US CITIZEN DIPLOMATS ARRIVE IN IRAN, INVITED BY AHMADINEJAD
Linda Milazzo 

In an effort to establish peaceful diplomacy with the government and 
people of Iran, and to model for the new Obama administration the 
power of cooperative good will, three highly regarded American peace 
makers have ventured to Iran. CODEPINK cofounders, Jodie Evans and 
Medea Benjamin, along with former Army Colonel and decorated Foreign 
Service Diplomat Ann Wright, are visiting Iran on visas personally 
granted them by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.Ahmadinejad 
provided the visas after receiving a personal request from CODEPINK: 
Women For Peace at a September 24th meeting in New York City where 
Ahmadinejad had gone to speak to the United Nations. While in New 
York, Ahmadinejad met with approximately 60 representatives from 
American peace and social justice organizations, where, over the 
course of two hours, he took unfiltered questions from the groups. 
The question from CODEPINK, which travels extensively on missions of 
peace, addressed why the organization's founders were repeatedly 
denied visas to Iran. Ahmadinejad offered to remedy the situation. He 
followed through on Monday when visas to Iran were issued to 
Benjamin, Evans and Wright. Within 48 hours, these intrepid citizen 
diplomats were packed and on their way.I caught up with Evans 
yesterday on her stop-over in Frankfurt and asked her to explain the 
intent of her mission. She replied:
"We're traveling to Iran to strengthen our connections with as many 
groups as possible in the areas of government, culture, education, 
women and, of course, peace. We've come to deepen our work as citizen 
diplomats to model the type of diplomacy we HOPE to see from our new 
government."
With the Bush administration's unrepentant militarism over the past 
eight years, preferring destruction over discussion and war over 
words, and with Bush refusing to meet with his contrived opponents 
unless antagonistic preconditions were met, it's fallen upon citizen 
diplomats to pursue and model the adult diplomacy this nation needs. 
Thus Evans, Benjamin and Wright, who understand that peace is 
achievable, that ALL war is failure, and the salvation of the planet 
is at stake, valiantly took up the task.For the past three years, 
Medea Benjamin, author and internationally recognized human rights 
advocate with Masters Degrees in Economics and Public Health, has 
been denied travel to Iran - even though Global Exchange, the San 
Francisco-based global justice organization she founded with husband, 
Dr. Kevin Danaher, has sent groups to Iran every year. Still, 
Benjamin was never deterred in her efforts to visit Iran or in her 
desire to model the diplomacy needed to promote understanding. With 
the Bush administration soon to exit and the Obama administration 
coming in, Benjamin has new hope for more conciliatory relations 
between the United States and other nations. When I asked Benjamin 
about the purpose of this mission, she wrote the following from Iran:
We hope the Obama administration will begin direct talks with Iran - 
without preconditions. On this visit to Iran, we are modeling the 
policy we would like to see. We're meeting with pro- and anti-
government groups. With religious and secular people. With 
environmentalists, women's groups ? a wide swath of the Iranian 
people. We hope to take their messages back to the US, and find 
creative ways to expand people-to-people ties. Our motto is "Let's 
talk!" which has tremendous resonance among Iranians, who are all 
anxious to promote dialogue and avoid war.
Indeed, CODEPINK's current campaign, directed at President-elect 
Obama, is simply called, "Let's talk!" It's a wide-ranging invitation 
to the incoming President to be ALL-communicative and ALL-inclusive. 
It calls upon Mr. Obama to be the great communicator he's capable of 
being and to use his formidable skills to dialogue with ALL the 
world's leaders, absent the egocentric preconditions of his 
predecessor. "Let's talk!" is similarly a resounding invitation to 
the President-elect to meet with the individual members of peace and 
social justice organizations who worked so hard to elect him. It 
calls upon Mr. Obama to show these American patriots, who like him, 
opposed the Iraq war from the start, the same respect they were shown 
by the President of Iran who gave them his time and took their 
unfiltered questions. "Let's talk!" invites Mr. Obama to be The 
People's President and take the opposite tack of his predecessor who 
not only refused to meet with anti-war patriots, but scorned their 
love of country.It IS after all love of country and love of humanity 
that embolden organizations like CODEPINK and individuals like Medea 
Benjamin, Jodie Evans and Ann Wright, to travel thousands of miles to 
Iran to speak on behalf of peace. Undeniably, idle time and lack of 
commitment ensure less complicated lives. But these heroes amongst us 
are committed to changing a world at war to a world at peace. It's 
about stopping the next war now!!Today from Iran where these peace 
makers traveled, I received this informal message from Evans who was 
clearly captivated by her day. Consider that this message is from a 
woman who's been to over 80 countries; to every continent on the 
globe; who served in the cabinet of the Governor of the largest state 
in the union; who ran two Presidential campaigns; and who sits on 
more Boards than any person I know. This is the exhilaration she felt 
after her day as a citizen diplomat, modeling communication, 
understanding and compassion. You know - just being an American 
intent on keeping peace:
We are just back from a fantastic day. Memories of our first days in 
Iraq almost 6 years ago strike us as we walk the streets, enter 
buildings and Medea and I share a tiny room with twin beds. But no 
call to prayer at 4 in the morning outside our window like there was 
in Iraq.I came down from the bedroom this morning for breakfast and 
we were swept away and now just returning at 10pm. It began when 
Rostam Pourzal arrived to ask what we wanted from our trip. 
Immediately he was on the phone with friends. Habib Ahmadzadeh soon 
arrived - a filmmaker who tells the story of war.Habib told us we 
take too literally the words, "Death to America" or "Death to 
Israel." They're meant to describe the policies of the US government 
or the Israeli government which seem very much like apartheid in 
South Africa. He said that the majority of Iranians are anti-war. He 
repeated what I've heard so often from Iranians: "We aren't warlike. 
We don't invade people. We only defend ourselves."Habib talked about 
his mother's heartache for the American soldiers who died in Iraq. 
She lost a son in the war and can feel the grief of those mothers. We 
asked him about President-elect Obama and he responded: "He is a 
walnut inside a shell and unknown. Hopefully history has taught us 
how little an individual can do. We need to learn how to rely on 
ourselves." Medea asked Habib about Afghanistan, and told him that 
Dobson [James Dobson, Focus On The Family] said Iran was funding the 
Taliban. Both Habib and Rostam laughed and said, "Taliban worse enemy 
of Iran? " We went to his offices and watched a powerful film, The 
Night Bus, about the cost of war on everyone, It takes place during 
the Iran/Iraq war. I was in tears almost throughout. It unflinchingly 
exposes the costs of war to heart, mind, spirit and soul?nothing 
heroic or beautiful about war. He says there is a movement in Iran to 
turn weapons into pens, or ways to communicate. That is why he makes 
films?He was in the military for many years and suffers from wounds 
of chemical weapons until today, so he also works with a group 
against the use of chemical weapons and the support of those who are 
suffering from their effects. What a big hearted wise man. In his 
attempts to show us his films there were technical difficulties and 
he laughed that Americans thought Iranians could have nuclear 
weapons. They can't even get high speed internet or get video 
equipment that works.At 7pm we were off to a beautifully manicured 
park, full of women and college age students with a café called The 
House Of The Artists. The café was rich with conversation and 
everyone looked as if they were a poet or an artist. A nuclear 
engineer came over to find out who we were, exclaiming that he was 
educated at Cal State LA. I asked him how close they were to a bomb. 
He laughed. Said it would be a very long time.Soon our table was full 
of amazing women. Women who work for peace. Most were about our age, 
had grown children, and had suffered in some way for being outspoken -
but were still fearless. Their faces were full of joy and life and 
the conversation was at a pitch for hours. We began to work on our 
project of asking Iranians what they would like to tell new President 
Obama. The filmmaker Rakhashan Bani-Etemad sat in the garden with 
Medea for about 15 minutes of filming with the camera in the hands of 
Habib. The generosity of everyone is overwhelming, their time, their 
stories, their passion?.we can't even pay for a meal.Tonight the 
students from Miles for Peace who bicycled across the US came at 
about 11:00 to beg Medea for time to take her to see their Iran. They 
also told us about their plans for a friend to swim the Persian Gulf 
for peace, and an agreement they have for the US soccer team to play 
the Iranian soccer team in April and then 50 Iranian/Americans to 
come to Iran and bicycle across Iran as they had done across the 
US.There is so much more but I am exhausted.
President-elect Obama, Iranians are wonderful people. They don't 
deserve harm. In my life as an educator, I work with many Iranian 
adults. My students are physicians, engineers, educators, scientists 
and more. Iranians living in America are frequently more wealthy than 
those in Iran today. They left Iran with their riches. Most define 
Iran by "before the [Islamic] Revolution" and "after the Revolution." 
They are some of the best-traveled, most sophisticated and generous 
people I know. Most Iranians I've met, who are naturalized citizens, 
voted for YOU in HOPE you'd negotiate a lasting peace with Iran.I 
also have Iraqi students - but just a few. Of my Iraqi students, one 
always comes to mind. He's an incredibly handsome young father of a 
very famous young son. His son was the beautiful five year old boy 
who was set on fire in Iraq, terribly disfigured, and brought to the 
U.S. to be treated. The young father is making a life here in 
America. He smiles and tells me of his young son's progress. About 
his many operations. In each conversation I feel his sense of pain. 
In each conversation I feel MY sense of shame.President-elect Obama, 
take a lesson from the citizen diplomats who have traveled to 
Iran. "Let's talk!" Let's stop the next war now!!Recently in New York 
City, CODEPINK distributed a faux edition of the New York Times, 
displaying the headline, IRAQ WAR ENDS! It was enthusiastically 
received!
Last week in Washington, DC, CODEPINK visited the Syrian, Iranian, 
Cuban, Venezuelan and Bolivian embassies to deliver doves, apple 
pies, flowers and cards. All five countries have had strained 
relationships with the Bush administration. The CODEPINK message to 
these Embassies was YES WE CAN Live in Peace. As you can see, we're 
READY FOR CHANGE.So tell us President-elect Obama, now that you're 
taking office with your commitment to bring change, when's a good 
time to talk??

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