Many of AEI and PNAC's former members are now working in Bush's administration.
PNAC's influence on Bush's foreign and defense policies are so powerful that many
of its recommendations on how to transform the military have already been adopted
by the Pentagon.
But unlike Iraq, using military force in these other countries to replace the
rulers wasn't being considered as a way to oust the regimes, according to former
Bush administration officials. Whether or not that becomes the course of action
now is debatable but even if military force isn't used for regime change in Iran
or other Middle-Eastern countries the reasons for engaging in political warfare
in that region is just as troubling as the reasons the U.S. launched a military
attack on Iraq: intelligence information that suggests these countries pose an
immediate threat to the U.S. is thin and possibly non-existent.
Still, the Bush administration has its agenda and it seems that Iran is indeed
its next target. Instead of military action, the Bush administration will encourage
a "popular uprising" in its effort to overthrow Iran's supreme leader,
Ali Khamenei, and lend financial support to Iranians to get the job done.
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To get Iranians to rise up against its government, U.S. Senator Sam Brownback,
R-Kansas, has drafted an amendment to the Senate Foreign Authorization bill titled
The Iran Democracy Act that calls for using the new Radio Farda to host
programming from Iranian Americans who communicate with their families inside
Iran about the desire for an internationally monitored referendum vote on what
form of government Iran should have.
The amendment would also provide grants for private radio and TV stations in
the U.S. that broadcast pro-democracy news and information into Iran. The amendment
also provides funds to translate books, videos and other materials into Persian
- specifically, information on building and organising non-violent social movements.
Moreover, Brownback introduced legislation that would establish an Iran Democracy
Foundation to provide grants to the Iranian-American community and for the radio
and TV Stations in the U.S. that broadcast directly into Iran.
This is the type of political warfare the Bush administration believes will
force Iran's government from power. But the Bush administration will have a hard
time convincing Iranians that it can follow through on its promise. For one, anarchy
is running amok in postwar Iraq and many critics have accused the Bush administration
of abandoning its goal of democratising the country. Furthermore, Iranians remember
how the first President Bush encouraged the Kurds to rise up against Saddam Hussein during the 1990s only to be abandoned by that administration and ultimately slaughtered by Hussein.
But that doesn't stop the think tanks from believing that it can't be done.
"For Iran, the approach might be compared to the approach the United States and other democratic states took to Poland in the 1980s," said David Frum, President Bush's former speechwriter, who is credited with coining the phrase "axis of evil," in an April 5 presentation at AEI. "In Poland, as in Iran, an economically incompetent authoritarian regime ruled over an increasingly angry population. In Poland, as in Iran, a mass opposition movement rose up against the regime: Solidarity in Poland, the student democratic movement in Iran.
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"Back in the 1980s, the United States and its allies never confronted the Polish communists directly. Instead, they imposed stringent economic sanctions
on the regime - and contributed hundreds of millions of dollars to pay for its
covert newspapers and radio stations and to support the families of jailed or
exiled activists … as the regime's economy disintegrated, the Polish communists
were compelled first to open negotiations with Solidarity, next to permit Solidarity
to compete in semi-free elections, and finally to step aside for a Solidarity
government. Fourteen years later, Poland is a democratic state and a staunch NATO
ally."
Richard Perle, who sits on the Defense Policy Board, a group that advises Rumsfeld, is more blunt in the reasons for going after Iran and he is not shy about suggesting that military force be used if necessary.
"The idea that our victory over Saddam will drive other dictators to develop chemical and biological weapons misses the key point: They are already doing so. That's why we may someday need to pre-empt rather than wait until we are attacked," Perle said in a letter to AEI members earlier this month.
Michael Ledeen, another influential AEI scholar, claims that the U.S. ought to "bag" Iran's regime because of its anti-American views.
'The Iranian people have shown themselves to be the most pro-American population in the Muslim world, but the Iranian regime is arguably the most anti-American
on Earth. Let's support the people, and help them bag the regime."