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      New York Times Fiction:  On Obama's Letter to 
	Rouhani 
  By Ramzy Baroud 
      Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 30, 2013 
	   Mark Landler is a White House correspondent for The New York 
	Times. Under the title “Through Diplomacy, Obama Finds a Pen Pal in Iran”, 
	Landler wrote of President Barack Obama’s deep “belief in the power of the 
	written word,” and of his “frustrating private correspondence with the 
	leaders of Iran.” (NYT, Sep. 19)   What is also frustrating is the 
	unabashed snobbery of Landler’s and the NYT’s narrative regarding Iran: that 
	of successive US administrations trying their best and obstinate Iranian 
	leaders – stereotyped and derided - who always fail to reciprocate. This is 
	all supposedly changing though since the new Iranian President Hasan Rouhani, 
	who they present as different and approachable, decided to break ranks with 
	his predecessors.   This is of course hardly an appropriate framing of 
	the story. While a friendly exchange of letters between Rouhani and Obama is 
	a welcomed development in a region that is torn between failed revolutions, 
	civil wars and the potential of an all-out regional conflict, it is not true 
	that it is Rouhani’s personality that is setting him apart from his 
	predecessor, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.   Rouhani’s ‘charm offensive’ as 
	described by the times is a ‘process’ that ‘has included the release of 11 
	prominent political prisoners and a series of conciliatory statements by top 
	Iranian officials.’ It is natural then, we are meant to believe, that Obama 
	would make his move and apply his writing skills in earnest. Israel was not 
	mentioned in the story even once, as if the fact that Israel’s decade-long 
	advocacy of sanctioning and bombing Iran has not been the single greatest 
	motive behind the deteriorating relations between Washington and Tehran, 
	long before Ahmadinejad was painted by US media, NTY included, as the devil 
	incarnate.   Dominant US media is unlikely to adjust its attitude 
	towards Iran and the rest of the Middle East anytime soon: the perceived 
	enemies will remain enemies and the historic allies – as in Israel only – 
	will always be that. While that choosy discourse has been the bread and 
	butter of US media – from elitist publications like NYT to demagogues like 
	Fox News – that one-sidedness will no longer suffice as the Middle East 
	region is vastly changing in terms of alliances and power plays.   
	Iran’s internal politics is multifarious, and the country’s location in a 
	geopolitically complex region makes it impossible, needless to say unfair, 
	to confine the country’s existence to the US whims and expectations. It is 
	US impulses, not the Iranian’s leader lack of letter writing skills that 
	made the relationship extremely difficult since the breakup 34 years ago. 
	Since then, it has been one pretense after the other. At the heart of the US 
	argument is Israel’s security – a doctrine that simply means total Israeli 
	military domination over its neighbors. US insistence to rule over a region 
	it perceives as its domain since the fading of British and French influence 
	in the oil-rich region has its many, violent at times, implications. But 
	there were also many wasted opportunities that could have assured both the 
	US and Iran that mutual respect and cooperation were a possibility worth 
	exploring.   Former Iranian President Mohammed Khatami (in office 
	1997-2005) was a reformist, and he too was seen as ‘different’. In fact, he 
	did try to reach out to the US, but aside from a few symbolic gestures 
	involving both parties, to no avail. The balances of power were extremely 
	skewed in favor of the US, and politicians with sinister ambitions 
	understood well the danger of reciprocal diplomacy with Iran.   The 
	Obama administration is not particularly keen on peace for its sake, but is 
	realistic enough to understand that the balances of power are constantly 
	shifting. If the US continues with intractable attitude, it will leave the 
	space open for its opponents to gain ground, and could find itself mired in 
	new conflicts with dangerous consequences. Russia, whose political lot in 
	the Middle East has grown to an unprecedented extent, delivered a masterful 
	stroke when it capitalized on US Secretary of State John Kerry’s apparent 
	gaffe regarding Syria’s chemical weapons arsenal. On Sep 14, Moscow’s 
	proposal to avert war, turned into an agreement, and in record time the mood 
	had completely shifted from one geared towards an imminent war, to one with 
	ample possibilities.   Of course, while the current civil war is 
	tearing Syria to shreds, Iran and its allies – as well as its enemies - have 
	been key players in the conflict. Now that an agreement has been reached 
	regarding Syria, Tom Curry, a National Affairs Writer with NBC News reported 
	that Obama is hoping the Syria agreement “could point the way to a 
	diplomatic solution to the problem of Iran’s nuclear weapons ambitions.” 
	  Preparing for all possibilities, Rouhani began a quest to fortify his 
	country’s own alliances. In the recent 13th Summit of the Shanghai 
	Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Kyrgyzstan, Rouhani showed willingness to 
	resolve problems surrounding its nuclear weapons program. Empowered by the 
	dissipating chances of war against Syria, and Russia’s growing fortunes as a 
	diplomatic arbitrator, Iran sees an opportunity for a dignified solution. 
	  Evidently, Israel and its Washington allies are not happy. To offset a 
	backlash, Kerry selected Israel as his first destination after the signing 
	of the Syria chemical weapons agreement on Sep. 14. Israeli Prime Minister 
	Benjamin Netanyahu, who had warned that Rouhani was no different than his 
	predecessor, must now find a way to restate his country’s relevance, and 
	will continue to find ways to push for war. Republican Senator John McCain’s 
	tireless advocacy for military action is not bearing fruits. His song ‘bomb, 
	bomb, bomb Iran’ couldn’t even deliver a limited strike against Syria. 
	Pro-Israel lawmakers such as Ted Deutch and Peter Roskam are merely urging 
	their government to double its efforts to prevent Russia’s arming of Iran 
	with advanced S-300 air defense systems.   Too little too late. Russia 
	knows well that any turning back on its Iranian ally will not bode well for 
	its longer term interests in the region. Andrei Arashev of the leading 
	Russian think tank Strategic Culture Foundation is calling for “strategic 
	alliance” with Iran, a sentiment echoed elsewhere. To achieve that alliance, 
	but also to ease tensions with Washington, the Russian Kommersant reported 
	that Moscow might offer Antey-2500, an alternative air defense system with 
	equal efficiency. But there is more as “Russia is ready to execute the 
	Pakistan-Iran gas pipeline project, ignoring the US sanctions on Iran,” 
	reported Pakistan’s The New International on Sep. 19, citing a Russian 
	minister’s comments in a meeting with Pakistan’s petroleum minister in 
	Islamabad.   It really matters little whether Obama is a true pen pal 
	or not, the same way that his oratory skills have long been disregarded as 
	extraneous. The issue here has much to do with the political landscape in 
	the Middle East, the failed attempt at war in Syria and Iran’s own 
	alliances, starting with Russia. Obama’s alleged morally-driven expectations 
	from Iran’s leaders and his supposed need for a trustworthy Iranian pen pal 
	is all but mere fiction promoted by the New York Times. This strange logic 
	begins and ends there.   - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is a media consultant, an internationally-syndicated columnist and the 
	editor of PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father was A Freedom 
	Fighter: Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press).   
	  
	  
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