Monday, March 7, 2011 - 11:38 PM

Iran is the largest nation-state supporter of armed resistance to Israel's occupation, a country whose current leadership justifies seemingly provocative actions in the Middle East as countermeasures to Israeli-American expansionism. As popular revolutions designed at securing freedom and throwing off the domination of authoritarian rulers, many of which are U.S. clients, Iran has expressed an official foreign policy that purports to stand with a self-determined Middle East, directed by the will of its people.
So why is the largest national patron of the Palestinian struggle and self-proclaimed ally of Arab world liberation jailing American solidarity activists who shine a light on the systematic Israeli abuse of Palestinians?
On February 6, 2011 Shane Bauer and Josh Fattal -- American citizens and global justice activists -- went on trial behind closed doors in Tehran on espionage charges after being arrested by Iran near the Iran-Iraq border in 2009. Along with Sarah Shourd (Bauer's fiancée), the three were allegedly captured at gunpoint by Iranian forces while hiking in the Iraqi north. Whether they had accidentally crossed the border into Iran or Iranian forces were operating on the Iraqi side of the border is disputed.
The three were placed in Tehran's notorious Evin Prison, and while Shourd (who was kept in solitary confinement for a year) was released on $500,000 bail, returning to the United States in September on what the Iranian government has called compassionate grounds, Bauer and Fattal remain in prison. Shourd has refused to return to the Iran for the trial, pleading not guilty in absentia, and her bail is being revoked as a result.
The Iranian government has called this a straight espionage case and tried to engage in high stakes negotiations with the United States for a prisoner exchange, a position unquestioningly promoted and publicized by Iran's Press TV network. However, looking at Bauer's and Fattal's political track records, it becomes clear that Washington is unlikely to trade much to retrieve outspoken critics of U.S. policy in the Middle East.
Meeting in London with Shon Meckfessel (dubbed the fourth hiker) in July, he discussed Shourd, Bauer and Fattal's active commitment to global justice and the absurdity of calling them U.S. spies. On the hiking trip with the other three, he had stayed at his hotel due to a cold the day they were captured by Iranian authorities.
Meckfessel talked about how prior to the trip to Iraq the three were in Israel and the Occupied Territories, visiting long-time friend Tristan Anderson in hospital. Anderson was critically injured when an Israeli soldier shot him in the head with a high-velocity tear-gas canister during an anti-wall demonstration in the West Bank town of Nalin. He has been featured several times on Iran's foreign service Press TV network as an international solidarity activist hero, however his close friendship to the jailed hikers and his pleas for Bauer and Fattal's release have not.
"I find it astounding that over a year and half into this that Iran as well as western media coverage have utterly neglected the considerable evidence to the reason for our presence in the region, being our long public record of our critical journalism and education in the region," Meckfessel said over the phone just after the first hearing of the trial.
Shourd, Fattal, and Bauer, according to Meckfessel, had made close connections with people in the West Bank popular struggles against Israel's wall in the town of Bilin and the family of Bassem and Jahwar Abu Rahmah. Bassem was killed in April 2009 after being shot in the stomach by a tear gas canister during a demonstration, while Jahwar died on January 1, 2011 resulting from heavy teargas exposure during a demonstration the previous day.
Meckfessel highlighted that at the time of their arrest, Bauer -- a critical journalist in the Middle East -- was finishing an article on the effect of Israel's use of the American made high-velocity teargas canisters on the Palestinian anti-wall struggles. The story was never published due to Bauer's detainment.
It is likely for this reason that the United States seems to be putting little effort into securing the release of Fattal and Bauer, and would be unlikely to engage in a high profile trade for them. This is re-enforced by the assessment in an U.S. Embassy cable -- part of the WikiLeaks releases -- which seeks to construe events in a manner that allows the United States to blame the hikers while distancing the government from any responsibility for their protection.
"The lack of coordination on the part of these hikers, particularly after being forewarned, indicates an intent to agitate and create publicity regarding international policies on Iran," reads the cable titled "(Criminal event) Kidnapping" from July 2009.
This lack of willingness to engage in a meaningful trade to protect its critical citizens is indicative of the Obama administration's approach in the region, which refuses to use its leverage to protect the people making democratic demands of its client states, while scoring rhetorical points with Iran, where it has little leverage. It is the other side of the same coin that shows an Iranian position of posturing on the Palestinian struggle and Middle Eastern liberation while jailing the allies of that struggle for personal gain and repressing local demands that echo the regional call from the street.
As a result of this reality, Meckfessel has been campaigning in the United States and Europe to raise the activist profile of the hikers among the European left, Palestinian solidarity activists, and the anti-war movement to generate pressure through a dialogue between social movements and Iran. "They are stuck between states," Meckfessel said about a situation where the hikers lacked strong national advocacy. "Iran cares about alienating pro-Palestinian activists and once these people find out about this, it will alienate them [from Iran]," he added.
It is a point made clear in Bauer's testimony at the first hearing of his trial, where he was consistently denied access with his lawyer by the court. "I have never had any contact with any U.S. intelligence services in Iraq or America; I am a journalist and my purpose in my work is to expose and investigate the wrong doing of my government, especially in the Middle East," he told the Iranian court on Feb. 6.
Nonetheless, trying Bauer and Fattal (and Shourd in absentia) indicates that Iran is more concerned with using anti-war and pro-Palestine activists as pawns in their negotiating games with Washington than respecting the anti-war movement and Palestinian struggle. Labeling as American spies and jailing the very people who are prime examples of international activism that Iran and their international press services seem to love promoting makes any genuine sentiment to those claims ring hollow.
Instead, the continued jailing of Fattal and Bauer makes Iran's commitment to the success of the Palestinian struggle, and its rhetoric against the American government's aggressive intrusions into the Middle East appear hypocritical. It also underscores the motivational fig leaf behind backing democratic revolutions in the Arab world while trying to nudge Islamic elements into the foreground and brutally cracking down on popular unrest based on similar discontents at home.
This begs the question, is Iran's sending of arms to Gaza and constant diplomatic maneuvering to pressure Israel really being done to help secure Palestinian liberation or simply an extension of serving their own interests by using the Palestinian struggle?
This trial, which Iran appears to seek negotiating leverage through while the United States spins the situation for its own interests, exemplifies a Middle East where those committed to freedom and self-determination are being trapped between America and Iran.
Jesse Rosenfeld is a freelance journalist based in Ramallah and Tel Aviv since 2007. He has published with the Nation, Le Monde Diplomatique, Al Jazeera English, the Irish Times, the National, the Guardian -- Comment Is Free, the Daily Star, Haaretz English, and the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs.
AFP/Getty images
EXPLORE:MIDDLE EAST, MIDDLE EAST, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS, IRAN, ISRAEL/PALESTINE, JUSTICE, OBAMA ADMINISTRATION
Really? I would expect more from this article
The reason they are being kept is
A) Iran genuinely believes that they are spies and just because they have done certain actions that doesn't negate the fact they are spies (I doubt they are, but I can't speak for Iran).
B) Believe it or not Iran hates the United States just as much as it hates Israel. For every speech Iran gives condemning Israel in the UN, it includes multipule statements condemning the U.S.
C) Iran doesn't care about "the Palestinian Struggle," it cares far more about using them as pawns to wipe Israel off the map
D) If Iran was genuinely concerned about human rights maybe they would stop beating women who have exposed skin and hanging homosexuals first.
Cry me a river...... These 4 dim wits roused themselves from the cheapest hotel they could find the MINWAN hotel (BTW they all slept in the one room ( Shourd such a liberated **lady*that she is) And they then proceeded AT NIGHT to trek miles BEYOND the main tourist attraction the waterfall , to a place even the locals fear to go! Untill they finally made their way to the border of Iran. It takes much effort to be such an idiot , and I for one will give them an A+ for this one. But it is all down hill from here.Just innocent white bred Jewish americans with cameras??...... Shourd was released on bail afforded by OMAN to the tune of 1/2 mil bail, and came back to her USA sporting a*ring* she become engaged as she was afforded contact with her coherts while in prison.Now there was the day in court! Did Shourd reurn as promised? No? Right. while she was there,she was not abused she had Parental visits, books visists each day with 2 others. even though it is no hotel still she fared well. AND A TRIAL DATE WAS SET. Get this they were caught on the border. they were charged...They were given a hearing, but Shourd did not return, thus there is now a delay.. They will again have their day in court . Lay off the Iran bashing, Iran has every right to protect the borders, would you expect anything less if it were USA? I think not. Meckfessel is the snake in the grass in this story, this ***Sudden illness ** causing him to be safe at the USA embassy at the end that day . Is it just me or are we just missing something in between?
USA is a GREAT COUNTRY and it DOES believe in HUMAN Dignity.
Human Dignity is for all humans.
Americans are as dignified as Iranians.
I hope the world realizes that it needs a massive transformation of its priorities.
Iran is the big bully here. Understand that. They are a rogue regime bent on gaining nuclear capability. They are virulently anti-west. They repress their own people and even people who support their cause. They are not rational. They are not logical. This incident shows that they are not opposed to western policies. They are opposed to the concept of the West. They are not opposed to Israeli policies. They are opposed to the existence of Israel.
And let me tell you something, Mr. Rosenfeld. Why would America trade legitimately guilty prisoners (i hope so) for two citizens who WERE engaged in extremely risky activities? Its a sad situation, but America has no responsibility to go around the world, negotiating with 'terrorist supporting states,' for the sake on rogue risk taking citizens? I hope you agree with me.
Oh, and it saddens me to say this, but these journalists wouldnt be put in any Israeli prison, however rabidly anti-israeli they were. So get off your pseudo-humanitarian high horse and re-prioritize your priorities. Start realizing that Israel is the not the problem, and all these states such as Iran who use it and abuse it to their advantage, are the real states who should be the subject of all those TRULY committed to freedom and self-determination.
This blog is full of hate that is destroying logic. Iran is strategically American partner in many major international areas such as Iraq War, War with Alghaedeh - Taliban, and removal of Libyan leader.

The Middle East Channel offers unique analysis and insights on this diverse and vital region of more than 400 million.
Read More
(7)
HIDE COMMENTS LOGIN OR REGISTER REPORT ABUSE