In Las Vegas earlier this month, the “Fight of the Century” took place with Floyd Mayweather winning the welterweight championship over Manny Pacquiao with a display of his textbook defensive boxing skills that kept his aggressive opponent at bay, earning him the unified title. While Mayweather raked in a reported $200 million for a night’s work, Trita Parsi, the head of the National Iranian-American Council, was also hard at work playing defense, earning his money protecting the Iranian regime’s façade of “moderation”.
In Politico, Parsi was ducking questions over some rather bizarre comments made in Iranian state media, including the whopper that Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) was caught meeting with Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the founder and self-declared caliph of ISIS. The photo used by Tehran to “prove” its ludicrous charge was so clearly doctored it would be laughable were it not part of a recurring pattern of propaganda efforts by the regime to portray Iran as aggrieved, threatened, and beset upon by the U.S. Such a posture gives Iran the ability to take actions — propaganda and otherwise — in the name of defending the Islamic nation from its enemies, real or imagined.
In an even more bizarre twist, after months of dithering the Iranian regime finally accused imprisoned Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian of espionage, but ironically charged him with working with the NIAC as proof of his spying. The regime claimed conversations Rezaian had with Parsi through Twitter was evidence enough.
Parsi was left in the uncomfortable situation of having to deny that Rezaian was working with the NIAC, while at the same time correcting the New York Times characterization of the NIAC as being “supportive of Iran” on all issues. Mayweather has nothing on this guy.
Granted it’s been a tough year for Parsi and company. They had a defamation suit they filed to combat charges that they colluded with the Iranian regime thrown out of court. Parsi was sanctioned for $183,000 for misconduct during the trial, including withholding key pieces of evidence.
Parsi has long been a stooge of Tehran. In the summer of 2007, Parsi embarked on a campaign to remove the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC) from the State Department’s terrorist list. The designation of Iran’s Guards Corp was in response to Iranian infiltration in Iraq, and in particular their direct role in killing hundreds of American soldiers by supplying Shia extremists with improvised explosive devices (IED). Parsi argued: “The White House’s decision to designate the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps as a terrorist organization could deal a double blow to efforts to utilize diplomacy with Iran to stabilize Iraq. Not only does the designation risk undermining the important yet limited talks between the United States and Iran in Baghdad, but it may also negatively impact the next U.S. president’s ability to seek diplomacy with Iran by further entrenching U.S.-Iran relations in a paradigm of enmity.”
The Daily Caller
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