As the psyops operations and media propaganda
intensifies, you might think war is imminent and that Iran is doing what
countries under threat do in these circumstances, such as mobilizing
their people and preparing for a bombing onslaught.
Think
again. While I have been told that military targets have been or are
being moved around, the atmosphere in Tehran is relaxed with more talk
of a cultural battlefield than a military one. There’s a commemoration
under way of the 33rd anniversary of the Iranian revolution
and an international conference on “Hollywoodism and Cinema” as an
extension of an annual Fajr film festival
And
that’s what I am doing here, as a guest participant in an event that
sees Hollywood as a bigger enemy than the Pentagon.
It has become for
them an “ism” and is the subject of discussions over its global role in
shaping positive attitudes towards what passes for American
“civilization,” its relationship to the awakenings and uprisings
throughout the world – Iran’s Press TV probably devotes more coverage to
Occupy Wall Street than any TV channel – and Hollywood’s alleged
support for Zionism and Israel, a country that’s only cited here as “the
Zionist Regime.”
Israel,
in turn, is even more hostile seeing Iran as an “existential threat.”
Sometimes it looks like both countries – both under the influence of
religious fanaticism – need a stereotyped enemy to rally their own
populations. It is Israel that is banging the drums loudest for war.
The
conference was opened by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who
didn’t have much good to say about Hollywood , which, paradoxically,
celebrated its 125th anniversary on Feb. 1.
“All
those who work in Hollywood push ideas, based on getting the maximum of
profit and pleasure using any possible methods,” Ahmadinejad said. “We
do not expect anything from Hollywood.” Speaking softly and
philosophically, Ahmadinejad noted that people must “deliver truth and
facts,” so that “masses would follow up.”
About 48
foreign scholars are here, and one News Dissector (me). Most of the
president’s speech was really about values more than politics
emphasizing the importance of the cultural environment. He believes it
is impacted negatively by a movie industry that does little to educate
customers about the world’s crises.
He
rejected Marxism and Liberalism, instead speaking of man as a creation
of God who is caught between conflicting pressures to be selfish or to
serve humanity. I am not sure that he knew that one of the Hollywood
companies leading the charge against Iran is owned by Disney (and is one
I used to work for): ABC News.
Fairness and Accuracy in Media singles out a recent ABC newscast as
an egregious example of propaganda. “America’s top spy warns that Iran
is willing to launch a terrorist strike inside the U.S.,” announced
anchor Diane Sawyer at the top of the program. “We’ll tell you his
evidence.”
The ABC
report was actually very light on evidence. It did, however, pass along
numerous incendiary allegations from U.S. government officials – without
the skeptical scrutiny that is real journalism’s primary function.
Echoing
the government, Sawyer set up the report with an assertion that Iran is
“more determined than ever to launch an attack on U.S. soil.”
Correspondent Martha Raddatz, claiming that the “the saber-rattling
coming from Iran has been constant,” told viewers that Director of
National Intelligence James Clapper delivered “a new bracing warning …
Iran may be more ready than ever to launch terror attacks inside the
United States.”
Reports
like this are barely criticized in Iran because there have been so many
of them for so many years, with ABC’s earlier “America Held Hostage”
series in 1980 a well known example of reporting as incitement.
After
Ahmadinejad’s talk, an Iranian friend pushed me into the president’s
path where I tried to engage him, asking if he would be willing to talk
to American leaders. He smiled, responding, “Washington does not want to
have any dialogues.” So that was a non-starter.
I then
smiled back and asked if the American people have reasons to fear him
and an Iranian nuclear bomb. This time, he laughed as if I was being
naïve. (I was trying to be provocative.)
Looking
up at me, he asked if I thought he was scary, and then denied that Iran
was building bombs or threatening the American people. He was very calm
as he spoke. Admittedly the evidence for Iran doing so is not very
strong and, in fact, a recent report indicated that the U.S. military
wants Israel to chill out its agitation and bombing threats.
(Gareth
Porter reports on IPS: “Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen.
Martin Dempsey told Israeli leaders Jan. 20 that the United States would
not participate in a war against Iran begun by Israel without prior
agreement from Washington, according to accounts from well-placed senior
military officers.”)
I then
told President Ahmadinejad that I have been covering Occupy Wall Street
and asked what his advice would be to them. As a charter member of the
Iranian student movement, he was quick to express admiration for those
in the streets struggling for justice in America, but added, “The Wall
Street movement has to deepen its work” by intensifying its organizing
efforts.
At that
point, his security intensified its presence, and after welcoming me to
his country, I was pushed gently to the side as he went back to work. My
“interview” was over.
The
conference continued in the afternoon with more reports on the Occupy
Movement and analysis of Hollywood’s impact. On hand to receive an award
for his father Oliver Stone was his son Sean who spoke about the
growing power of social media. If nothing else, his dad has proven that
Hollywood can produce topical dramas and social criticism.
The
Zionism issue was spoken to by three anti-Zionist Rabbis and raised in
an interview that I did live on Press TV on Thursday night, which I
found not so much anti-Semitic as totally uninformed about many in the
Jewish community worldwide who are not only not ardent Zionists but are
critical of the Israeli occupation of Palestinians and the suppression
of their rights.
The host
was startled by the vehemence of my views that may not have much
support at high levels in the government. I was glad to have an
opportunity to publicly challenge Holocaust denial in Iran and combat
stereotypes, even as Hollywood legitimately stood accused of creating
them of Muslims.
This is
my second trip to Iran, a country that is being embargoed, sanctioned
and put down in our media with nary a chance to talk back. That’s why I
came — to learn more about Iran’s views that have been banished from the
airways in Britain, and rarely, if ever, given airtime in what passes
for our “free” media. Iran is escalating its media efforts with a new
channel in Spanish.
There is more to come, and I am already on kabob overload.