By Medea Benjamin and Nicolas J. S. Davies
May 29, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - On May 6th, President Trump
vetoed a
war powers bill specifying that he must ask Congress
for authorization to use military force against Iran.
Trump’s "maximum pressure" campaign of
deadly sanctions and threats of war against Iran has
seen no let-up, even as the U.S., Iran and the whole
world desperately need to set aside our conflicts to
face down the common danger of the Covid-19 pandemic.
So what is it about Iran that makes it such a target
of hostility for Trump and the neocons? There are many
repressive regimes in the world, and many of them are
close US allies, so this policy is clearly not based on
an objective assessment that Iran is more repressive
than Egypt, Saudi Arabia or other monarchies in the
Persian Gulf.
The Trump administration claims that its "maximum
pressure" sanctions and threats of war against Iran are
based on the danger that Iran will develop nuclear
weapons. But after decades of inspections by the
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and despite
the US’s
politicization of the IAEA, the Agency has
repeatedly confirmed that Iran
does not have a nuclear weapons program.
If Iran ever did any preliminary research on nuclear
weapons, it was probably during the Iran-Iraq War in the
1980s, when the
US and its allies helped Iraq to make and use
chemical weapons that killed up to 100,000 Iranians. A
2007 USNational
Intelligence Estimate, the IAEA’s 2015 "Final
Assessment on Past and Present Outstanding Issues"
and decades of IAEA inspections have examined and
resolved every scrap of false evidence of a nuclear
weapons program
presented or fabricated by the CIA and its allies.
If, despite all the evidence, US policymakers still
fear that Iran could develop nuclear weapons, then
adhering to the Iran Nuclear Deal (JCPOA), keeping Iran
inside the Non-Proliferation Treaty, and ensuring
ongoing access by IAEA inspectors would provide greater
security than abandoning the deal.
As with Bush’s false WMD claims about Iraq in 2003,
Trump’s real goal is not nuclear non-proliferation but
regime change. After 40 years of failed sanctions and
hostility, Trump and a cabal of US warhawks still cling
to the vain hope that a tanking economy and widespread
suffering in Iran will lead to a popular uprising or
make it vulnerable to another U.S.-backed coup or
invasion.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
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United Against a Nuclear Iran and the
Counter Extremism Project
One of the key organizations promoting and pushing
hostility towards Iran is a shadowy group called United
Against a Nuclear Iran (UANI). Founded in 2008, it was
expanded and reorganized in 2014 under the umbrella of
the Counter Extremism Project United (CEPU) to broaden
its attacks on Iran and divert US policymakers’
attention away from the role of Israel, Saudi Arabia,
the United Arab Emirates and other US allies in
spreading violence, extremism and chaos in the greater
Middle East.
UANI acts as a private enforcer of US sanctions by
keeping a "business
registry" of hundreds of companies all over the
world – from Adidas to Zurich Financial Services – that
trade with or are considering trading with Iran. UANI
hounds these companies by naming and shaming them,
issuing reports for the media, and urging the Office of
Foreign Assets Control to impose fines and sanctions. It
also keeps a
checklist of companies that have signed a
declaration certifying they do not conduct business in
or with Iran.
Proving how little they care about the Iranian
people, UANI even targets pharmaceutical, biotechnology,
and medical-device corporations –
including
Bayer,
Merck,
Pfizer,
Eli Lilly, and
Abbott Laboratories – that have been granted special
US humanitarian aid licenses.
Where does UANI get its funds?
UANI was founded by three former US officials, Dennis
Ross, Richard Holbrooke and Mark Wallace. In 2013, it
still had a modest budget of $1.7 million, nearly 80%
coming from two Jewish-American billionaires with strong
ties to Israel and the Republican Party: $843,000 from
precious metals investor
Thomas Kaplan and $500,000 from casino owner
Sheldon Adelson. Wallace and other UANI staff have
also worked for Kaplan’s investment firms, and he
remains a key funder and advocate for UANI and its
affiliated groups.
In 2014, UANI split into two entities: the original
UANI and the Green Light Project, which does business as
the Counter Extremism Project. Both entities are under
the umbrella of and funded by a third, Counter Extremism
Project United (CEPU). This permits the organization to
brand its fundraising as being for the Counter Extremism
Project, even though it still regrants a third of its
funds to UANI.
CEO Mark Wallace, Executive Director David Ibsen and
other staff work for all three groups in their
shared offices in Grand Central Tower in New York.
In 2018, Wallace drew a combined salary of $750,000 from
all three entities, while Ibsen’s combined salary was
$512,126.
In recent years, the revenues for the umbrella group,
CEPU, have mushroomed, reaching $22 million in 2017.
CEPU is secretive about the sources of this money. But
investigative journalist
Eli Clifton, who starting looking into UANI in 2014
when it was sued for defamation by a Greek ship owner it
accused of violating sanctions on Iran, has found
evidence suggesting financial ties with Saudi Arabia and
the United Arab Emirates.
That is certainly what
hacked emails between CEPU staff, an Emirati
official and a Saudi lobbyist imply. In September 2014,
CEPU’s president Frances Townsend emailed the UAE
Ambassador to the US to
solicit the UAE’s support and propose that it host
and fund a CEPU forum in Abu Dhabi.
Four months later, Townsend emailed again to
thank him, writing, "And many thanks for your and
Richard Mintz’ (UAE lobbyist) ongoing support of the CEP
effort!" UANI fundraiser Thomas Kaplan has formed a
close relationship with Emirati ruler Bin Zayed, and
visited the UAE at least 24 times. In 2019, he gushed to
an interviewer that the UAE and its
despotic rulers "are my closest partners in more
parts of my life than anyone else other than my wife."
Another email from Saudi lobbyist and former Senator
Norm Coleman to the Emirati Ambassador about CEPU’s tax
status implied that the Saudis and Emiratis were both
involved in its funding, which would mean that CEPU may
be violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act by
failing to register as a Saudi or Emirati agent in the
US
Ben Freeman of the Center for International Policy
has documented the dangerously unaccountable and
covert expansion of the influence of foreign governments
and military-industrial interests over US foreign policy
in recent years, in which registered lobbyists are only
the "tip of the iceberg" when it comes to foreign
influence. Eli Clifton calls UANI, "a fantastic case
study and maybe a microcosm of the ways in which
American foreign policy is actually influenced and
implemented."
CEPU and
UANI’s staff and advisory boards are stocked with
Republicans, neoconservatives and warhawks, many of whom
earn lavish salaries and consulting fees. In the two
years before President Trump appointed John Bolton as
his National Security Advisor, CEPU paid Bolton
$240,000 in consulting fees. Bolton, who
openly advocates war with Iran, was instrumental in
getting the Trump administration to withdraw from the
nuclear deal.
UANI also enlists Democrats to try to give the group
broader, bipartisan credibility. The chair of UANI’s
board is former Democratic Senator Joe Lieberman, who
was known as the most pro-Zionist member of the Senate.
A more moderate Democrat on UANI’s board is former New
Mexico governor and UN ambassador Bill Richardson.
Norman Roule, a CIA veteran who was the National
Intelligence Manager for Iran throughout the Obama
administration was paid
$366,000 in consulting fees by CEPU in 2018. Soon
after the brutal Saudi assassination of journalist Jamal
Khassoghi, Roule and UANI fundraiser Thomas Kaplan met
with Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman in Saudi Arabia,
and Roule then played a
leading role in articles and on the talk-show
circuit whitewashing Bin Salman’s repression and talking
up his superficial "reforms" of Saudi society.
More recently, amid a growing outcry from Congress,
the UN and the European Union to ease US sanctions on
Iran during the pandemic, UANI chairman Joe Lieberman,
CEPU president Frances Townsend and CEO Mark Wallace
signed
a letter to Trump that falsely claimed, “US
sanctions neither prevent nor target the supply of food,
medicine or medical devices to Iran,” and begged him not
to relax his murderous sanctions because of COVID-19.
This was too much for Norman Roule, who tossed out his
UANI script and told
the Nation, "the international community
should do everything it can to enable the Iranian people
to obtain access to medical supplies and equipment."
Two Israeli shell companies to whom CEPU and UANI
have paid millions of dollars in "consulting fees" raise
even more troubling questions. CEPU has paid over
$500,000 to Darlink, located near Tel Aviv, while UANI
paid at least $1.5 million to Grove Business Consulting
in Hod Hasharon, about 10% of its revenues from 2016 to
2018. Neither firm seems to really exist, but Grove’s
address on UANI’s IRS filings appears in the
Panama Papers as that of Dr. Gideon Ginossar, an
officer of an offshore company registered in the British
Virgin Islands that defaulted on its creditors in 2010.
Selling a Corrupted Picture to US Policymakers
UANI’s parent group, Counter Extremism Project
United, presents itself as dedicated to countering all
forms of extremism. But in practice, it is predictably
selective in its targets, demonizing Iran and its allies
while turning a blind eye to other countries with more
credible links to extremism and terrorism.
UANI supports
accusations by Trump and US warhawks that Iran is
"the world’s worst state sponsor of terrorism," based
mainly on its support for the Lebanese Shiite political
party Hezbollah, whose militia
defends southern Lebanon against Israel and fights
in Syria as an ally of the government.
But Iran placed UANI on its own list of terrorist
groups in 2019 after Mark Wallace and UANI hosted a
meeting at the Roosevelt Hotel in New York that was
mainly attended by supporters of the
Mujahedin-e-Kalqh (MEK). The MEK is a group that the
US government itself listed as a terrorist organization
until 2012 and which is still committed to the violent
overthrow of the government in Iran – preferably by
persuading the US and its allies to do it for them. UANI
tried to distance itself from the meeting after the
fact, but the published program listed UANI as the event
organizer.
On the other hand, there are two countries where CEPU
and UANI seem strangely unable to find any links to
extremism or terrorism at all, and they are the very
countries that appear to be funding their operations,
lavish salaries and shadowy "consulting fees": Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Many Americans are still demanding a public
investigation into Saudi Arabia’s role in the crimes of
September 11th. In a court case against Saudi Arabia
brought by 9/11 victims’ families, the FBI recently
revealed that a
Saudi Embassy official, Mussaed Ahmed al-Jarrah,
provided crucial support to two of the hijackers. Brett
Eagleson, a spokesman for the families whose father was
killed on September 11th, told Yahoo News,
"(This) demonstrates there was a hierarchy of command
that’s coming from the Saudi Embassy to the Ministry of
Islamic Affairs [in Los Angeles] to the hijackers."
The global spread of the Wahhabi version of Islam
that unleashed and fueled Al Qaeda, ISIS and other
violent Muslim extremist groups has been driven
primarily by Saudi Arabia, which has built and funded
Wahhabi schools and mosques all over the world. That
includes the King Fahd Mosque in Los Angeles that the
two 9/11 hijackers attended.
It is also
well documented that Saudi Arabia has been the
largest funder and arms supplier for the Al Qaeda-led
forces that have destroyed Syria since 2011, including
CIA-brokered shipments of thousands of tons of weapons
from Benghazi in Libya and at least eight countries in
Eastern Europe.
The UAE also supplied arms funding to Al
Qaeda-allied rebels in Syria between 2012 and 2016, and
the Saudi and UAE roles have now been reversed in Libya,
where the UAE is the
main supplier of thousands of tons of weapons to
General Haftar’s rebel forces. In Yemen, both the Saudis
and Emiratis have committed
war crimes. The Saudi and Emirati air forces have
bombed schools, clinics, weddings and school buses,
while the Emiratis
tortured detainees in 18 secret prisons in Yemen.
But United Against a Nuclear Iran and Counter
Extremism Project have redacted all of this from the
one-sided worldview they offer to US policymakers and
the American corporate media. While they demonize Iran,
Qatar, Hezbollah and the Muslim Brotherhood as
extremists and terrorists, they depict Saudi Arabia and
the UAE exclusively as victims of terrorism and allies
in U.S.-led "counterterrorism" campaigns, never as
sponsors of extremism and terrorism or perpetrators of
war crimes.
The message of these groups dedicated to "countering
extremism" is clear and none too subtle: Saudi Arabia
and the UAE are always US allies and victims of
extremism, never a problem or a source of danger,
violence or chaos. The country we should all be worrying
about is – you guessed it – Iran. You couldn’t pay for
propaganda like this! But on the other hand, if you’re
Saudi Arabia or the United Arab Emirates and you have
greedy, corrupt Americans knocking on your door eager to
sell their loyalty, maybe you can.
Medea Benjamin is cofounder of
CODEPINK for
Peace, and author of several books, including
Inside Iran: The Real History and Politics of the
Islamic Republic of Iran.
Nicolas J. S. Davies is an independent journalist,
a researcher with CODEPINK and the author of
Blood On Our Hands: the American Invasion and
Destruction of Iraq.
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