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June 1, 2007

Talk to foreigners and we will view you as a spy, Iran warns academics

"Some scholars claim spying allegations are a pretext to purge universities of those deemed too liberal or pro-western." Cracking down on thoughtcrime in Iran. By Robert Tait for The Guardian:

Iran's powerful intelligence ministry has stepped up its war of nerves with the west by telling the country's academics they will be suspected of spying if they maintain contact with foreign institutions or travel abroad to international conferences.
The blunt warning has been issued by the ministry's counter-espionage director in an atmosphere of rising suspicion and paranoia as Iran claims to have cracked a CIA-backed spy ring and has charged three American citizens with spying.
In a briefing with Iranian journalists, the official - whose identity was not disclosed - accused western intelligence agencies of using academic contacts to lure scholars into an espionage network against Iran. He said seminars inside and outside the country were used.
"Unfortunately, our lecturers are exposed to intelligence threats," he said. "We are worried about many academic conferences which foreigners attend and establish relations [with Iranian academics]. Any foreigner who establishes relations is not trustworthy. Through their approaches, they first establish an academic relationship but this soon changes into an intelligence relationship.
"Some conversations which take place under the auspices of academic or scientific interviews are pretexts for getting close to the country's scientific figures. Unfortunately some decent individuals fall into the trap of these plots."
[...]
Some scholars claim spying allegations are a pretext to purge universities of those deemed too liberal or pro-western. Some say they have been hounded from their posts after their foreign contacts or attendance at international seminars aroused suspicion. Dozens of lecturers have been forced into early retirement as Iran's fundamentalist president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has sought to stamp out the relatively permissive campus atmosphere that flourished under his reformist predecessor, Mohammad Khatami.
"I have been told that my services will not be required in the next academic year, even though I am not close to retirement age and they need lecturers in my field," one social scientist, who has taught in the US, told the Guardian. "I was told that I was in touch with quite a few foreign academics and travelled abroad quite frequently to lectures and, therefore, I was a suspicious person. They warned that if I followed it up and created publicity, they would make more trouble for me and even threatened my family. It's terrible. For the first time in my life I have the feeling I'm living in a police state. I think things will get worse before they get better."
The mood has been captured on campuses by the appearance of slogans such as "the cultural revolution is forthcoming", seen as signalling a return to puritanical values of the 1979 Islamic revolution. It has been accompanied by tales of harassment for such perceived offences as advocating a two-state solution for the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or even wearing a tie, seen as a decadent western affectation.
This week Iran said it was charging two American-Iranian scholars Haleh Esfandiari and Kian Tajbakhsh with spying after accusing them of fomenting a "velvet revolution". Parnaz Azimi, a journalist, has been charged with acting against national security.

Posted by Marisol at June 1, 2007 2:10 AM
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"Iran's powerful intelligence ministry" AKA Muslim religious police?....

Posted by: exsgtbrown [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 1, 2007 6:23 AM

facism, communism, islamism, they are all in one the ssme, gone are free speech, freedom of anything that takes away their power. can we send in Pelosi to talk to the iranian monkey man, maybe she can convey that the US is really on their side, at the least the Democrats.

Posted by: ZenaWarriorPrincess [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 1, 2007 6:33 AM

Will we see a protest by the UK academics union over this? Not anytime soon, I'm sure. Their siding with the jihadist enemies and terrorists, wallowing in fanatical leftist hatred of Israel as it struggles to survive.

Posted by: usapatriot [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 1, 2007 6:35 AM

Several of those being held, though not apparently Esfandiari, the best-known, are so-called dialoguists, wishing and hoping and hoping and wishing, and certainly firmly against any American firm dealing with the Islamic Republic of Iran, when it should be obvious by now that firm dealing -- including bombs from on high -- are needed to stop the nuclear project.

Perhaps absence -- absence from safe America -- will make their hearts grow fonder for that intelligent application of bombs-away (no hearts, no minds, just bombs away) over Natanz and points connected.

What is most likely, however, is a variant on the Stockholm Syndrome. They are expelled, they return to Ameria tearful and grateful. And then a few days later, having composed themselves, they issue statements -- they can't after all admit to themselves their prior naivete and trust, so will simply double the dose -- "that the way forward is through dialogue." And that message of false hope and misunderstanding will acquire, from their lips, a more persuasive force among the credulous.

"Stockholm Syndrome"? We need a variant on that, too. It long ago became a phrase on tap. How about: Gamlastan Gullibility?

Posted by: Hugh [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 1, 2007 8:08 AM

Remember that headline from a few days back about the Iranians discovering networks of western spies .... ?

Posted by: joeblough [TypeKey Profile Page] at June 1, 2007 10:48 AM

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