The news of alleged
election fraud has spread through Tehran like wildfire, pitching
ayatollah Rafsanjani's supporters against ayatollah Khamenei's in
street confrontations. This chaotic situation is secretly stirred
by the CIA which has been spreading confusion by flooding Iranians
with contradicting SMS messages. Thierry Meyssan recounts this
psychological warfare experiment.
In March 2000, the Secretary of State Madeleine Albright admitted
that the Eisenhower administration organized a regime change in
1953 in Iran and that this historical event explained the current
hostility of Iranians towards the United States. Last week, during
the speech he addressed to Muslims in Cairo, President Obama
officially recognized that « in the midst of the cold war the
United States played a role in the toppling of a democratically
elected Iranian government » [1].
At the time, Iran was controlled by a puppet monarchy headed by
the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. He had been placed on the throne
by the British who forced his father, the pro-Nazi Cossack officer
Reza Pahlavi to resign. However, the Shah had to deal with a
nationalist Prime Minister, Mohammad Mossadegh. Mossadegh, with
the help of ayatollah Abou al-Qassem Kachani, nationalized the oil
resources [2].
Furious, the British persuaded the United States that the Iranian
dissent needed to be stopped before the country became communist.
The CIA then put together Operation Ajax to overthrow Mossadegh
with the help of the Shah, and to replace him with Nazi general
Fazlollah Zahedi who until then was detained by the British.
Zahedi is responsible for having instituted the cruelest terror
regime of the time, while the Shah would cover his exactions while
parading for Western 'people' magazines.
Operation Ajax was lead by archeologist Donald Wilber, historian
Kermit Roosevelt (grandson of president Theodore Roosevelt) and
general Norman Schwartzkopf Sr. (whose son with the same name lead
Operation Desert Storm). This operation remains a textbook example
of subversion. The CIA came up with a scenario that gave the
impression of a popular revolt when in reality it was a covert
operation. The highpoint of the show was a demonstration in Tehran
with 8 000 actors paid by the Agency to provide credible pictures
to Western media [3].
Is History repeating itself? Washington renounced to a military
attack on Iran and has dissuaded Israel to take such an
initiative. In order to « change the regime », the Obama
administration prefers to play the game of covert actions - less
dangerous but with a more unpredictable outcome. After the Iranian
presidential elections, huge demonstrations in the streets of
Tehran are pitching supporters of president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
and supreme leader Ali Khamenei on one side, to supporters of
defeated candidate Mir-Hossein Mousavi and former president Akbar
Hashemi Rafsanjani on the other. The demonstrations are a sign of
a profound division in the Iranian society between a nationalist
proletariat and a bourgeoisie upset at being held back from
economic globalization [4].
With its covert actions, Washington is trying to weigh on the
events to topple the re-elected president.
Once again, Iran is an experimental field for innovative
subversive methods. CIA is relying in 2009 on a new weapon:
control of cell phones. Since the democratization of mobile
phones, Anglo-Saxon secret services have increased their
interception capability. While wired phones' tapping requires the
installation of branch circuits - and therefore local agents,
tapping of mobile phones can be done remotely using the Echelon
network. However, this system cannot intercept Skype mobile phones
communications, which explains the success of Skype telephones in
conflict areas [5].
The National Security Agency (NSA) therefore lobbied world
Internet Service Providers to require their cooperation. Those who
accepted have received huge retribution [6].
In countries under their occupation - Iraq, Afghanistan and
Pakistan - , the Anglo-Saxons intercept all telephone
communication, whether mobile or wired. The goal is not to obtain
full transcripts of any given conversation, but to identify «
social networks ». In other words, telephones are surveillance
bugs which make it possible to know who anyone is in touch with.
Firstly, the hope is to identify resistance networks.
Secondly, telephones make it possible to locate identified targets
and «neutralize» them. This is why in February 2008, the Afghan
rebels ordered various operators to stop their activity daily,
from 5PM to 3AM, in order to prevent the Anglo-Saxons to follow
their whereabouts. The relay antennas of those that refused to
comply where destroyed [7].
On the contrary, with the exception of a telephone exchange which
was accidentally hit, Israeli forces made sure not to hit
telephone exchanges in Gaza during Operation Cast Lead from
December 2008 to January 2009. This is a complete change in
strategy. Since the Gulf War, the most prevalent strategy was
colonel John A. Warden's « five circles theory »: the bombing of
telephone infrastructures was considered a strategic objective to
both confuse populations and to cut communication lines between
commanding centers and fighters. Now the opposite applies:
telecommunication infrastructures must be protected. During the
bombings in Gaza, the operator Jawwal [8]
offered additional talk time to its users - officially to help
them but de facto serving Israel's interests. Going one step
further, Anglo-Saxons and Israeli secrets services developed
psychological warfare methods based on an extensive use of mobile
phones. In July 2008, after the exchange of prisoners and remains
between Israel and Hezbollah, robots placed tens of thousands of
calls to Lebanese mobile phones. A voice speaking in Arabic was
warning against participating in any resistance activity and
belittled Hezbollah. The Lebanese minister of telecommunications,
Jibran Bassil [9],
files a complaint to the UN against this blatant violation of the
country's sovereignty [10].
Following the same approach, tens of thousands of Lebanese and
Syrians received an automatic phone call in October 2008 to offer
them 10 million dollars for any information leading to the
location and freeing of Israeli prisoners. People interested in
collaborating were invited to call a number in the UK [11].
This method has now been used in Iran to bluff the population, to
spread shocking news and to channel the resulting anger.
First, SMS were sent during the night of the counting of the
votes, according to which the Guardian Council of the Constitution
(equivalent to a constitutional court) had informed Mir-Hossein
Mousavi of his victory. After that, the announcing of the official
results - the re-election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad with 64 % of cast
votes - seemed like a huge fraud. However, three days earlier, M.
Mousavi and his friends were considering a massive victory of M.
Ahmadinejad as certain and were trying to explain it by unbalanced
campaigns. Indeed the ex president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani was
detailing his grievances in an open letter. The US polling
institutes in Iran were predicting a 20 points lead for M.
Ahmadinejad over M. Mousavi [12].
M. Mousavi victory never seemed possible, even if it is probable
that some fraud accentuated the margin between the two candidates.
Secondly, Iranian citizens were selected or volunteered on the
Internet to chat on Facebook or to subscribe to Twitter feeds.
They received information - true or false - (still via SMS) about
the evolution of the political crisis and the ongoing
demonstrations. These anonymous news posts were spreading news of
gun fights and numerous deaths which to this day have not been
confirmed. Because of an unfortunate calendar overlap, Twitter was
supposed to suspend its service for a night to allow for some
maintenance of its systems. The US State Department intervened to
ask them to postpone it [13].
According to the New York Times, these operations contributed to
spread defiance in the population [14].
©
Voltaire Net
Messages describing death threats,
police bursting into homes, etc. sent by authors who cannot be
indentified or located.
Simultaneously, in
a new type of effort, the CIA is mobilizing anti-Iranian militants
in the United States and in the United Kingdom to increase the
chaos. A Practical Guide to revolution in Iran was distributed to
them, which contains a number of recommendations, including:
- set Twitter accounts feeds to Tehran time zone;
- centralize messages on the following Twitter accounts @stopAhmadi,
#iranelection and #gr88 ;
- official Iranian State websites should not be attacked. « Let
the US military take care of it » (sic).
When applied, these recommendations make it impossible to
authenticate any Twitter messages. It is impossible to know if
they are being sent by witnesses of the demonstrations in Tehran
or by CIA agents in Langley, and it is impossible to distinguish
real from false ones. The goal is to create more and more
confusion and to push Iranians to fight amongst themselves.
Army general staffs everywhere in the world are closely following
the events in Tehran. They are trying to evaluate the efficiency
of this new subversion method in the Iranian experimental field.
Evidently, the destabilization process worked. But it is unclear
if the CIA will be able to channel demonstrators to do what the
Pentagon has renounced to do, and what they do not want to do
themselves : to change the regime and put an end to the Islamic
revolution.
