DISPASSIONATE HOLOCAUST® INVESTIGATION OFF LIMITS

Boycott organized against
free marketplace of ideas in Iran

CH-TV, Vancouver, B.C. Sunday, 17 December 2006

PARIS — Nearly 40 European and North American research institutes
will suspend contacts with a leading Iranian think tank that helped
organize last week’s conference in Tehran of Holocaust deniers, a
Paris-based researcher said Saturday.

The institutes, including the Center for International Studies in Victoria,
have agreed to suspend ongoing programs with the Iranian Institute
for Political and International Studies, or IPIS, according to a statement
issued by Francois Heisbourg, who organized the boycott.

They have also refused participation in IPIS meetings or invite IPIS staff
to their own forums and to decline travel to Iran sponsored by the Iranian
institute.

The Dec. 11-12 conference in Tehran drew Holocaust deniers from around
the world to debate whether the Second World War genocide of Jews took
place. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a keynote speaker, said
that Israel will one day be “wiped out” and “humanity will achieve freedom.”

Boycott

The conference drew denunciations from around the world.

Researchers, led by Heisbourg, decided to issue their own form of protest
by boycotting the Iranian institute that organized the conference.

"It’s the equivalent for us of breaking off diplomatic relations between
embassies,” Heisbourg said in a telephone interview.

Heisbourg, chairman of the International Institute for Strategic Studies
in London and president of the Geneva Centre for Security Policy, said the
IPIS is a touchstone in Iran for foreign researchers.

The statement describes the IPIS as a “mainstream Iranian interface”
with foreign think tanks.

“Through its complicity with the deniers of the absolute evil that was the
Holocaust, IPIS has now forfeited its status as an acceptable partner,”
according to the statement.

IPIS had the leading role in organizing the Tehran conference, calling for
papers, sending invitations, arranging logistics, Heisbourg said.

“They convened the meeting and ran the meeting,” he said.

'A moral decision'

The decision to suspend contacts with the IPIS was a moral, not a political,
decision, Heisbourg said, “to make it very, very clear that every time a red
line is crossed there actually is a price to be paid. The price here is quite real.”

The decision to boycott IPIS will not be reconsidered without “an explicit
repudiation of Holocaust denial and a return to academic standards,” the
statement said.

Dozens of European and American experts signed on to the statement,
as well as several in Canada and Australia.

Heisbourg said that among the signatories are John Hamre, head of the
Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington; Volker Perthes,
director of Berlin’s Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik; Tomas Ries, director
of the Swedish Institute for International Affairs; Ognyan Minchev, director
of the Institute for Regional and International Studies in Sofia, Bulgaria;
Gordon Smith of the Center for International Studies in Victoria; Eugeniusz
Smolnar, director for the Center for International Relations in Warsaw, Poland;
Ross Babbage, director of Australia’s Strategy International.

An array of French signers includes Thierry de Montbrial, director of the
French Institute of International Relations.