- 10 January 2008
- 2 Comments
- Diplomacy, Events in DC
Friendship on the Fault Lines
10 January 2008 Posted By Sara Shokravi
It is tragic when the only thing that is able to transcend bellicose rhetoric and confrontational policies is a catastrophe that flattens an entire city and consumes 50,000 lives in one night. In 2003 an earthquake with a magnitude of 6.6 destroyed the 2,000 year old citadel of Bam, entrapping and burying the inhabitants as the ancient city came crumbling down. Among those buried were Adele Freedman and Tobb Dell’Oro, two American tourists. Jahangir Golestan’s documentary, BAM 6.6, tells the intertwining stories of these two individuals along with the Iranians surrounding them.
The aim of the movie is to show how human empathy “transcends geopolitical differences with a simple message of love and hope amidst tragedy, unfolding through the story of two young American victims of this devastating earthquake.” Despite the uplifting feel good aura of the movie, what caught my attention was the international aid that poured into Bam particularly that from the United States.
The documentary included interviews by U.S. aid workers that were sent to Bam to take part in the humanitarian efforts. On December 30 an 81-member USAID/DART team arrived in Iran where they aided in search and rescue missions as well as maintaining sanitary and health conditions in the region. However, the team left shortly after on January 14, when sympathy once again turned into hostility as the two countries continued on their path of mutual bitterness.
Once again, missed opportunities. In fact, this could have been the perfect opportunity: no politics, only sympathy and human compassion to kick start things. Bam seemed to be the big finale to a series of missed opportunities. After the 2001 invasion in Afghanistan and Iranian intelligence/military support to U.S. forces, a year of progress in mending relations came to a startling halt in 2002 as Iran was condemned a member of the axis of evil. Again in 2003, the U.S. government completely ignored, and even denied the existence of a Grand Bargain Proposal sent via the Swiss embassy in Iran. As the USAID group left Iran, they seemed to take with them what seemed to be at that time the last remnants of hope.
Since then, there have been several other occasions to initiate talk between the U.S. and Iran, though none seem to be as significant as those rare opportunities that lingered on between 2001 and 2003. Regardless, BAM 6.6 is only a further testament to the fact that humanity has no boundaries and that perhaps people to people exchanges and track two diplomacy are the way to go. But then again, is the U.S. willing to put an end to its ridiculous sanctions on NGO to NGO exchanges? And is the Islamic Republic willing to end harassment of its own people to allow them to take part in such exchanges with the U.S.?
2 Responses to “Friendship on the Fault Lines”
As events in the Persian Gulf are intensifying between Iran and the United States, Diplomacy seems to dwindle further away. Is this just rhetoric by both sides, or is it leading up to something more serious?
Always the problem remains the same, governments that do not represent the will of their people. The US administration wants control of the Middle East to secure the energy future of the USA by reducing the countries rich in oil reserves to vassal states…and they can only do this militarily because while they created and lived with the sanctions, the rest of the world was busy cutting oil deals with Iran and Iraq. The IRI cannot stay in power without a perceived threat from the outside to keep everyone united in fear just like here with this unholy war on terrorism which is an war on dissidence. So the two governments serve each others’ ends like they are on each others payrolls while neither serves the needs of its people…I for one would like to see the neo -conservatives in the US and in Iran voted out of existence…what a tremendous leap backwards the two countries have taken at the hands of these reactionaries…it will take decades to undo all the harm theyhave both caused…