[Imagine Hi Jintao and/or Vladimir Putin openly asking their
respective legislatures for cash to destabilize the US...]


<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/02/15/AR2006021500672.html>

Rice Asks for $75 Million to Increase Pressure on Iran

By Glenn Kessler
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, February 16, 2006; A01

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asked Congress yesterday to
provide $75 million in emergency funding to step up pressure on the
Iranian government, including expanding radio and television
broadcasts into Iran and promoting internal opposition to the rule of
religious leaders.

The request would substantially boost the money devoted to confronting
Iran -- only $10 million is budgeted to support dissidents in 2006 --
and signals a new effort by the Bush administration to persuade other
nations to join the United States in a coalition to bolster Iranian
activists, halt Iran's funding of terrorism and stem its nuclear
ambitions, State Department officials said.

"The United States will actively confront the policies of this Iranian
regime, and at the same time we are going to work to support the
aspirations of the Iranian people for freedom in their own country,"
Rice told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee at a hearing on the
administration's foreign affairs budget.

Iranian officials announced this week that they have begun enriching
uranium, a step that appears likely to ensure that the country's
nuclear program will be discussed by the U.N. Security Council next
month. But U.S. officials despair that any action by the council will
be slow and deliberate, so yesterday's effort appears to be part of a
sustained campaign to enlist other countries to act against Iran even
sooner.

Rice will travel to Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates
next week in part to discuss the "strategic challenge to the world
represented by the Iranian regime," the State Department said. Another
senior official, Undersecretary R. Nicholas Burns, also will discuss
Iran next week with his counterparts in the Group of Eight
industrialized nations. Officials will also seek to coordinate
strategy on Iran with NATO members.

Sen. Sam Brownback (R-Kan.), who has called for $100 million to
promote democracy in Iran, applauded the initiative as the "absolutely
right move at this point in time." Although some Iranian activists
have criticized the administration for moving too slowly to support
them, Brownback said the administration had been "very methodical" in
fighting terrorism. "The first step was Afghanistan, then Iraq, and
now you're seeing an increasing focus on Iran."

But Martin S. Indyk, a Clinton administration official who now heads
the Saban Center on Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution,
said the democratic forces the administration wants to support have
failed in the past to take on the clerics and have little basis of
support -- and would be tainted by U.S. aid. "It's hard to see how $75
million makes a dent in that political reality," Indyk said.

The Clinton administration, under pressure from Congress, tried to
assist such groups in the 1990s, Indyk said, but Iran interpreted the
effort as an attempt to the overthrow the government and responded by
funding a series of terrorist attacks in Israel.

Rice told lawmakers that because the Iranians have begun enriching
uranium, "they have crossed a point where they are in open defiance of
the international community." Rice said the United States has a "menu
of options" available to punish Iran, adding: "You will see us trying
to walk a fine line in actions we take."

Under the proposed supplemental request for the fiscal 2006 budget,
the administration would use $50 million of the new funds to
significantly increase Farsi broadcasts into Iran, mainly satellite
television broadcasting by the federal government and broadcasts of
the U.S.-funded Radio Farda, to build the capacity to broadcast 24
hours a day, seven days a week.

An additional $15 million would go to Iranian labor unions, human
rights activists and other groups, generally via nongovernmental
organizations and democracy groups such as the National Endowment for
Democracy. The administration has already budgeted $10 million for
such activity but is only just beginning to spend the $3.5 million
appropriated in 2005 for this purpose.

Officials said $5 million will be used to foster Iranian student
exchanges -- which have plummeted since the 1979 Iranian Revolution --
and another $5 million will be aimed at reaching the Iranian public
through the Internet and building independent Farsi television and
radio stations.

State Department officials, briefing reporters about the plan on the
condition of anonymity to avoid upstaging Rice, said they saw an
opportunity to enlist support against Iran because of intemperate
statements by Iran's new president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, that have
called for the elimination of Israel and expressed doubt about the
Holocaust.

The United States has no relations with Tehran, but one official said
the United States hopes to capitalize on the "disturbing trend of
Iranian diplomacy" since Ahmadinejad's election, including the refusal
to continue negotiations on the nuclear program. He said the
administration would press countries that have ties to "begin to think
what they can do to push back against what has been a radical series
of proposals out of the government of Iran."

The officials sidestepped questions about whether the administration
is seeking "regime change." One official said the United States is
pursuing a "hard-headed" diplomatic track in which it hopes the
policies of Iran will change and "people who support democracy" will
be strengthened. A second official cited the 1980 uprising in Poland
by the Solidarity labor movement, which toppled the communist
government, as a model for the kind of movement the administration
hopes to foster.

The officials acknowledged that aiding activists and dissidents in
Iran may be difficult and could expose them to retribution, so they
said the aid will probably be provided without much fanfare.

At the hearing, Rice won bipartisan praise for her handling of
negotiations on Iran's nuclear programs, but lawmakers from both
parties raised objections to the overall thrust of the
administration's Middle East policy. At one point, Sen. Lincoln D.
Chafee (R-R.I.) blamed the administration for the victory of Hamas in
last month's Palestinian legislative elections. "The whole year, 2005,
nothing was done, opportunities missed, and now we have a very, very
disastrous situation of a terrorist organization winning an election,"
Chafee asserted.

Rice acknowledged the victory of Hamas is "a difficult moment" in the
Israeli-Palestinian peace process, but she said it was due to a
backlash against the ruling party, not a failure of U.S. policy.

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