Fara Mansoor is a fugitive. No, he hasn't broken any laws in
the United States. His crime is the truth. What he has to say
and the documents he carries are equivalent to a death warrant
for him, Mansoor is an Iranian who was part of the "establishment"
in Iran long before the 1979 hostage taking. Mansoor's records
actually discount the alleged "October Surprise" theory that the
Ronald Reagan-George Bush team paid the Iranians not to release
52 American hostages until after the November 1980 Presidential
elections.
Mansoor's meticulous documents, shared exclusively with this
magazine, shows a much more sinister plot, the plot to take the
hostages in the first place. "For 15 years the truth about the
nature and origins of the Iranian hostage crisis has been buried
in a mountain of misinformation," Mansoor states. "Endless expert
analysis has served only to deepen the fog that still surrounds
this issue. We have been led to believe that the 'crisis' was
a spontaneous act that just sprang out of the 'chaos' of the 'Islamic
Revolution'. Nothing could be further from the truth!"
"To really understand the hostage crisis and 'who done it', one
has to look not only with a microscope, but also a wide angle
lens to have a panoramic view of this well scripted 'drama',"
Mansoor states. "That 'drama' was the result of large historical
patterns, models, and motives. Once its true nature is understood,
it will be clear how Iran/Contra happened. Why Rafsanjani has
been trying to 'move toward the West,' and why Reagan called him
a 'moderate'. And why, during the Gulf War, James Baker said,
'we think Iran has conducted itself in a very, very credible way
through this crisis'" Mansoor emphasizes that the "October Surprise"
myth has served as dangerous misinformation. READ All About
The
- 1979 Islamic Coup of Iran -
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The Original
October Surprise
Both Republicans and Democrats are fretting about the prospect
of an "October Surprise" that might hurt them in the last days
of Election 2006. But perhaps no "October Surprise" has been more
mysterious or more influential than the one in 1980 that -- with
the help of George H.W. Bush -- gave the concept its name. Arguably,
the 1980 "October Surprise," which involved secret contacts with
Iran, launched the modern era of Republican dominance. October
25, 2006
The Original
October Surprise (Part 2)
Part 2 of our series on the "Original October Surprise" of 1980
focuses on the role of banker David Rockefeller and his collaboration
with Republicans during the Iranian hostage crisis. That national
humiliation, which played out over 444 days, doomed Jimmy Carter's
presidency and helped open the door to the modern era of GOP dominance.
October 27, 2006
The Original
October Surprise (Part 3)
Part 3 of our series on the "Original October Surprise" of 1980
addresses the troubling question of whether disgruntled CIA officers
collaborated with their former boss, George H.W. Bush, to sabotage
President Jimmy Carter's Iran-hostage negotiations -- and thus
changed the course of U.S. political history. The first two parts,
deals with the inept investigation by Indiana Democrat Lee Hamilton
and the role of banker David Rockefeller in the 1980 affair.
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Shame
on Us All
October 17, 2006, should go down in history as the antithesis
of July 4, 1776. On that glorious day, the American Founders proclaimed
that all people possessed "unalienable rights," including the
crucial legal right of habeas corpus. Some 230 years later
on a dreary fall day in Washington, George W. Bush signed a law
repealing America's founding principles and establishing a parallel
system for prosecuting enemies of the state, including U.S. citizens.
October 18, 2006