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AMESS: Exposing Iran’s chief liar

Amess

david-amess

Not Ahmadinejad but the opposition should be our partner in ‎progress

The Washington Times – By David Amess
Tyrants resort to a Big Lie when they have nothing truthful to say to the world or their people. The theory is that ‎if you say something outrageous often enough, people will start to believe it.‎

Last month, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad uttered a brazen Big Lie against the West, suggesting to ‎the United Nations that the U.S. government had masterminded the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade ‎Center and the Pentagon, resulting in the deaths of thousands.‎

That ranks right along with stories that Franklin D. Roosevelt helped plot the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in ‎an effort to get the United States into World War II on the side of his British friends.‎
As Big Lies go, they don’t get much bigger.

But brazen remarks are not anything new for Mr. Ahmadinejad. He began by denying the Holocaust in 2005. ‎The next step was denying Israel’s right to exist, and now he’s reached the pinnacle – claiming Sept. 11 could ‎have been a U.S. government conspiracy.

I happened to be in New York at the same time as the Iranian president. I was literally across the street from the ‎U.N., addressing a major anti-Ahmadinejad rally of thousands of Iranian dissidents – and discussing another of ‎the regime’s Big Lies.‎

In 1980, in the early days of the Iranian Revolution, when faced with growing criticism of rampant torture in ‎Iranian prisons, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini appointed a “fact-finding commission.” The commission’s ‎findings were very telling. It declared that the opposition – primarily the People’s Mujahedeen Organization of ‎Iran (PMOI) – tortured its own members in order to blame the regime.

Now fast-forward 30 years. This time Khomeini’s fervid disciple, Mr. Ahmadinejad, used the same tactic to ‎describe Sept. 11.‎

Why do despots resort to the Big Lie? To cover up what they don’t want their own people or the world to ‎know. In the present case, Mr. Ahmadinejad is trying to divert attention from what is happening in Iran – the ‎opposition is getting stronger and the regime has to resort to ever-tougher suppressive measures to try to keep ‎control.

That’s why, just the other day, President Obama signed an executive order imposing sanctions on eight Iranian ‎officials determined to be responsible for or complicit in severe human rights abuses in Iran since the presidential ‎election last year.‎

The executive order puts severe restrictions on these individuals and bars any Americans from engaging in any ‎transactions with them. Mr. Obama’s action is a welcome change from the West’s previously timid response to ‎actions by Mr. Ahmadinejad and the mullahs who have propped him up.‎

The United States keeps insisting that sanctions are hurting the Tehran regime and are the key element in a drive ‎to change Tehran’s behavior. In reality, the problem with U.S. policy is that it has failed to factor in the mullahs’ ‎key weak point, i.e., the enemy within.‎

The Iranian political scene is very dynamic. Iranians showed their outrage last year by pouring into the streets ‎time after time, crying “Freedom,” “Down with the dictator,” and “Down with Ali Khamenei,” the supreme ‎leader.‎

This also was very evident at the rally outside the U.N. when Mr. Ahmadinejad spoke inside. Thousands of ‎Iranians from all age groups and all strata cried no to Mr. Ahmadinejad, and yes to Rajavi, referring to Maryam ‎Rajavi, the leader of the opposition.

Iranians called for removal of the PMOI from the State Department’s list of terrorist organizations. They were ‎joined by the former mayor of New York, Rudolph W. Giuliani, and former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. John ‎Bolton, among others (myself included).‎

The lifting of the ban on the opposition is more justified now in light of the fact that on July 16, the Court of ‎Appeals for the District of Columbia said the decision of former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to ‎maintain the designation of the PMOI violated the group’s due-process rights. The court cast doubt on the ‎accuracy of information used against the PMOI and remanded the case to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham ‎Clinton.‎

Removing the terrorist tag would enjoy the backing of Congress. A bipartisan group of more than 80 members ‎co-sponsored House Resolution 1431, explicitly calling for the delisting of the PMOI, “thereby denying the ‎regime the pretext to crack down on dissidents inside Iran.”‎

It is ironic that as Mr. Ahmadinejad keeps lashing out against the very principles of the United States, the U.S. ‎keeps the main opposition enchained.

The time has come for a new Iran policy, with the opposition at its core, instead of further rounds of futile ‎negotiations. Is there any red line for the West, or is everything open to compromise and negotiation? The next ‎time Mr. Ahmadinejad challenges Western civilization, and the time after that, his quiver might not be limited to ‎words.‎

David Amess is a British member of Parliament from the Conservative Party and a member of the Parliamentary ‎Committee for Iran Freedom.

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