
The
CIA's role in Iranian Regime Change
By: Keith Thomson
The Huffington Post |
| June 24, 2009 |
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I would guess that in the past
year, there were more regime-change-in-Iran plots floated by members
of the intelligence community than there are Iranians.
During that time, research for my
novel Once A Spy (Doubleday, 2010) brought me into contact
with an array of intelligence community personnel ranging from
analysts to CIA Director Michael Hayden. On a scale of 1 to 10, I
would estimate their overall enthusiasm for a change of regime was a
9. Among Israeli intelligence officers (who didn't exactly cotton to
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's dismissal of the Holocaust as a myth or to his
frequent mentions of the end of the Zionist regime and Iran's nuclear
program in the same breath), the average was 12.
Still, the consensus on actively
promoting regime change was: "Let's wait and see what happens in
the election in June." After all, the United States hasn't had
the easiest time installing new foreign governments lately (see: Iraq).
And certainly not in Iran (see: Shah,
The).
What was the intelligence
community's best-case scenario? Short of outright regime change or
Ahmadinejad climbing aboard a missile and accidentally launching
himself at Pyongyang Strangelove-style,
we are now witnessing it: An election leaving the Iranian people--and
the world--outraged.
According to former CIA operations
officer Fred
Rustmann, "If we were doing our job, and I'm not sure we are,
we would be knee deep into supporting opposition factions in Iran and
would be able to claim at least partial credit for what's going on
there today."
"The agency's political
warfare capability has been dead since the days of Bill Casey,"
says John Lenczowski, the president of the Institute
of World Politics whose extensive foreign policy résumé includes
Director of European and Soviet Affairs for the National Security
Council.
Regardless, Rustmann and Lenczowski
say, the CIA may now help set Tehran's smoldering tinder ablaze by
supplying the opposition factions with money, intel, press placement,
and weapons--perhaps the most potent of which may be BlackBerrys.
"What we could do immediately
is essentially manipulate Iranian media, especially the media that
serves the Iranian diaspora," says another former CIA operations
officer, who goes by--and wrote an
espionage memoir under--the pseudonym Ishmael Jones. "The
internet-driven communication between Iranians worldwide and those in
Iran is frenetic."
"The CIA already has a
cooperative program in place with [certain American
publications]," he adds. "Reporters from [those
publications] meet regularly with the top CIA officials--not a
conspiracy hatched in a smoke-filled room, but the natural result of
reporters working hard to develop top-level sources within the CIA.
Just switching [those reporters] for journalists who serve the Iranian
diaspora would do the trick. These journalists will be eager to
[cooperate]. The CIA must certainly have extensive and true
information about Iranian government corruption. This information,
supplied by Iranian diaspora journalists, would be read within hours
by ordinary Iranians and would strengthen resistance to the current
regime."
It wouldn't be unprecedented.
"Some of the most powerful instruments the United States had
during the cold war were Radio Free
Europe, Radio Liberty, and the
Voice of America,"
Lenczowski says. "Now such communication can enable the Iranian
people to see the world differently."
And, thanks to Twitter,
almost instantaneously.
Lenczowski adds, "Iranians
have to be emboldened for resistance. Some may not be sufficiently fed
up. Many are too fearful." He cautions, "One of the
difficulties of this sort of action is you have to have a sufficient
level of distance so that it doesn't look like Uncle Sam is the
marionetteer. Intelligently conceived communications with Iranians
talking to Iranians can penetrate barriers and make a significant
difference."
Additional operations of this
nature may include increasingly delegitimizing the current
regime--although Ahmadinejad and Ayatollah Khamenei have done much of
the job themselves--and isolating the Ayatollahs from their supporting
factions and allies, particularly Syria, Hezbollah and Hamas.
"The Israelis are already onto this one through their own
negotiations with Syria," Lenczowski points out. "A Camp
David style agreement between Israel and Syria would go a long way
toward removing Syria from Iran's orbit." At the same time the
CIA will continue to work in conjunction with liaison counterparts
like Israel's
Mossad.
And at the end of the day:
"The best thing the CIA chief can do is to give President Obama
an honest assessment of what we know and what we do not know about the
Iranian situation," says Jones. "Obama's decisions will be
better if he realizes that he lacks key human source intelligence. If
CIA briefers instead seek to impress him, and lead him to believe that
he possesses an omnipotent view of the situation, then he will be
making decisions blindly."
In any case, President Obama and
CIA Director Leon Panetta will continue to deny any involvement, while
Ahmadinejad and company will blame the West--particularly the United
States--for meddling. So there's little to lose there, providing
American fingerprints aren't found on the BlackBerry keyboards.
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