AZAR NAFISI
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Azar Nafisi

Azar Nafisi is a writer and academic in the humanities. Currently, she teaches at the Foreign Policy Institute of Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies. She has taught at the University of Tehran, the Free Islamic University and Allameh Tabatabaii. She wrote about her struggles to teach works of Western literature that had been banned in Iran in the bestselling book Reading Lolita in Tehran: A Memoir in Books (2003). Born in Iran in 1955, Nafisi earned a Ph.D. in English and American literature from the University of Oklahoma.
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Most Recent Idea
Policy & Politics
03/18/2008

Description: Obama would be great, and McCain is a paradox.

Question: Which Presidential candidate would deal with Iran best?

Transcript: It’s very difficult because policies on Iran are rather vague. I do agree with Mrs. Clinton that you need to . . . I guess Obama as well would say that you need the carrots and sticks. You need to both have dialogue as at the same time, you know . . . at the same time support the Iranian people; although I’m not putting words in Mrs. Clinton’s mouth. I don’t think she said that. But she has been firm in certain areas, which I agree with. I don’t think that Clinton administration’s policies during __________ times really helped, because they themselves were not sure what dialogue meant. If you go into dialogue with the devil, you should know what the context is. And I don’t think they were aware of it. With Obama, I feel that . . . First of all I very much admire the fact that not just in foreign policy but also in domestic policy he feels confident enough . . . You need . . . You can be . . . You should only be confident . . . When you are confident you can sit with people you disagree with and respect them. So I think that policy that he uses both towards people he disagrees with at home and abroad – the fact that he says I’ll give you space to talk; we should negotiate; I admire that very much. I think that alongside of that there should be firmness. Talking with them should not be compromising Iranian people, so there needs to be a double message of talking with the government; at the same time supporting democracy in Iran. It’s partly when U.S. policy towards Soviet Union at its best when they managed to support the dissidents not through giving __________ in money, but giving _________ in voice __________, you know? So that is what I hope. Obama, I like the mindset. I like the way he . . . not the preachy side of it, but the attitude. The change for him is not a change in agendas. It’s a change in attitude. So that change in attitude I think will bring maybe a more . . . change in foreign policy, which would take us away from the disasters we’ve had over the past 30 years.

Question: What about McCain?

Transcript: Well McCain is always a paradox, isn’t he? I mean you like him but you don’t like his policies. (Chuckles) So I was avoiding that because . . . (Chuckles) You know and I sometimes think how much of that is mythologized – the personas we create of the candidates? Would I really like him if I knew him? But as it is, what I know of him, in many ways he’s a man of integrity. And obviously from his experiences what he says he believes in, I just happen to disagree with it. I don’t know exactly what he thinks about Iran. I think this tough boy attitude is not necessarily the best. I think sometimes our politicians mistake . . . The same way they mistake compromise for dialogue – they think dialogue means forgetting about human rights – they mistake firmness for belligerence. You can be firm with Iran, but you don’t have to constantly say nasty things about them. That doesn’t make you firm. It . . . It makes . . . It gives the Iranians a great space to get back at you because they’re much better than you are in this. So if you tell Mr. Ahmadinejad, “You’re an idiot,” he can turn around and say, “Okay, you’re an idiot as well,” and that’s it. If you tell them, “We’ll attack you if you do this,” they say, “We’ll attack your ships right now,” in fact. So that language is not going to work. You know that is not the way to go about it.

Recorded on: 2/22/08

 

 

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