lumigan tramadol tadalafil

Iran’s technology revolution

2006-11-23
By

By Neal AbuNab

Last week’s Ted Koppel Discovery Channel documentary painted a meticulously-framed picture of Iran to support a hostile mindset. It was like a self-fulfilling prophecy; one always finds what he is looking for. He focused on the schisms of Iranian society much the same way that Iran always points out the schisms that exist in America. Koppel reminded Americans of the origin of this conflict when in 1954 the CIA toppled the democratically elected government in Tehran and appointed the Shah. Then, in 1979 the Islamic revolution kicked the Shah out and took over the US embassy and held up American hostages for over a year.

“Iran-the most dangerous nation” was the title of his show and the name said it all. It set out to prove just how much danger Iran presented to America and its darling Israel. Scenes of Iranian crowds marching in the streets chanting “Death to America and Death to Israel” faded in and out of the screen like a needle knitting all the stories together. By the end of the 2-hour documentary my mind surrendered to the message that Iran is America’s number one enemy.

It is the conclusion that any western viewer with an average education will reach. Koppel was laying the cultural foundation for the inevitable military confrontation with Iran. He began his story by saying: like any other country I visited which was ruled by an authoritarian regime…freedom of expression is almost non-existent…and women have to adhere to a repressive code of conduct. He interviewed political dissidents and people who’d been jailed by the Iranian regime and demonstrated how opposition views and newspapers were disappearing under the current president, Ahmadinejad. But he also showed the obsession of younger Iranians with the internet and western culture. They see American movies, dance to rap music and hold mixed sex parties at underground locations. The Iranian regime is obsessed with censorship and it shuts down numerous internet sites and spends lots of energy spying on its people.

They say that good things are either illegal, immoral or fattening. Iranians search for fun in breaking such prohibitions and doing naughty things in secret. “We used to drink in public and pray at home. Now, we pray in public and drink at home.” This is what Koppel heard everywhere he went in Iran. They are beginning to taste the fruits of peace and prosperity and women are teething for a sexual revolution. His photographer told him that her sister and the younger generation do not even know the name of their own president. Younger women in Iran today are mostly concerned with finding a career and having fun. Many of them are getting educated and rebelling against the rigidity of traditional customs. These are the signs of an affluent society in the making.

The brightest personal moment for Koppel in this episode happened when he clasped the hand of a young man who told him that he liked George Bush. A large portion of the documentary was devoted to the question of Iran’s nuclear energy program. But Koppel also reported that the price of Gas in Iran is 30 cents per gallon; people hardly pay any taxes; electricity and water services are highly subsidized, and education and healthcare are almost free. This was made possible by the skyrocketing oil prices.

Most Iranians believed that their nuclear program was peaceful in nature and that’s why they supported it. It was a matter of national pride to them to develop a home grown technology. Nuclear research sites are scattered all over the country and enrichment facilities have become numerous. Ahmadinejad announced last week that 30,000 uranium enrichment centrifuges will be installed within the next year. He also brokered peace between Syria and Iraq thereby making a goodwill gesture to the American negotiator indicating that Iran has something to offer in the way of stabilizing Iraq.

Koppel’s documentary closed by stating that the US had to negotiate with Iran over the Iraq issue, but at the same time it has to keep its military options open. That seems to be the current conclusion of most senior statesmen like Henry Kissinger and James Baker. The idea of national pride attached to the nuclear program is the easy explanation offered by most media. But the matter is more complicated and the Iranian regime is dealing with two vital issues regarding the nuclear program. The first one is called employment and the second one is called development of an industrial base.

More than 50% of Iran’s population of 70 million is under the age of 25 and about 800,000 people will be entering the job market every year. The nuclear program with its massive facilities under construction, provide employment for hundreds of thousands of people. This can not be simply shut down. It is like the nuclear construction boom of the sixties and seventies in America. Iran’s program has been set in motion irreversibly for the next 20 years.

Iran realizes that within the next 20 years there will be alternative sources of energy available to the industrialized world. Oil producing nations will be left in the cold if they do not use their current revenues to develop a real industrial base. Iran is building car factories, a defense industry and a home-grown technology base. CNN reported last week that Iran was making a breakthrough in embryonic stem cell research.

In the nineties Clinton worked so hard to complete the human genome project which produced the human genetic map in 1999. Stem cell research would’ve taken off in America if Bush had not slowed down the program because he “respected the sanctity of human life.” Iran, as well as the rest of the world, benefited from Clinton’s work and it had its Mullahs issue a religious Fatwa in 2002 that embryonic stem cell research was Halal and sanctioned by the Qur’an. They ruled that the “spirit” entered an embryo at the age of 121 days. Thus, aborting a fetus up until that point does not amount to killing a human life. Iran is bringing questions of religion and technology together in a way that is surpassing the Vatican’s pace.

Iran’s research program brought back movement to a rat’s paralyzed limb. Its stem cell research is more advanced today than America’s. Iran is in a hurry to build a solid home-grown technological base with scientists that can champion inventions in every field from electronics to medicine. This will provide opportunity to build factories that can employ millions of people and fuel a robust economy.

In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution Iran suffered from a massive exodus of scientists, educators and thinkers. In the eighties it suffered from the enormous toll of death and destruction imposed on it by Saddam Hussein. Today’s Iran does not look like a nation preparing for war. It looks like a nation hard at work trying to re-build itself and chart a path towards modernity. The erosion of the freedom of the press indicates that it has chosen to follow the Chinese model. These are state-mandated necessities that most people disagree with just like sacrificing civil liberties in America in the name of security.

Iran is trying to make itself look attractive to business leaders who prefer autocracy to achieve fast growth. It is creating a higher standard of living for its people and at the same time becoming the most influential player in the Middle East. Its nuclear program is the most visible symbol of the bubbling technological revolution. It seems determined to make the transformation to a fully industrialized self-reliant nation making it the first one in that region. It will never give up its nuclear program voluntarily. In fact, it is already talking about exporting the technology to places like Venezuela and Egypt.

Neal AbuNab is a Michigan-based author of “The War on Terror and Democracy”- available at Amazon.com. He is a commentator on Arab and Muslim affairs and his weekly column appears in the Arab American News. He can be reached at: www.IslamPalestineBlogger.com

12 views
Didn't make Oprah's Book Club. And Ronnie doesn't care. Man up. Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.


  • Hal

    Just think what a wonderful country Iran would be if it weren’t run by AMadJihad. Of course, other muslims would take over, and the outcome would likely be the same.

  • Hal

    Just think what a wonderful country Iran would be if it weren’t run by AMadJihad. Of course, other muslims would take over, and the outcome would likely be the same.

  • Hal

    Just think what a wonderful country Iran would be if it weren’t run by AMadJihad. Of course, other muslims would take over, and the outcome would likely be the same.

  • Hal

    Just think what a wonderful country Iran would be if it weren’t run by AMadJihad. Of course, other muslims would take over, and the outcome would likely be the same.

  • http://www.antipeonage.0catch.com Roger Knight

    I was an engineering student at the University of Washington at the time of the Iranian Hostage Crisis. Sitting next to me in the chemistry, physics, mechanics, statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, heat transfer, metallurgy, industrial processes, and other such clases were a number of Iranians. Like me, some of them majored in mechanical engineering. Others majored in electrical, chemical, civil, aerodynamic, and yes, nuclear engineering. The UW awarded an Iranian a Ph.D in nuclear engineering in 1975. When I asked where he went, some people told me that he was at an institute in Tehran, still there after the Khomeini Revolution.
    Do you find that reassuring?
    There were 60,000 Iranians with student visas in the United States in 1979. Many actually attended class and learned what people need to know to go home and build for their home governments:
    Airplanes, missiles, bombs, artillery, Gatling guns, torpedos, and of course, nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.
    Knowing the students sitting next to me I am not surprized Iran is developing nuclear weapons, missiles, torpedos, and other such things.
    What surprizes me is that it took them so long.

  • http://www.antipeonage.0catch.com Roger Knight

    I was an engineering student at the University of Washington at the time of the Iranian Hostage Crisis. Sitting next to me in the chemistry, physics, mechanics, statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, heat transfer, metallurgy, industrial processes, and other such clases were a number of Iranians. Like me, some of them majored in mechanical engineering. Others majored in electrical, chemical, civil, aerodynamic, and yes, nuclear engineering. The UW awarded an Iranian a Ph.D in nuclear engineering in 1975. When I asked where he went, some people told me that he was at an institute in Tehran, still there after the Khomeini Revolution.
    Do you find that reassuring?
    There were 60,000 Iranians with student visas in the United States in 1979. Many actually attended class and learned what people need to know to go home and build for their home governments:
    Airplanes, missiles, bombs, artillery, Gatling guns, torpedos, and of course, nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.
    Knowing the students sitting next to me I am not surprized Iran is developing nuclear weapons, missiles, torpedos, and other such things.
    What surprizes me is that it took them so long.

  • http://www.antipeonage.0catch.com Roger Knight

    I was an engineering student at the University of Washington at the time of the Iranian Hostage Crisis. Sitting next to me in the chemistry, physics, mechanics, statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, heat transfer, metallurgy, industrial processes, and other such clases were a number of Iranians. Like me, some of them majored in mechanical engineering. Others majored in electrical, chemical, civil, aerodynamic, and yes, nuclear engineering. The UW awarded an Iranian a Ph.D in nuclear engineering in 1975. When I asked where he went, some people told me that he was at an institute in Tehran, still there after the Khomeini Revolution.
    Do you find that reassuring?
    There were 60,000 Iranians with student visas in the United States in 1979. Many actually attended class and learned what people need to know to go home and build for their home governments:
    Airplanes, missiles, bombs, artillery, Gatling guns, torpedos, and of course, nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.
    Knowing the students sitting next to me I am not surprized Iran is developing nuclear weapons, missiles, torpedos, and other such things.
    What surprizes me is that it took them so long.

  • http://www.antipeonage.0catch.com Roger Knight

    I was an engineering student at the University of Washington at the time of the Iranian Hostage Crisis. Sitting next to me in the chemistry, physics, mechanics, statics, dynamics, thermodynamics, heat transfer, metallurgy, industrial processes, and other such clases were a number of Iranians. Like me, some of them majored in mechanical engineering. Others majored in electrical, chemical, civil, aerodynamic, and yes, nuclear engineering. The UW awarded an Iranian a Ph.D in nuclear engineering in 1975. When I asked where he went, some people told me that he was at an institute in Tehran, still there after the Khomeini Revolution.
    Do you find that reassuring?
    There were 60,000 Iranians with student visas in the United States in 1979. Many actually attended class and learned what people need to know to go home and build for their home governments:
    Airplanes, missiles, bombs, artillery, Gatling guns, torpedos, and of course, nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.
    Knowing the students sitting next to me I am not surprized Iran is developing nuclear weapons, missiles, torpedos, and other such things.
    What surprizes me is that it took them so long.

  • Toubrouk

    “In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution Iran suffered from a massive exodus of scientists, educators and thinkers. In the eighties it suffered from the enormous toll of death and destruction imposed on it by Saddam Hussein. Today’s Iran does not look like a nation preparing for war.”

    Do this include all the new millitary displays of ultra-fast torpedos and balistic missiles? If Iran was really on the path of peace, why do the Iranian prime-minister call for the destruction of Israel over and over again?

    Not thinking that Iran is planning for war is daydreaming.

  • Toubrouk

    “In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution Iran suffered from a massive exodus of scientists, educators and thinkers. In the eighties it suffered from the enormous toll of death and destruction imposed on it by Saddam Hussein. Today’s Iran does not look like a nation preparing for war.”

    Do this include all the new millitary displays of ultra-fast torpedos and balistic missiles? If Iran was really on the path of peace, why do the Iranian prime-minister call for the destruction of Israel over and over again?

    Not thinking that Iran is planning for war is daydreaming.

  • Toubrouk

    “In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution Iran suffered from a massive exodus of scientists, educators and thinkers. In the eighties it suffered from the enormous toll of death and destruction imposed on it by Saddam Hussein. Today’s Iran does not look like a nation preparing for war.”

    Do this include all the new millitary displays of ultra-fast torpedos and balistic missiles? If Iran was really on the path of peace, why do the Iranian prime-minister call for the destruction of Israel over and over again?

    Not thinking that Iran is planning for war is daydreaming.

  • Toubrouk

    “In the aftermath of the 1979 revolution Iran suffered from a massive exodus of scientists, educators and thinkers. In the eighties it suffered from the enormous toll of death and destruction imposed on it by Saddam Hussein. Today’s Iran does not look like a nation preparing for war.”

    Do this include all the new millitary displays of ultra-fast torpedos and balistic missiles? If Iran was really on the path of peace, why do the Iranian prime-minister call for the destruction of Israel over and over again?

    Not thinking that Iran is planning for war is daydreaming.







Right.

Man up.

Buy the book now on Amazon.com. Or listen to Ronnie tell a story at escaping-from-reality.com.

Search