The Command Post
Iraq
June 02, 2004
Iran: A Plea for Western 'Soft Power'

Blog Iran passes on this impassioned plea from Ramin Parham:

"In my article, I related the story of Tannaz, an Iranian student, and asked the question the West is facing: Between Jannati, Secretary of the Guardian Council of the Iranian theocracy, and Tannaz, which one will you choose? A few years ago in Serbia, between Milosevic on one hand and the Serbian students and Zoran Djindjic on the other, a united West chose the students and their leaders. Today, the entire Balkan region has been stabilized and democratic nations are being built. Tomorrow, in Iran, which way will the West go? Will we all harvest the seeds of democracy or the grapes of wrath and resentment of a disillusioned youth? That is the question.

For Reggie, Charlie, and Tannaz to celebrate Democracy Day in a freedom parade in Tehran, we do not need bullets. Rather, to witness the Iranian D-Day we need the West's immense information-projection power. We need the West's vastly influential think tanks to advocate a policy of freedom for the people, not détente with a regime whose Majlis (Parliament) inaugurates with chants of "Death to America" and whose Friday "prayers" serve as recruiting speeches for suicide bombers.

We need congressional hearings and testimonies given by young Iranians describing the hopelessness of existence under theocracy; the complete lack of normalcy and dignity; the day-by-day attrition of life. We need a tiny fraction of the West's financial support channeled to the families of Iranian political prisoners and jailed journalists with international monitoring. We need your soft power, and all of it. We need it in a barrage of heavy-media artillery, think-tank platforms, and the solidarity of Western NGOs. We need U.S. and EU campus events with young Iranians "yearning for freedom" standing hand in hand with Western students. We need Western artists lending their music and their voices to the Joyless Generation."

If you're interested, the entire article is available at NRO of all places.

Hungarian Ambassador Simonyi discussed the power of Rock & Roll in an excellent Guest Blog series here at Winds of Change.NET. Does the mullahs' atomic program give this kind of 'soft power' strategy enough time to work? I'm not sure it does - but I know that we should start anyway, and make a serious attempt.

The Europeans are too corrupt to follow, of course, too busy cutting deals with Iran's theocratic jailers and torturers. "Blood for Oil," indeed. That still leaves the USA - and this is an option America absolutely has not pursued seriously enough.

Stronger, please.

Posted By Winds of Change.NET at June 2, 2004 12:53 AM | TrackBack
Comments

OK, where are all the folks who post many inches of comments to these posts. This one of all I've seen recently is perhaps the most important one of all.

See my recent post to the Iraq Section:

Now, here’s a thought what if the indegenious people would like a change in their gov’t, could that perhaps counter the terrorists who pursue kidnappings and slaughter . . . ?

See a previous post of mine that used a link from The Post:

OPED

Commentary:

Again blessed be for the Internet for it’s ability to share thoughts unfettered by borders, repressive governments, and thought police.

Here are two very insightful essays on an awakening in Iran:

Feeling the Heat
As Iran’s Joyless Generation awakes, the theocracy shudders

What Can I Do?
It?s the West’s soft power we need.

http://www.hspig.org/ipw-web/bulletin/bb/viewtopic.php?t=874

There is a revolution in waiting as Iran’s “Joyless Generation” awakes. Will the West in its comfort zone hear the sounds of the this new dawn? Will we continue with the status quo and regional stability or will we seize the moment and enable this new birth? Now is the time for action!

*****

And now for our secret weapon . . . :

Moderator’s Note: From The Command Post’s OPED Section (www.command-post.org) posted originally on Winds of Change Net blog site (www.windsofchange.net)

The Strategic Influence and Power of American Rock & Roll

http://www.windsofchange.net/archives/004251.php

*****

November 8, 2003

The Axis of Elvis
Joe Katzman

“The wind of change
Blows straight into the face of time
Like a stormwind that will ring
The freedom bell for peace of mind
Let your balalaika sing
What my guitar wants to say…”
- The Scorpions, “Winds of Change”

Mike Daley sends this irresistable tidbit along. Apparently, tonight will feature a very special speech at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame by Hungary’s ambassador to the United States. To quote from the Hall of Fame’s official news release:

“Mr. Simonyi will discuss his personal experiences with rock music and the impact that it made in Communist-ruled Hungary and other Soviet Bloc countries. The free flow of American and British rock music – and the revolutionary ideas it represents – over the airwaves in Central and Eastern Europe was instrumental in loosening the Communists’ grip on power and contributed to the eventual downfall of dictatorships in that area of the world.

Ambassador Simonyi’s speech is entitled “Rocking for the Free World: How Rock Music Helped Bring Down the Iron Curtain.” The Ambassador, an accomplished blues guitarist himself and formerly the member of several Hungarian rock groups, will be introduced by Jeff “Skunk” Baxter, former lead guitarist with the Doobie Brothers and Steely Dan.

As I think back over the last 20 years and remember what the world used to be like, I believe the appropriate expression for occasions like this is “Fuckin’ A!” We live in wonderful, dangerous times - and the one does not negate the other.

“Not only for me but also for other Hungarians of my generation, this became the stuff that really linked us to the free world,” he said. “As I listened to this kind of music, I felt I was part of the free world myself.”

Back in May of 2002, my blog essay “G-d Gave Rock N’ Roll To You…” explained why Rock, Jazz, and other forms of Western music are so inherently dangerous to certain regimes and ideologies, and why that still mattered. From Arab News to McCoy’s B-52s, from C.P. Freund to Neal Stephenson, it ties them all together, relates these ideas to present events, and makes the case for giving our bastard cultural children Jazz, Blues and Rock n’ Roll their due.

For Hungary is not the first society rocked to freedom by this music. America is. The music embraced America long before America embraced its players, and Americans accepted it in their ears before they accepted its true message in their hearts. It was sorrow, and endurance, and joy. It took old lines and boldly crossed them, and its mix shook the world. It dared its listeners to define themselves. It set them free.

That’s what this music means - and what America means, too, in its best moments. Rock n’ Roll America, beacon of freedom. Or, as Lileks puts it, “we’re The Axis of Elvis.” Amen.

The black artists who made jazz, blues and rock possible brought forth a great gift out of a great injustice, and helped define America to the world. Their gift goes on giving, in America and beyond. Here’s the full series:

In the words of Ambassador Simonyi’s favorite artist, Stevie Winwood:

“Many a mile to freedom, many a smile to tell
Ask my bluebird to sing you, from the heart of a wishing well
Call all my reindeer to graze here, call all my grain to grow
Then together we flow like the river
Then together we melt like the snow…

…A few more miles to go
Miles to freedom.”
- Stevie Winwood, “Many a Mile to Freedom”
_________________
Ron Wright,
Board of Advisors, Security Council Member,
WWW.HSPIG.ORG

Posted by: rwright at June 3, 2004 10:03 AM

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