Bury Heads in Sand Over Iranian Uprising
By Struan
Stevenson
The
uprising has continued to roar across Iran, yet the Western media remain
strangely silent. Why are Donald Trump and U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo
the only ones who have mentioned the nationwide Iranian protests that have seen
thousands arrested and jailed and dozens shot down on the streets or murdered
in prison?
The
protests were triggered eight months ago by the collapsing economy, unpaid
wages and brutal repression by the fascist mullah regime. Soon they spread to
142 cities across Iran and have continued ever since. But now the demands of
the protesters have transformed. They are shouting for regime change with cries
of "death to the dictator" and "forget Syria and Lebanon, what
about us?" Violent clashes with the security forces have raged on for
days, with the mullahs now openly accusing Iran's main democratic opposition
movement, the People's Mojahedin of Iran (PMOI/MEK) of coordinating and fueling
the nationwide revolt.
Martyrs of the uprising |
The reintroduction of the first phase of sanctions by the Americans following
Trump's decision to withdraw from the nuclear deal forged by his predecessor
Barack Obama came into force on Monday, causing a plunge in the value of Iran's
currency, the rial. Those sanctions have been imposed on a wide range of items
such as foodstuffs, gold, steel, other metals and cars. In 90 days, a further
tranche of sanctions will hit oil and gas, as the United States tries to cut
Iranian oil exports to zero. Trump has set a list of 12 new demands, including
an end to Iran's aggressive meddling in Middle East conflict zones such as
Syria, Yemen, Iraq and Lebanon, and an end to its development of ballistic
missiles. Trump has even offered to meet Iran's President Hassan Rouhani to
discuss the sanctions issue, while at the same time backing the street protests
and their demand for regime change.
The
mullahs are now panicking. They are attempting to blackmail the EU into filling
the financial void created by the renewed U.S. sanctions, by threatening to
close the Strait of Hormuz, a pivotal lifeline for oil and gas from the Middle
East. They deployed warships into the Strait on Sunday in a show of strength.
The EU, as arch-appeasers, have frantically sought ways of keeping the nuclear
deal alive, concerned more with lucrative commercial deals with the medieval
Iranian regime, rather than human rights.
Germany's
Chambers of Industry and Commerce have even scheduled a seminar in Bonn on
Sept. 5, to show German businesses how to circumvent the U.S. sanctions and
continue to do business in Iran. But such initiatives are falling on deaf ears.
European companies have quickly realized that they would lose $1,000 in
American business for every $1 they earn in contracts with the Iran. With their
finances drained by venal corruption and by the cost of funding proxy wars in
Syria, Yemen, Libya and Iraq, the mullahs know that their medieval theocracy is
nearing its inevitable end.
Politico's
Brussels Playbook, the daily political newsletter, on Monday said: "The
big question though is why official Europe is still so infatuated with Iran.
After all, just last month, a plot by Iranian operatives to bomb a convention
of exiled Iranians near Paris was foiled at the last minute. Iran, as Mark
Dubowitz, CEO of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank, recently
pointed out to Germany's Tagesspiegel, "supports globally active terror
organizations, violates the human rights of its own people, supports the terror
of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, the Houthis in Yemen, Hezbollah in the entire
Middle East, Europe, Africa as well as North and South America, not to mention
Hamas in Gaza. It is seeking nuclear weapons and the rockets to deliver them.
It is fueling wars in the Middle East that create millions of refugees who
travel to Germany and other European countries."
Politico
concluded, "But maybe those are just niggling details in the face of all
that business opportunity ..."
The
Western liberal press are perplexed. They loathe Trump and heaped praise on
Obama's policy of appeasement to the Iranian mullahs. They regularly portray
Rouhani as a moderate, although he has personally approved more than 3,500
executions since he came to power and has authorized the vicious crackdown on
the ongoing nationwide protests. The press cannot understand why Iran's 80
million citizens are rising in protest against a regime that Europe does
business with. They remain blind to the venal corruption and savage abuse of
human rights that takes place in that country on a daily basis. Their policy,
therefore, is to behave like ostriches with their heads buried in the sand,
ignoring the Iranian uprising. But the Western media should remember, if you
keep your head buried in the sand, all people can see is an ass.
Struan
Stevenson is coordinator of the Campaign for Iran Change. He served as a member
of the European Parliament representing Scotland (1999-2014), president of the
Parliament's Delegation for Relations with Iraq (2009-14) and chairman of
Friends of a Free Iran Intergroup (2004-14). He is an international lecturer on
the Middle East and is also president of the European Iraqi Freedom
Association.
Source: UPI
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