Untitled Document
During the past week, Americans have been treated to the spectacle of America's
mainstream news media stumbling over itself while attempting to define the newly
elected President of Iran, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, for American readers and viewers.
To anyone still reeling from its impotent interrogation of (and robust support
for) the Bush administration's transparently spurious rationale for invading
Iraq, this week's media performance was both frightening and depressing.
It began normally and professionally enough, with articles by the New York
Times, Washington Post and Chicago Tribune (from the Los Angeles Times) on June
26, 2005, that described Ahmadinejad's background, his rapid rise to power and
his "hard-line" or "ultraconservative" views and policies.
Invariably, the reports got around to his expressed determination to exercise
Iran's rights to the nuclear fuel cycle under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty. (It's widely believed that successful completion of this cycle would
provide Iran with the option to build nuclear weapons.)
Although the Times published thoughtful and nuanced articles about Iran's new
president, it also published a nuanced article belied by its flagrant headline:
"U.S. Challenge in Iran: Victory by Hard-Liner Could Widen Rift on Terror
and Nuclear Program." "Terror" and "nuclear" are emotionally
laden words, but when it comes to American-Iranian relations, they are innocuous
when compared to any reference to the Americans taken hostage in 1979. Yet,
the very second paragraph of that otherwise balanced article advised readers
that America is now "facing a populist who came to age in the student union
that took over the American Embassy in 1979."
Given Middle East expert Kenneth Pollock's observation that "the hostage
crisis has left a terrible scar on the American psyche." [Pollock, The
Persian Puzzle, p. 172] it was not unreasonable to expect the Times to accompany
any reference to the hostage crisis with an explanation about why Iranians chose
the American Embassy in November 1979. Yet, it failed to do so.
But, the June 26, 2005, CBS Evening News' report on Ahmadinejad was far worse.
Not only did it serve up a script containing inflammatory half-truths about
the date and reasons behind U.S.-Iranian antagonism, it also provided viewers
with visual reminders of the hostage crisis. The inflammatory half-truths went
as follows: "America and Iran have been at odds since 1979, when Iranian
students, followers of Ayatollah Khomeini, seized 52 U.S. Embassy Staff and
held them captive for 449 days, before releasing them."
Like the Times' article, the CBS report also failed to explain why the American
embassy was seized. Thus, Americans were reminded about the embassy seizure
by two prominent news sources, but neither explained that the Iranians seized
the American Embassy, in part, because they suspected that President Carter
and the deposed Iranian dictator, Muhammad Reza Shah, were planning another
American-led coup.
Another coup? Yes, in 1953 the Eisenhower administration gave the CIA the green
light to topple the constitutional government of democratically elected Prime
Minister Muhammad Mussadiq and replace it with the dictatorial rule of Muhammad
Reza Shah. Thus, America and Iran have been at odds since 1953 (not 1979), when
America, not Iran, was the offending instigator.
Moreover, as Dilip Hiro recently has written, "The CIA-engineered overthrow
of Mussadiq's constitutional government…blocked the development of Iran
as a multi-party, democratic state." {Hiro, Iranian Labyrinth, p. 353].
Americans should keep Hiro's observation in mind whenever Bush administration
officials decry the absence of democracy in Iran.
Yet, as Pollock correctly concludes, the embassy seizure was more than a precautionary
move. "It was an act of vengeance for the 1953 coup, designed to humiliate
the United States, to cause pain to the American people, and to assuage the
angry psychological scars that the Iranian people still bore from that event."
[p.155]
Unfortunately, it was the very absence of such obligatory historical context
that permitted the news cycle on Ahmadinejad to deteriorate into farce.
Consider the July 1, 2005, front page of the New York Times. It juxtaposed
two photos, one recently taken of Ahmadinejad, the other of someone resembling
a younger Ahmadinejad—but who's seen escorting a hostage. The accompanying
headline reads: "U.S. Pursuing Reports That Link Iranian to Embassy Seizure
in '79."
That article prompted me to send the following "letter to the editor"
email to the Times:
To the Editor:
Even if Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took part in the embassy seizure in 1979, as some
former hostages contend, both the Bush administration and America's news media
have an obligation to explain precisely what provoked the event that Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini called "the second [Iranian] revolution, greater than
the first."
The first revolution in February 1979 was led by Khomeini and overthrew some
twenty-five years of dictatorial rule by Muhammad Reza Shah. But the Shah ruled
for twenty-five years because the Eisenhower administration gave the CIA the
green light to implement Operation Ajax in 1953, and thus engineer the coup
that toppled the constitutional government of democratically elected Prime Minister
Muhammad Mussadiq. Eisenhower moved because the British government, fearing
the nationalization of its Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, persuaded him that Mussadiq's
rule was leading to a Communist takeover. (Two birds of a feather, even then!)
In fact, because the 1953 coup and the 1979 Embassy seizure were so closely
connected in the minds of Iranians, Khomeini refused to release the hostages
until Ronald Reagan was sworn in as President—thus demonstrating Iran's
ability to topple an American leader (Jimmy Carter).
Thus, lest the embassy seizure be manipulated to magnify the threat to America
posed by Iran's nuclear program, both the Bush administration and America's
news media are obligated to give Americans the complete story.
Walter C. Uhler
Apparently the Times didn't find my letter "fit to print."
Unfortunately, that Times' article was representative of a brief, but widespread,
media feeding frenzy that sent U.S. Representatives rushing to support new sanctions
under The Iran Freedom Support Act.
Yet, in slightly more than 24 four hours, the farce had ended. No, the farce
didn't implode because some competent reporter told the full story behind the
taking of the hostages; it collapsed because authoritative doubts and denials
rendered a link between the two photos improbable.
Was it too much to ask that the mainstream media withhold these stories about
Ahmadinejad, until the allegations of former American hostages could be investigated?
Why the urgency? Did the out-of-context references to the embassy seizure, respectively
published and broadcast by the Times and the CBS Evening News on June 26, 2005,
cause the news cycle to degenerate into unverified claims that Ahmadinejad was
one of the hostage takers of 1979?
Regardless of how these questions are answered, the damage has been done. For,
just as the attacks on September 11 rendered many Americans susceptible to spurious
arguments for invading Iraq, so, too, has the media's irresponsible reporting
of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's involvement in the embassy seizure generated yet more
susceptibility to political manipulation by the Bush administration.
Although it's now Iran, it nevertheless appears to be "Déjà
vu all over again."