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Keep them behind the war curve.
While some Americans are exposing the deception for the latest war, steadily lay
the groundwork for the next one.
Focus plenty of news reports on alienated youth in Iran, spotlighting despair
that borders on nihilism. Meanwhile, give scant media attention to the growth
of civil society, with many thousands of Iranian young people and their elders
striving to create a diffuse yet coherent social movement for democracy and
human rights.
Make it easy for the U.S. public to forget -- or remain ignorant of -- key
elements in the United States history with Iran. Such as the U.S.-organized
1953 coup that overthrew the democratically elected Iranian prime minister,
democrat Muhammad Mussadiq, and installed a brutal shah who ruled for a quarter
century. Or the U.S. government's record of aiding the Saddam Hussein regime
in its eight-year war with Iran after Iraqi troops attacked Iran in 1980.
Count on most members of Congress, even those lambasting the White House over
the Downing Street Memo, to be silent or voice support while the Bush administration
proceeds with agenda-setting for a U.S. -- or U.S.-backed Israeli -- missile
attack on Iran. Along the way, make that country out to be a nuclear pariah
while it adheres to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (which the nuclear-armed Israeli
government still refuses to sign).
Incrementally poison the potential for a lessening of tensions between Washington
and Tehran.
With implicit threats of military action against Iran, heighten the obstacles
faced by Iranian democracy activists. Denigrate the presidential election in
Iran, even though -- or maybe because -- the flawed election has been a valuable
tool utilized by an emerging democracy movement to widen public discourse and
deepen the country's political process. Strengthen the hand of Iran's hardliners
while denouncing them. Undermine the democracy activists of Iran while claiming
to favor them. Make sure that Washington reduces the odds of democratic progress
by greatly pressurizing the situation, enabling Iranian advocates of repression
to plausibly claim that Iran is under threat of foreign intervention. Above
all, keep encouraging Americans to see Iran as a nation best understood with
Washington's policy-driven clichés, rather than a country with a complex
and authentic political process underway. The less that Americans really know
about Iran, the easier it will be to launch the missiles.