Hostage taking
Worth reading: The Wall Street Journal‘s Gerald Seib on "What Iran says by jailing journalist" Roxana Saberi: … This jockeying is going on amid the run-up to Iran’s June 12 presidential election, which will determine whether the U.S. will be dealing with the enigmatic Mr. Ahmadinejad or the possibly more pragmatic opposition figure, Mir-Hossein Mousavi. ...
Worth reading: The Wall Street Journal's Gerald Seib on "What Iran says by jailing journalist" Roxana Saberi:
Worth reading: The Wall Street Journal‘s Gerald Seib on "What Iran says by jailing journalist" Roxana Saberi:
… This jockeying is going on amid the run-up to Iran’s June 12 presidential election, which will determine whether the U.S. will be dealing with the enigmatic Mr. Ahmadinejad or the possibly more pragmatic opposition figure, Mir-Hossein Mousavi. Hanging over it is the possibility the new Israeli government of incoming Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu may decide to take matters into its own hands with a military strike at Iran’s nuclear facilities.
In the midst of all that, a journalist can be an easy target for signal-sending. That’s likely what has happened with Roxana Saberi, a 31-year-old Iranian-American journalist incarcerated in Tehran’s Evin Prison and publicly charged by the Iranian government last week with espionage. …The strange path her case has taken strongly suggests political maneuvering. …
Spying is an easy charge to make against journalists, because what they do for a living — gathering information, asking nosy questions — can be made to look like espionage. And Ms. Saberi, a freelancer without the backing of a big international news organization, was particularly vulnerable.
What, then, might be the point of jailing a journalist, especially now? Obviously, it’s the kind of move that chills internal dissent. …Picking dual-citizen Iranian-Americans singles out people who are especially exposed to government action because of their Iranian citizenship, while also sending a signal to the U.S. …
It also may be that hard-liners within Iran wanted to create precisely this kind of case to mount an obstacle to meaningful American-Iranian dialogue.
That’s a problem for President Barack Obama, but he also has meaningful leverage. Many in the Iranian government do want a dialogue with the U.S. Mr. Obama recently sent them an important signal by implicitly indicating his policy won’t be to push for regime change in Iran, but rather to deal with the government he gets there.
In return, the U.S. should get a lower level of paranoia among Iranian officials and security services. More broadly, the ground rules for the coming U.S.-Iran dialogue are being laid. It’s a good time for the U.S. to make clear that jockeying for position by grabbing American citizens off the streets of Tehran won’t be part of this process.
Seib notes that he spent a few days in Evin prison himself in 1987 but was released before being charged.
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