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Flabbergasted Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-02-07 09:51 PM
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United States Seeks To Engage the Iranian People
State Department builds stock of Iran experts, promotes citizen exchanges

By David Shelby
USINFO Staff Writer



Washington – After 25 years of holding each other at arm’s length, the United States is seeking to engage the people of Iran in direct exchanges with the hope of building stronger ties and greater understanding between Iranians and Americans, says Under Secretary of State R. Nicholas Burns.

Burns told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee March 29 that the United States and Iran remain in an unusual diplomatic position.

“We have no relationship with them; we have no embassy there; we have very few American businesses there, very few American journalists. There literally has been no contact between our countries,” he said. “And so while we are opposed to the Iranian regime, we ought to be open to increased contacts with the Iranian people.”

Burns outlined several programs the State Department has undertaken over the past year to reach out to the Iranian people. The United States has expanded its Persian-language television, radio and Internet presence as a means of communicating with the people of Iran. He also described citizen exchange programs allowing Iranian students and working professionals to gain firsthand exposure to American people and society. (See related article.)

“If we cannot have a normal relationship with the Iranian government -- and we don't have one right now and there's no hope of an early resumption of diplomatic relations -- surely we can open up connections to people in Iran,” he said. “We've all seen the huge, long-term impact of having someone study in our country and get to know the American people and what that means in 30, 40 years when that person is in a position of some influence in their society.”


Senators from both parties welcomed the Bush administration’s initiatives. The committee’s ranking Republican member, Richard Lugar of Indiana, called for a “full-court press” by the United States to promote people-to-people exchanges.

“I think there is certainly evidence that as Americans who have been innovative have attempted to get to know the Iranians better and have been going into the country and so forth, there have been productive results,” he said. He called it “critically important that we get to know Iran better.”

Foreign Relations Chairman Joseph Biden urged the administration to carry its initiatives further and allow more U.S. nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) to operate in Iran. Currently, all U.S. entities face strict limitations on their activities in Iran due to economic sanctions that the United States has imposed on the Iranian government over the past 25 years.

Burns said the administration would like to see more U.S. NGOs working in Iran, but he cautioned that direct links between U.S. organizations and civil society groups in Iran could be politically harmful to those groups.

In addition to promoting citizen exchanges, the State Department is building its capacity to understand Iran, Burns said. Over the past two years the department has expanded its Iran desk from one person to eight people and established an Iran office staffed with Persian speakers in Dubai. Burns likened the Dubai office to Riga station, the U.S. outpost in Riga, Latvia, where diplomats studied the Soviet Union before the United States opened its embassy in Moscow in 1933.

Burns also noted that some members of Congress have sought to establish relations on a personal level with the Iranian Majles , and he welcomed those efforts.

The full text (PDF, 57KB) of Burns' testimony is available on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee Web site.


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Deep13 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-02-07 09:54 PM
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1. Yes, our propoganda will overpower their own propoganda.
:shrug:
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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-02-07 09:58 PM
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2. Isn't that what Condi was supposed to do? I give her an F! nt
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Tess49 Donating Member (606 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-02-07 10:05 PM
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3. I misread your title. Thought it said US seeks to enrage Iranian
people. We're off to a good start, I thought, as I clicked on the post. Damn, these glasses!
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Kagemusha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Apr-02-07 10:06 PM
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4. Probably just a spy recruiting programme.
Burns isn't promoting this for his health. I don't think there's anything he promotes that doesn't have a nefarious purpose somehow.
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kineneb Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-03-07 12:04 AM
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5. dimwits! If I want to engage one of "the Iranian people", I will e-mail my aunt
don't those idiots realize how many ex-pat Iranians (& now Voting US Citizens) live in here... Most of whom still have relatives in Iran (like us)?

As always, BushCo suffers from an anal-cranial inversion.
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sutz12 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-03-07 12:21 AM
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6. Well, our stable of Iraq experts worked out well, didn't it?
:shrug:

Sorry, Georgie, but you will have to talk to the Iranian government some day.
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Autumn Colors Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Apr-03-07 12:35 AM
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7. We never should have STOPPED the exchanges
Edited on Tue Apr-03-07 12:37 AM by Autumn Colors
We used to have them. I know, I participated in one - lived with a family in Tehran for 3 months (June-Aug 1978). Most amazing summer of my life, thanks to AFS Intercultural Programs.

I talk to my host family all the time. We all have email and instant messaging. Some of them are still in Iran and others are here in the USA (helping add a few blue votes to Texas, no less!).

Anyone who wants to communicate with Iranians only has to jump on the internet. It's not like people in Iran don't have computers.

Salaam, kineneb. Chetoree?



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