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Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Mexico: Emergence of an Unexpected Threat




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Mexico: Emergence of an Unexpected Threat

By Scott Stewart | September 30, 2009

At approximately 2 a.m. on Sept. 25, a small improvised explosive device (IED) consisting of three or four butane canisters was used to attack a Banamex bank branch in the Milpa Alta delegation of Mexico City. The device damaged an ATM and shattered the bank's front windows. It was not an isolated event. The bombing was the seventh recorded IED attack in the Federal District — and the fifth such attack against a local bank branch — since the beginning of September.

The attack was claimed in a communique posted to a Spanish-language anarchist Web site by a group calling itself the Subversive Alliance for the Liberation of the Earth, Animals and Humans (ASLTAH). The note said, "Once again we have proven who our enemies are," indicating that the organization's "cells for the dissolution of civilization" were behind the other, similar attacks. The communique noted that the organization had attacked Banamex because it was a "business that promotes torture, destruction and slavery" and vowed that ASLTAH would not stop attacking "until we see your ashes." The group closed its communique by sending greetings to the Earth Liberation Front (ELF), the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) and the "eco-pyromaniacs for the liberation of the earth in this place." Communiques have also claimed some of the other recent IED attacks in the name of ASLTAH.

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On Sept. 22, authorities also discovered and disabled a small IED left outside of a MetLife insurance office in Guadalajara, Jalisco state. A message spray-painted on a wall near where the device was found read, "Novartis stop torturing animals," a reference to the multinational pharmaceutical company, which has an office near where the IED was found and which has been heavily targeted by the group Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC). Novartis is a large customer of Huntingdon Life Sciences, the research company SHAC was formed to destroy because Huntingdon uses animals in its testing for harmful side effects of drugs, chemicals and consumer items. A second message spray-painted on a wall near where the device was found on Sept. 22 read, "Novartis break with HLS." Two other IEDs were detonated at banks in Mexico City on the same day.

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These IED attacks are the most recent incidents in a wave of anarchist, animal rights, and eco-protest attacks that have swept across Mexico this year. Activists have conducted literally hundreds of incidents of vandalism, arson and, in more recent months, IED attacks in various locations across the country. The most active cells are in Mexico City and Guadalajara.

For a country in the midst of a bloody cartel war in which thousands of people are killed every year — and where serious crimes like kidnapping terrorize nearly every segment of society — direct-action attacks by militant activists are hardly the biggest threat faced by the Mexican government. However, the escalation of direct-action attacks in Mexico that has resulted in the more frequent use of IEDs shows no sign of abating, and these attacks are likely to grow more frequent, spectacular and deadly.

The Wave

Precisely quantifying the wave of direct-action attacks in Mexico is difficult for a number of reasons. One is that the reporting of such incidents is spotty and the police, the press and the activists themselves are often not consistent in what they report and how. Moreover, is often hard to separate direct-action vandalism from incidents of plain old non-political vandalism or tell the difference between an anarchist IED attack against a bank and an IED attack against a bank conducted by a Marxist group such as the Popular Revolutionary Army (EPR). Then there is the issue of counting. Should a series of five Molotov cocktail attacks against ATMs or the destruction of 20 Telmex phone booths in one night be counted as one attack or as separate incidents?

If we count conservatively — e.g., consider a series of like incidents as one — we can say there have been around 200 direct-action attacks to date in 2009. But if we count each incident separately, we can easily claim there have been more than 400 such attacks. For example, by our count, there have been more than 350 Telmex phone booths smashed, burned or otherwise vandalized so far this year. (Activists will do things like glue metal shavings into the calling-card and coin slots.) However, for the sake of this analysis we'll go with the conservative number of about 200 attacks.

Now, Telmex seems to be the most popular target so far for direct-action attacks. In addition to hitting phone booths, activists also have attacked Telmex vehicles and offices and have cut Telmex cables. From their statements, the activists appear to hold a special hatred for Carlos Slim, one of the richest men in the world and the chairman of Telmex and several other companies. In many ways, Slim — a patriarchal billionaire industrialist — is the personification of almost everything that the anarchistic activists hate. In addition to Telmex and banks, the activists also have attacked other targets such as restaurants (including McDonald's and KFC), meat shops, pet shops, fur and leather stores, luxury vehicles, and construction equipment.

The activists' most common tactics tend to be on the lower end of the violence scale and include graffiti and paint (frequently red to symbolize the blood of animals) to vandalize a target. They also frequently release captive birds or animals as well as use superglue and pieces of metal to obstruct locks, pay phones and ATM card readers. Moving up the violence continuum, activists less frequently will break windows, burn buildings and vehicles, and make bomb threats — there have been at least 157 incidents involving arson or incendiary devices so far in 2009. To help put this into perspective, these activists have conducted more arson attacks in Mexico to date in 2009 than their American counterparts have conducted in the United States since 2001.

At the high end of the violence spectrum are the IED attacks, and this is where there has really been an increase in activity in recent weeks. In the first six months of 2009, there were several bomb threats and hoaxes and a few acid bombs, but only two real IEDs were used. In June, July and August there was one IED attack per month — and so far in September there have been seven IED attacks in Mexico City alone and one successful attack and one attempted attack in Guadalajara. Again, by way of comparison, these eight IED attacks by Mexican activists in September are more than American activists have conducted in the United States since 2001.

Proliferation of IEDs

There are several factors that can explain this trend toward the activists' increasing use of IEDs. The first is, quite simply, that IEDs generate more attention than graffiti, glue or even an arson attack — indeed, here we are devoting a weekly security report to activist IED attacks in Mexico. In light of the overall level of violence in Mexico, most observers have ignored the past lower-level activity by these activist groups, and IEDs help cut through the noise and bring attention to the activists' causes. The scope and frequency of IED attacks this month ensured that they could not be overlooked.

The second factor is the learning curve of the cells' bombmakers. As a bombmaker becomes more proficient in his tradecraft, the devices he crafts tend to become both more reliable and more powerful. The improvement in tradecraft also means that the bombmaker is able to increase his operational tempo and deploy devices more frequently. It is quite possible that the few IEDs that were reported as hoaxes in March, April and May could have been IEDs that did not function properly — a common occurrence for new bombmakers who do not extensively test their devices.

The third factor is thrill and ego. In many past cases, militant activists have launched progressively larger attacks. One reason for this is that after a series of direct-action attacks, the activists get bored doing lower-level things like gluing locks or paint-stripping cars and they move to more destructive and spectacular attacks, such as those using timed incendiary devices. For many activists, there is a thrill associated with getting increased attention for the cause, in causing more damage to their targets and in getting away with increasingly brazen attacks.

Finally, in recent years, we have noted a shift among activist groups away from a strict concern for human life. Many activists are becoming convinced that less violent tactics have been ineffective, and if they really want to save the Earth and animals, they need to take more aggressive action. There is a small but growing fringe of hard-core activists who believe that, to paraphrase Lenin, you have to break eggs to make an omelet.

The Ruckus Society, a direct-action activist training organization, explains it this way in a training document: "There is a law against breaking into a house. However, if you break into a house as part of a greater good, such as rushing into the house to save a child from a fire, it is permissible to break that law. In fact, you can say that there is even a moral obligation to break that law. In the same way then, it is permissible to break minor laws to save the Earth." In general, activists do not condone violent action directed at humans, but neither do they always condemn it in very strong terms — they often explain that the anger that prompts such violence is "understandable" in light of what they perceive as ecological injustice and cruelty to animals.

In recent years there has been a polarization in the animal rights and environmental movements, with fringe activists becoming increasingly isolated and violent — and more likely to use potentially deadly tools like IEDs in their attacks.

Confluences

The very name of ASLTAH — the Subversive Alliance for the Liberation of the Earth, Animals and Humans — illustrates the interesting confluence of animal rights, ecological activism and anti-imperialism/anarchism that inhabit the radical fringe. It is not uncommon for one cell of independent activists to claim it carried out its attacks under the banner of "organizations" such as ELF, ALF or SHAC. In true anarchistic style, however, these organizations are amorphous and nonhierarchical — there is no single ELF, ALF or SHAC. Rather, the individual activists and cells who act on behalf of the organizations control their own activities while adhering to guidelines circulated in meetings and conferences, via the Internet, and in various magazines, newsletters and other publications. These individual activists and cells are driven only by their consciences, or by group decisions within the cell. This results in a level of operational security that can be hard for law enforcement and security officials to breach.

As noted above, these activists have been far more active in Mexico than they have in the United States. One reason for this is that the operating environment north of the border is markedly different than it is in Mexico. In the United States, the FBI and local and state police agencies have focused hard on these activists, and groups like ELF and ALF have been branded as domestic terrorists. There have been several major investigations into these groups in recent years.

South of the border it is a different matter. Mexican authorities are plagued with problems ranging from drug cartels to Marxist terrorist/insurgent groups like the EPR to rampant police and government corruption. Simply put, there is a vacuum of law and order in Mexico and that vacuum is clearly reflected in statistics such as the number of kidnappings inside the country every year. The overall level of violence in Mexico and this vacuum of authority provide room for the activists to operate, and the host of other crime and violence issues plaguing the country works to ensure that the authorities are simply too busy to place much emphasis on investigating activist attacks and catching those responsible for them. Therefore, the activists operate boldly and with a sense of impunity that often leads to an increase in violence — especially within the context of a very violent place, which Mexico is at the present time.

This atmosphere means that the activist cells behind the increase in IED attacks will be able to continue their campaigns against assorted capitalist, animal and ecological targets with very little chance of being seriously pursued. Consequently, as the IED campaign continues, the attacks will likely become more frequent and more destructive. And given Mexico's densely populated cities and the activists' target sets, this escalation will ensure that the attacks will eventually turn deadly.

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THE U.S. AND IRAN IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE- by Shaul Bakhash


       THE U.S. AND IRAN IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE

                     by Shaul Bakhash

The U.S.  has had  relations with  Iran ever  since the last
quarter of  the nineteenth  century.  American  missionaries
have been  in Iran  even longer  than that.  But the  United
States' real  engagement with Iran dates only from WWII. The
relationship has  generally been  close,  but  it  has  been
punctuated first  by the  involvement of the CIA in the coup
of 1953  which overthrew  a popular prime minister, Mohammed
Mossadegh, and then by the Islamic Revolution of 1979, which
led to a breach in relations that has not yet been repaired.
Indeed, two  countries that  were  once  close  friends  and
allies now  see each  other,  respectively,  as  the  "Great
Satan" and a member of an "Axis of Evil."

Looking at  how some  of the leading historians and analysts
of the U.S.-Iranian relationship have dealt with this issue,
it's interesting  to note  this constant  sense of  loss, of
what might  have been.  Barry Rubin entitled his work on the
relationship  Paved   with  Good   Intentions;  James   Bill
subtitled his  Eagle and  the  Lion  with  "The  Tragedy  of
Iranian-American Relations."  Gary Sick,  a former member of
the National  Security  Council,  subtitles  his  "America's
Tragic Encounter  with Iran."  A recent  book by  journalist
Barbara Slavin  plays on  this idea  of a  relationship that
might have  been much  better than it is, entitling her book
Bitter Friends, Bosom Enemies.

Between 1945-79,  the U.S.-Iranian  relationship was in some
ways similar  to the U.S.-Saudi relationship, where the U.S.
dealt with  one ruling family. In the case of Iran, the U.S.
dealt with  one ruler,  Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, who came
to the  throne in 1941 and continued to rule for almost four
decades. In  this period, the relationship was governed by a
number of enduring and persistent features.

First, on the American side, the interest in Iran was due in
large part  to the  country's strategic location, bordering,
on the one side, the Persian Gulf and on the other, at least
until the  collapse of the Soviet Union, sharing a very long
border with  America's previous  adversary.  Iran  was  also
important because  of its oil. During the Cold War, Iran was
both a  potential target  of  Soviet  expansionism,  against
which it had to be protected, and a potential and often real
ally in  the struggle  against the Soviet Union. Finally, as
Iran  grew   wealthier  from   oil   revenues,   it   became
increasingly a  market  for  U.S.  goods,  arms,  industrial
equipment, technology, investments, and, during the oil boom
years after  1973, the  employment of  American technicians,
advisers, specialists and the like.

On the Iranian side, first, the U.S. was seen as a potential
protector, initially  against the dominance of the two great
powers that Iran had experienced throughout its 19th-century
and early  20th-century history  - Russia  and Britain;  and
then against  the Soviet  Union. A second persistent feature
of the U.S.-Iranian relationship was Iran's view of the U.S.
not only  as a  patron and protector, but also as an ally in
advancing what  one scholar  has called the Shah's dreams of
grandeur; the  idea that  Iran could  and should  be a great
power, at least in the region.

Iran's 19th-early  20th century  history  with  Britain  and
Russia/the  Soviet  Union  included  wars  with  both  these
powers. Iran  lost territory to both, principally to Russia.
Both countries  were deeply  involved in  Iran's economy and
trade, and  both interfered  extensively in  Iran's internal
affairs and  politics. Beginning  in the  19th century, Iran
sought what  I call  a "third-country  policy"  -  that  is,
trying to find a country that could counterbalance these two
great powers. In the 19th century, it was sometimes Germany,
sometimes  France.   In  the   20th  century,   particularly
beginning in  WWII, Iran  began to look to the U.S. But this
older history  of wariness of great powers has played a role
in Iran's  relations with  the U.S.  as well. A country that
was seen  for the  most part  of the period after 1941 as an
ally, a  great power in its own right, could also be seen as
a country  playing once  again the  imperialist role.  As we
have seen  since the  1979 revolution, it is largely in this
role that  Tehran has  viewed the  U.S  in  the  last  three
decades.

One can  view the  U.S.-Iranian relationship  since WWII  in
four phases.  First, from  1941-53, Iran  sought a protector
and friend; the Shah actively and determinedly sought to woo
the U.S.,  to attract it into a closer relationship. Second,
from 1953  to the  late 1960s (post-overthrow of Mossadegh),
with the  restoration of the Shah, who had fled the country,
to the  throne, as  the result of a coup engineered in large
part by  the CIA  and British  intelligence, was a period in
which Iran  was very  dependent on  the U.S.  - on  American
protection, support,  and aid.  This was not quite a patron-
client relationship, and Iran and the Shah's independence of
the U.S.  grew. But nevertheless, it was clear that the U.S.
was the  senior partner  in the  relationship. Third, in the
period 1973-79,  the relationship  became  much  more  of  a
partnership.  The   shah  was  much  more  stable  at  home,
wealthier, and more adept at handling his foreign relations.
He began  to make  demands. Fourth  and finally, since 1979,
the two  countries have  been adversaries  and have  had  no
direct political and diplomatic relations at all.

WWII AND POST-WWII
When WWII  broke out,  Iran  declared  neutrality.  But  the
Russians and  British invaded  Iran in  August 1941  anyway.
They did so principally for two reasons. First, Iran had had
very close  relations with Germany. The myth that the ruling
monarch of  the time  was pro-fascist/German  has  now  been
addressed and  dismissed.  But  there  was  a  large  German
presence in Iran, and the British feared for the security of
their oil wells in the south, and the Russians for their oil
wells in Baku, across the Iranian border.

Secondly, once  Hitler invaded  Russia in  spring 1941,  the
allies needed  Iran's land route to supply the Russian army.
This would  not have  been impossible  under a neutral Iran,
and therefore  the Russians  and British  decided to  invade
Iran. They  got rid  of the  shah and  placed his son on the
throne.  This  also  brought  American  troops  to  Iran  to
facilitate the  supplies that  moved from  the Persian  Gulf
across Iranian territory to the Soviet Union.

The Shah  courted the  U.S. assiduously  in this  period  as
protection against  the two  great powers  that had occupied
the country.  On the whole, the U.S. was willing to be wooed
and seduced.  Early on  they gave Iran considerable support.
It was the U.S. that persuaded Russia and Britain to sign an
agreement to  withdraw their  troops from  Iran  within  six
months of  the end  of hostilities in the war. The Russians'
behavior in Iran was moderated because of the U.S. presence.

When at  the end  of WWII  the Russians  insisted on keeping
their  troops   in  Iran  and  supported  a  quasi-breakaway
autonomous movement  in the  Iranian province of Azerbaijan,
the U.S.  was very  helpful in  pressuring the  Russians  to
withdraw and  end this  support. Already  during the  war, a
permanent  feature  of  the  U.S.-Iranian  relationship  had
begun. The  Americans sent advisors to assist in building up
the Iranian  army, police,  and  gendarmerie  force  and  to
assist in  other areas  of Iranian  administration  such  as
finance.

The shah, who was always ambitious to build up a large army,
already began  in this  period what became a perennial theme
in the  relationship, which  is to  urge  the  Americans  to
supply his army with more advanced armaments.

MOSSADEGH AND OIL NATIONALIZATION CRISIS
This honeymoon period in the U.S.-Iranian relationship faced
a crisis  in 1951,  during the  movement to  nationalize the
Iranian oil  industry. Iran's  oil  industry  was  the  most
important industry  in the  country. It  was  the  principle
source of  foreign exchange  revenues. It  was  the  largest
employer in  the country.  But it  was  British  controlled.
Iranians had  no say  in the  management of  the company, or
production, or  setting oil  prices. For  years, the British
government had  derived from  the Iranian  oil operation far
more income  than the Iranian government itself. In the late
1940s and  then genuinely in 1951, there began a movement to
nationalize the  oil industry.  This  movement  was  led  by
Mossadegh, who  became Prime  Minister. The oil industry was
in fact  nationalized in March 1951. Then there began a two-
year struggle between Iran and Britain over this act.

During the  Truman administration,  the U.S.  government was
supportive of  Iran.  The  US  was  suspicious  of  the  old
imperial powers,  and supported nationalist movements, which
it thought  were a  good barrier to the spread of communism.
There was  genuine sympathy  with the plight of the Iranians
and their desire for more control of their oil industry. The
Truman administration  was often  in the  position of urging
the British  to  be  more  forthcoming  in  meeting  Iranian
demands.

The British  from the  beginning were  very unsympathetic to
nationalization  and   decided  that  Mossadegh  was  not  a
reasonable man  with whom  they could  deal. They  sought to
have him  removed from  office. They  tried to  persuade the
U.S. to join them in a plot to overthrow him. Truman was not
willing to  go along  with this  idea, but  as soon  as  the
Eisenhower administration  came in,  it was  very receptive.
Both President  Eisenhower's secretary of state, John Foster
Dulles, and  his brother  Allen, the  head of  the CIA, were
Cold Warriors.  JFD believed that neutrality in the Cold War
between the  Soviet bloc  and the  U.S.  was  immoral.  They
joined the  British in a plot which, after some wavering and
uncertainty, did succeed in overthrowing Mossadegh in August
1953.

This was  a seminal event in the modern history of Iran. The
involvement of  the CIA  and British  intelligence in a coup
that overthrew  a properly  elected and  very popular PM has
remained seared  into the Iranian historical imagination and
has colored the relationship U.S.-Iranian relationship.

There were a number of other important repercussions of this
U.S. involvement  in the  overthrow of Mossadegh.  The Shah,
who almost lost his throne over the affair, returned to Iran
in August  1953 determined  that this should never happen to
him again.  After 1953, there was increasing royal autocracy
and  intolerance   for   criticism,   dissent,   independent
political parties,  an independent  press or  an independent
parliament.

Second,  the   shah's  dependence   on  U.S.   support   was
intensified and entrenched. In fact, having brought the shah
back to  power, the  U.S. had a deep interest in seeing that
his regime  was stable  and that  he remained on the throne.
Therefore, he  was  given  not  only  moral  and  diplomatic
support, but financial and other forms of aid as well.

In the  minds of  the Iranian political class, the impact of
this U.S.  involvement was  two-fold. On  the one  hand, the
idea that  America was  different from  the  older  imperial
powers persisted.  The opposition, including Mossadegh's own
party, the National Front, continued to believe that just as
America had  helped Iran  against the  imperialists  in  the
past, it would come back to its senses and help them again.

On the  other  hand,  the  U.S.,  which  had  been  seen  as
supportive of  Iran's national  interests, was  now seen  in
another light. Both these trends of thinking persisted among
the Iranian  political class pretty much down to the time of
the 1979 revolution, although the close alliance of the shah
and the  U.S. in these years, particularly in the late 1960s
and 70s,  these years  of growing  royal autocracy,  clearly
brought  the  Iranian  belief  in  America's  commitment  to
democracy, to put it mildly, under great strain.

These were  also years  in which  the shah, both in terms of
what he  considered  Iranian  national  interests  and  also
because of his reliance on U.S. support, when Iran's foreign
policy was  very  closely  aligned  with  America's  foreign
policy. As  a result,  tensions with the USSR increased, and
Iran was  quick to  join the  Baghdad Pact,  which saw Iran,
Turkey, Pakistan  and Britain  allied together  in a defense
pact with the U.S. an informal partner.

This close  U.S.-Iran alignment  on foreign policy issues in
the 1950s  and the  early 1960s was occurring at a time when
elsewhere in  the Middle  East and  Asia we  saw the rise of
nationalists governments.  In the Middle East in particular,
monarchies seemed  to be  falling like  flies. Revolutionary
officer regimes  were coming  to power  in Egypt,  Iraq  and
Syria.  The   great  nations  of  Asia,  India,  China,  and
Indonesia, were  leading a  non-aligned movement.  Therefore
the shah,  in terms of the broader trends in the Middle East
and the  region, seemed  isolated. All  this did not go very
well with  the  younger  generation  in  Iran,  and  broadly
speaking, with  the educated  middle classes.  The shah  was
pursuing a  foreign  policy,  however  sensible,  one  might
argue, that went against the grain of the dominant political
mood in the country.

The  shah   also  developed,  in  this  period,  very  close
relations with Israel - not because of the U.S., but because
of his own calculations of where Iran's interest lay. He saw
all around  him Arab regimes that were radical, increasingly
allied  to   the  Soviet   Union,  republics   rather   than
monarchies. It made sense then, that the enemy of your enemy
was your  friend, and  Iran's  relations  with  Israel  grew
increasingly in  this period.  Not among  all, but  among  a
significant element in the population, it was unpopular.

The events  surrounding what  became known  as the Status of
Forces  bill  (1964)  -  the  U.S.  just  signed  a  similar
agreement with Iraq, SOFA - also proved controversial. These
SOFA agreements  the U.S.  has with  many countries where it
stations troops  are intended  to protect American troops or
military advisors  in other  countries from  the  "terrible"
local courts.  It in  effect extends  diplomatic immunity to
military personnel  serving in  a foreign  country. In 1964,
the U.S.  pressured a  reluctant shah  and a  very reluctant
parliament and  reluctant government  cabinet to sign a SOFA
to cover  American military personnel in Iran. The agreement
immediately  aroused  memories  of  so-called  capitulations
which were very common in the region in the 19th century and
which also exempted European nationals from the jurisdiction
of native  courts, Iranian  courts  in  the  case  of  Iran,
Ottoman courts  in the  case of the Ottoman empire, Egyptian
courts in  the case  of Egypt.  In fact, Ayatollah Khomeini,
who 15  years later  was to  lead an  Islamic revolution  in
Iran, was  expelled  from  the  country  for  opposing  very
publicly the  status of  forces bill,  which  he  called  an
agreement for the enslavement of Iran.

These were  all ways  in which the U.S.-Iranian relationship
soured in  the 1960s-70s.  But  the  fact  that  the  press,
parliament, and political activity was controlled meant that
the pros  and cons  of this  close relationship the shah had
reached with the U.S. were never openly discussed and public
opinion was never openly articulated.

At the  same time, the shah was never really a client of the
U.S. In  fact, he  always chafed  at having  to do America's
will and  sought to  escape this  tutelage as  quickly as he
could. As  his regime grew more stable, especially as Iran's
oil revenues  increased, he  tried to shake the U.S. off. He
did so  increasingly successfully.  The U.S. was preoccupied
with Vietnam,  the Nixon  doctrine which  led to  the  twin-
pillars policy,  the idea  that regional  powers allied with
the U.S.  should take  responsibility for regional security,
and  that   Iran  and  Saudi  Arabia  should  shoulder  more
responsibility for  Persian Gulf  security, meant  the  U.S.
relied more  and more  on the  shah and  more on him than on
Saudi Arabia,  which  lacked  Iran's  size,  population,  or
military clout.  The Shah  welcomed this,  partly because it
enhanced his  own role and importance, and partly because he
wanted to escape U.S. tutelage.

Then as  oil prices exploded in 1973-74, Iran's oil revenues
quadrupled overnight.  The shah  became not  a debtor to the
U.S. or  the countries  of Europe  but a  creditor. Iran not
only gained  enormous economic  clout, but  also offered the
U.S. in a period of financial stringency and high oil prices
a huge  market for  arms, industrial  equipment, technology,
and employment.

In this  period the U.S. did make a number of serious errors
in Iran,  in addition to doing a number of things correctly.
Aside  from   a  brief   period  under  President  Kennedy's
administration, when  Kennedy pressured  the shah  to  begin
some reforms  in Iran,  particularly to  break up the landed
estates and  give a  greater share  in land ownership to the
peasantry, there  was very  little pressure  in this  entire
period on  the shah  in the  political sphere.  The U.S. was
pleased to see Iran stable and developing. It was developing
spectacularly. The  U. S. was pleased to have a large market
for American  goods. And  as long  as there  was very little
internal  unrest,   it  seemed  that  everything  was  under
control. The  U.S. in  this period,  when it  had weight and
influence in  Iran, missed  opportunities to  guide the shah
politically, internally, in another direction.

Second, the  U.S. was so pleased with the close alliance and
with the  apparent stability  of the  shah's regime  that it
began less  and less to study closely the internal political
situation. We  know now  that a time was reached when at the
shah's insistence,  the CIA  agreed that it would not do its
own intelligence  work in Iran, but would rely on the shah's
sources. When  the boom  in oil prices occurred and the shah
decided to  use this  huge revenue,  less wisely  than other
Gulf  states,   to  try  and  catapult  Iran  into  economic
advancement  and  industrialization,  the  result  was  huge
dislocations in  the economy.  Not only the U.S. but all the
European countries were complicit in an economic policy that
proved in  the end  very destabilizing to the shah's regime.
The attempt  to inject into the economy a significant amount
of money  in  a  very  short  period  of  time  caused  huge
dislocations, and  explains  in  part  the  discontent  that
helped fuel the 1979 Islamic revolution.

When that  revolution took  place,  U.S.-Iranian  diplomatic
relations were  broken and have not been restored since. The
Islamic movement  itself had  from the  beginning  an  anti-
American component.  Khomeini's revolution  was against  the
shah, rooted primarily in internal problems. But it was also
against the  shah's  close  relations  with  the  U.S.  This
stemmed from two very obvious factors. First, after all, the
Americans  had   supported  the  shah,  and  the  opposition
therefore saw the U.S. as complicit in the shah's autocracy.
One also cannot forget that Khomeini was exiled from his own
country and  spent 14  years  initially  in  Iraq  and  then
briefly in France as a result of opposing the SOFA.

Second, Khomeini  both in leading the revolution and then in
stabilizing it once the monarchy had been overthrown, played
very adeptly on anti-American sentiment. The themes of anti-
Americanism, of  America as  the  shah's  supporter,  became
themes not  only of  the revolutionary campaign but of post-
revolutionary Iran as well.

Third, the  seizure  of  the  American  embassy  by  student
radicals and  the taking  of American  diplomats as hostages
had an  enormous impact. Some 50 Americans remained hostages
in  Iran   for  444  days,  from  November  1979  until  the
inauguration of  President Reagan  in 1981.  This has left a
deep impact  on the  American political imagination and also
on the  Iranian one.  For the  Americans, this was a searing
experience; for  the Iranians,  it was  a moment of triumph.
The students who seized the embassy became overnight heroes.

Fourth, there  was the  U.S. position  during the  Iran-Iraq
war. When  the war  broke out,  the U.S.  formally at  least
adopted a  position of neutrality and did not supply arms to
either side.  America hoped the two sides would wear out and
exhaust each  other. But  once Iran  looked as  if it  might
actually win  the war  and bring Saddam down, the U.S. began
to  support   Saddam,  not  only  diplomatically,  but  with
intelligence. The  U.S. also  remained virtually silent when
Saddam used chemical weapons against Iranian troops.

Finally, there  has been  the problem on the Iranian side of
the U.S.  attempt to sanction, isolate and demonize Iran and
to view  Iran as  pursuing policies in Lebanon, on the Arab-
Israeli  conflict,   and  elsewhere,   hostile  to  American
interests.

It's not  as if during these years there was no U.S. attempt
to reach  out to  the Iranians  or  vice  versa.  The  first
president Bush,  in his inaugural address, referring to U.S.
hostages held  in Lebanon  by  Iranian  prot‚g‚s,  used  the
phrase "good  will breeds  good will." The Iranians did then
help secure  the release  of these  remaining U.S. hostages,
but no good will came in reciprocation. Early in the Clinton
administration,  the   president  of  Iran  offered  a  U.S.
company, Conoco, a large oil deal, but Clinton prevented the
deal  from   going  through.   President  Clinton   himself,
especially in  his second  term, attempted  on a  number  of
occasions to reach out to the Iranians without success.

So there  were attempts  in these years to repair relations.
Why didn't  they succeed? First, there was the legacy of the
hostilities of  the past  on both  sides. Second,  there are
concrete issues  dividing the  two countries. In any Iran-US
rapprochement, Iran  would  want  to  see  an  end  to  U.S.
sanctions against  Iran, and an end to America's attempts to
isolate Iran and deny it technology, trade, and credits. The
U.S. would  expect Iran  to change its posture on Israel, to
stop attempting  to be  a spoiler in the Palestinian-Israeli
peace process,  and to  end  its  support  for  groups  like
Hezbollah in  Lebanon and Hamas in the Gaza strip hostile to
Israel. Also,  for the  U.S. there's  the  issue  of  Iran's
nuclear program.

In addition,  some forms  of Iranian foreign policy behavior
to which  the U.S.  particularly takes exception have become
very entrenched.  Iran's hostility  to Israel  has become  a
pillar of its foreign policy; its investment in Hezbollah in
Lebanon is a long-standing policy. Iran and the U.S. are now
competitors for influence in the Persian Gulf and the Middle
East. Iran  may be  a small and weak country compared to the
U.S., but  it does  have its  visions of  grandeur. It  sees
itself as  the great  power of  the Persian  Gulf region. It
believes the  U.S. must  make space  for it  at the table in
deciding the  future of Iraq or Afghanistan. One can see how
much at odds the Iranian position is from America's.

The events  in Iran  surrounding the  June 23 elections will
make it  much more  difficult for  President Obama,  who has
tried to  open a  new page  in U.S.-Iran relations, to allow
his senior officials to sit at the table with Iran. But even
had these  events not taken place, U.S.-Iran relations would
remain fraught with difficulties and obstacles.
-----------------------------------------------------

Shaul Bakhash  is the Clarence Robinson professor of history
at George  Mason University.  This essay  is  based  on  his
presentation at  "U.S. Foreign  Policy and the Modern Middle
East," a  Summer Institute  for Teachers  sponsored  by  The
American Institute  for History  Education and  The  Wachman
Center of  the Foreign  Policy Research Institute, held June
25-27, 2009,  in Philadelphia.  

 

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Wehret den Anfängen – German protestors ask Irish to stand fast


Lisbon Treaty faces new court challenge from Czech senators

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 06:03 PM PDT

www.irishtimes.com A GROUP of Czech senators has lodged a new constitutional court challenge against the Lisbon Treaty, alleging that it turns the EU into a "super state". Part of the appeal rests on a claim that the guarantees on the treaty given to Ireland by EU leaders should have been ratified by the Czech parliament. The senators [...] Related posts:
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Call for OSCE election monitors to oversee Lisbon Referendum amid growing concern about electoral fraud

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 04:01 PM PDT

There has been a formal call for the OSCE to oversee the Irish Lisbon referendum amid growing concerns that the result of the Irish referendum may be manipulated by postal vote fraud. A source within the Dublin City Council have informed the former MEP candidate Fiachra Ă“ Luain of efforts by the head of the [...] Related posts:
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  2. Serious Flaw in Referendum Spending Limits www.caeuc.org Same Treaty, Same Answer – No to Lisbon...
  3. EU breaks its own rules to funnel money into Irish referendum www.telegraph.co.uk The European Commission seems to have been pouring...

Schoolgirl dies after cervical cancer vaccination

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 02:09 PM PDT

www.guardian.co.uk An urgent investigation has been launched after a 14-year-old girl died shortly after receiving a cervical cancer vaccination at her school. Natalie Morton was a pupil at the Blue Coat Church of England School in Coventry, where she was given the human papilloma virus (HPV) jab yesterday. She was taken to Coventry University hospital, where she [...] Related posts:
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  2. Protesting parents who took pupils from school may be prosecuted www.independent.ie PARENTS of 14 children who have been withdrawn...
  3. First Irish Person Dies From CIA's 'Swine Flu'   www.independent.ie Young woman is first to die from swine...

Wehret den Anfängen – German protestors ask Irish to stand fast

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 06:44 AM PDT

Youtube A new film about protests in Germany against the Lisbon Treaty (including the demonstration in Berlin in early September) Direct link to video at Youtube Related posts:Irish Dáil should not have inferior powers to the German Parliament in controlling Irish Government Ministers when exercising the Lisbon Treaty's self-amending powers www.nationalplatform.org The  Dáil and Seanad should insist [...] Related posts:
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  3. German parliament hears new EU treaty law as ratification clock ticks www.dw-world.de Germany's Bundestag is debating new legislation which would...

EU breaks its own rules to funnel money into Irish referendum

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 06:28 AM PDT

www.telegraph.co.uk The European Commission seems to have been pouring money into the Irish referendum in contravention of its own rules. Nothing new here, of course. The EU rarely lets the letter of the law stand in the way of what it wants. If it did, Ireland wouldn't be having this referendum: Brussels would have accepted the [...] Related posts:
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Provocateur Cops Caught Disguised As Anarchists At G20

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 06:11 AM PDT

Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com Shocking video has emerged of cops posing as anarchist protesters at the G20 Summit in Pittsburgh, in yet another example of authorities attempting to provoke chaos at global summits in order to justify a brutal police crackdown. Footage from Saturday night shows three burly older men who look completely out of place with [...] Related posts:
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Contempt for Irish Voters by French state secretary for Europe

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 06:03 AM PDT

euobserver.com France has indicated that even if the Irish vote No in their referendum on the Lisbon Treaty on Friday, it will not hinder the European Union from taking steps towards further integration. Pierre Lellouche, France's state secretary for Europe, told French TV on Monday morning (28 September), that a "solution" will be found in case of [...] Related posts:
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Navy Ships breaking out with Swine Flu after H1N1 vaccinations – Five turning back from mission

Posted: 29 Sep 2009 05:41 AM PDT

Source: Fighting for Liberty Navy Ships breaking out with Swine Flu after H1N1 vaccinations- Five Turning back from mission Please listen to mp3 file on the Flu on Navy Ships From A Marine Disquisition fluonships.mp3 Edited Version Full Version Data gleaned indirectly from anonymous testimony of Navy wives of the affected crew via the internet radio show A Marine Disquisition! From Bob [...] Related posts:
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Who are the US power elite

Who are the Power Elite

 
BY

Muhammed Asadi September 27, 2009

Tags: imperialism , power elite , political structure

Historical Specificity and the U.S. Power Structure

According to C. Wright Mills, changes in the American structure have not involved any radical "revolution"; the changes have been institutional adjustments in the relative positions of the economic, political and military domains.

The first phase of institutional adjustment refers to the period
from the American Revolutionary War (1775-1783) to the presidency of John Adams (ended 1801). In that period there were no clearly demarcated institutional orders in that economic, political and military affairs increasingly coincided, and a pseudo-feudal order prevailed (without a standing army). In the early 19th century, Jeffersonian 'republicanism 'as political philosophy together with Alexander Hamilton's laissez faire economic prescriptions were the dominant ethos of the emerging capitalist structure. Then there was the Civil War (1861-1865) that resulted in the consolidation of capital and the development of wage labor. In 1886, formal corporate ascendancy was acknowledged by the state when the Supreme Court declared that the 14th Amendment protected the corporation as a 'person' with inalienable rights. Following that 'protection', economic men sometimes through outright bribery or purchase of political men dominated the power structure that represented a 'laissez faire state' (with a brief 'transparent' progressive era (1896-1919) in response to the revolt by petty bourgeoisie (the Middle Class of the time) and large farm owners which resulted in several progressive reforms.

The Great Depression which started in 1929 created in the political establishment a center of power not seen before, since the institutions of the New Deal (the socialist props incorporated to save capitalism from collapse) regulated affairs of the corporations. This 'independent power' center incorporated through necessity, resulted in the economic men making inroads into political positions of power rather than ruling from the outside. With World War 2, the structure of the economy altered to a form of militarized capitalism, military men and their ideology became dominant in America. Military men increasingly entered the political directorate, and later the economic sphere in the major defense industries.

Mills wrote:

"The shape and meaning of the power elite today can be understood only when these three sets of structural trends are seen at their point of coincidence: (today) the military capitalism of private corporations exists in a weakened and formal democratic system containing a military order already quite political in outlook and demeanor….but these instituted elite (in the military, political and economic domains) is frequently in some tension: it comes together only on certain coinciding points and only on certain occasions of 'crisis'." (1956:276).

Mills is against the simple Marxian (not Marx's) view of a Ruling Class that states that an economic class rules. The structure of power in the US is more complex and involves interplay of military, economic and political power due to adjustments by the economic elite through necessity. Marx and Engels had stated the same in the Communist Manifesto:

"The bourgeoisie cannot exist without constantly revolutionizing the instruments of production, and thereby the relations of production and with them the whole relations of society..." (Marx and Engels, 1848)

This point, that the bourgeoisie, through necessity of survival might alter the 'sub-structure' and through it the 'super-structure', is lost on both the classical Marxists and the Neo-Millsians who argue against each other. There is no dispute between Mills and Marx given the above quote.
The power elite are those at the pinnacles of the economic, military and political institutions (chosen through co-optation and socialization), they move between these three institutional structures, in other words positions of power are interchangeable in the military, political and economic domains resulting in institutionally circumscribed adaptation, producing a near uniform world view among them. Further, this power elite possesses a specific and clear 'class consciousness' and unique image of self as a (social) psychological fact (considering themselves separate and superior to the rest of society), regardless of popularly ascribed ideological label or party membership, this is amply revealed in their wars of aggression where they butcher the underlying populations with impunity and quite impersonally.

It is not that they all come from a 'common origin' of privilege (most of them do) but the fact that they are institutionally selected, rewarded and promoted means that regardless of their 'origin' those at the top have similar world view. The fact that their selection represents common origin is merely there to enhance the probability of success (since no socialization is ever complete). Thus minorities are always a wild-card (a greater risk) because of difference of origin, even if they are molded by elite institutions. The difference is a difference of degree only. Origin and institutional vetting (and socialization) and not either/or determines degree of standardization of world view.

Factions might exist among the power elite but their coinciding "community of interests" and the resulting inner discipline (the psychological 'fact' in outlook) bind them together even across differences (Mills 1956:283). Given these forces that are at play among them, the way they have emerged and the institutions that have shaped them, it is impossible for them to break away from maintaining the structural status quo that has created them, in the decisions they make while in public office. These interests are driven by their worldview, the "military metaphysic", which has, since the end of World War II, come to describe the economic life of the U.S, in the form of a 'permanent war economy'. The most important thing to remember is:

"We must remember that these men of the Power Elite now occupy the strategic places in the structure of American society; that they command the dominant institutions of the dominant nation; that as a set of men, they are in a position to make decisions with terrible consequences for the underlying populations of the world." (1956:286)

The Power Elite does not refer to people conspiring together in a coordinated way, it is not about conspiracy theory; rather it is about the dominant positions in the dominant institutional orders (military, political and economic) of the dominant country (DDD). How these positions and their interchangeability among the three domains, based on bureaucratic requirements (that includes choosing a certain type of person, how status is allocated through his career, how promotions are given etc) that results in similarity of worldview and 'class consciousness' regarding their unique group. This means that no drastic change of worldview is possible during their careers at the top, in that their 'integrity' and 'identity' depends on their doing what is required to maintain the structure that has pushed them to the top.

These elite prefer to work and use the existing institutions (in a society) to get what they want but when they feel their new demands will not be met with existing organizations, they construct new ones, like the Department of Homeland Security post 9/11 or on a larger scale, the nuclear family and white ethnic identity post World War 2 etc. Due to centralization of decision, communication and ownership and the destructive technology that has been developed by the military-state, the power at the disposal of the Power Elite is of such great magnitude that is "unequaled in human history" (Mills 1956:361)

References:

Mills, C. Wright. 1956. The Power Elite. USA: Oxford University Press.

Tayyab Shah Rebutts Farhat Tajs Assertions about Talibans ISI link

The FC is being commanded by one of the best officers that I have known,Maj Gen Tariq Khan and I think he is a man who can turn the tide.May God be with him .
 
 
Agha Amin

 Taliban and Salarzais
 Tuesday, September 29, 2009
We were astounded after reading Farhat Taj's article on Sept 27 titled "The Taliban and the Salarzais". I could not believe the lengths to which people will go to just to secure a space in a newspaper. The writer referred to a senior member of the Salarzai tribe as saying that the ISI was behind the target killing of elders and that the Taliban are just a facade. Nothing can be farther from the truth, and such a statement can either be passed thorough ignorance or with malicious intent. Either way such conspiracy theories are based on rumours and there is no concrete evidence which can help prove this allegation.

According to the writer, when the Mamond Taliban had commenced bombardment of Salarzai villages, neither the political administration nor the army was serious about helping them. This is another baseless rumour because immediately after the start of the bombing of the Salarzai villages the military responded with heavy shelling on Taliban positions on Mullah Said ridge.

The credibility of this article can be judged by the fact that the writer says that the spokesman for the lashkar Malik Munasib Khan was killed by the same group which she accuses earlier in the article. Given that Malik Munasib Khan is still alive and doing quite well, one would have to say that the claim that he was killed is patently false. The writer also mentions shelling on the Salarzai villages and claims that this was coming from Timergara and coordinated by a Colonel Sajjad. In reality, there are no gun positions covering Salarzai from Timergara and no officer by the name of Colonel Sajjad was ever posted there.

The writer says that Pashat is an area under Taliban control but not marked so by the military. Had the writer done some research on this topic she would have found that Pashat is the headquarters of the Salarzai lashkar. After reading this article I can only guess that the writer has never visited Bajaur and knows close to nothing about the mechanics of a lashkar in general and the Salarzai lashkar in particular. The lashkar was provided material and moral support by the security forces, and its injured were promptly evacuated by the security forces to Peshawar by helicopter. Their shaheed and injured were compensated and compensation amount paid to their next of kin. Writing on a sensitive issue like this requires diligent investigation.

We would also request your newspaper to thoroughly check the article for its factual worth, otherwise, printing such ill-researched pieces will not only undermine your newspaper's credibility but also the sacrifices made by the security forces.

Spokesman for FC NWFP

Peshawar


--
Thanks and Regards,

Tayyab A. Shah
Regina,SK,Canada
Ph:(306)-540-5633

Monday, September 21, 2009

Iranian Strategic Rationale in supporting anti US insurgents in Afghanistan

As I see it iranian position is simple ---

 

1-  one sunni afghan insurgent killed or one US soldier killed , both are of strategic benefit to iran.one sunni less contributes to a  weaker taliban threat to post US afghanistan---one US soldier killed again benefits iran.one has to see Iranians closely and only then one can understand how much the hate the Sunnis.Perhaps as much as the Saudis hate Shias.Now this is a very serious basis of this whole argument.

 

2-in the same light iranian intelligence seeks greater conflict in pakistani balochistan so that pakistani security forces kill more baloch and the baloch secessionist threat inside iran is reduced.seen in this light i would not even rule out complicity of iranian intelligence in turbat murders of three baloch leaders blamed on pakistani intelligence.


Agha H Amin

------------------------------------------------------------

 

 


U.S. sees hand of elite Iranian unit in Afghanistan

Mon Sep 21, 2009 By Adam Entous

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States believes Iran's Revolutionary Guards are providing training and weapons to Taliban insurgents in Afghanistan to help them fight Western forces, U.S. counterterrorism officials said on Monday.

The alleged role played by the Revolutionary Guard's shadowy, elite Qods force in helping the Taliban, and the extent to which the Iranian leadership may be involved, has been hotly debated within the Pentagon and the U.S. intelligence community.

In a confidential assessment of the war, the top U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan, Army General Stanley McChrystal, said Iranian military assistance was not an immediate threat to Western forces but could become one in the future.

A counterterrorism official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the degree of Qods assistance -- supplying arms and providing training to Taliban elements -- had reached "very troubling" proportions, underscoring heightened concerns within the intelligence community.

The CIA and other agencies have been stepping up their presence in Afghanistan, deploying more officers to accommodate a surge in demand for intelligence on the Taliban and other threats, a U.S. intelligence official said.

Two years ago, the Bush administration dubbed the Revolutionary Guard a proliferator of weapons of mass destruction and imposed sanctions on its Qods force.

It accused the group of arming and training militants in Iraq who, in turn, attacked U.S. forces.

Pentagon officials pointed to the seizure late last month in western Afghanistan, near the border with Iran, of weapons and explosives bearing markings indicating they were made in Iran.

The large weapons cache, the first seized in Afghanistan in nearly two years, included rockets, explosives, improvised explosive devices (IEDs), as well as munitions known as explosively formed penetrators, or EFPs, capable of piercing U.S. armor, Pentagon officials said.

U.S. officials said they believed the Iranian government was aware of the assistance but it was not clear to what extent its leaders were directly involved.

US SAYS IRAN PLAYING BOTH SIDES

Mainly Shi'ite Iran has historically played a complicated role in Afghanistan.

Tehran was a foe of the Taliban when the hardline Sunni movement ruled Afghanistan.

Since the group's ouster in a U.S.-backed invasion in 2001, Tehran has provided developmental assistance and political support to the government of Afghan President Hamid Karzai.

U.S. officials said Iran appeared to be trying to play both sides, currying Taliban favor in case they return to power while trying to undercut the American military and enhance its bargaining power in talks over its nuclear program.

Set up after the 1979 Islamic revolution to protect the ruling system against internal and external threats, the Revolutionary Guard has about 125,000 members and is the most important wing of Iran's military.

Qods, which means Jerusalem, is the guard's special operations unit, handling activities abroad.

In his assessment of the war, a copy of which was obtained by the Washington Post and posted online, McChrystal said the Qods force was "reportedly" training fighters for certain Taliban groups and providing other forms of military assistance to insurgents.

"Iran's current policies and actions do not pose a short-term threat to the mission, but Iran has the capability to threaten the mission in the future," McChrystal wrote.

Pentagon officials said the presence of Iranian-made improvised explosive devices in the recently discovered cache in Afghanistan was particularly troubling because those weapons cause the highest number of Western casualties.

(Reporting by Adam Entous; Editing by Simon Denyer and Cynthia Osterman)

 

 

 

PROMINENT INDO PAK FREE MASONS

 
   
Lodge Southern Brotherhood is the only Lodge in Bangalore and the State of Karnataka under the United Grand Lodge England. Consecrated on 15th August 1908. Southern Brotherhood will be celebrating its Centenary in August this year. Boasting a current membership of over 90 people from a variety of backgrounds, we are blessed to have a relatively young group of Masons, ready to propel this Lodge into the next 100 years. Southern Brotherhood is also honoured to be a Hall Stone Lodge .
   
We meet on the 4th Monday of every month, except in December when we meet on the 3rd Wednesday. Our Election Meeting is in October and our Installation is in November each year.
Message from Worshipful Master
Our meetings take place at the:
Freemasons' Hall
No. 2, Primrose Road
Bangalore – 560 025
Worshipful Master: Kirit Morzaria
Secretary: T. V. Menon
The temple is geographically behind Prestige Meridian Building on MG Road, but can only be accessed from Primrose Road.  
Visiting Brethren from affiliated Grand Lodges are welcome to attend our meetings. Please remember to carry your Grand Lodge Certificate and a Certificate of good standing from your Lodge.

 
Freemasonry has always fascinated people from all walks of life. The kaleidoscope of its membership has included Royalty, Aristocracy, Gentry and Commoners alike. Freemasons in India have been no exception, and have contributed to India over the last three centuries in no small manner.

Some of the Eminent Indian Masons

· Sir Phirozeshah Mehta
· Dadabhoy Nowroji Tata
· Swami Vivekananda
· W.C. Bannerjee
· President Dr. Rajendra Prasad
· President Dr. S. Radhakrishnan
· Pandit Motilal Nehru
· President Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed
· Sir Dorabji Jamshedji Tata
· J.R.D. Tata
· Goculdas Narottam Morarjee
· Ebrahim Currimbhoy
· Dr. B.G. Kher
· Bhulabhai Desai
· Dr. C. Rajagopalachari
· Sir C.P. Ramaswamy Iyer
· Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy
· D.L. Vaidya
· Dr. D.R. Bhandarkar
· Sir N.G. Chandavarkar
· M.R. Jayakar
· Dwarkadas Narainji
· Purshottamdas Thakurdas
· Sir Chimanlal Setalvad
· T.G. Khaitan
· Dharamsey Morarjee
· Narsingir Pratapgir
· Sir Bhalchandra K. Pradhan
· Dr. Sir Tehmuiji Nariman
· P.M. Kanga
· Sir Sultan Mohammad Shah, Aga Khan
· Dr. Badruddin Tyabji
· Sir Sayyad Ahmad Khan Dahlavi
· Mohammadbhoy Currimbhoy Ebrahim,
· Ebrahim Rahimtulla Currimbhoy
· Dr. R.N. Cooper
· Dr. P.V. Cherian
· Maharaja Ganga Singh
· Maharaja Duleep Singh
· Maharaja Randheer Singh
· Maharaja Digvijay Smghji
· Maharaja Mahinder Bhupinder Singh
· Maharaja Yadvinder Singh
· Maharaja Sir Bhawani Singh
· Maharaja N.N. Bhup
· Maharaja J.N. Bhup
· Maharaja R.J. Bhup
· Maharaja Viziaram Raj
· Maharaja Chhatarsinghji
· Maharaja Mayurdhwaj Jaladhip
· Thakursaheb Daulatsinhji
· Sir Gangadharrrao Patwardhan
· Shrimant Shankarrao Patwardhan
· Balasaheb Pant
· Pantbahadur Raghunathrao Shankarrao
· Sir Syed Reza Ali Khan
· Sir Syed Ahmed Ali Khan
· Sahebzada Abu Samad Khan
· Ibrahim Khan
· Mirza Husain Yawar Khan
· Maharajkumar Mohammad Amir Hyder Kha
· Nawabzada Khan Mohammed Tolay
· Nawabzada Syed Hussam Bilgrami
· Nawab Jung Nawab Hyder
· Nawab Sir Amin Jung Jung Bahadur
· Chintamanrao Patwardhan
· Sampatrao Gaikwad
· Shrimant Bhau Ramrao Venkatrao
· Diwan Suryashankar Mehta
· Sheikh Abdul Khaliq
· Sorab M. Bharucha
· Sardar Sir R.J. Vakil
· David Abraham
· S.V. Sista
· Ayaz Peerbhoy
· Rasesh Mafatlal
· Justice D.P. Madon
· Justice Prakash Narain.
· J.B. Kanga
· D.D. Davar
· M.P. Kapadia
· D.R. Pradhan
· R.K. Saiyad
· Parikshit Sahni
· Ashok Kumar Ganguly.
· Dr. Phiroze Sethna.
· Nanik Rupani.
· G. L. Raheja.
· Narayan Varma.
· Sir Reginald Spence.
· Jamshed N Guzder
· Dr. Shantilal J Mehta
· Dr. Framroz Sethna
· Dr. Homiyar Dastoor
· Dr. Mohanlal Modi
· Dr. Jamnadas Merchant
· Rustomji A Wadia
· David Shellim
· Nariman S Patel
· Damodar D. Meht
· Maharaja Jaya Chamaraja Wadeyar
· Justice P.N.Khanna
· Justice G Ramanujam
· Justice S.S.Ali
· Justice R Bhattacharya
· Justice V Ramaswamy
· Justice S Natarajan
· Justice A.B.Saharya
· Dr Gaur Hari Singhania
· Justice S Padmanabhan
· Justice V Ratnam
· Justice B.S.Sinha
· Justice Devinder Gupta
· H.H.Marthanda Varma
· Justice U Sinha
· Justice A.R.Lakshmanan
· Justice S Jagadeesan
· C.A.Ramakrishnan I.C.S.
· Prof M.S.Thacker
· Justice K Veeraswami
· Justice T Ramprasad Rao
· Cav.Dr.G.K Devarajulu
· Justice N.S.Ramaswamy
· Sitaram Jaipuria
· G Ramaswamy
· V.P.Raman
· Srikanta Datta Narasimharaja Wadiyar
· Sir Jamshedjee Jeejeebhoy
· Sir Purushotamdas Thakurdas
· His Holiness Sir Sultan Mohamed Shah, Aga Khan
· Dr. Badruddin Tyabji
· The Nawab Of Pataudi Mansur Ali Khan
· Lt.Gen.H.H.Maharaja Jivaji Rao Scindia ,Maharaja of Scindia
· Mr Madhav Rao Scindia
· Maharaja of Bobbili
· Ardaseer Cursetji Wadia
· Deshabandu Chittaran Das
· Gaganendranath Tagore
· W.C.Banwejee
· Sir Rash Bihari Ghose
· Kishab Chandra Sen
· B.G.Kher
· Romesh Chanra Dutt
· Sir Syed Ahmed Khan
· Ashok Kumar Ganguly

 
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