From the Los Angeles Times
Grooming the next Ahmad Chalabi
Richard Perle is again propping up
regime-toppling Mideast dissidents who lack credibility.
By Alan Weisman
November 28, 2007
ON A COLD MORNING last winter, I arrived at the home of Richard Perle
outside Washington for a scheduled interview. I was about 10 minutes
early, so I chose to shiver a bit on the front porch. Perle, the point
man for the neoconservatives' drive for regime change throughout the
Middle East, had agreed to spend time me with for a book I was writing
about his life and times. Just then, the front door opened and out
stepped Perle and a robust young man who was obviously in a hurry.
"Oh, Alan," Perle said with some surprise. "I'd like you to meet . . .
" But I already knew who his guest was.
"Yes, sir," I said, extending my hand. "I recognize you from your
photographs."
My, my, I thought. Mr. Perle is at it again.
The exiting guest was Farid Ghadry, an exiled Syrian dissident who,
like Perle, believes it's past time to replace Syrian dictator Bashar
Assad. Ghadry, who heads a Washington-based group called the Syrian
Reform Party, hopes to be the man in charge one day in Damascus. When I
met him, he had already been granted audiences with David Wurmser, Vice
President Dick Cheney's top Middle East advisor and Perle protege, and
with Cheney's daughter, Elizabeth, who headed the State Department's
Iran-Syria desk from 2005 until last June. I asked Wurmser about
Ghadry. Was he another Ahmad Chalabi, the checkered Iraqi exile whom
the United States backed as a Saddam Hussein replacement in Iraq?
"He's
not asking for money, and we're not advocating money for him," Wurmser
told me. "As for him wanting power, sure, he probably has an agenda.
But it doesn't matter. This is where you go back to the Soviet Union,
because it's the same question that we always work with, from Lech
Walesa to Vaclav Havel: 'Did they have an understanding of the malady
and danger posed by the totalitarian regime in their country?' "
The
scenario of the U.S. backing exiles to aid in "democratizing" Middle
Eastern countries is so appealing to Perle, Wurmser and their
like-minded friends that they continue to pursue it despite past
failures. Perle, of course, was the most prominent and aggressive
advocate of Chalabi, dubbed the "Jay Gatsby of Iraq" for his social
life and financial scandals, as the leader of a new Iraq. That effort
collapsed when the Iraqi people, finally given a chance to vote in
January 2005, did not award Chalabi's party a single seat in the new
parliament.
Perle insists that his man, who has a new job with
the Baghdad government, was the victim of a smear campaign led by the
State Department and the CIA. The Chalabi experience has not muted
Perle's unabashed affection for dissidents. "I think the best way to
bring about regime change," he told me, "is to help decent people who
are powerless without outside help."
People such as 32-year-old
Amir Abbas Fakhravar, an Iranian dissident now living in exile in the
United States. In a 2006 Washington Post Op-Ed article, Perle promoted
Fakhravar as a heroic and inspirational figure around whom oppressed
Iranians could rally, if only he were given America's support.
Fakhravar is president of the Iran Enterprise Institute, which takes
its name and some of its financial support from the neoconservative
American Enterprise Institute, of which Perle is a resident fellow. In
the coming weeks, Fakhravar will be speaking at a conference in Palm
Beach, Fla., on the subject of regime change in Tehran, addressing the
Heritage Foundation in Washington and then heading to Rome to deliver a
lecture on "Democracy in the Islamic World." Just recently, he was the
honored guest at DePaul University's "Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week,"
where he was introduced as "the hero of our age."
His story, as
he and his supporters tell it, could be a Hollywood script. Young,
handsome, bold Iranian student leads the oppressed and downtrodden
against the crushing tyranny of the mullahs, rising up, a la "Les
Miserables." He stands atop the barricades during student protests in
Iran in 1999 and is then imprisoned and tortured. He communicates with
the West from Tehran's maximum-security Evin prison via a cellphone and
escapes to freedom, with a shoot-to-kill order hanging over his head.
Unfortunately,
Fakhravar's detractors, including some Iranian dissidents and exiles,
insist that his story might as well be a Hollywood script. In a report
last November in Mother Jones, Laura Rozen interviewed Iranian
dissidents and journalists who cast doubt on Fakhravar's story. They
claim, for example, that in their experience, political prisoners at
Evin weren't allowed to use cellphones to communicate with the outside
world. And, they say, he did not so much escape from prison, he simply
went AWOL while on a kind of furlough that prisoners could sometimes
arrange. As for other harrowing details, in reality he took a regular
flight to Dubai (where he was met by Perle). Most important, Rozen's
sources told her, Fakhravar was never a major figure in the student
uprising of 1999.
Writing in Progressive magazine, Muhammad
Sahimi, a chemical engineering professor at USC, lists Fakhravar among
the exiles who have no credibility in Iran: "They are not even known
there." Although Amnesty International lists Fakhravar among those
tortured by the Tehran regime, it uses the word "reportedly" to
describe his ordeal.
Perle insists that Fakhravar is being
smeared by forces opposed to aggressive regime change. But the
fundamental problem for Perle and like-minded others is that the men
they are supporting lack the stature of their successful and
illustrious predecessors, the Walesas and Havels. In the first place,
Walesa and Havel did not operate in exile; they remained in their
countries despite repeated imprisonment, government pressure and
threats. There was never any question that they were recognized as the
real thing -- opposition leaders -- by the throngs in the shipyards of
Gdansk and St. Wenceslas Square. They may have had personal as well as
altruistic ambitions and motives, but they were nothing if not
authentic.
Which brings us back to America's Middle East
wannabe heroes. Take Ghadry, an American-educated Arab with a passion
for technology start-ups as well as saving Syria. Unfortunately for
Perle, Ghadry is seen in many quarters as a front man for Israel. Not
only is he a dues-paying member of the American Israeli Public Affairs
Committee, the most powerful Israeli lobby in Washington, but a recent
column on his website, titled "Why I Admire Israel," seems to play
right into the hands of those who believe the Bush administration's
obsession with regime change in the Middle East is really all about
protecting Israel. Did Perle, the savviest of Washington power players,
believe that Ghadry's tub-thumping for Tel Aviv would make him more
popular in Syria?
"No," Perle replied. "I don't. But he's his own man. I don't always
understand what he's doing and why he's doing it."
So,
in his quest for idealistic dissidents to do in the Middle East what
the Walesas and Havels achieved in Eastern Europe, Perle and his
acolytes have tapped the discredited Ahmad Chalabi for Iraq, the
suspect Amir Abbas Fakhravar for Iran and the allegiance-challenged
Fahrid Ghadry for Syria. They're just not making heroes like they used
to.
Alan Weisman is the author of the first biography of Richard
Perle, "Prince of Darkness -- Richard Perle: The Kingdom, the Power,
and the End of Empire in America."
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times