Fareed Zakaria’s Rant Against Iranian “Show Trials”
By Bronwyn's Harbor on August 11, 2009 at 10:45 PM in Current Affairs
Zakaria is right: The illegally-elected Iranian leadership and mullahs are acting like Stalinist goons.
Here’s Newsweek’s story about its reporter, Maziar Bahari, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s comments on August 6th about the trials:
“NEWSWEEK Reporter Arrested,” June 21, 2009:
Among the dozens of people arrested overnight in Tehran was NEWSWEEK reporter Maziar Bahari, who has covered Iran for the magazine for over a decade. Bahari was home asleep at 7 a.m. when several security officers showed up at his Tehran apartment. According to his mother, who lives with the 41-year-old reporter and documentary filmmaker, the men did not identify themselves. They seized Bahari’s laptop and several videotapes. Assuring her that he would be their guest, they then left with Bahari. He has not been heard from since.
In a statement, NEWSWEEK magazine has strongly condemned the detention of Bahari and called for him to be released immediately. Bahari is a dual Canadian-Iranian citizen. According to the statement, “His coverage of Iran, for NEWSWEEK and other outlets, has always been fair and nuanced, and has given full weight to all sides of the issues. He has always worked well with different administrations in Tehran, including the current one.” … Read all.
And here are Hillary’s fiercely frank statements on the detentions and show trials:
“Clinton says trial shows Iran ‘is afraid of its own people’,” CNN, August 6, 2009:
[...]
“It is a show trial, there’s no doubt about it,” Clinton told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in a wide-ranging interview to be broadcast on his “GPS” program Sunday.
“It demonstrates I think better than any of us could ever say that this Iranian leadership is afraid of their own people, and afraid of the truth and the facts coming out.”
Clinton spoke to Zakaria during her visit to Africa.
Those on trial include Newsweek reporter Maziar Bahari, who has dual citizenship in Iran and Canada, and Kian Tajbakhsh, an Iranian-American scholar. The trial, which began over the weekend, is scheduled to resume Saturday, according to Iran’s semi-official Fars News Agency.
This week, the State Department issued a statement expressing deep concern for Tajbakhsh.
“Given that the charges facing Mr. Tajbakhsh are without foundation, we call on Iran’s leadership to release Mr. Tajbakhsh without delay,” State Department spokesman Robert Wood said Tuesday, reading a prepared statement. “He has played absolutely no role in the election and poses no threat to the Iranian government or its national security.”
Wood said Tajbakhsh has not been provided an attorney, which he is entitled to, and warned Iran that “the world is watching what is happening in Iran and will bear witness.”
Speaking on Thursday, Clinton said the United States also has “expressed our concern about Mr. Bahari’s confinement and trial” to Canada’s government, and offered its help.
All of those on trial in Iran — who include Iranian journalists and supporters of the opposition — have been charged for their alleged roles in protests that followed last month’s disputed presidential election. … Read all.
Hillary’s bold statement that “this Iranian leadership is afraid of their own people, and afraid of the truth and the facts coming out” reveals her sophisticated comprehension that the Iranian government is divided within as well as among its citizens, and is in trouble in a way that it hasn’t been in decades.
Most pundits I’ve heard believe that any significant upheaval in the Iranian government won’t happen soon but that, slowly, the leadership’s ironclad hold over its people is beginning to crumble — and deservedly so.


















