News and Document archive source
copyrighted material disclaimer at bottom of page

NewsMinewar-on-terroriranamerican-iran-posturing — Viewing Item


US halts overtures { July 23 2002 }

Original Source Link: (May no longer be active)
   http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47045-2002Jul22.html

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47045-2002Jul22.html

U.S. Halts Overtures To Iran's Khatami
Reformist Faction Viewed as Unable To Achieve Change

By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, July 23, 2002; Page A01



The Bush administration has abandoned hopes it can work with President Mohammad Khatami and his reformist allies in the Iranian government and is turning its attention to appealing directly to democracy supporters among the Iranian people, administration officials said.

The policy shift, which scuttles a five-year effort in which the United States tried to explore ways to work with Khatami and encourage a reform agenda in Iran, follows an intensive review within the administration over whether to adopt a harder line toward a government President Bush has labeled part of the "axis of evil."

A senior administration official said Bush has concluded with his senior foreign policy advisers that Khatami and his supporters in the government "are too weak, ineffective and not serious about delivering on their promises" to transform Iranian society. Instead, the official said, "we have made a conscious decision to associate with the aspirations of Iranian people. We will not play, if you like, the factional politics of reform versus hard-line."

Bush signaled the change publicly in a strongly worded presidential statement in which he praised large pro-democracy street demonstrations in Iran. The shift cheered foreign policy experts who had urged a tougher approach toward Tehran and was a setback for the State Department, which had spearheaded efforts to engage the Khatami leadership.

In the statement, Bush said that "uncompromising, destructive policies have persisted" in Iran despite recent presidential and parliamentary elections that have brought reform advocates to power. He accused Iranian leaders and their families of continuing "to obstruct reform while reaping unfair benefits" and demanded that the government listen to the Iranian people, who he said have "no better friend than the United States."

Bush approved the statement earlier this month after pro-democracy protesters and Iranian security forces clashed at the demonstrations, and a top Iranian cleric, Ayatollah Jalaleddin Taheri, resigned his post to denounce what he called the "incompetence of the authorities and the failure of the political structure."

Although virtually unnoticed in the United States when issued July 12, Bush's statement spawned fierce complaints from Iranian officials and resulted in government efforts to organize anti-U.S. demonstrations in Tehran last week, criticizing Bush for interfering in Iran's internal affairs.

The Bush administration broadcast its support to the Iranian demonstrators through the Voice of America, which carried reports on Bush's statement. Zalmay M. Khalilzad, a senior director at the National Security Council responsible for Iranian policy, gave a television interview in Farsi on Friday promoting the policy. The interview was beamed into Iran via VOA.

Khatami took office in 1997 and was reelected last year by a wide majority. He has been viewed as more open-minded to relations with the United States and to opening up Iran to democratic reforms than Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and his fellow clerics. The Clinton and Bush administrations, until now, had sought to probe whether Khatami would prove to be a fruitful alternative to the fundamentalists, while Europeans have been more eager to open direct trade and political links with the Khatami government.

Since Bush grouped Iran with Iraq and North Korea as members of the "axis of evil" in his State of the Union speech in January, there has been an intense debate within the administration over how hard to signal its support for the reform movement. With signs that the demonstrations were gathering momentum, the debate this month swung toward the approach urged by the National Security Council and Pentagon, taking the State Department by surprise, officials said.

A few days before Bush's statement was issued, State Department spokesman Richard Boucher shrugged off a suggestion that the United States would issue a comment on the student demonstrations. "The official U.S. line is, you know, we don't comment when people demonstrate," Boucher said.

"The White House kind of surprised a few people with their activity on this," a State Department official said.

"This statement is evidence that they've [the State Department] been losing that debate," said Michael Rubin, a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute who supports the administration's new emphasis. "Engagement sounds good in theory, but in the case of Iran, it does not work in practice."

But Martin Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel now at the Brookings Institution, said the new approach carried significant risks. "This may help those we are trying to harm and harm those we are trying to help," he said, because reformers may be tagged as agents of the United States.

"The same principle applies to Iran as the Palestinians," Indyk said. "We should be careful about leaving the impression that we intend to determine who the leadership will be."

Relations with the United States have been a key issue in Iran since the shah was overthrown in 1979. Earlier this year, Khamenei declared that talks with "the Great Satan" amounted to treason, and the Iranian justice ministry announced it would try journalists who promoted dialogue with the United States.

Both Khamenei and Khatami have denounced Bush's statement. "Different factions, although they have disputes, told the Americans to mind their own business and told them not to interfere in Iran's internal affairs," Khamenei told worshipers who chanted "Death to America" last week. "Khatami took a position against Bush and slapped him in the mouth," Khamenei said approvingly.

The fact that Bush issued the statement in his own name made a deep impression in Iran. "Usually, the White House or the State Department issue statements or express views on various incidents in other countries," said Hasan Rowhani, secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council. "This time around, the American president himself issued a statement, and this showed the importance of the decision."

Rowhani dismissed Bush's statement as "insulting and impudent, as well as devious. . . . It was also extremely ridiculous and simplistic."

Some administration officials believe the reaction inside Iran to the statement is evidence it is having its desired effect. "It has increased tensions within the regime," an official said, citing a dispute over the weekend between the Republican Guards and reformers over whether the democracy advocates were "pawns" in a U.S. plan to invade Iran.

But another administration official said the jury is still out. "There is a view that the country is ripe for a change, that you can give it a flick and it is transformed," he said. "We need to wait and sort this out. There is a question about whether opinion leaders in Iran will consider this as gross meddling or whether they will see it as well-timed."



© 2002 The Washington Post Company


US-iran-war-hype-2007
Ahmadinejad predicts collapse of israel US UK
British troops taken by iran [jpg]
Bush allows force against iranian agents in iraq { January 26 2007 }
Bush on warpath over un shock report abomb
Cfr told of US plans to strike iran { April 11 2006 }
Condoleezza abrupt brush off hardlines iran { May 9 2006 }
Congress funding iran dissidents to overthrow government
Considers regime change
Democrats warn bush on iran attack { December 2007 }
Hersh says no attack on iran without public support { October 2 2007 }
Hillary changes iran rhetoric again { September 2007 }
Hillary votes for iran measure in senate { September 2007 }
Iran accuses US of fabricated navy incident { January 9 2008 }
Iran blasts us backing protests { June 15 2003 }
Iran criticizes US led nuke exercise
Iran dampens the hopes of betters relations { January 1 2004 }
Iran dismisses US sanctions { October 26 2007 }
Iran drops dollar from oil deals { December 8 2007 }
Iran ends voluntary IAEA cooperation after UN referral
Iran held US soldiers
Iran labels cia terrorist organization { August 2007 }
Iran leader says US threats are psychological warfare
Iran no longer trades oil in dollars { March 2008 }
Iran protests US interference { June 16 2003 }
Iran seizes 3 british vessels 8 crewmen { June 22 2004 }
Iran threatens dollar with euro switch { May 5 2006 }
Iran threatens harm and pain to US { March 9 2006 }
Iran to start military drills after western drills
Iraq wmd intelligence haunts iran intelligence { February 12 2007 }
Millions in US money helps iran consolidate power { March 14 2006 }
Neo cons broadcast opposition radio into iran { December 5 2003 }
Oil prices up on iran attack rumors { May 2008 }
Paper reports bush to attack iran { May 20 2008 }
Pentagon eyes covert action
Pentagon says planning iran strike routine { September 2007 }
Pentagon secret teams in iran
Prankster may have caused iran naval incident { December 2008 }
Regime change in iran now in bushs sights
Rumored incident scares bond markets { December 2007 }
Rumsfeld charges alqaeda iran link { May 20 2003 }
Rumsfeld pushes regime change { May 29 2003 }
Russia and china moving to US stance on iran in UN { March 29 2006 }
Russia says raid on iranian office in iraq unacceptable
Second carrier group to gulf { December 2007 }
Seymour hersh spreads iran war rumours { March 2004 }
Tehran charges 3 americans with espionage { April 2007 }
UN gives iran one month to stop uranium enrichment
US accuses china russia of blocking sanctions
US arrests iranian consular staff in iraq { December 2007 }
US halts overtures { July 23 2002 }
US names iran chief terror { May 21 2002 }
US officials crafting iran bombing plan { September 11 2007 }
Us says iran harbors al qaeda associate { June 10 2003 }
War planners gaming iran war scenarios { December 13 2004 }

Files Listed: 54



Correction/submissions

CIA FOIA Archive

National Security
Archives
Support one-state solution for Israel and Palestine Tea Party bumper stickers JFK for Dummies, The Assassination made simple