_“Argo” as Orientalism and why it Upsets Iranians_ 
(http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/juancole/ymbn/~3/ztFviCO8V5E/orientalism-upsets-iranians.html?utm_so
urce=feedburner&utm_medium=email)   
Posted:  26 Feb 2013 04:09 AM PST 
 
The taking of US diplomatic personnel hostage by radical Iranian activists  
and angry crowds in November of 1979, and then the backing for this action 
of  the government of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, was profoundly illegal. I 
know  some of the former hostages, and deeply sympathize with their trauma. 
Nothing  justifies what was done to them. 
But Ben Affleck’s otherwise fine, Oscar-winning film, “Argo,” about the  
escape of some US embassy personnel, functions as American propaganda and a 
sort  of neo-Orientalism. That it was based on a memoir of the incident by a 
former  Central Intelligence Agency operative involved in the rescue is part 
of the  problem. That memoir is a primary source and valuable, but good 
history, and  good story-telling about history, weights sources and tries to 
correct for their  biases. “Argo” does not. Some of the _Iranian objections 
to the  film are equally grounded in propaganda concerns_ 
(http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/147378/) , but some are  legitimate. 
It isn’t just that the memoir _slights  the massive contribution of the 
Canadian embassy and Canadian diplomats to the  mission and plays up the 
relatively minor CIA role._ 
(http://www.theglobeandmail.com/arts/awards-and-festivals/film-awards/ken-taylor-sets-the-record-straight-about-argos-take-on-the-c
anadian-caper/article9044112/)  (Virtually every good  idea that 
contributed to the success of the rescue came from Canada, but somehow  
American movie 
audiences insist that it all has to be about us.) Nor that _Britain’s  
important role is denied and even denigrated_ 
(http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2284631/Ben-Afflecks-Argo-UK-diplomats-deny-movie-slur-turned-away-Ira
nian-hostages.html)  Nor is my main objection that a  whole series of 
exciting events are invented that never occurred. It is that the  entire 
context 
for these events is virtually absent and the Iranian characters  are 
depicted as full of mindless rage. 
Although the film begins with an info-dump that explains that the _US  
screwed over Iran by having the CIA overthrow the elected government in 1953 
and 
 then helped impose a royal dictatorship_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/All-Shahs-Men-American-Middle/dp/047018549X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1361880083&sr=8-1&ke
ywords=all+the+shah's+men)  in the form of the restored shah,  that part of 
the film is emotionally flat. It tells, it doesn’t show. It is  tacked on. 
It does not intersect with the subsequent film in any significant  way. It 
therefore has no emotional weight and does little to contextualize the  
Iranian characters (none of whose names I think we even learn). 
Former hostage and superb American diplomatic _John  Limbert makes the same 
point in Foreign Policy_ 
(http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/02/25/former_hostages_seize_argo_publicity_call_for_diplomacy_with_iran)
 :

“Argo highlights the negative attitudes that the two countries  have held 
toward each other for decades. Its brief introduction attempts to  provide 
historical context behind the embassy takeover, but the film does not  convey 
the prevailing Iranian sense of grievance — real or imagined — that led  to 
the 1979 attack, and to the emotional response in the streets of Tehran . . 
 . More than three decades later, the same atmosphere of suspicion, 
mistrust,  and festering wounds dominates Iranian-American relations.”  

You could have had Iranian characters angry that the American-backed Shah 
or  king, Mohammad Reza Pahlevi, had _arbitrarily  imprisoned them or their 
friends among the dissidents, _ 
(http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2012/05/comment-parviz-sabeti-and-the-murder-of-political-prisoners-
under-the-shah.html) and had subjected  both intellectuals and members of 
openly revolutionary groups to torture and  murder in prison. That would not 
in any way have justified what was done to  Foreign Service Officers of the 
State Department, but it would have humanized  the Iranian villains of the 
piece and made the film more complex and less like a  comic book. 
“Argo” could have been a moment when Americans come to terms with their 
Cold  War role as villains in places like Iran. It could have been a film 
about what  intelligence analysts call “blowback,” when a covert operation goes 
awry.  Instead it plays into a ‘war on terror’ narrative of innocent 
Americans  victimized by essentially deranged foreign mobs. 
_Muhammad  Sahimi writes_ 
(http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/tehranbureau/2012/05/comment-parviz-sabeti-and-the-murder-of-political-prisoners-unde
r-the-shah.html) ,

” Mehdi Rezaei, an MKO member, was arrested in April 1972 and  executed 
that September at the age of 20, after enduring horrific torture. Ali  Asghar 
Badizadegan, one of the MKO’s founders, was forced into an electric  oven 
according to his comrade Lotfollah Meysami. He was burned so badly that  he 
became paralyzed, and the SAVAK refused to turn over his body after he was  
executed in May 1972. As Ali Gheissari writes in Iranian Intellectuals in the  
Twentieth Century, under Sabeti the Committee was also “responsible for the  
arbitrary detention, interrogation, and torture of many university students 
 during that period.”  

The Shah’s feared secret police, and his entire repressive regime, did not  
function completely on their own. They had been installed by the US in  
cooperation with far rightwing Iranian generals and the Iranian equivalent of  
billionaires, and SAVAK and the regime continued to have close links to the 
CIA.  It is alleged that some of the torture techniques used by the Shah’s 
SAVAK were  taught to them by the CIA. And, it is further _alleged that the 
CIA itself had  front groups on and was active in spying on Iranian campuses, 
in parallel to  operations such as COINTELPRO in the US_ 
(http://www.cia-on-campus.org/volkman.html) . The anti-Shah Iranian students  
piecing together 
shredded US embassy cables in Tehran weren’t looking for photos  of the 
escaped diplomats, as “Argo” implies. (There was no last-minute  
identification of them or car chase on the tarmac– that was all made up). They  
were 
looking for evidence of the ways the intelligence officials under cover at  the 
embassy had been monitoring them and their friends and putting them in  
torture cells.  
Such spying on Iranian dissidents was a very minor part of what US  
intelligence was doing in Iran at that time– allegedly only three field 
officers  
even knew Persian. Mostly they were using Iran as a listening base to spy on 
the  Soviet Union. But keeping Iran subservient and docile was key for 
Washington to  remaining able to deploy its petroleum for Western economic 
success versus the  Warsaw Pact and Communist China, and to being able to use 
Iran 
for monitoring  the USSR. Hence, some resources were also devoted to 
repressing critics of the  shah. And while liasing with SAVAK to arrest 
intellectuals and dissidents may  have been a subsidiary effort for the Agency, 
for 
those whose lives were ruined  by the Shah’s apparatus of repression, it 
rather bulked large. 
The US embassy personnel taken captive were not responsible for the Shah 
and  what he did to the Iranian people, but the US government did whatever it 
could  to back the Shah and protect him from international criticism. 
The Iranian crowds are depicted in the film as irrational mobs. The  
Revolutionary Guards at the airport are depicted as angry puritans, worried  
about 
_Marvel  artist Jack Kirby’s somewhat salacious storyboards for the 
proposed “Lord of  Light” film that the CIA optioned for the operation_ 
(http://www.buzzfeed.com/richardrushfield/the-lost-jack-kirby-sketches-for-the-real-arg
o-film-project)  (based on a novel by  Roger Zelazny). No Iranian character 
in the film who has a legitimate grievance  against US policy is permitted 
to be sympathetic or to have any intimate moments  that would humanize him 
or her. 
The film tells but doesn’t show some of the US atrocities in Iran. It  
shows the plight of the hapless US diplomats. In making that key dramatic  
decision, and then in Orientalizing the Iranian protagonists as angry and  
irrational, the film betrays its subject matter and becomes propaganda, lacking 
 
true moral or emotional ambiguity. Roger Zelazny’s and Jack Kirby’s “Lord of 
 Light” would have been more nuanced.

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Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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