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An Interview With Kourosh Zaim

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  • An Interview With Kourosh Zaim

    AN INTERVIEW WITH KOUROSH ZAIM
    Amil Imani

    Intellectual Conservative
    July 7 2008
    AZ

    Amil Imani interviews Kourosh Zaim, an Iranian political activist
    and a member of the Iran National Front-Central Council.

    NMJ: How long have you been advocating democratic reform in Iran?

    Zaim: Well, I like to think I have been active since 1953, when I
    was close to the Iran National Front major personalities due to my
    grand uncle's and my father's close association with them and the
    democratic movement. During my college years in the United States
    and many years after that, I was among the most active and outspoken
    critics of the former regime in Iran. Upon my return to Iran in
    1975, I was considered a dissident until 1979 when I rejoined the
    post-revolution Iran National Front. Since then, I have continued to
    speak out as a dissident activist.

    NMJ: What do you see as the main obstacles to democracy, back in the
    1970s and now?

    Zaim: Back in the 70's, the American support of the Shah's regime out
    of fear of communism, emboldened the Shah in his autocratic reign
    to put pressure on the democratic forces in Iran. He banned their
    activities and often jailed its leaders. As the result, religious
    forces, well-known for their opposition to communism, found open fields
    for propaganda, recruitment and organizing. Young energetic members
    of the democratic political organizations, who disliked inactivity,
    broke away and formed rebellious and armed socialist-Islamist militant
    groups behind the opportunist clergy. Thus, the Shah created his own
    enemies and so his own downfall; whereas, if he had allowed peaceful
    activity of democratic opposition, the impatient youth would have
    been guided by intelligent and farsighted leaders and would have
    never been attracted to the traditionally timid and opportunist clergy.

    Now, the clerical regime of the Islamic Republic, after 30 years of
    theocratic rule, has proven its inability to reach but a very small
    and backward segment of the population. This regime, too, suppressed
    the democratic forces in the country and with much more brutality than
    its predecessor. However, the information explosion of the 90's and
    the current communication revolution has made it helpless in keeping
    the democratic opposition voices from being heard. Furthermore,
    the ever-strengthening of the international organizations and
    pro-activeness of the international community in support of democracy
    and accountability has put the current regime on the defensive.

    NMJ: Do you see the United States as a model for democracy?

    Zaim: No country is a utopian model for democracy except maybe for
    its own people. Democracy is always on the path of change toward
    improvement. A democratic system must be democratic for the people
    it governs. That's why we see somewhat different interpretations of
    how democracy should be institutionalized in different cultures. I
    call freedom of choice with respect to the rights of others democracy.

    NMJ: You have two sons in the U.S., is that correct?

    Zaim: Yes. My two elder sons Turaj and Bijan are now in the United
    States. They were born in Iran, but were sent out of the country when
    they were 6 and 4, respectively.

    NMJ: They escaped with their mother during the war with Iraq. Why
    did you not go with them? Did you know of their escape?

    Zaim: After the revolution, I was very active in opposition politics
    in the framework of the Iran National Front. I was appointed to a
    five-member committee for writing of the INF platform and another
    committee for writing of by-laws, a position I have been repeatedly
    elected to since then. In addition, my articles criticizing the current
    policies were published widely. I had also formed a think tank in the
    name of "Iran Center for Thought and Speech: for shaping the future
    of Iran" in which we planned to research and map out Iran's future.

    In addition, I had researched and written a book in 1980 called Where
    Is the Soviet Empire Going? in which I had analyzed facts about the
    Soviet system and predicted that it would disintegrate in about 10-12
    years. I had also predicted independence of eastern European, Caucasian
    and Central Asian countries within two years hence. The book was first
    published in Mizan daily newspaper as a serial. Those years the Iran
    Communist Tudeh Party was very influential and had infiltrated all
    aspects of the Islamic Republic organizations. The paper Mizan was
    banned and revolutionary guards attacked its offices and set it on
    fire. Later the book was published by a brave publisher who believed
    in me. Bookstores were attacked or threatened not to display or sell
    the book. The publisher had to turn 7,000 copies out of 10,000 it
    had printed into pulp. The Communist Party paper attacked me in a
    center spread. During all this time, Radio Moscow was continuously
    blasting against me, calling me a self-professed theoretician who
    talked about the future of the Soviet Union without knowing anything
    about it and preventing friendly relations between the two brother
    countries. In response, I sent a message to Radio Moscow, which was
    published in one of the papers. In this message I told them that I
    am not afraid of their threats and will do whatever I can to protect
    the interests of my country. I told them that they didn't have any
    talents but threatening and terrorizing, so they should go ahead and
    do what they're good at and I will do what I am good at.

    I had also written a long two-issue article in another paper warning
    the ignorant, politically illiterate and outdated clerical hierarchy
    of the communist infiltrators acting as their advisors and making
    decisions for them. The paper, Edalat, was later closed and its chief
    editor jailed. Another article that caused trouble was one for a very
    popular magazine Black and White. In that article I had explained my
    research about Ayatollah Khomeini's thoughts and beliefs. I had claimed
    that, unlike what his current promises of democracy and non-involvement
    of the clergy government are, he is planning a theocracy based on
    total religious control of the society. The magazine was attacked
    and set on fire.

    When Soviets attacked Afghanistan, not one dared to voice and sign
    a declaration of opposition except an Afghan resistance commander,
    one of the INF leaders, a representative of a high ayatollah and
    myself. Three months into the Afghanistan invasion, I wrote an article
    expressing the opinion that the Russians would be bogged down in
    Afghanistan for 12-13 years and be forced to leave in defeat just
    like the Americans did in Viet Nam. I also wrote another article
    criticizing Iran's revolutionary policies and predicted that soon
    we would be bogged down in a protracted border war with Iraq. Nine
    months later, Iraq attacked Iran.

    All this had made me very unpopular with the regime and its
    allies. I was threatened several times. Our bilingual school, best
    in Middle East, was raided by machine gun-wielding RGs, confiscated
    and ransacked. Our home was often the site of RGs' midnight shooting
    sprees in the air. One night the shooting was so violent and prolonged
    that I took my wife and children to the boiler room, spread blankets
    and hid them behind the boiler until morning, although I myself
    returned to the bedroom and opened the curtains so they could see me
    lying down unconcerned. They also repeatedly threatened my family,
    arrested and detained my wife for a few hours and tried every which
    way to scare me even through threatening the children.

    One day the head of the Iran Central Bank called me and advised that
    I should hide for a while for there was a plot to assassinate me. I
    told him that I don't hide. He then asked me, at least, not to go
    to my office for a few months and offered his own home office in the
    basement of his sister's house. I accepted and spent my office hours
    in his basement, but went home every night. After 2 or 3 months I
    got tired of seclusion and went back to my office. It took no more
    than two weeks before I was arrested in my office and taken to the
    infamous Evin prison. My experience in Evin prison is a story all by
    itself. Soon after, they also arrested both my younger brothers, one a
    Maoist group theoretician-leader and one a student activist. This was
    1983 when some two dozen other INF activists were also in prison or
    being arrested. Evidently, I was supposed to be executed in prison;
    however, after the communist party fell out of favor with Ayatollah
    Khomeini and their leaders were arrested, I survived and was released
    after some 4 or 5 months.

    Before my imprisonment, when threats against me were becoming more
    frequent and obvious, some armed political groups offered assistance
    to protect me and/or to take my family to safety. One was the Armenian
    nationalists, who promised protection of family and the transporting
    of them outside the country in case of my arrest or death. Soon after
    my arrest, my wife and two sons of 6 and 4 were zipped out of the
    country with the help of our Kurdish fellow countrymen on horseback
    through and over the snowy mountains into Turkey. This must have been
    one of the most dangerous trips and the most frightening experience
    my family had to endure. In Turkey, they were received by the Turkish
    Ambassador, who arranged for their flight to the United States.

    NMJ: They have not visited you since then -- do you believe it will
    be safe for them to visit soon, or is it a bad idea because of who
    their father is?

    Zaim: No, but I had the opportunity to visit them a few times in
    between periods when I was forbidden to leave the country. The last
    time I saw them, they were 12 and 10 years of age. Yes, I believe it
    will be safe now for them to visit Iran except that they might be
    under scrutiny. But, now, any inconvenience caused them will be so
    widely publicized that it would be counterproductive for the regime.

    NMJ: Your eldest son is a poet or musician, and an activist of
    sorts. Do you feel you imparted some of your ideals to him before he
    left? What did you try to teach your children at that young age?

    Zaim: Yes. My eldest is a highly talented poet and musician. He used to
    write poems when in grammar school that would boggle the mind. He has
    perfected a talent I tried when young, but didn't go far with it. My
    second son is also talented in theater, writing plays and directing.

    NMJ: What is your hope for Iran-U.S. relations and what do you think
    is the best path for the lion and the eagle?

    Zaim: Normalization of relations between Iran and America is
    inevitable. We have suffered much for our mismanagement of foreign
    policy and must correct our course very soon. Over the past 30 years
    we have fallen behind the equivalent of a century or more. We cannot
    make up the loss, even running at top speed using all resources, is
    less than a quarter century. And, for that we have to make friends
    with every country in the world.

    NMJ: Do you have hope for new dialogue if Senator Obama is elected
    president of the U.S.?"

    Zaim: It doesn't matter who the American president is as long as the
    Islamic Republic is running the country. If dialogue means support
    for the current system and for their longevity, I don't believe it
    will happen. I hope things will begin to change course before the
    U.S. has a new president.

    Foreign Affairs, National Defense

    Amil Imani is an Iranian-born American citizen and pro-democracy
    activist residing in the United States of America. Imani is a
    columnist, literary translator, novelist and an essayist, who has
    been writing and speaking out for the struggling people of his native
    land, Iran.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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