Leggo My 'Argo': Iran's Unhealthy Fixation On Ben Affleck
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- When Ben Affleck's "Argo" -- a film based on the true-life,
CIA-assisted Canadian operation to rescue American diplomats during the Iranian
hostage crisis in 1979 -- won the Oscar for Best Picture, all I could think
about was how badly Iran blew a prime opportunity to keep quiet for once.
Iranian Culture Minister Mohammad Hosseini is so incensed with the portrayal of
his country in "Argo" that the government is financing a film in response. Look,
Canadians took issue with some "Argo" distortions, too -- mainly because, as
former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has said, "90 percent of the contributions to
the ideas and the consummation of the plan was Canadian," while the film
portrays the inverse. But Canada isn't going to get all insecure about something
that happened more than three decades ago. Granted, Canada also has a lot going
for it -- including a world of "friends" with whom to trade.
By contrast, the Iranian regime considers its image to be so fragile that a
single Hollywood film must be treated as a threat. Even Affleck is more secure
in his manhood than Iran. The director has called Iran's criticism "a badge of
honor."
Iran could learn from Affleck, who has bombed out in the past but has learned
whatever lessons he needed. He simply moves on and tries not to repeat the same
bad scripts. When Iran bombs out, it never, ever lets go of the script.
Iran's grasp of diplomatic relations hasn't improved much since the "Argo" era,
regardless of what Iranians want us to believe. The best image that any country
can project is through its day-to-day actions, its relationships, its friends.
Sadly, Iran doesn't have many friends. Well, it has Russia and China as besties
-- but someone should ask Russian President Vladimir Putin how it feels to have
your friend's checks start bouncing, as Iran's did when Russia was trying to
help build the Bushehr nuclear power plant.
While trying so desperately to martyr itself as a victim of the meddling West,
Iran is dropping ammo all over Africa. Great Britain's Conflict Armament
Research recently issued a report detailing Iranian ammunition used by
"foreign-backed insurgents, rebel forces, Islamist-oriented armed groups and
warring communities." Speaking of which, Israel just bombed an Iranian general
who was hanging out in a Syrian conflict zone -- no doubt handing out cupcakes
and balloon animals to children.
Meanwhile, Iran's own trade partners seem to have relegated the nation to "Mr.
Right, For Right Now" status, with China, India, Malaysia, South Korea,
Singapore, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Turkey and Taiwan qualifying for exemptions
from U.S. sanctions for having significantly reduced their imports of Iranian
oil.
I can't even begin to imagine how this must anger the knee-jerk anti-Americans
who chronically fly off handle at the thought of Iran not having a God-given
right to trade with the United States and its allies while simultaneously
bad-mouthing them all. Pretty soon the anti-Westerners will be the only ones
left on earth who will want to do business with Iran -- and by that I mean them
personally. Like, they can go online and send over some pizza or something.
As China keeps colonizing Africa and going into resource-rich nations to drink
their respective milkshakes dry, Iran will be increasingly relegated to
flophouse status -- a pit stop for Chinese imperialists in transit between their
de facto African colonies. China could even fill up Iran like a giant foam ball
pit at Chuck E. Cheese because it will be all theirs.
Oh, so you haven't heard about China seducing and colonizing various African
nations rich in resources but poor in their ability to exploit them? That's
likely because there are no corporate logos at which to point fingers of blame
-- unless you count the Chinese Communist Party as a massive corporate entity
unto itself.
I guess bilious anti-Westerners who foam at the mouth with every incursion
Western nations make into Africa -- usually for national security or
humanitarian purposes -- figure that the sort of dubious labor conditions they
abhor in China would still be preferable to anything a Western corporation would
introduce in Africa.
That's the reality Iran has created for itself -- and the movie that it should
really be worried about.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN