Back to all interviews
Freedom Collection

Interviews with Nima Rashedan

Interviewed January 5, 2011

I think, just comparing Iran and Egypt, there were people – millions of people – on the streets of Tehran; and the government was shooting them, and CNN was on the streets of Tehran for the first days. So, here you have the president of the United States coming and publicly saying: “for me, Mr. [Mir-Hossein]Moussavi and [Mahmoud] Ahmadinejad have no difference; I’m just attracted to these robust discourse of the election.” The U.S. administration, there in Washington, D.C., they were so interested in talking to Mr. Ahmadinejad that they never publicly – at least for first one or two weeks – they never publicly gave any support to those 16- and 17-year-old girls, which with bare hands, they were standing against one of the most well equipped anti-riot armies.

They just neglect. And the people, they were dying in Tehran, and they were calling their famous slogans. They were calling: “Barack Hussein Obama, are you with them or are you with us?” This was an answer which we didn’t got from President Obama for something like six or seven months after that, when he was sure that the protest movement is well-rooted enough in the society, and also, Mr. Ahmadinejad is not a good dialogue partner. For the first time, he said: Yeah, I’m supporting the Iranian Green Movement. But at least for the first one or two month, which we really needed that support, [they were] public and very insistent on this U.S. position: that we are not meddling in Iranian affairs. But look at Egypt: from the very first days, the administration started to say Mubarak has to go, although Mr. Mubarak has done not even one percent of what Iranian regime did against the protestors.