Since the outbreak of mass demonstrations and unrest in Iran last week, US media have mostly busied themselves with the question of not if we should “do something,” but what, exactly, that something should be. As usual, it’s simply taken for granted the United States has a divine right to intervene in the affairs of Iran, under the vague blanket of “human rights” and “democracy promotion.” (The rare exception, such as an op-ed by ex-Obama official Philip Gordon—New York Times, 12/30/17—still accepted the premise of regime change: “I, too, want to see the government in Tehran weakened, moderated or even removed.”) With this axiom firmly established in Very Serious foreign policy circles, the next question becomes the nature, degree and scope of the “something” being done.

The New York Times (1/2/18) publishes mock concern for Iranian protesters from someone who once quipped: “I’ve written about 25,000 words about bombing Iran. Even my mom thinks I’ve gone too far.”
Leading the pack in the “do something” insta-consensus was the right-wing pro-Israel think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), which has overwhelmed the narrative. In the past five days, FDD has had op-eds in influential US outlets like the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, New York Post and Politico, and has been quoted in a dozen more. Its punditry was marked by cynical “support” for Iranian protesters, demagoguing of the Iranian “regime” and disgust with the Obama-era Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), otherwise known as the Iran deal.
The scrapping of JCPOA has been the primary political charge of FDD for years, and it seems to see the recent unrest in Iran—and any subsequent crackdown—as the thin moral pretext it needs to justify snuffing out a treaty it’s long opposed. Thus FDD has eagerly jumped on the unrest, painting itself as the sigh of the oppressed.
Op-eds written or co-written by FDD staff in the past five days:
- “Iran’s Theocracy Is on the Brink” (Mark Dubowitz/Ray Takeyh, Wall Street Journal, 1/1/18)
- “Where We Can Agree on Iran” (Mark Dubowitz/Daniel Shapiro, Politico, 1/1/18)
- “Eruption in Iran: And It’s Not Just the Economy, Stupid” (Clifford D. May, Washington Times, 1/2/18)
- “The Worst Thing for Iran’s Protesters? US Silence” (Reuehl Marc Gerecht, New York Times, 1/2/18)
- “What Washington Can Do to Support Iran’s Protesters” (Richard Goldberg/Jamie Fly, New York Post, 1/2/18)
A sampling of quotes by FDD staff in news reporting:
- “Since Rouhani entered office, he has managed to inflate expectations with lofty rhetoric but has actually done little to change the reality of life on the ground in Iran,” said Behnam Ben Taleblu, an Iran expert at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington.” (Washington Post, 12/30/17)
- “‘Western governments should make it clear that the regime will be held responsible and will pay a price for any bloodshed,’ Mr. Dubowitz said.” (Wall Street Journal, 1/1/18)
- “‘[Trump’s] not going to want to waive sanctions and keep money flowing to dictators when there are people protesting in the streets,’ said Richard Goldberg, a former Senate Republican aide who helped design Iran sanctions and is now a senior adviser at the hawkish Foundation for Defense of Democracies.” (Politico, 1/2/18)
- “‘If there is a bipartisan bill that is ready for congressional action, that would go a long way toward persuading the president to issue the waivers,’ said Mark Dubowitz, the chief executive of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. ‘If there’s not, what’s happening in Iran will give the president all the more reason to say, “I’ve had it with this deal.”’” (New York Times, 1/2/18)

A Twitter user illustrated the irony of Trump calling for respect for the people’s right to express themselves—in Iran.
FDD op-eds and quotes followed a similar formula: express outrage on behalf of the protesters, applaud Trump for his hypocritical defense of the right to protest, and push for increased sanctions against Iran—often while taking a swipe at the hated Iran deal.
FDD’s pro-Iranian people posture was rarely accompanied by an explanation of their ideological project. The outfit—funded by big-name pro-Israel billionaires like casino mogul Sheldon Adelson, Home Depot founder Bernard Marcus (who’s said that “Iran is the devil”) and Wall Street speculator Paul Singer—are largely presented as bespectacled academics calling balls and strikes without a particular agenda beyond their self-proclaimed “defense of democracies.” (The name ought to provoke some skepticism, given the group’s eagerness to enlist the hereditary dictatorship Saudi Arabia in its anti-Iranian crusade—LobeLog, 2/26/16.)
This problem is not unique to FDD; as FAIR (8/12/16) has noted before, the overreliance by the media on deeply conflicted think tanks that present as neutral but are, in reality, glorified lobbyists for a political cause or corporate cohort misleads readers on an institutional scale. (In FDD’s case, it’s Israel’s right wing; for the Center for Strategic and International Studies, it’s weapons contractors—FAIR.org, 5/8/17, 7/17/17.)
FDD, it’s worth noting, also worked closely with the Trump administration and CIA to curate documents implicating Iran in the 9/11 attacks, as part of a broader anti-Iran strategy that rogue DoJ lawyers spelled out in November in leaks to the Washington Post (11/17/17; FAIR.org, 11/24/17).

Reuel Marc Gerecht: The FDD senior fellow’s resume includes stints at PNAC, AEI and the CIA.
Occasionally, editors will note they are “conservative” or “hawkish,” but FDD is mostly presented as a quasi-academic and impartial observer. The average reader, for example, would probably be surprised to find out the FDD “fellow” expressing concern for The Iranian People™ in the Times, Reuel Marc Gerecht, has long joked about wanting to bomb these same Iranians. As Eli Clifton noted in LobeLog (1/4/18), in 2010 Gerecht quipped: “Counted up the other day: I’ve written about 25,000 words about bombing Iran. Even my mom thinks I’ve gone too far.”
Shouldn’t someone so self-admittedly obsessed with killing Iranians be disqualified from posing as their protector in a major US newspaper? Failing that, shouldn’t readers be alerted that Gerecht was the director in the late ’90s of the Middle East Initiative at the Project for the New American Century—the most prominent advocacy group for the invasion of Iraq, a war that left 500,000 to a million dead?
Think tank addiction for overworked and often myopic reporters and editors has rendered such glaring questions unaskable. FDD are the “experts,” and the “experts” are needed to drive the bulk of commentary, regardless of their well-documented ulterior motives.




Prediction: before long Johnson will be denouncing the protests as a CIA plot, in line with his Syria “analysis”.
AFAIK he never said _the protests_ were CIA-organized, though this story https://fair.org/home/down-the-memory-hole-nyt-erases-cias-efforts-to-overthrow-syrias-government/ says they supplied arms, it references multiple major newspapers. But i shouldn’t have to guess about the (likely incredibly shoddy)basis of your accusation.
Annoyingly, the story is also up on infowars.. https://archive.fo/8k2fD Not sure if that is advisable, it might make it seem like they have good stories, whereas infact infowars really sucks quite badly.
Iranian militias participation in the killing campaign in Syria and the Iraqi/ Iranian militias in the killings in Iraq with all the money spent to support Assad and pushing Hezbollah to fight with the butcher of Syria Was the main reason for financial instability in Iran that reflected mostly on the poor pushing them to the streets
Now there is room for outside interference in the local politics
Should the international community stopped them and Assad from their war crimes , including him in civilians with internationally forbidden arm such as cluster bombs, phosphorus bombs and even chemical weapons this would have not happened plus the millions of refugees and many more millions of displaced people in addition to the 500.000-1,000,000 killed and 2-3 million people injured would have not taken place
The worst catastrophe of our time in Syria opened the floodgates for a series of other major catastrophes in the works
Translation: Only American (and Israeli/Saudi) backed violent interventions, election meddling and of course fomenting of revolts/coups is exempt from criticism.
LMAO, though – talking about “cluster bombs” without mentioning the U.S. or Israel is quite amusing.
Same as above with Typos corrected:
Iranian militias participation in the killing campaign in Syria and the Iraqi/ Iranian militias in the killings in Iraq with all the money spent to support Assad and pushing Hezbollah to fight with the butcher of Syria Was the main reason for financial instability in Iran that reflected mostly on the poor pushing them to the streets
Now there is room for outside interference in the local and regional politics
Should the international community stopped them and Assad from their war crimes , including attacking civilians with internationally forbidden arm such as cluster bombs, phosphorus bombs and even chemical weapons this would have not happened plus the millions of refugees and many more millions of displaced people in addition to the 500.000-1,000,000 killed and 2-3 million people injured would have not taken place
The worst catastrophe of our time in Syria opened the floodgates for a series of other major catastrophes still in the works
Would have been much better if ISIS/Al Nusra won instead, right? It would have been peace, reconciliation, and happiness for the people of Syria! Or perhaps we should have invaded, and Syria could have become a paradise, just like after we ‘saved’ Iraq and Libya.
Chopped any heads off today?
haha! exactly, I can’t fathom how people who claim to oppose to the IRaq War, express horror at what’s happened in Libya, and even some who don’t want war with Iran could support efforts to overthrow Assad but hey! I blame Al Jazeera that Qatari owned sectarian outlet and many on in the left media for jumping the shark on Syria for that, a sad state of affairs.
Good job Adam, as usual, keep fighting the good fight! This piece has drawn comments from the same ‘bomb, bomb, bomb bomb Iran!’ nuts you expose here, must be getting under someone’s skin when they are sending trolls and shills to counter you.
Thanks for preserving the flame of honest journalism, along with guys like Jimmy Dore, Glenn Greenwald, and those stinkin’ ‘russkies’ (Hedges, Blumenthal, Jesse Ventura).
Once again, another good column exposing the hypocrisy of the current-day right-wing ‘conservatives’ in this — and other (Israel in this case) — countries! They’re always so damned interested in starting wars and bombing other countries that are today’s ‘enemy’. Yet let a bomb go-off in THIS country — or one of our allies — and then they all of a sudden become shocked and morally outraged at the ‘less than human monsters’ who would do such a thing! As the late Ed Herman noted, so many of these so-called terrorists operate on a ‘retail’ level, with victims in the 10’s or occasionally 1000’s (which is bad enough), but it takes a government like the US or similar to get that body-count into the 100’s of THOUSANDS or even MILLIONS, the truly disgusting levels of terrorism…
Anyway, keep up the good work!
So it is not considered “fake news” when all the MSM report the same comments from the same “think tanks”. Look at the names!!