Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
No Country for Old Men: The Reality of Iran in the Shadow of War
by Chris Floyd
When it comes, it will come quickly. No big build-up, no new "roll-out of the product." The groundwork has already been laid, the specious casus beli already embraced, enthusiastically, by Congress. Proposed legislation to "compel" Bush to seek Congressional approval for an attack will be ignored, just as Bush blatantly ignores any Congressional stricture he dislikes. If he decides to launch an attack on Iran, no institutional or legal fetter will stop him. That's the stark truth of the matter.
The attack will probably be a limited one at first, with the immediate "reasons" being offered up afterwards or in media res. After all, who is going to seriously question the Commander-in-Chief when our brave boys are in the air over enemy territory in Iran?
They had parliamentary elections in Iran last week. It was not
good news for the cause of peace. Why? Because reform candidates did
unexpectedly well, while hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad saw a
deep split in the conservative majority, with many in his own faction
rejecting his Bush-like belligerence and incompetence. This might sound
like glad tidings at first glance but it actually makes an attack
more likely. It undermines the carefully crafted cartoon image of Iran
as a monolithic, maniacal horde of barbarians intent on senseless
destruction. If a truer picture of Iranian society is allowed to take
hold, it would pose a serious threat to the agenda of the Crawford
Caligula and his militarist handlers.
After all, they fought
long and hard to get rid of the moderate government of former president
Mohammed Khatami spurning Tehran's extraordinary offer in 2003 of
complete cooperation on nuclear safeguards, helping establish security
in Iraq, ending armed support for Palestinian militias, cooperating
against terrorism, and recognizing Israel. Instead, the Bushists hoped
for a more demonizable figure whom they could use to "justify" their
goal of establishing a pliable client state in the oil-rich,
strategically located land. And just as with their openly stated wish
in 2000 for a "new Pearl Harbor" that would "catalyze" the American
public into supporting their radical imperialist program, they got
lucky again with the election of Ahmadinejad a sinister clown made to
order for scaremongering propaganda, even though his actual powers are
quite limited. Any development that complicates the cartoon, such as
the recent elections, is bad for business.
And make no
mistake, the Bush faction's predatory designs on Iran are business
big business. The entire "War on Terror" is an engine for crony
profiteering on a monstrous scale and the greatest transfer of public
wealth into private hands the world has ever seen. Those who believe
that the Bushists would hold back from striking Iran because it is too
"risky" don't understand the stakes these warmongers are playing for.
As they will never suffer personally or financially from even the worst
outcome of their policies, the game is well worth the candle for them.
Others will do the dying. Others will face the ruin. Others will weep
with pain and grief.
But who will be killed in the attack on
Iran, and the subsequent, inevitable escalation? For most Americans,
the image of Iran is still the one that was seared onto their
television screens in 1979 and 1980: the angry, violent hostage-takers,
fundamentalist zombies blindly obedient to the will of an evil,
black-robed tyrant. Less visual, but still potent, are the later press
descriptions of Iranian hordes swarming in suicidal waves across the
battlefields with Iraq. Such images and impressions endlessly
recapitulated in the media and in the political rhetoric of both
parties constitute the picture of the Iranian "enemy" that many
Americans hold in their minds today.
It is these mad,
maniacal, frothing zealots who will die in any attack, most people
think when they consider the matter at all. One might oppose a strike
on practical grounds, of course, as Admiral William Fallon, recently
removed as head of U.S. Central Command, allegedly did; but not from
any concern over the fate of those "ants," as Fallon described the
Iranians, in a perfect encapsulation of the general consensus.
Even
at the time of their creation, these images were gross exaggerations of
Iranian society; today they are wildly absurd, even hallucinatory in
their lack of connection to reality. Consider just one fact: almost 70
percent of Iran's population is under 30. Most Iranians were not even
born at the time of the 1979 revolution. The overwhelming majority of
Iranians are too young to have played the slightest part in the war
with Iraq. Most Iranians are also too young to play any substantial
role in governing the country now. It has one of the youngest
populations in the world. And beneath the rigid outward shell of its
repressive system, this nation of youth is seething with change,
growing toward new freedoms, making its own way toward a future that
if allowed to develop will doubtless be much different than any
scenario imagined by the militarists in Washington or the old men in
Qom.
This week in the Observer, Peter Beaumont provided an
insightful portrait of young Iran, particularly the women who now
outnumber the men in the nation's universities: a circumstance
unimaginable in Iraq or Afghanistan, the lands "liberated" by the
Terror War. An excerpt:
"The rules of the coffee houses - in
comparison with the street - reflect the fundamental division in Iran.
It is not the divide between the 'Reforms' and the 'Principalists' of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who competed for Iran's parliamentary
elections on Friday. For many of the young those elections represented
an increasingly irrelevant distinction in a clerical system they feel
is stacked in favour of itself. Instead, the division is between what
Iranians do and say in private, or in places where they feel
comfortable, and how they are forced to behave in public.
"The
inevitable tension between the two is defining the boundaries of the
country's culture wars. For it is here, rather than in the polling
booths, that Iran's most crucial competition is taking place - over the
limits of what is acceptable self-expression. It is the struggle to
push the boundaries of freedom in Iran.
"In Tehran, it is visible
in the girls who wear their scarves pushed far back on their heads,
hair springing free, faces heavily made up or tight jackets worn over
their knee-length mantles in a challenge to the system. Even those
attempting to push the boundaries insist that, despite the image of
Iran in the West as virtually a totalitarian regime, Iranians enjoy
more freedoms than they are credited with. Two of those are Sohrab
Mahdavi, editor of the online Tehranavenue.com, and his friend Ramin
Sadighi, a musician and director of a record label, who are involved in
a project to bring more music into public places.
"'The crucial
thing to understand about Iran,' said Mahdavi, 'is that we do have
freedoms. The important issue is the separation between public and
private space in Iranian life. Since the revolution, public space has
been tightly controlled [by the clerical authorities], so people have
created their own "public spaces" in private. A consequence is that
what is acceptable in private is now constantly in the process of
trying to nibble away at the controlled public arena.'
"'And you
have to bear in mind,' said Sadighi, 'how youthful the population is
here. They are the fruits of the system in many respects. But they are
going in an opposite direction to it. There is no social movement that
is represented by them - and I think that is probably a good thing for
the future of Iran - but what is happening is that people have joined
together to form small colonies of interest.'
"It is a business
that is explained by a young Iranian teacher. 'In the private space,
you don't have to hide yourself. There are no restrictions. No
boundaries. On what I read. What I believe. What I want to know.'"
These
"islands of freedom" as yet unconnected into a larger movement, still
under threat will be destroyed by an American attack and the
subsequent, inevitable strengthening of the hardliners or, in the
extreme case, the subsequent collapse of Iranian society into the kind
of murderous chaos Bush and his Establishment enablers have inflicted
on Iraq.
These are the people who will die innocent, young,
hopeful, human in any attempt to extend the militarists' empire of
corruption and domination ever deeper into the oil lands.