” at: http://www.bitterlemons-international.org/inside.php?id=468


Leave a comment »

  1. After reading this article, I agree more with Mr. Parsi than the author! In 2006, under the Bush administration and the ever present Israeli lobbyist in Washington, dialogue with Iran was better than WAR. Today, Mr. Obama is pausing. He is better sending Ramadan messages than engaging in a dialogue with them. And if this regime topples, who is the next leader? do we have one? I don’t think so. So let’s just set the grounds for democracy while we search and let’s keep US out of it so we can one day say we OWN it.
    What’s wrong with this?

    I always wonder, how do you reason with a Mullah? let alone your best friend is a rabbi :0)

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