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Iran: Nonviolence 101

by: Steve Weissman, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Supporters of Iranian presidential candidate Mirhossein Mousavi hold a rally in Tehran. (Photo: Reuters Pictures)

    Peter Ackerman and Ramin Ahmadi called the revolution on January 4, 2006, in an article in the International Herald Tribune with the prophetic title "Iran's Future? Watch the Streets."

    "Against all odds, nonviolent tactics such as protests and strikes have gradually become common in Iran's domestic political scene," they wrote. "Student activists have frequently resorted to strikes, sit-ins and demonstrations, and the violent response of the regime and repeated attacks of the paramilitaries have not succeeded in silencing them."

    Iran's medical professionals, teachers, workers, bus drivers and women were also using non-violent tactics such as protests, industrial action, and hunger strikes in their fight for equal rights and civil liberties, the authors reported.

    These "uncoordinated actions" had created "a grass-roots movement … waiting to be roused," urged Ackerman and Ahmadi. But, "its cadres so far lack a clear strategic vision and steady leadership."

    Where would the Iranians find this vision and leadership?

    "Nongovernmental organizations around the world should expand their efforts to assist Iranian civil society, women's groups, unions and journalists," the authors wrote. But, they left out a salient fact. In a chilling mix of Mahatma Gandhi and James Bond, Ackerman and Ahmadi themselves were already working with the United States Government to engineer regime change in Iran.

    A Wall Street whiz kid who made his fortune in leveraged buy-outs, the billionaire Ackerman was chair of Freedom House, a hot-bed of neo-con support for American intervention just about everywhere. In this pursuit, he has promoted the use of non-violent civil disobedience in American-backed "color revolutions" from Serbia to the Ukraine, Georgia, and Venezuela, where it failed.

    Ahmadi teaches medicine at Yale and co-founded the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center, using initial grants of $1.6 million in 2004 from the U.S. Department of State, according to the New York Times. Washington reportedly continued its open-handed support in succeeding years, allowing the center to publicize the abuses of the Ayatollahs in English and Farsi.

    Ahmadi and the center also ran regular workshops for Iranians on non- violent civil disobedience. These were in Dubai, across the straits from Iran. Some of the sessions operated under the name Iranian Center for Applied Nonviolence and included a session on popular revolts around the world, especially the "color revolutions."

    According to the Times, at least two members of the Serbian youth movement Otpor participated, as did the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict, which Peter Ackerman founded and chaired. The sessions taught the Iranian participants how to use Hushmail, an encrypted e-mail account, and Martus software to upload information about human rights abuses without leaving any trace on the originating computer.

    "We were certain that we would have trouble once we went back to Tehran," said one of the Iranians. "This was like a James Bond camp for revolutionaries."

    No one should question the value of non-violent civil disobedience for those who would bring down an unpopular government. Nor does the American training deny the very real grievances felt by the millions of Iranians who have taken to the streets – or by the lesser numbers of middle-class women who banged pots and pans as part of earlier CIA destabilization programs in Brazil and Chile. Even more important, no one should doubt the courage and commitment of anyone who would stand up against the Ayatollahs and their repressive state power.

    But the presence of American involvement adds several dynamics of its own, which Ackerman and Ahmadi failed to explain to their Iranian trainees.

    First, the Americans decide where to put their efforts – and when to stop them. Washington does not fund or provide training and technology for non-violent revolutions against regimes it backs, as in Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Israel, or Columbia.

    Second, the American meddling makes it easier for the Ayatollahs to build support within their own ranks and among a large majority of the population for whatever repressive measures they finally decide to take.

    Third, the non-violent participants know nothing of other moves that the dark side of the American government might be making at the same time, whether staging acts of provocation or supporting terrorist activities by breakaway groups such as the Baluchi Jundallah. Nor do the vast majority of participants know that American Intelligence regularly uses training sessions of all kinds to recruit individual agents.

    Fourth, the Iranian activists want to win. At least some in the America government might prefer to provoke a brutal defeat, a Tiananmen Square, to further isolate Iran and bring pressure within the Obama administration for a military response to the Iranian nuclear program.

    Fifth, non-violent tactics and organizational discipline offer ways to win the support of soldiers and police officers, isolate would-be provocateurs, and avoid giving the government any easy excuse to bang heads and kill people. The same techniques also give the organizers ways to turn off the protest, as appears to have happened during the Orange Revolution in Ukraine.

    One other dynamic has more lasting effects. During the Cold War, the CIA funded and manipulated a number of liberal and social democratic intellectuals, labor unions, civil society groups, and publications. The CIA-run Congress for Cultural Freedom and its vast network were perhaps the best known. When journalists at Ramparts and elsewhere exposed the CIA's hand, many of these individuals and groups became discredited for having allowed Cold Warriors and dirty tricksters to use them.

    Washington's promotion of non-violent resistance in other countries is already casting suspicion on a number of activists and thinkers who, wittingly or not, have allowed themselves to become pawns in open and covert programs to "promote democracy." Non-violent activists everywhere need to draw a clear line against cooperating with governments of any stripe in this foreign meddling.

  

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A veteran of the Berkeley Free Speech Movement and the New Left monthly Ramparts, Steve Weissman lived for many years in London, working as a magazine writer and television producer. He now lives and works in France.

Comments

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When I saw the green

When I saw the green armbands, head scarves, etc. I was reminded of the so-called Orange Revolution just passed, and concluded "CIA." Here you remind us of the Ramparts reportage and the lessons we learned then. Ahmadinejad was scoffed for accusing the CIA of setting a sniper to kill someone, in this case Neda. I tend to think he was wrong about the sniper, who was probably one of his own paid thugs- but he was probably right in pointing to CIA involvement at the level you describe here in training Iranian students. . . I recall that the US first encouraged and then stranded Hungarians in 1956 and Tibetans, whom we also trained and armed, in the early 60's .. .

This quite the sticky

This quite the sticky conundrum. Non-violent protesting is an effective way for a population to effect the changes it desires, and training in it is all to the good. But hanging the CIA connection on it discredits it. Very clever, those neo-cons. As in all things tho, knowledge is power. Take the good and thumb your nose at the CIA would seem to be indicated here.

If a "wall street whiz kid"

If a "wall street whiz kid" and the CIA were behind it, you can bet it wasn't the good of the Iranian people they had in mind. It was oil. Repressive dictatorships around the world are holding hands with the US because it buys their products and they let them set up factories and drill their oil. If they won't play ball with major corporations then they are titled repressive regimes that have to be delivered, (with the help of the US Marines), our style of democracy. Which usually means we set up our own puppet dictatorship with just as phony elections but our dictator stays in power. So do our corporations. The US leaves such huge footprints where ever it goes. A blind man could see how they stomp around the globe with Wall Street pulling the strings.

In Chile and Argentina, yes.

In Chile and Argentina, yes. In Brazil, unfortunately not.

Let's clean up our own

Let's clean up our own backyard people. What I want to know is when are the American people going to drop their Prozac, beer, cellphones, and take to the streets. I cannot believe that a government responsible for the death of so many innocent foreign civilians, and Wall Street , banks and business corporations so corrupt that they have brought the world economy to it's knees, are being bailed out by the very people they robbed. In an election landslide promising "change" we haven't reversed any of the Bush war machinations that helped bring us here. Nor have we punished any of the guilty for war crimes and fiscal irresponsibility. The weak and the homeless are your brethren. If socialism is the only thing that can stop the erosion of common decency and values then I say let's bring it on brother and give those corporate pigs and war mongers their just due. The world is tired of eating "yellowcake".

I've little doubt that CIA

I've little doubt that CIA would interfere if they could get a big pointy toe in the door..as would mossad who has been instigating and trouble making, if not outright murder for years..including that of Iranian nuclear scientists... but one of the surrealer moments I've had were seeing your Iranian men on the streets lobbing rocks at heavily armed police...and for a flashing flaming second I thought I was actually and finally seeing coveage of Palestine...it looked so much the same...young people telling the powers to GO !! but I must have been dreaming...there is no US MSM coverage of the suffering of millions under brutal Isreali occupation for 42 yrs...Iran has OIL...Iraq had OIL...Aghanistan has GAS.. boys with stones against guns has just never been newsworthy for US MSM for some reason...when it comes to OIL/GAS-less places who want FREEDOM.....Free Gaza!

The current Iranian regime

The current Iranian regime is really awful. They deserve to be thrown out. As one who has written extensively of the insidios actions of CIA both abroad and at home, I can safely say that they do usually provoke blowback that is worse than the regime they are tring to overthrow. The lesson from this is that the blowback is simply not worth it, but these jerks never learn. Even there strategy is stupid. Susan Rice should be using the U.N. as a form for denouncing what is going on in Iran, which is violating all sorts of international conventions. Tougher sanctions can help by further damaging Iran's faltering economy. Covert action is a seductive but, in the end, dangerous path to follow. One would have thought CIA and others, including Freedom House, which has always been a CIA front, might have learned. But like the Bourbons, it can be said that they learned nothing and forgot nothing."

We should not forget that it

We should not forget that it was the CIA under President Eisenhower that destroyed the iranian democratic government of Mohamed Mossadegh, replaced it with the dictatorship of the Shah, and helped to suport and train Savak, the shah's secret police. Kermit Roosevelt wrote a book about his leadership in that overthrow. I suppose we thought Iranians can't read. The revolution of the Ayatollahs came as the people wanted to get rid of the shah and his American connections. The Iranians took the US Embassy because they associated it with the Shah. Americans should be very careful about internal involvement in attempts to restore democracy in Iran We can do much more harm than good by our presence. I think President Obama is wisely walking a very narrow path and the Republicans are letting their own ambitions lead them to, once again, play with fire in an explosive situation.

Americans need to take to

Americans need to take to the streets. Then they would finally realize that democracy and free speech is just an illusion. The mighty military would be all over them. Remember the Kent state killings- unarmed college students just protesting the Vietnam war and the military was sent in, 8 dead.....True democracy is an illusion. It is all being manipulated by a few.

Additional Resources on

Additional Resources on ICNC, Otpor and CANVAS Weissman uses the "politics of association" to critique the work of not only Peter Ackerman but also of the International Center on Nonviolent Conflict and of CANVAS (the Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies, which emerged out of the Serbian Otpor movement to oppose Milosevic). I would recommend two additional sources of information regarding the development of nonviolent opposition strategies and the work of organizations mentioned by Weissman: "Nonviolent Action and Pro-Democracy Struggles" by Stephen Zunes Foreign Policy in Focus, January 24, 2008 http://www.fpif.org/fpiftxt/4923 Center for Applied Nonviolent Action and Strategies (CANVAS) http://www.canvasopedia.org

These materials on how to

These materials on how to stage a peaceful democratic uprising which have been produced by Freedom House, National Endowment for Democracy and any number of other CIA front groups are available in English and should be used by people in the U.S. to organize mass protest to challenge the two party ruling class concensus holding together the U.S. military-industrial-congressional-intelligence complex. As to Iran, remember that at least a year prior to Ackerman and Ahmadi's International Herald Tribune article, the New Yorker ran an article by Seymour Herch in January 2005 reporting that U.S. Special Forces had been deep in Iran since at least the summer of 2004 and that the U.S. CIA and Defense Department were actively seeking to destabilize Iran. So of course it is always much more than those in the U.S. seeking to foment "peaceful" revolutions. They are just another part of a larger, coordinated U.S. effort to achieve its (not the people of the countries involved) strategic and geo-political ends. As we know, the U.S. is seeking to use the same "non-violent" and "peaceful" means to destabilize much of Latin America's revitalized progressive and left movements and governments. But have no doubt, the U.S. military and CIA are deeply, deeply involved. Good sources are Eva Golinger and Jeremy Bigwood as well as UpsideDownWorld.com and TeleSURtv.net

@Jeff Leys Serbian Otpor

@Jeff Leys Serbian Otpor movement isn't grassroot one.It is creation of CIA and US Gov.You can see it here: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&contentId=A18395-2000Dec3¬Found=true US Gov. does not supply world with "nonviolent" movements,only with death and sectarian violence.We,in Balkan know that very well.

There's no way for effective

There's no way for effective non-violent protest to happen in the US on a mass scale. Anytime half a million turn up in DC for a day of peaceful protest, the media reduces the number to 100,000 and seeks every means of marginalizing the message. The presidential directives and laws passed by the Bush administration and upheld by Obama alredy provide for all the advance surveillance and quick crackdowns any government could ever want, all beyond the reach of a TV screen (if not also a camera). I don't see any point of that. So far, a few factory-worker occupations have succeeded in blocking mass lay-offs, but we know that strikes are futile. Armed revolution has no chance of happening or succeeding. If anything remotely like non-violent revolution is to succeed in the US - even with massive bloodshed and imprisonment - it will have to take a totally new and clever form never before seen on the planet.

We are the Majority now.

We are the Majority now. The Neocons and the Neolibs are the new minority. All we have to do is pick up the phone and call our congressmen and raise hell. They will figure out that being bought and paid for doesn't guarantee reelection when the people still have the vote. Pick up the phone - that is the greatest weapon we have. Do it before we descend into a pandemic crisis with forced vaccines or some other excuse for martial law.

On the other hand . . .

On the other hand . . . maybe this isn't such a bad thing. Yes, of course it's evil of the US to train protesters and incite street riots in other countries to further the aims of the US. But the CIA has never looked at its pawns as people, with minds of their own, able to make distinctions and recognize when they're being screwed. The Taliban were given guns and training to fight the Russians. For the past eight years that training and those very same guns have been turned on us. Much the same will happen with nonviolence tactics -- they'll be turned on any government that does not follow basic democratic principles, whether the US likes it or not. And unlike guns, nonviolent thinking and tactics do not work in the service of despots, tyrants, and autocrats. Please! Train more activists and organizers in foreign countries!

The overall consensus of

The overall consensus of these comments paints a grim picture of American "interests" abroad, and rightly so. Does our shining new President bother to read Truthout? Or is he, like his ignorant predecessor, ignoring the voices of outraged people everywhere?

I am surprised and

I am surprised and disappointed the Weissman does not mention the admitted presence of US operatives in remote areas of Iran and the increasing drug problem in Iran caused by drugs flowing in through areas of unruly groups adjacent to Afghanistan.

With enemies like Peter

With enemies like Peter Ackerman, who needs friends? Ackerman has helped those of us who practice nonviolence and if someone believes that a nonviolent revolution can install a dictator who is then impervious to another nonviolent revolution, the logic is truly vacuous. If our CIA wants to export nonviolence, let's arrange for as much blowback as we can. ICNC has helped US citizens learn nonviolence and has helped us in our campaigns in opposition to US foreign policy, so I thank them and I say bring it on. I have lots of friends at ICNC, no friends at CIA, and see no connection between the two. The 'proofs' offered by Weissman and the ultraleftists are spurious at best.

Hey, all you neo-libs and

Hey, all you neo-libs and cons from the ICNC, NED, USIP, and passionate color revolutionists everywhere: Why not direct your sincere efforts into organizing your fellow Americans for a street revolution here in our OWN house. Wall Street and the Military Industrial Complex are robbing us blind and inflicting violence in the Middle East and around the world on any sovereign nation that refuses to become a client state with Uncle Sam. There will never be justice around the globe until we squash the consumer-fed beast that is us. Look in the mirror, our tax dollars prop up dictators everywhere who subjugate to multi-national corporations coveting their recourses, or provide real estate for our military bases. And beware, color revolutionists, of being duped into fomenting revolutions that only result in installing obedient client states for US business interests. Forgive me if I've overlooked, but I haven't heard much from you all regarding the blood spilled in Uzbekistan because peaceful demonstrators are contesting THAT election. Many more dead there than in Iran. But no Twitter or YouTube? Oh right, you all forgot to get State Department money for technology to THAT theocratic dictatorship. Meanwhile at home, our constitution is being eviscerated, we are shamelessly behind the rest of the world in health care, we are being spied upon and military recruiters are preying upon our youth in schools to provide cannon fodder for our next war of "liberation." Enough reasons to get Twittering on a revolution HERE, and you "NGO"s (wink, wink) could sure help.