Thursday, June 30, 2016

The New York Times Still Falls for Ben Rhodes' Iran Lies - Clifford Smith




by Clifford Smith


The New York Times really wants to continue believing that White House aide Ben Rhodes told the truth about Iran.


Originally published under the title "Even After Ben Rhodes Came Clean, New York Times Still Reports His Iran Lies as Truth."
 
The New York Times really wants to continue believing that White House aide Ben Rhodes told the truth about Iran.
"I want to believe," the slogan from The X-Files, seems to also be the operating principle for the New York Times regarding its coverage of Iran. The Times continues to report on events in Iran as a series of meaningful confrontations between "moderates" and "hard-liners" that will shape Iran's behavior toward the U.S. -- even after the Times was directly told that the White House had lied about it.
Central to the Obama administration's case for the Iran nuclear deal was the narrative that the election of Hassan Rouhani and other Iranian "moderates" made the deal possible. Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes admitted, in a New York Times article no less, that such a story was "the center of the arc" of a narrative that was "largely manufactured" for the purpose of selling the deal.

On some level, the narrative worked: it fooled much of the public, the press, and well over 100 members of Congress. The New York Times certainly swallowed this narrative, hook, line, and sinker, and the Times hardly stands alone -- but the paper has indeed been the most prominent, slavishly devoted dupe.

Candidates for the Iran's presidency and parliament are pre-approved by the unelected Guardian Council.
The notion of an Iranian "moderate" controlling the regime was always spurious on its face. Elections don't significantly affect major policy decisions in Iran. People who stand for "election" for president and Parliament must first be approved by an unelected body beholden to the Supreme Leader. Iran is functionally a theocratic dictatorship.

And Rouhani is simply not a moderate, as Rhodes essentially admitted. Instead, he is a master deceiver.

He feigns his concern for human rights, but according to UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Ahmed Shaheed and former opposition leaders, human rights have actually gotten worse under Rouhani. Shaheed believes that this has escaped widespread attention because of the focus on the nuclear deal.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (right) was hand-picked by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei (left).
These kinds of distractions are not new tactics for Rouhani. In his previous role as a nuclear negotiator, his goal was to split Iran's adversaries while buying time for their nuclear program to develop. He remains a tool of the worst actors in Iran.

However, and in spite of the implausibility of the narrative, not to mention Rhodes having explained his cynical manipulation to the Times itself, the Times continues to insist on the centrality of this fictional "moderates/hard-liners" dynamic in understanding Iran's behavior.

Literally the day after the Times published Rhodes' explanation of his falsehoods, the Times opened up its editorial page to excoriate not Iran, but the United States.

The notion of an Iranian 'moderate' controlling the regime was always spurious on its face.
Because international finance is still skittish, the Times was concerned the U.S. might infuriate the "hard-liners" because some Iranian sanctions were not lifted as part of the deal. I'm not sure what is worse: the fact that the Times continued to play up the moderate/hard-liner narrative, or that it blamed the U.S. for not doing enough to placate the hard-liners.

Another story, published six days after the Rhodes mea culpa, played up the moderate/hardliner narrative while ironically proving it false.

It seems that a woman, Minoo Khaleghi, was elected to Parliament -- but was ruled ineligible because she broke Iranian law by being photographed without her hijab, something she denies. The Times later reported on the "hardliners" more general crackdown on women who don't wear headscarves.

Assuming Ms. Khaleghi is a real moderate, her ineligibility proves again that hardliners hold all the power.

Such self-contradictory reporting has continued unabated with the re-election of Parliamentary Speaker Ali Larijani. According to the Times, Larijani's landslide victory was a "mild surprise" since "reformists" had done so well in February elections.

It never occurred to the Times that Iranian officials' actions might not match up with the "reformist" label. Even when "moderates" win in Iran, they either aren't actually moderates or are not allowed to hold power.
The idea that a moderate/hardliner conflict affects how the Iranian regime behaves toward the U.S. is false.
But even now, even after Rhodes' mea culpa, essentially no Iran-related story by the Times fails to follow this false narrative.

Of course, there are plenty of moderate voices and genuine would-be reformers in Iran. The Iranian people's spontaneous organization during the "green revolution" and the ongoing saga of the frequently imprisoned but irrepressible filmmaker Jafar Panahi are just two examples that demonstrate moderate, reformist sentiments exist outside of government. But the idea that a moderate/hardliner conflict affects how the current Iranian regime behaves toward the U.S. is false.

Further, the Times knows it is false based on its own reporting.

However, it just keeps reporting it as fact, and even Agent Mulder didn't want to believe that badly.


Clifford Smith is director of the Middle East Forum's Washington Project.

Source: http://www.meforum.org/6095/new-york-times-ben-rhodes-iran

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Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.

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