Tehran Jails Iranian American Scholar After Long House Arrest
Iran yesterday detained prominent American academic Haleh Esfandiari, director of the Middle East Program at the Smithsonian Institution's Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, according to center president and director Lee H. Hamilton and Esfandiari's husband.
Esfandiari, a dual U.S.-Iranian citizen who has lived in the United States for more than a quarter-century, has been under virtual house arrest since last December, when the government refused to allow her to leave Iran after visiting her 93-year-old mother. Since then, she has been summoned repeatedly for interrogations by intelligence officials about U.S. programs on Iran. In particular, she was questioned about Iran programs at the Wilson Center, one of Washington's most prominent foreign policy think tanks.
Esfandiari was summoned by the intelligence ministry again yesterday but was then taken to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison, the sources said.
Esfandiari is one of three "soft hostages," all dual U.S.-Iranian nationals, whose passports have been confiscated by the Iranian government, rendering them unable to leave the country.
The United States has not faced such tension over Americans held in Iran since the 1979-1981 hostage crisis, when 52 Americans were held for 444 days. Until Esfandiari' s detention yesterday, the Wilson Center and her family had sought to avoid publicity in hopes that she would be granted a new passport.
Esfandiari and the other soft hostages appear caught up in an Iranian reaction to the Bush administration's $75 million program to promote democracy in Iran, which was unveiled last year. Tehran has since cracked down on human rights advocates, labor groups and women's rights campaigners, according to human rights activists.
"The government's justification for these actions is usually couched as a response to the State Department's announcement to provide financial support to Iranian civil society and nongovernment organizations," said Hadi Ghaemi of Human Rights Watch. "This has fueled a perception among the Iranian politicians that the U.S. is committed to instigating a 'velvet revolution' in Iran.
Ironically, the Iranian Americans who travel to Iran mostly stay away from politics and are not by any means part of the 'regime change' advocates. But they have become pawns in the hands of Iranian government as it charts its strategy in engaging with the U.S."
During her interrogations, Esfandiari was pressured to make false confessions or to falsely implicate the Wilson Center in activities in which it had no role, Hamilton said. Esfandiari was contacted again a few days ago and asked to "cooperate" with intelligence ministry officials, which she refused. On Monday she was told to report to the Ministry of Intelligence again. When she arrived yesterday, she was taken to Evin Prison. It is unclear whether she has been formally charged with any offense.
Hamilton, a former congressman and Iraq Study Group co-chairman, wrote Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Feb. 20 appealing for Esfandiari to be allowed to leave. "I said the Wilson Center did not receive any money from the U.S. government for the purpose of trying to influence or to determine specific policies or direction of the Iranian government," Hamilton said in an interview yesterday. "We've been very transparent about our dealings. . . . We have offered a wide array of viewpoints. That's our role."
In a subsequent conference call with reporters, he added, "The interrogators could have gotten all the information with a few clicks on the Wilson Center Web site."
Hamilton's Iraq Study Group report in December urged the Bush administration to deal with Tehran on the issue of Iraq. "It is our view that in diplomacy, a nation can and should engage its adversaries and enemies to try to resolve conflicts and differences," the report said. "Diplomatic talks should be extensive and substantive." The Wilson Center did not receive a response from the Iranian president's office.
Esfandiari has brought in many scholars and analysts from Tehran to speak at the Wilson Center, one of the few places in Washington to offer a robust range of opinions on Iran. "The irony is, in Washington she faced criticism for bringing in people who were sympathetic to the Iranian government," said Karim Sadjadpour of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "By detaining her the Iranian government only eliminates an advocate for diplomacy and strengthens the voices of those in Washington who say the regime is cruel and should not be engaged."
6 comments:
Ay baba! Never a dull moment, is it? Why hasn't there been media coverage of this for this long? Anyhow, now that there is publicity, they can't keep such a prominent individual in prison for long. Thanks for sharing.
Hamilton is a poor excuse for a man. I will never understand why he is all for 'talking' to a LIER! GRRRRRRR.
If only the USA could get on the same page for a freakin' change, we might actually get somewhere. I don't get why it is fashionable to be against President Bush just out of hand.
I don't agree with him on much, recently, but I will neither abandon him!
I pray for her safety, life, and soul.
Dear Rosemary: forgive my ignorance but I don't know who Hamilton is..LOL
Two things!
Firstly, The way this article is written in the Washington Post:
"Tehran has since cracked down on human rights advocates..."
So before this, Islamic Republic did not crack down on human rights advocates??
I know Hadi and I am sure the way he has been quoted by Washington Post is not the way he commented on this situation.
Secondly, so many Iranians like Hale Esfandiari, try to appease the Islamic Republic by advocating soft options, just so that they can go back and forward to Iran to see their relatives.
Otherwise the arrest of this advocate of diplomacy with Iran just goes to prove that you can not be diplomatic with this Shiite religious dictatorship.
Is it my imagination or has the United States government always failed to hold Iran accountable for its actions? This appears to be simply another form of hostage taking. The IRI began with hostage taking. The IRI helped form Hezbollah and Hezbollah uses hostage taking. The IRI has seized sailers. It would appear that the IRI's government acts more like kidnappers than a government.
Roxieamerica: It's not your imagination. I've been wondering about that for years. I can't explain it...
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