After a relaxing time staying at Judith’s in the woods we were off…we arrived at the Fellowship of Reconciliation to meet Leila, the organizer of the event and the Director of FOR’s Iran program. There were a lot of people in the audience who had traveled to Iran with FOR. It was great to have an audience who had a real sense of what Iran is like.
The room we spoke in over looked a large lake the FOR office is beautiful, Raed could tell us what kind of architecture it is but I don’t know.
Rostam spoke about how the US government claims Iran is its major threat. He tried to have us imagine Iran’s perspective. Iran is constantly being threatened by the US calling for increased sanctions, threats of bombing and potential invasion. Iran is also surrounded by nuclear powers in Pakistan, Israel, India, and Russia and surrounded by US military bases in Saudi Arabia, Iraq and Afghanistan. Iran is the one who feels threatened and is being threatened. Yet the IAEA after combing the country for hours and hours has not come up with any proof that Iran is developing a nuclear weapons program. In fact Iran’s foreign policy has been consistent, it has not invaded another country for over 250 years, Rostam reminded us that we cannot say the same for US foreign policy.
The origins of Iran’s nuclear energy program are important to remember. They began over 30 years ago when Iran’s Shah was pressured by President Ford to adopt nuclear energy. When the Shah refused saying Iran had all the oil it needed to provide energy for its people. Ford brought Henry Kissinger and American defense contractors GE and Westing House to the table to apply more pressure to the Shah. Eventually the Shah agreed and bought a dozen nuclear reactors including a uranium enrichment facility. In the end the GE reactors were never build because of the Iranian revolution. Part of the point is that Iran has had this nuclear program for over 30 years why is it suddenly a threat? If this is hard to believe read about it in a recent Washington Post article by Dafna Linzer, click here.
After the talks we quickly sped off to NYC to avoid any traffic. It was sad to leave Leila and the FOR team as they were having a potluck and discussions before their next event that evening but we had one last event to make!
Alwan for the Arts is where we were headed in downtown Manhattan. Alwan is a great spot that is run by Ahmed with a lot of volunteers. Alwan is one of the few Middle Eastern arts and community spaces in NY and we were glad to be warmly welcomed there. The event was great as it is in NY where Chelsea and I both live so lots of friends came, including Andrew Stern the photojournalist with images from Lebanon in the show and Ramin Talaie with images from Iran in the show. Andrew and Raed actually know each other from Iraq, so it was a great reunion in a lot of ways.
The event went a little long with hard questions from the audience about how we can foster a change of US policy in the Middle East. Answers from the panel came in all the usual forms.
Pressure the corporations to give up contracts in Iraq, and return the monies lost, including monies corporations are still holding for unfinished projects to Iraqi companies.
Continue to pressure congress to stop funding the war, now more than ever, letting the dems know why they are in office.
The suggestion I think we need to highlight more is to continue to educate ourselves and our communities about the realities of US foreign policy currently and historically in the Middle East. Many times as our panel has showed me the keys to re-spinning Washington’s arguments are in Washington’s past. This awareness can help ourselves and others to change what Raed calls the ‘mental approach’ Americans have when thinking about foreign policy. One of thinking the United States is supreme and all other nations and peoples need US to take care of them. Understanding our history will help us to change this sense of automatic entitlement we have been taught that rationalizes that it is feasible to bomb countries into democracy, or to bomb countries to liberate women. If social change movements can change these gut reactions in Americans they will grow and eventually win.
This is my last blog, I’m signing off. If you want reach me email info@justforeignpolicy.org
~Jessica
Antonia started the talk and launched into how corporations are driving the oil timeline for the war. She explained how the top five oil companies in the world control the biz. They control refining, marketing, and extraction. This not only allows them to control how much oil is turned to gas everyday and how much drivers pay at the pump this gives them un-due influence over US elected officials. Antonia went on to explain, for the first time in US history the top leaders (16 of them) in US government have spent more time as oil company executives than working for government! This includes, President, George Bush, Vice President, Dick Cheney and Secretary of State, Condi Rice who spent 10 years on the Board of Directors of