The Daily - A Deadly Crackdown in Iran
Episode Date: December 3, 2019Behind the curtain of an internet blackout, the Islamic Republic’s security forces have killed at least 180 unarmed protesters. Natalie Kitroeff speaks to Farnaz Fassihi about Iran’s deadliest pol...itical unrest in decades and why the United States wanted that unrest — and has helped fuel it. Guest: Farnaz Fassihi, a reporter covering Iran for The New York Times, in conversation with Natalie Kitroeff. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:How a peaceful protest over fuel prices quickly evolved into nationwide demonstrations against the Islamic Republic and its leaders, unrest which scores of people would not survive.After the United States condemned the extrajudicial killings, Iran pointed to the rebuke as evidence that the demonstrations were backed by Western enemies.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, Iran is experiencing its deadliest political unrest in over 40 years,
with nearly 200 people killed by government forces in the last few weeks.
Natalie Kitcher speaks to Farnaz Fasihi
about why the United States wanted that unrest
and has helped fuel it.
It's Tuesday, December 3rd.
Farnaz, take me back to the beginning
of the recent uprising in Iran.
How did it start?
On Friday, November 15th,
this was about 15 minutes before midnight Iran time. I was busy reporting another story on Iran
that we planned to launch. And I started receiving text messages and emails from my contacts in Iran,
from my family members, from friends and from sources asking me if I had
heard anything about gas prices going up by almost 300% as of midnight. People were very alarmed.
They were shocked. They thought that this can't be. This is a rumor. How could they increase prices
without telling us? How can we afford to go to work? How can we afford to buy basic goods if gas prices triple in price?
There was a lot of anxiety almost immediately.
And other news authorities in Iran abruptly raised the price of fuel in the country by 50% overnight.
Iranians wake up the next morning.
They see official announcement in the news media on state TV that this is in fact not a rumor.
I hadn't heard the news. I came here and filled three leases and then I noticed the price was
90,000 rials. It resulted in long lines of cars waiting for hours at petrol stations in the
capital Tehran. And they start to panic. Motorists feared the consequences will be far-reaching.
In Tehran and the rest of Iran, everything is dependent on fuel prices.
If the price of fuel goes up in the night,
by day the price of rent will go up as well as other living expenses.
They start messaging each other on WhatsApp groups,
posting things on social media saying,
people, let's protest this.
Let's get to the streets and show them that we're angry at this.
Mobile phone video out of western Iran shows
people chanting, fuel prices go higher, the poor get poorer. On Friday by noon, people on major
highways in Tehran and other big cities had parked their cars and created a massive traffic jam
and turned off their cars for miles and miles and miles. Wow. And near the border with Iraq, they repeat,
turn your car off while blocking traffic.
And people were gathering at gas stations
and putting roadblocks on gas stations
and preventing other motorists from filling up their tanks
as a way to protest.
And in the first 24 hours, the protests were pretty peaceful.
People were coming out.
They were just voicing their concern.
They were saying, we're angry.
Listen to us.
By Saturday, November 16th, the protests were gaining steam,
and they were changing in nature.
There are videos of nighttime protests
where demonstrators have gone out into the street
and are chanting anti-regime slogans.
They had quickly shifted from being protests
about gas prices and the economy
to targeting the entire establishment
of the Islamic Republic. There were people in the streets saying death to Khamene establishment of the Islamic Republic.
There were people in the streets saying death to Khamenei, the supreme leader, death to
the dictator.
Government buildings have been set on fire as well as banks.
There were reports of banks getting torched and government buildings being attacked.
So for the moment, there does seem to be a lot of momentum behind all of this.
So for the moment, there does seem to be a lot of momentum behind all of this.
But the Iranian government does have a tendency to violently crack down on these kinds of protests.
As the protests spread, we started noticing that there was a disruption in our communications with Iran. I had a really hard time calling sources on their cell phones.
Their mobile service was disrupted.
I kept sending text messages and it would bounce back.
And by Sunday, the entire country went dark.
They unplugged the internet.
So what do you do as a reporter who's trying to cover this country from the outside?
How do you get around this to figure out what's going on?
It was very challenging.
I wanted to call sources on their landlines or on their mobile service,
but I was worried that if I do, those calls could be intercepted and they could get in trouble.
I tried to call my relatives and people that I thought would talk to me,
and they were terrified. They would say, nothing's going on. Everything is fine.
How's the weather? And try to change the subject because they thought that these calls might be
monitored. We tried to monitor the videos that were trickling out. But if there were protests
in thousands of cities in Iran, we were getting
maybe less than a dozen videos or eyewitness accounts a day. But we could quickly tell
that things were getting more and more violent. And then what happens?
Then slowly, internet and mobile service is restored. And the first accounts that we start getting are from
local journalists who have access to the internet when they come to work. And they've gathered
reporting data and videos and eyewitness accounts. They are banned from publishing and they start to
leak it out. They start to post it on social media. They start contacting reporters like me,
whom they know and trust, and sharing these things.
So as the curtain lifts on Iran,
we are able to see the scope of the disaster and the violence.
And so what do we learn about what happened?
We learned that in a space of 72 hours,
Iran turned off the lights and opened fire
at civilian protesters who were unarmed.
We see shocking videos of dead bodies
piled up on the street.
Security forces chasing down unarmed protesters who were throwing rocks. piled up on the street.
Security forces chasing down unarmed protesters who were throwing rocks and opening machine gun fire on them and people dropping dead.
We see close-up assassination-style shootings
where the police force would walk up to a young man
and point the gun to their head and just pull the trigger.
We start seeing videos of this one particular young man that I will name, Puriya Bakhtiari,
a 23-year-old engineer who is filming his last hours of life.
He is going around in the protest.
He's saying, I am an engineer.
I am unemployed.
I'm coming out because I'm fed up with this system.
I'm coming out because I'm so happy to see that everybody is supporting us.
And then it's sunset.
And he turns the camera to the sunset and says,
Look at this beautiful sunset.
I wish for a new dawn for my country.
And a few hours later, he's shot and killed.
And how many more are there like him who were killed?
So many more.
There's so many more young men who were killed,
young women, even children.
The death toll ranges somewhere from 180 to 450 and continues to climb as more cities
and more people get connected to the internet
and have a way of reaching out and tell their stories.
We found out about the city of Mahshar on Friday, just as internet went up,
where the Revolutionary Guards came in a big force and started shooting indiscriminately at
dozens of young men who had blocked the main entryway to the city and to an industrial complex.
the main entryway to the city and to an industrial complex.
Some of them dropped dead.
The others ran to a nearby marsh.
And one person was armed.
They shot at the Revolutionary Guards from the marshes. The guards encircled them and with machine gun fire, opened fire on them.
And the estimate is that between 40 to 100 people were killed in that mass murder incident.
Farnas, help me understand how a hike in gas prices caused all of this unrest.
There was a lot of pent-up anger and frustration over a host of things,
from financial corruption to unemployment, inflation. The government tells people how to dress,
how to think, what to do, where to go. And the sudden surprise price increase in gasoline was
really the last straw. Gasoline is very cheap in Iran because Iran is a major oil producing country
and gas prices are subsidized. A whole microeconomy had formed around this cheap
gasoline prices, where people used their cars and their motorcycles to compensate for the fact that
they couldn't find jobs. A lot of college graduates are Uber drivers. A lot of young men are messengers on motorcycles.
They can't now afford to buy cheap gasoline to put in their cars and have a business or
make a livelihood.
The prices of basic goods like bread, dairy, meat, everything has increased by at least
20% because transportation costs have increased.
by at least 20 percent because transportation costs have increased. And on top of waking up to the reality that gasoline prices have tripled and their purchasing powers have shrunk, the
Iranian people have been struggling with the pressures of American sanctions on their economy.
What is the role of the U.S. and U.S. sanctions in all of this?
What is the role of the U.S. and U.S. sanctions in all of this?
U.S. sanctions play a pretty significant role in Iran's economy.
Different U.S. administrations have imposed sanctions on Iran in order to squeeze and pressure its economy.
The 2015 nuclear deal between Iran and the world powers lifted those sanctions. And it brought in a lot of hope and a lot of investments from foreign companies
and a lot of job possibilities for Iranians.
And then President Trump comes in.
I am announcing today that the United States
will withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal.
He exits the nuclear deal,
and suddenly all of that hope,
all of those financial possibilities come to a halt. We will be instituting the highest level of economic sanction.
And immediately we start seeing significant impact on the currency, on Iran's ability to do trade.
And suddenly the government's facing a massive budget deficit.
And the stated goal of these more punishing sanctions
is to bring Iran to the negotiating table in a more serious way, right?
Well, that's the stated goal.
But all along, there's been also an unstated goal and policy, which is hoping that
these punishing sanctions would pressure Iranians to rise up against the regime, to start pushing
the government to have no choice but to come to the table and discuss a more comprehensive deal. Because not only is it facing international pressure, but the sanctions are destabilizing the society in Iran as well.
So in a sense, the Trump administration wanted this uprising to happen all along.
Yes. U.S. officials have embraced these protests. The special envoy of Iran,
Brian Hook, gave an interview and said, we're very pleased to see the protests across Iran.
Brian Hook's comments were unusual because typically when there's unrest and protests
in countries, the response from senior U.S. officials is that we're watching
what's happening, we're monitoring what's happening, we support the people, but you rarely
see them putting themselves at the front and center of these protests by saying we're very pleased.
Even Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted that he has asked Iranian protesters to communicate
with him and send him video footage of the violence against them.
We've received to date nearly 20,000 messages, videos, pictures, notes of the regime's abuses through telegram messaging services.
I hope they will continue to be sent to us.
So if the unstated goal of these sanctions was to cause all of this unrest, then they worked.
But what about the second part, the death of the protesters?
How much was the violence that followed part of the plan?
I think the responsibility of the violence on protesters solely falls on the government of Iran because at the end of the day, they're the ones that ordered their security forces to crush and use lethal force against civilians.
would tell you that if there was a popular uprising, the government would crack down and crush it very quickly and with a lot of force.
We'll be right back.
Farnas, what is the precedent in Iran for this kind of violent response to a citizen uprising?
Unfortunately, there's a history of Iranian rulers crushing citizen uprisings violently.
The crowds found the route to Jare Square blocked by troops.
In 1978... As their numbers increased, they pressed forward and the troops opened fire.
The Shah of Iran opened fire at protesters at a peaceful sit-in and killed 84 people.
That sparked the beginning of the end for him.
When I saw the Shah shortly afterwards,
the beginning of the end for him.
When I saw the Shah shortly afterwards,
it was the first time I'd really felt that he saw that a situation was arising
which he couldn't handle.
By January of 1979,
it was clear the Shah could no longer reign.
And the revolution in 1979
that brought the Islamic Republic to power.
The new government promised that it would abandon the ways of the Shah
and create a free society where criticism was tolerated
and public discourse and debates would be free.
And what we've seen is the exact opposite.
The last episode of a nationwide uprising happened in 2009
in response to a contested presidential election.
Tens of thousands of opposition supporters, mostly young, marched to Freedom Square.
Iranians took to the streets asking for a recount of the votes
and staged peaceful protests all over the country.
Violence on the streets of Tehran.
And the government cracked down.
Bloodshed in the streets of Iran.
At least seven people are reported to have been shot and killed
after a mass rally over charges of election fraud.
And over a period of 10 months, killed about 72 people. So based on
this history, the U.S. could have predicted that an uprising would result in violence. But the
level of violence we saw was unprecedented. Nobody could have predicted this. Right. So
the situation in Iran is spiraling. It's becoming more extreme than anyone thought it would be.
And I'm wondering, what does that mean for the U.S. strategy? Does few weeks as a success because its harsh policies on Iran are resulting
in a popular uprising. But if the ultimate goal is to bring Iran's leaders to the negotiating table,
that policy might have actually backfired. The U.S., by aligning itself with the Iranian people, has given the Iranian leadership ammunition to delegitimize the demands of the people.
What do you mean by that?
Well, on the surface, it looks as if the comments by Mr. Hook and Secretary Pompeo will help the Iranian people because it shows that the U.S.
administration stands in solidarity with their demands. But it also plays directly into the
playbook of the Iranian regime, which takes all sorts of comments by the American administration
and Westerners as proof that the uprising is not homegrown,
that the demands of the population are not legitimate,
and they are being staged and instigated by Washington.
So ultimately, it sounds like the U.S. strategy
may end up undercutting the power of these protests.
Correct.
It also undermines the ability of President Rouhani, who's considered a
moderate in the political structure of Iran, to negotiate with the U.S. and to come to the table
with Mr. Trump. The majority of people who handed Rouhani a victory are talking about sitting out
the elections. They're talking about
boycotting the elections. So if the centrists and the reformers, if the public doesn't vote,
then the hardliners are going to win. And we're going to see a hardening of policies in Iran,
particularly about engagement with the United States.
So while the goal was to bring the Iranian government to the negotiating table, this may end with a government that's more extreme and more anti-West.
That was always the fear with the Trump administration's maximum pressure policy, that it would actually empower the very factions that Washington does not want to see empowered.
Farnaz, what happens next for the Iranian people?
Iranian people are terrified right now. They are coming to terms with a new level of force being used against them. The cities and neighborhoods where there was an uprising very much feel like a security zone. We're hearing of security forces
going door to door in some areas where women were cooking for protesters and arresting those women.
Students are being abducted on college campuses.
There was an incident where the militia hid in five ambulances
and went to the campus of Tehran University in disguise
and rounded up students, shoved them in the ambulances and drove out.
And nobody knows where
they are. The protests have been crushed. There's no more uprising. But this arrests and feeling of
repression is still very much alive. The underlying reasons for this uprising have not been resolved.
The underlying reasons for this uprising have not been resolved.
And we can expect that the next time there's the equivalent of a gas price increase or a political decision that's not popular with the public, it would also spark another round of uprising.
And the next wave will likely be a lot more violent and the crackdown a lot more brutal.
Farnas, thank you so much.
Thank you very much for having me.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
On Monday, President Trump said he would impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from Brazil and Argentina,
a move that would destroy previous agreements with both countries,
damage their economies, and widen a global trade war.
In a tweet announcing the tariffs,
Trump accused Brazil and Argentina of manipulating their currencies in a way that hurts American farmers,
a claim that both economists and government officials have rejected.
The decision appeared to surprise leaders of both countries,
especially Brazil's new president, Jair Bolsonaro,
who has tried to establish close ties with Trump.
Bolsonaro appeared to learn of the tariffs from a reporter
who read him Trump's tweet.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.