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Peace at any cost is a Prelude to War!


Millions in Iran Rally Against U.S.
Tue Feb 12, 8:57 AM ET
By NEIL MacFARQUHAR The New York Times

TEHRAN, Feb. 11 Millions of Iranians galvanized by President Bush's branding
of their nation as part of an "axis of evil" marched in a nationwide pep
rally today that harkened back to the early days of the Islamic revolution,
with the American flag burned for the first time in recent memory.



  Iranians Rally Against United States (AP)



Amid the dirgelike chants of "Death to America!" marking the revolution's
23rd anniversary, President Mohammad Khatami tried to display Iran's milder
face, stressing his government's interest in détente.

Ever since Mr. Bush designated Iran part of an international terrorist
network open to American attack, conservatives in Iran have been greatly
buoyed, trying to use a resurgence of disgust with America to quash reform at
home, daily denouncing Washington and exhorting Iranians to follow suit. This
has made it difficult for President Khatami to preserve his reformist agenda
of promoting democracy and rooting out corruption an agenda he emphasized
today before he, too, criticized American foreign policy.

"Our policy is a policy of détente," Mr. Khatami told the throng clogging all
avenues to Freedom Square in Tehran. "We intend to have ties and peaceful
relations with all nations in the world," except Israel.

Although less strident than his old guard foes, Mr. Khatami suggested that
the United States was partly to blame for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
"The American people," he said, "should ask today how much of the awful and
terrifying incidents of Sept. 11 were due to terrorist acts, and how much of
it was due to the foreign policy adopted by American officials."

The threat to Iran "originates from the fact that America, or at least some
of its officials, see themselves as masters of the world," Mr. Khatami said.
"Since they have power, they want to force the world to obey them and exert
pressure on countries that disobey. Your revolution threatened America's
illegitimate interests in the region, so it is obvious that you are the
target of its animosity."

After each important line, the orderly crowd burst into another round of
"Death to America!" and waved a variety of signs, including one in English
quoting the late revolutionary patriarch, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini,
saying, "The U.S. cannot do a damn thing."

The chanting switched occasionally to "Death to Bush!" One man wrapped his
white donkey in a hand- painted American flag with "Bush" written on the
side, while a truck carried a huge poster mounted with five large close-up
photographs of the American president next to five similarly sized pictures
of an ape.

In his State of the Union address on Jan. 29, Mr. Bush singled out Iran for
trying to develop weapons of mass destruction and for its support for groups
like Hezbollah that the United States labels terrorists. In addition,
Washington has recently accused Iran of sending weapons to the Palestinians,
of trying to undermine the effort to build a stable central government in
Afghanistan and of helping Al Qaeda members to escape.

In suggesting that the United States review its own foreign policy rather
than cast aspersions, Mr. Khatami specifically cited what he depicted as the
plight of Palestinians denied human rights because of American support for
Israel.

The threats expressed by Mr. Bush and other administration officials over the
last two weeks surprised many in Iran. In some ways, they have united the
reformists and the old guard here in criticism of the United States; in other
ways, they have strengthened the hand of the conservatives.

"Any time we face international problems, democracy stops," said Ali Reza
Haghighi, a political science professor. "Now all the discourse must be
against the Americans."

Mr. Khatami worked to keep his reformist agenda alive.

"Some people must not object that we are talking so much about democracy,
religious democracy," he said. "The stress on democracy is the soul of the
Islamic revolution."

Mr. Khatami's supporters had envisioned the efforts to rebuild Afghanistan as
a kind of side door to re- establishing ties with Washington, a prospect that
alarmed the hard-liners who still control many of the levers of power here.

Mr. Bush's remarks thus delighted the old guard, which gleefully presented
them as evidence that the American attitude toward Tehran remained unchanged,
no matter that Iran helped in toppling the Taliban.

The reformists, while critical of America, have tried to suggest that the
actions Mr. Bush criticized were the work of shadowy groups within the
Iranian elite who want to keep the country isolated and autocratic.

Possibly reflecting uncertainty over how to deal with an American- backed
government in Kabul, Afghanistan was barely mentioned at the rally. "The
Taliban were a major bête noire," said one Western diplomat. "But now they
see a U.S. colony with bases developing in their backyard and they don't know
how to handle it."

At the rally, Iranians were generally polite to the few Western reporters in
their midst, saying things like "Welcome to Iran." But there were occasional
outbursts of animosity. "Garbage!" "Pigs!" "Get out of here!" shouted one
woman, while a man veered close to say, "I would like to punch America right
in the mouth!" at which point the crowd edged in, bellowing "Death to
America!"

While the size of the Tehran crowd was impossible to estimate
authoritatively, the wide avenues and highways leading to Freedom Square in
Tehran were jammed with hundreds of thousands of people. Iranian television
suggested that millions turned out across the country, showing pictures of
jammed streets in every city. Marchers said they were more galvanized than in
years past because they felt maligned by President Bush.

The turnout also reflected the daily exhortations to attend that accompanied
every news bulletin since Mr. Bush's speech. Employees at various government
ministries said they had been told to go.

The calls to attend did not move everyone. In affluent north Tehran, where
one occasionally hears support for the idea that Mr. Bush should carry
through with his threat to bomb, cars laden with skis headed out of town
toward the slopes.

As marchers headed toward the rally, periodically one would step out of the
crowd to offer spontaneous thoughts about the day. "As long as our revolution
is against America, we support it," said one man, wagging his finger. "The
day there is peace between this country and America, the revolution is over."

After 23 years, though, the sense of brooding menace that pervaded marches of
the past had mellowed. This one felt more like a carnival, complete with a
gold coin on offer for the best Uncle Sam effigy.

A yellow banner painted with giant letters in Persian was stretched across
one overpass. In the early days of the Islamic Republic it would have been
read as "America Is the Greatest Satan." But today the lettering helpfully
included its own English translation, reading, "America Is Extremely Naughty."



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