Closed Ears and an Open Mouth
Omid Memarian o.memarian@roozonline.com - 2007.11.19

How is it that Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who shows an insatiable desire to appear in front of foreign cameras and answer foreign journalists, refrains from answering simple questions from students in his own country? Why does he postpone confronting people who are gradually getting angry from his policies of the past 2 years?
How is it that he is willing to listen to harsh insults and pointed questions presented at Columbia University in New York, in a program watched live by millions of people, but he evades answering questions from of a few hundred students at home?
If the president’s public relations and media advisors were aware of media relations in today’s world, they would have advised him not only to allow students to voice their questions, but also to respond to them by using his amazing recollection of data and numbers, especially given his expertise in providing a rosy account of any situation.
Ahmadinejad, however, did not make that choice. As a result, more than anything he actually said at Tehran University, the spotlight fell on pictures of angry students that called their president a dictator.
This results from the fact that whenever the president defends his policies with respect to world peace, or the Holocaust, or relocating Israel to Alaska or Europe, he attributes his remarks to the Iranian nation, and voices his own opinions as if they were the demands of the Iranian people. As a result, it is very important that the picture of the Iranian people that is reported around the world through cameras be that of a unified and united people that stand behind their president’s decisions.
If such a thing was possible 20 years ago, it is not possible today. The smallest protest traverses borders in the shortest time and appears in news websites or television networks.
The students’ protest, which came shortly after the President’s speech at Columbia University, targeted the most sensitive part of Ahmadinejad’s propaganda discourse: that there are many in Iran who not only disagree with the President’s policies, but actually do not view Ahmadinejad’s views as those of the Iranian people.
Recent surveys show that a great number of people that voted for Mahmoud Ahmadinejad are not happy with their decision anymore. His resistance to answering the public’s questions about economic, political and security threats, as well as free speech, inflation, and other issues, demonstrates that the division between the public and the government, which is created by the President’s insistence on implementing his unpopular and poorly researched policies, is becoming even deeper. For a President who has closed ears and a wide and open mouth, however, this is only the beginning the way.
