[THS] !!! Justin Raimondo: The Shahram Affair
The Harder Stuff in news and commentary
ths at psalience.org
Sat Jul 17 12:58:34 CEST 2010
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article25942.htm
The Shahram Affair
Kidnapped Iranian scientist exposes US government as a criminal enterprise
By Justin Raimondo
July 15, 2010 "Anti War" - - Confronted with the accusation that Iranian nuclear
scientist Shahram Amiri had been kidnapped by US and Saudi intelligence agencies
while on a trip to Mecca, and brought to the US for interrogation, State Department
spokesman P.J. Crowley averred: We are not in the habit of going around
kidnapping people.
To which the only proper response is: Oh, really?
Given the numerous instances of extraordinary rendition in which our government
has been engaged, and no doubt continues to be engaged, one wonders how Senor
Crowley can say that with a straight face. But then again, being an official spokesman
for the US Department of State no doubt requires some sort of facial surgery or,
perhaps, an industrial-strength shot of Botox to achieve the desired results.
Now that Shahram has shown up at the Iranian interests section of the Pakistani
Embassy in Washington, D.C., claiming to have been abducted by the US and Saudi
intelligence services, and tortured, Crowley may want to review his knowledge of US
habits.
In March, ABC News released an exclusive report hailing Shahrams defection as
a great US intelligence coup, the missing link in the puzzle piecing together a
picture of Irans alleged nuclear weapons program. Shahram is said to have worked
for the Iranian Revolutionary Guards, and news of his defection appeared
alongside reports of an Iranian secret nuclear facility on the outskirts of the city of
Qom.
As it was, the Iranians themselves revealed the existence of the Qom facility and
opened it up to inspection by the IAEA, but the matter of Shahrams disappearance
appeared to throw a shadow over their efforts at openness which was, of course,
the whole point.
Our spooks had a narrative ready made. We were to be told that the defector had
brought with him a laptop which contained all the secrets of Irans nukes, and this
was to be touted as yet more evidence as if this administration needed any Iran
was harboring nuclear ambitions in defiance of the international community.
According to the people briefed on the intelligence operation, ABC reported,
Amiris disappearance was part of a long-planned CIA operation to get him to
defect. The CIA reportedly approached the scientist in Iran through an intermediary
who made an offer of resettlement on behalf of the United States.
That, at least, was the official story, dutifully relayed to the world by ABC News:
Shahram, however, upended their neat little narrative, months later, with a YouTube
video that indispensable weapon of counter-propaganda in which he told us:
I was kidnapped last year (2009) in the holy city of Medina on 3 June in a joint
operation by the terror and abduction units of the American CIA and Saudi Arabias
Istikhbarat [intelligence agency].They took me to a house located somewhere that I
didnt know. They gave me an anesthetic injection. When I became conscious I was
in a big [voice interrupted] towards America.
During the eight months that I was kept in America, I was subject to the most
severe tortures and psychological pressures by the American intelligence investigation
groups.
And the main aim behind these investigation teams and the pressure imposed on
me was to make me take part in an interview conducted by an American media
source and claim that I was an important figure in Irans nuclear program and I had
sought asylum in America at my own will. And (to say) while seeking asylum I took
some very important documents and a laptop with classified information on Irans
military nuclear program in it to America from my country.
This was followed, hours later, by yet another video, in which someone claiming to be
Shahram and looking, admittedly, just like him said he wanted to clear up
rumors, denied having any political views or that he had betrayed his country, and
stated: I am in America and intend to continue my education here. I am free here
and I assure everyone that I am safe.
Gee, its a good thing the CIA has their own YouTube channel: now theres a solid
investment of the US taxpayers money. But Shahram wasnt done with them quite
yet.
On June 29, a third video cropped up, which was played by Iranian television, in
which the real Shahram cleared up the mystery:
I, Shahram Amiri, am a national of the Islamic Republic of Iran and a few minutes
ago I succeeded in escaping US security agents in Virginia. Presently, I am producing
this video in a safe place. I could be re-arrested at any time.
After appealing to Western human rights organizations to intervene on his behalf
fat chance! he continued:
The second video which was published on YouTube by the US government, where I
have said that I am free and want to continue my education here, is not true and is a
complete fabrication. If something happens and I do not return home alive, the US
government will be responsible.
All this time Washington had refused to acknowledge Shahrams presence in the US,
but when he showed up at the Pakistani embassy an official who refused to be
named told the media: He came to this country freely, he lived here freely, and he
has chosen freely to return to Iran.
Such evidence as we have indicates only the last of those three assertions bears any
resemblance to the facts. Aside from Shahrams testimony, and his presence at the
embassy, the high quality of the second video, and the relatively poor quality of the
first and third, is suggestive of an effort by US intelligence to cover up a badly
botched job.
Whats interesting about this story isnt only the scandal of a kidnapping carried out
by our spooks after all, we should be inured to that by now but the role the US
media was slated to play if Shahram had gone along for the ride. I wonder which
American media source was tasked with interviewing him. Could it be ABC News,
the outlet given the exclusive story of his alleged defection just before the Qom
story broke? Just guessing there, but amid all the controversy over media folk
partying with administration movers-and-shakers, this kind of beach party ought to
make us stop and think about the degree to which the media is functioning as an
arm of government.
Not that this is anything all that new. Back in the day, youll recall, it was a
Washington Post reporter, Dillard Stokes, who, in league with the FBI and the
Roosevelt administration, wrote a letter under an assumed name to the defendants in
the Great Sedition Trial of 1940, seeking antiwar literature which he proposed to
distribute to US soldiers: this was later used as evidence by the prosecution. During
the cold war era, the media was utilized by the FBI s red squad to plant stories
and spread disinformation, and theres no reason to believe this symbiosis has ended
with the coming of the Obama-ites to Washington: quite the opposite, Im sure. We
are also all too familiar with cooked intelligence, the smell of it having permeated
Washington (and the front page of the New York Times thanks, Judy!) in the run-
up to the invasion of Iraq.
The signal achievement of the Obama administration may have been to combine
these elements of deception, and add to them the crime of kidnapping.
Let no one berate us libertarians for describing the US government as a criminal
enterprise: it isnt disloyalty to the country, or even a penchant for overstatement,
that drives us to such rhetorical excesses. Its the story of what happened to
Shahram Amiri: its the lies, the thuggery and hubris of a ruling elite that believes it
can get away with anything. Such is their contempt for the American people and
the peoples of the world that they think well swallow any tall tale, no matter how
crudely fabricated, because were just not as smart as their cunning selves.
However, it looks like theyre not cunning enough by half, having blown the Shahram
operation and exposed their embarrassingly inept tradecraft. They can try to patch
up this gaping hole in US credibility by claiming Shahram left only to protect his
family from retaliation, but there are certain problems with this.
Since the family wasnt harmed in the year Shahram spent in captivity in the US, one
can reasonably infer they were never in any danger. Indeed, if they were in danger,
and the US let him return home because of it, then wouldnt revealing this alleged
threat plant suspicion in the minds of Iranian officials that perhaps he had turned
over valuable intelligence to the Americans and place Shahram and his family in
mortal danger?
In any case, I did warn you far in advance that wed soon be treated to a veritable
cornucopia of news stories detailing the nefarious plans of Iranian ayatollahs to
nuke Israel, and Brooklyn, too. The Obama-ites are under increasing pressure from
the Israel lobby to abandon the CIAs assessment that Iran ended a nascent nuclear
weapons program in 2003: Shahrams defection was supposed to have facilitated
this development. Instead, the whole scheme backfired, and, rather than making the
case for war with Iran, the Shahram affair has confirmed what some of us knew
already: that the US government is a criminal enterprise with no morals, no
credibility.
Justin Raimondo is the editorial director of Antiwar.com. He is the author of An
Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N. Rothbard (Prometheus Books, 2000),
Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative Movement (ISI,
2008), and Into the Bosnian Quagmire: The Case Against U.S. Intervention in the
Balkans (1996).
He is a contributing editor for The American Conservative, a senior fellow at the
Randolph Bourne Institute, and an adjunct scholar with the Ludwig von Mises
Institute. He writes frequently for Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture.
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