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Iran–United States relations

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U.S.-Iran relations
Map indicating locations of USA and Iran

United States

Iran

Iran (Persia) and the United States have had political relations ever since the Shah of Persia, Nassereddin Shah Qajar, officially dispatched Persia's first ambassador to Washington D.C. in the late 1800s. However, after a series of conflicts and incidents between the two nations, there has been tension in their relationship.

Early relations

Even before political relations, Americans had been traveling to Iran since the early to mid 1800s. Justin Perkins and Asahel Grant were the first missionaries to be dispatched to Persia in 1834 via the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. Urmia University's College of Medicine, for example, was founded by a member group of American physicians in the 1870s. Samuel Benjamin however was the first official diplomatic Minister appointed by the United States to Iran in 1883.

Up until WW2, relations between Iran and the United States remained cordial, and as a result many constitutionalist Iranians came to view the U.S. as a "third force" in their struggle to break free of the humiliating British and Russian meddling and dominance in Persian affairs. In lieu of this trust, Iran's government appointed Americans as "Treasury General of Persia" three times. The posts were held by: Arthur Millspaugh, Morgan Shuster, and Elgin Groseclose.

During the Persian Constitutional Revolution, Howard Baskerville died in Tabriz when trying to help the constitutionalists, and after Morgan Shuster was appointed Treasury General of Persia, an American was killed in Tehran by henchmen thought to be affiliated with the Russian and British influence. In fact, Iran's parliament in Tehran was bombed by General Liakhoff of Imperial Russia, and the American Morgan Shuster had to resign under tremendous British and Russian pressure put on the Shah. Shuster's book "The Strangling of Persia" is a recount of the details of these events, a harsh criticism of Britain and Imperial Russia.

It was the American embassy that first relayed to the Iran desk at the Foreign Office in London, confirmation of the popular view that the British were involved in the 1921 coup that brough Reza Pahlavi to power. [1] A British Embassy report from 1932 concedes that the British put Reza Shah "on the throne". The United States was not an ally of Britain at that point in time in Persia. For sources on the British involvement see [2]

Morgan Shuster was soon followed by Arthur Millspaugh, appointed as Treasury General by Reza Shah Pahlavi, and Arthur Pope, who was a main driving force behind the Persian Empire revivalist policies of Reza Shah. But the friendly relations between the United States and Iran was in for a change as the 1950s arrived.

The 1950s and the politics of oil, a turning point

From 1952-53, Iran's democractically elected nationalist Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadeq began a period of rapid power consolidation, which led to the brief exile and then placement into power of Iran's constitutional monarch, the Shah, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Much of the events of 1952 were started by Mossadeq’s nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company, now British Petroleum. Established by the British in the early 20th century, an agreement had been made to share profits, but the company hid their financial records from the Iranian government. Due to alleged profit monopolization by the Anglo-Iranian Oil company, the Iranian Parliament had unanimously agreed to nationalize its holding of, what was at the time, the British Empire’s largest company.

The United States and Britain, through a now-admitted covert operation of the CIA called Operation Ajax, helped organize protests to overthrow Moussadeq and return the Shah to Iran. After his return from brief exile, Iran's fledgling attempts at democracy quickly descended into dictatorship as the Shah dismantled the constitutional limitations on his office and began to rule as an absolute monarch.

During his reign, the Shah received significant American support, frequently making state visits to the White House and earning praise from numerous American Presidents. The Shah's close ties to Washington and his bold agenda of rapidly Westernizing of Iran soon began to infuriate certain segments of the Iranian population, especially the hardline Islamic conservatives.

The 1979 revolution

File:Farah-Jackie.JPG
Empress Farah Pahlavi and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy in a friendly chat.

In 1979 Iranians revolted and the Shah was ousted for a second time. Ayatollah Khomeni became Iran's new leader, and soon began issuing vicious rhetoric against the United States, describing the country as the "Great Satan" and a "nation of infidels."

The American administration under President Jimmy Carter refused to give the Shah any further support and expressed no interest in attempting to return him to power. A significant embarrassment for Carter occurred when the Shah, as of that time suffering from cancer, requested entry into the United States for treatment. Carter reluctantly agreed, but the move only re-inforced Iranian notions that the former monarch was an American puppet.

The 1979 Iran hostage crisis

On November 4, 1979, militant Iranian students occupied the American embassy in Tehran with the support of Ayatollah Khomeini. Fifty-two Americans were held hostage for 444 days. On April 7, 1980, the United States broke diplomatic relations with Iran, and on April 24, 1981, the Swiss Government assumed representation of U.S. interests in Tehran via an interest section. Iranian interests in the United States are represented by the Iranian Interests Section of the Pakistani Embassyin Washington, DC.

In accordance with the Algiers declaration of January 20, 1981, the Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal (located in The Hague, Netherlands) was established for the purpose of handling claims of U.S. nationals against Iran and of Iranian nationals against the United States. U.S. contact with Iran through The Hague covers only legal matters.

The 1988 shooting down of Iran Air Flight 655

On July 3, 1988 the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian Airbus A300B2, on a scheduled commercial flight in Iranian airspace over the Strait of Hormuz, resulting in 290 civilian fatalities from six nations including 66 children. On February 22, 1996 the United States agreed to pay Iran $61.8 million in compensation for the 248 Iranians killed in the shootdown. The money was much less than what has been taken from Iran's frozen assets in U.S. for American hostages. United States took $65 million from Iran's frozen asset to compensate for three Americans held hostage by Lebanese groups, claiming that Iran indirectly supported the groups. The United States has not compensated Iran for the airplane itself, to date. The aircraft was worth more than $30 million.

Commercial relations

Before the Revolution with the Shah, the United States was Iran's foremost economic and military partner; thus participating greatly in the rapid modernization of its infrastructure and industry, with over thirty thousand American expatriates residing at its peak in the country, in a technical, consulting or teaching capacity. A posteriori, some western analysts say arguably that the transformation was too rapid may be, thus fueling the unrest and discontent among an important part of the population in the country; which culminated with the Revolution itself in 1979.

Commercial relations between Iran and the United States are restricted by U.S. sanctions and consist mainly of Iranian purchases of food and medical products and U.S. purchases of carpets and food. The U.S. Government prohibits most trade with Iran, through the Iran-Libya Sanctions Act of 1996.

The issue of frozen Iranian assets is especially sensitive for the Iranian government. After the 1979 seizure of the American Embassy in Tehran, the United States froze about $12 billion in Iranian assets, including bank deposits, gold and other properties. According to U.S. officials, most of those were released in 1981 as part of the deal for the return of U.S. hostages taken in the embassy seizure. But some assets--Iranian officials say $10 billion, U.S. officials say much less--remain frozen pending resolution of legal claims arising from the revolution.

From 2000 until 2004

Since 2003 the U.S. has been flying unmanned aerial vehicles, launched from Iraq, over Iran to obtain intelligence on Iran's nuclear program, reportedly providing little new information [1]. The Iranian government has formally protested the incursions as illegal [2].

In January 2006, James Risen, a New York Times reporter, alleged in his book State of War that the CIA carried out a Clinton approved operation in 2000 (Operation Merlin) intended to delay Iran's nuclear weapons program by feeding it flawed blueprints for key missing components - which backfired and may actually have aided Iran, as the flaw was likely detected and corrected by a former Soviet nuclear scientist the operation used to make the delivery.

Concerns of Iranian and US governments against each other

File:Anti-US Tehran.jpg
Anti US mural, Tehran

There are serious obstacles to improved relations between the two countries. The U.S. Government defines five areas of Iranian policy which it considers objectionable:

  • Alleged Iranian efforts to acquire nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction;
  • Alleged involvement in international terrorism;
  • Alleged support for violent opposition to the Middle East peace process;
  • Alleged threats and subversive activities against its neighbors; and
  • Its human rights record.

A similar, Iranian, list of complaints might read as follows:

  • CIA Operation Ajax to overthrow democratically chosen Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh and restore the exiled Shah;
  • Frozen Iranian assets that have not been released since 1979;
  • U.S. Support for anti-Iranian terrorist organisations (i.e. the MKO).;
  • U.S. companies assistance in developing Iraq's chemical weapons facilities during the Iran-Iraq war.;
  • USS Vincennes shooting down Iran Air Flight 655 with many civilian fatalities;
  • U.S. Sanctions and political and other economic pressure on Iran;
  • Unlawful flying of U.S. UAVs over Iran since 2003;
  • Its human rights record.

Tensions and threats of military actions in 2005-2006

US refusal to grant visas to Iranians for United Nations activities

In September 2005, U.S. State Department refused to issue visas for Iran’s parliamentary speaker and a group of senior Iranian officials to travel to US to participate in an International parliamentary meeting held by the United Nations. According to UN rules, US has to grant visas to the senior officials from any UN member states, irrespective of their political views, to take part in UN meetings.

Claims of threats of a military attack on Iran by the US

The United States' official position on Iran is that "a nuclear-armed Iran is not acceptable" and that "all options" - including the unilateral use of force and first-strike nuclear weapons - are "on the table". [3] However, they have denied that the United States is preparing for an imminent strike. This came while three European countries, the United Kingdom (UK), France and Germany (the "EU-3") attempted to negotiate a cessation of nuclear enrichment activities by Iran, and American claims that these activities are aimed at producing nuclear weapons. [3]

As of 2006, the United States has either a large or significant military presence or a history of several decades of tight military cooperation in four other countries bordering Iran: Iraq, Turkey, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

An American journalist, Seymour Hersh, claimed in January 2005 that U.S. Central Command had been asked to revise the military's war plan, providing for a maximum ground and air invasion of Iran and that the "hawks" in the U.S. government believed the EU3 negotiations would not succeed, and the Administration will act after this became clear. A former high-level intelligence official told him "It's not if we're going to do anything against Iran. They're doing it." [4]

Scott Ritter, former UN weapons of mass destruction inspector in Iraq, 1991-1998, claimed in April 2005 that the Pentagon was told in June 2005 to be prepared to launch a massive aerial attack against Iran in order to destroy the Iranian nuclear program. He claimed in June 2005 that the US military was preparing a "massive military presence" in Azerbaijan that would foretell a major land-based campaign designed to capture Tehran. He also claimed that the US attack on Iran had "already begun" (see below).[5]

In his article published March 27, 2006, Joseph Cirincione, director for non-proliferation at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, claimed that "some senior officials have already made up their minds: They want to hit Iran." and that there "may be a coordinated campaign to prepare for a military strike on Iran."[6] Joseph Cirincione also warned "that a military strike would be disastrous for the United States. It would rally the Iranian public around an otherwise unpopular regime, inflame anti-American anger around the Muslim world, and jeopardize the already fragile U.S. position in Iraq. And it would accelerate, not delay, the Iranian nuclear program. Hard-liners in Tehran would be proven right in their claim that the only thing that can deter the United States is a nuclear bomb. Iranian leaders could respond with a crash nuclear program that could produce a bomb in a few years."

Professor at the University of San Francisco and Middle East editor for the Foreign Policy in Focus Project, Stephen Zunes, also claims that a military attack on Iran is being planned.[7]

Claims of plans for use of nuclear weapons against Iran

In March 2005 US revised its doctrine on when to use nuclear weapons to include preemptive or possibly preventive use on non-nuclear states.

In August 2005, Philip Giraldi, a former CIA officer, claimed that US Vice President Dick Cheney had instructed STRATCOM to prepare a contingency plan to be employed in response to another 9/11-type terrorist attack on the United States... [including] a large-scale air assault on Iran employing both conventional and tactical nuclear weapons... not conditional on Iran actually being involved in the act of terrorism directed against the United States. The reason cited for the attack to use mini-nukes is that the targets are hardened or are deep underground and would not be destroyed by non-nuclear warheads.[8]

Claims that the US plans to use nuclear weapons in an attack on Iran have also been made in 2005 and 2006 by Jorge Hirsch[9] [10], in January 2006 by Michel Chossudovsky [11], and by the Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention on Iran[12] and in April 2006 by Seymour M. Hersh [13].

On April 18, 2006, on CSPAN, in response to a journalist's questioning, "Sir, when you talk about Iran, and you talk about, how you have to have diplomatic efforts, you often say all options are on the table. Does that include, uh, the possibility of a nuclear strike, is that something that your administration has plans about?", US president George W. Bush replied "All options are on the table".[14]

Claims of Iranian facilities which would be attacked by the US

Cities likely to be targets according to the Centre for Nonproliferation Studies [15], the Oxford Research Group [16] and Michael Keefer[17] include towns with a total estimated population (1999-2006) of about 23 million (including metropolitan areas). These include:

The role of Iran's nuclear program in US-Iran tensions

Since 2003, the United States has alleged that Iran has a program to develop nuclear weapons. Iran has maintained that its nuclear program is aimed only at generating electricity.

In June 2005, the US secretary of state Condoleezza Rice said IAEA head Mohamed ElBaradei should either toughen his stance on Iran or fail to be chosen for a third term as IAEA head.[18] Both the United States and Iran are parties to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The United States (and other official nuclear weapons states) were alleged during the May 2005 month-long meeting on the NPT to be in violation of the NPT through Article VI, which requires them to disarm, which as of 2006 they have not done, while the IAEA has stated that Iran is in violation of a Safeguards Agreement related to the NPT, due to insufficient reporting of nuclear material, its processing and its use.[19]. Under Article IV, the treaty gives non-nuclear states the right to develop civilian nuclear energy programs.[20]

From 2003 to early 2006, tensions between the US and Iran have successively mounted even while International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) inspections of sensitive nuclear industry sites in Iran have continued, in line with an Additional Protocol to the NPT which Iran voluntarily adhered to.

On March 8, 2006, US and EU-3 representatives noted that Iran has enough unenriched uranium hexaflouride gas to make up to 10 atomic bombs if it were to be highly enriched, and adding it was "time for the Security Council to act".[21] The unenriched uranium cannot be used either in the Bushehr reactor, which is a pressurized water reactor, nor in atomic bombs, unless it becomes enriched. .

The role of crude oil and other strategic reasons in US-Iran tensions

Stephen Zunes stated that the Republican and Democratic Parties of the USA have

an urge to punish, isolate, and militarily threaten an oil-rich country [Iran] that refuses to sufficiently cooperate with U.S. economic and strategic designs in the Middle East.[22]

The role of the Iranian Oil Bourse and the euro in US-Iran tensions

There are numerous indications that Iran plans to create a new International Oil futures exchange, whose formal name is uncertain, but may be called the Iranian Oil Bourse, trading oil priced in euros and possibly other currencies, rather than dollars, which all other other oil markets currently use for trade. Some fear that this would have significant negative impact on the strength of the US Dollar on international currency markets. The opening of the exchange had been planned for March 20, 2006, but has been delayed.[23]

The role of electoral reasons in the USA in US-Iran tensions

In November 2005, Michael Klare, professor of Peace and World Security Studies at Hampshire College, alleged that a major factor motivating the George W. Bush administration to attack Iran would be its desire to distract attention from domestic political difficulties and to increase popularity for the President. US popular support for Bush increased by about 10% when the US invaded Iraq in 2003 and only dropped back to its previous level several months later.[24]

The role of electoral reasons in Iran in US-Iran tensions

Remarks made by Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad have been interpreted by analysts such as Ali Ansari as having national electoral aims internally in Iran,[25] and by others such as the Israeli government as constituting threats to attack Israel.[26]

Religious-conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was elected president of Iran in 2005.

In October 2005, he made remarks to domestic audiences agreeing with Ayatollah Khomeini's statement that the occupying regime in [Israel/Palestine should vanish from] from the page of time, citing in his speech that the regime of the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Soviet Union as a State and Saddam Hussein's government of Iraq, had similarly been removed from power.

On December 8 2005, he made remarks doubting the Holocaust though a week later, on December 14, he made a similar statement no longer literally denying the Holocaust.

These remarks are generally considered to be in line with his populist voting base - 19% of voters chose him in the first round of the 2005 presidential election.

Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Juan Cole claim that the remarks have been mistranslated and misinterpreted in the Western media, who claimed that Ahmadinejad stated that Israel should be "wiped off the map", and that his aim is only to support democracy in Palestine.

Independently of whether or not his remarks were misinterpreted, the international reaction to his perceived statements was extremely negative.

Seema Mustafa in the Asian Age claimed that Ahmadinejad's remarks relating to Israel and the Holocaust are now used as a major reason for an attack against Iran, stating that:

A campaign to demonise [Ahmadinejad] to rally around international opinion against Iran has been very effectively unleashed. He has, in fact, been carefully inducted as a key component in the propaganda war against Iran...

and that this argument was presented to journalists in Delhi by German-French-UK representative Dr Michael Schaefer and US undersecretary Nicholas Burns when they were requesting Indian representative to accept IAEA referral of Iran to the UN Security Council[27].

The role of increasing democracy in the Middle East in US-Iran tensions

In political speeches following the 2003 invasion of Iraq, George W. Bush has claimed (after weapons of mass destruction could not be found) that his administration's goal in the invasion was to bring democracy to countries in the Middle East and to oppose "islamofascism".

The World Tribunal on Iraq and others have doubted the sincerity of this motive, pointing to a systematic campaign against academia in Iraq during the US occupation of Iraq.

Robert Dreyfuss, author of Devil's Game: How the United States Helped Unleash Fundamentalist Islam, claims that the US actions in the region have in fact supported, and are continuing to support, "islamofascism" rather than oppose it.[28]

On February 5, 2006, Iranian blogger Persian Majeed listed a number of alleged human rights violations by the US in Iran and alleged attacks by the US against Iranian democracy of the preceding half-century, requesting judicial enquiries and appropriate compensation payments to Iranians. His judgment of the severity of the US actions against democracy in Iran concludes with the request that the US should be referred to the United Nations for sanctions. [29]

Iranian fears of attack by the US

Paul Pillar, former CIA official who led the preparation of all National Intelligence Estimates (NIEs) on Iran from 2000 to 2005 in his role as national intelligence officer for the Near East and South Asia, told the InterPress Service that all of the NIEs on Iran during that period addressed the Iranian fears of U.S. attack explicitly and related their desire for nuclear weapons to those fears and stated "Iranian perceptions of threat, especially from the United States and Israel, were not the only factor, but were in our judgment part of what drove whatever effort they were making to build nuclear weapons." Another former CIA official, Ellen Laipson, said that the Iranian fear of an attack by the United States has long been "a standard element" in NIEs on Iran.[30]

2003-2006 alleged US violations of Iranian sovereignty

Several claims have been made that the US has violated Iranian territorial sovereignty since 2003, including the flying of drones[31][32][33], sending US soldiers into Iranian territory[4], and the use of former or current members of the Mujahideen e-Khalq (MEK or MKO)[34] and the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PEJAK)[35] to carry out provocations such as bombings on Iranian territory in order to provoke pre-existing ethnic tensions.

Claimed flights of US drones over Iranian territory

Since 2003 the U.S. has been flying unmanned aerial vehicles, launched from Iraq, over Iran to obtain intelligence on Iran's alleged nuclear weapons program, reportedly providing little new information.[31]The Iranian government has formally protested the incursions as illegal. A U.S. RQ-7 Shadow and a Hermes UAV have crashed in Iran.[32]

In June 2005, Scott Ritter claimed that US attacks on Iran had already begun, including US overflights of Iran using pilotless drones.[33]

Claims of US armed forces present on Iranian territory

Seymour Hersh has claimed that the US has also been penetrating eastern Iran from Afghanistan in a hunt for underground [nuclear weapons development] installations.[4]

Claims of US using proxies

Scott Ritter also claimed that CIA-backed bombings had been undertaken in Iran by the Mujahideen e-Khalq (MEK or MKO), an opposition group listed by the United States Department of State as a Foreign Terrorist Organization.[33]

In April 2006, The Raw Story cited an unnamed UN source "close to" the United Nations Security Council stating that former MEK members had been used as a proxy by the US for "roughly a year" inside of Iranian territory. An intelligence source quoted by The Raw Story said that the former MEK members were made to "swear an oath to Democracy and resign from the MEK" before being incorporated into US military units and retrained for their operations in Iran.[34]

Following the killing of 24 Iranian security forces in Iran in March 2006 by the Party for a Free Life in Kurdistan (PEJAK), an opposition group closely linked to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which is listed by the U.S. State Department as a Foreign Terrorist Organization, Dennis Kucinich claimed in a letter to George W. Bush on April 18, 2006, that PEJAK is being supported and coordinated by the US, since it is based in Iraq, which is under the de facto control of US military forces.[35]

List of prominent Americans in Iran

Further reading

  • Friedman Alan, Spider's Web: The Secret History of how the White House Illegally Armed Iraq. New York, Bantam Books, 1993.
  • Jentleson Bruce, With friends like these: Reagan, Bush, and Saddam, 1982-1990. New York, W. W. Norton, 1994.
  • Phythian Mark, Arming Iraq: How the U.S. and Britain Secretly Built Saddam's War Machine. Boston, Northeastern University Press, 1997.
  • Morgan Shuster, The Strangling of Persia, ISBN 093421106X

References

  1. ^ Zirinsky M.P. Imperial Power and dictatorship: Britain and the rise of Reza Shah 1921-1926. International Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 24, 1992. p.646
  2. ^ Sources:
    • FO 371 16077 E2844 dated 8 June 1932.
    • The Memoirs of Anthony Eden are also explicit about Britain's role in putting Reza Khan in power.
    • Ansari, Ali M. Modern Iran since 1921. Longman. 2003 ISBN 0582356857 p.26-31
  3. ^ Blair's Next War, May 04, 2005, Dave Wearing
  4. ^ a b c http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/?050124fa_fact
  5. ^ Sleepwalking To Disaster In Iran, April 01, 2005, Scott Ritter
  6. ^ Fool Me Twice, March 27, 2006, Joseph Cirincione, Foreign Policy
  7. ^ The United States, Israel, and the Possible Attack on Iran, Stephen Zunes, May 2, 2006, ZNet
  8. ^ Deep Background, August 1, 2005, Philip Giraldi, The American Conservative
  9. ^ A 'Legal' US Nuclear Attack Against Iran, Jorge Hirsch, November 12, 2005
  10. ^ America and Iran: At the Brink of the Abyss ,Jorge Hirsch, February 20, 2006
  11. ^ Nuclear War Against Iran, Michel Chossudovsky, January 3, 2006
  12. ^ Campaign Against Sanctions and Military Intervention on Iran
  13. ^ The Iran plans, Seymour Hersh, The New Yorker Mag., April 8, 2006
  14. ^ http://www.geocities.com/jorgehirsch/nuclear/bushoptions.mov, CSPAN interview archived by Jorge E. Hirsch
  15. ^ A Preemptive Attack on Iran's Nuclear Facilities: Possible Consequences, September 9, 2004, Sammy Salama, Karen Ruster, Centre for Nonproliferation Studies
  16. ^ Iran Body Count: Iran: consequences of a war, February 2006, Paul Rogers
  17. ^ Petrodollars and Nuclear Weapons Proliferation: Understanding the Planned Assault on Iran, Centre for Research on Globalization, Michael Keefer, February 10, 2006
  18. ^ US agrees to back UN nuclear head, June 9, 2005, BBC
  19. ^ Implementation of the NPT Safeguards Agreement in the Islamic Republic of Iran: Resolution adopted on 24 September 2005, IAEA
  20. ^ http://www.un.org/events/npt2005/
  21. ^ US demands drastic action as Iran nuclear row escalates, Ian Traynor, The Guardian, March 9, 2006
  22. ^ The U.S. and Iran: Democracy, Terrorism, and Nuclear Weapons, August 31, 2005, Stephen Zunes, Foreign Policy in Focus
  23. ^ A frenzied Persian new year, March 22, 2006, Asia Times
  24. ^ Wag the Dog: Crisis Scenarios for Deflecting Attention from the President's Woes, November 16, 2005, Michael T. Klare
  25. ^ Denying the Holocaust for Political Advantage?, Michael Scott Moore, Spiegel, December 14, 2005
  26. ^ Iran biggest threat since Nazis, says Israel as Ahmadinejad provokes new outrage, Conal Urquhart, Ian Traynor, the Guardian, April 25, 2006
  27. ^ Our Bomb, Your Bomb: On India, Iran, and the Nuclear Bomb, January 22, 2006, Seema Mustafa, Asian Age
  28. ^ Political Islam vs. Democracy: The Bush Administration's Deadly Waltz with Shiite Theocrats in Iraq and Muslim Brotherhood Fanatics in Syria, Egypt, and Elsewhere, November 29, 2005, Robert Dreyfuss
  29. ^ Let's rewrite Iranian history: The past 50 years, blog, February 5, 2006, Persian Majeed, iranian.com
  30. ^ Fear of U.S. Drove Iran's Nuclear Policy, Gareth Porter, February 10, 2006, InterPress Service
  31. ^ a b U.S. Uses Drones to Probe Iran For Arms, February 13, 2005, Washington Post
  32. ^ a b Iran Protests U.S. Aerial Drones, November 8, 2005, Washington Post
  33. ^ a b c The US war with Iran has already begun, June 21, 2005, 2005, Scott Ritter
  34. ^ a b On Cheney, Rumsfeld order, US outsourcing special ops, intelligence to Iraq terror group, intelligence officials say, by Larisa Alexandrovna, April 13, 2006, The Raw Story
  35. ^ a b Kucinich Questions The President On US Trained Insurgents In Iran: Sends Letter To President Bush, Dennis Kucinich, April 18, 2006

See also

External links