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The Shocking Shaming of Iran’s Ambassador – HotAir

And by “shocking,” I mean in a good way. It’s been so long since we’ve seen real journalism and the actual speaking of truth to power that it’s almost difficult to process.





BBC presenter Laura Kuenssberg sat down with Iran’s ambassador to the UK to discuss the war as well as what preceded it, as Ali Mousavi learned to his surprise and displeasure. Kuenssberg started off by noting that “your country is under attack,” but almost immediately pressed Mousavi to explain the massacre of civilian protesters. Mousavi seemed initially stunned by the question, attempted to deflect the blame to economic sanctions and “foreign aggressors,” but Kuenssberg was having none of that (transcript mine):

Q: Your country is under attack, but your people have also been under attack. Since we last spoke, your government has killed thousands of its own people in the streets who had the courage to stand up, to protest against the suffering that they have been experiencing at the hands of regime. Thousands of people were killed. How on Earth do you justify that, Ambassador?

A: The Iranian side has their own problems, due to the economic sanctions against us, and the Iranian people unfortunately has their own problems, you know, in this matter. But I do believe, I do believe, yes, there are people in a very painful and sensitive period of time, but they are – they are supporting the government against the foreign invader, the foreign aggressors. 

Q: To say, Ambassador – 

A: If you go to the inside of Iran, you can see one solidarity, one unity among the people –





Suuuuure, pal. That solidarity is why the IRGC and Basij opened fire on people in the streets, massacring tens of thousands of those in the “unity” of Iranians for the regime. 

Some ‘journalists’ might have stopped there and moved onto another question. Kuenssberg refused to let Mousavi off the hook, pointing out that not only could she not have gone inside the country to report the story honestly, but the Iranian government also shut down the Internet rather than allow the world to see the truth about this “unity” and “solidarity”:

Q: Ambassador, we would love to be able to report independently from inside Iran to see what is really going on –

A: Why not? 

Q: – but we have seen much of what has gone on. Just this morning, I looked at many of the images and watched some of the videos from what happened to protesters in your country in January. I looked at images and videos, verified independently by our colleagues at BBC Verify, that show body bags littered over the courtyard of a mortuary at the Karazakh Medical Facility in Tehran. I saw images of young, old, teenagers – people killed by your government. Beaten faces, bloodied bodies, gunshot wounds. How on Earth do you justify that and sit there today, saying, “Our people have some complaints”? Your government killed thousands of their own people and the world saw that.

A: Laura, Laura. I, I, I again recommend you to be very vigilant and delicate regarding – [crosstalk] Let me finish. And so, I do not want to say that we do not have any problems. No! The problem, they’re real, there are in our country, but you see, how to settle, how to address these kinds of problems according to the Iranian laws and regulations, it’s very important. And we handle them without any, any interference of the foreign countries against Iran. It’s –

Q: This was not about foreign interference. This was about your own people taking to the streets to protest about their own suffering. And if you had nothing to hide, why turn off the Internet during the protests? If you had nothing to hide, why not allow people to report freely and fairly?

A: Because, because the Internet now using for a military, uh, devices against the Iranian security. You should be very delicate regarding for the Iranian circumstances and conditions for Iran. 





Remarkable, in both directions. We have yet to see any Western news outlet put Iranian regime representatives to anything close to this level of scrutiny, perhaps in the entire 47 years of the Islamic Republic. Most of them want to preserve their access to Tehran and wind up becoming mouthpieces for the regime, as CNN did with Saddam Hussein to maintain access to Baghdad. Instead, Kuenssberg asked questions that not only should journalists have been asking all along, but hopefully, tribunals will be asking when Mousavi’s regime collapses and real accountability will be possible. 

In the meantime, kudos to the BBC and to Kuenssberg for a momentary display of real journalism and actual steel in the spine. Perhaps someone can transplant that into Keir Starmer and the rest of the perfidious Labour establishment. 


Editor’s Note: For decades, former presidents have been all talk and no action. Now, Donald Trump is eliminating the threat from Iran once and for all.

Help us report the truth about the Trump administration’s decisive actions to keep Americans safe and bring peace to the world. Join Hot Air VIP and use promo code FIGHT to get 60% off your membership!





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