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The Ignorance of Thomas L. Friedman!
Will the N.Y.T. Apologize?
by Shirin Neshat of Sarbazan

letters@nytimes.com
FAX: (212) 556-3622.
Letters
to the Editor
The New York Times
229 West 43rd Street
New York, NY 10036
Dear Sir
(s):
I duly
noted Mr. Thomas L. Friedman's op-ed piece to the New York Times
dated December 23, 2005 and entitled, "A Shah With a Turban."
Mr. Friedman is quite correct in his various criticisms of the Presidency of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and the regime of the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI).
Unfortunately, he displays an insulting and shocking ignorance of Persian
history in equating the reign of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and the Pahlavi
Dynasty with the thuggery of Mr. Ahmadinejad and the theocratic Mullahs
behind the latter's dubious election this past June. This is the obvious
implication and intent behind his article's ill-chosen title.
Mr.
Friedman notes the repressive character of the IRI regime in Iran, and its
systematic eradication of human rights and political _expression there in
the shutdown of reformist news publications and the disqualification of
legitimate political candidates by the Council of Guardians and other
totalitarian elements of the theocratic regime in Tehran. What he does not
tell his readers is that he himself was a supporter of the anti-Shah student
protestors in Washington, D.C. in the 1978-79 time frame, promoting and
legitimizing the activities of the Islamic Student Association and Mr.
Ebrahim Yazdi. Are you now happy with what you and Jimmy Carter have
brought to the nation of Iran, the Middle East, and the entire world, Mr.
Friedman? Or is it time to begin singing from a different page while
disguising the ugly truths of the past with revisionist history?
Mr.
Friedman is a Jewish-American with very cordial relations with the
government of Israel and the American neo-conservatives allied with it.
Surely he knows that Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's government enjoyed
diplomatic relations with Israel that involved mutual trade relationships
and reciprocal travel arrangements between Tehran and Tel Aviv. More
importantly, the Shah was an avowed enemy of terrorist factions in the
region that were targeting Israel, and kept Iran out of the political
crossfire of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. How does this equate in any
sense of the word with the provocative anti-Semitic statements and stated
desire of Mr. Ahmadinejad to "wipe Israel off the map?" Or the
documentation recently provided by Toby Harnden, the Chief Foreign
Correspondent of the British Telegraph, that the IRI's newest excuse
for a President is recruiting legions of Iranian children to be employed as
suicide bombers against American and Israeli interests wherever possible?
And is Mr. Friedman aware of the historic and ideological linkage between
the Peacock Throne and the reign of Cyrus the Great of Achaemenid Persia
2,500 years ago? Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi was well aware of the role of
Cyrus in issuing a royal declaration allowing the Jews of the Babylonian
Diaspora to return to their homeland, a fact recorded in the Jewish Old
Testament. He was also proud of the Declaration of Universal Human Rights
issued by Cyrus on a cylinder now housed by the British Museum. This
lineage has nothing, I repeat nothing, to do with the simian government of
the IRI regime, or its Chief Baboon, Mr. Ahmadinejad, who was not
legitimately elected--but hand-picked by the Supreme Leader of the IRI, Mr.
Khamenei--and ratified by a transparently fraudulent electoral process.
And now,
people like Mr. Friedman are wringing their hands over the Russian-aided
Iranian nuclear program headed in the direction of a full-blown acquisition
of the nuclear fuel cycle and the enrichment of uranium. Does anyone
believe that the staunch anti-Communism and pro-American stance of the
Pahlavi Dynasty would have ever permitted this brand of Russian subversion
in Iran and the Middle East to happen?
The IRI
regime and its President have wrought much for the world to see: economic
stagnation; an 8 year Iran-Iraq War which cost over 2 million lives; the
repression of human rights generally and the rights of women specifically;
the implementation of a theocratically oriented, State-controlled
educational system; the systematic execution of minors in Iran; the routine
denial of legal due process of law for the accused; and the possible
introduction of a nuclear conflict in the Middle East before the end of
2006.
<>And all
courtesy of the Thomas Friedmans and Jimmy Carters of the planet, whose role
in pulling the rug out from under a true friend of the United States and the
West, has introduced this great tragedy into the history of the world, a
tragedy not yet fully unfolded in time.
Shirin Neshat
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