US-based NGO allowed to set up shop in Iran

by Kal El on October 5, 2008 · View Comments

Do you like this story?

Talk about a bold move.

WASHINGTON: The United States has granted permission for a US non-governmental organization to open an office in Iran, the US State Department said on Thursday, but said Washington’s Tehran policy remained unchanged.

In a rare move, the US Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC) granted a license to the Princeton, New Jersey-based American-Iranian Council (AIC) to operate in Iran.

A US official said the decision to allow the NGO to go to Iran was “carefully reviewed” within the US government.

We want to encourage this kind of cultural exchange and mutual understanding” between the US and Iranian people “while trying to isolate the regime,” said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The United States is at loggerheads with Tehran on a range of issues, including Iran’s nuclear program, which the West suspects is aimed at building an atomic bomb. Tehran argues it is for peaceful power purposes.

The two nations have been antagonists since the Islamic Revolution in Iran in 1979 and the seizure of the U.S embassy in Tehran. Switzerland handles US interests in Iran as Washington has no diplomatic ties with Tehran.

The New York Times reported this summer that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice was seeking the approval of President George W. Bush to establish a US Interests Section in the Iranian capital.

Proponents argue this would give American diplomats an opportunity to observe the country’s complex politics firsthand.

This AIC office is a first step on the path to the institutionalization of a normalized relationship,” executive director Brent Lollis said in a statement. “Of special importance is our role in helping to discourage inaccurate portrayals of either nation’s government, culture or population.

In the past year Iran charged three visiting Iranian-American scholars with espionage and detained another.

Iran has accused the United States of using intellectuals and others inside the country to undermine the Islamic Republic through what it calls “velvet revolution,” a reference to the nonviolent overthrow of Communism in Czechoslovakia in 1989.-Reuters

Velvet revolution? I am all for it, the Iranians have been through hell this past decade.

Related posts:

  1. Report: U.S. to Establish First Diplomatic Presence in Iran Since 1979
  2. Iran: Flogging an effective deterrent, says senior official
  3. Russia sells Iran new sophisticated air defense system
  4. Iran torches 7 Jewish synagogues
  5. Iran threatens US "weak points" if attacked
  • jennyjen

    Sounds like a good place to go if you have a death wish. Ditto on that Velvet Revolution.

blog comments powered by Disqus