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"Satellite Images Raise Questions About Iran Threat, Experts Say," worries The Daily Beast. "Iran And Trading Partners Will Find Ways To Skirt Sanctions, Analysts Say," frets NPR. "Iran uses proxies to punch above its weight in the Middle East, experts say," declares NBC News. "Fuel from Iran is financing Yemen rebels' war, U.N. experts say," writes the Associated Press.
Experts say. Analysts say. Officials say. We hear these qualifiers constantly in the media and when it comes to reporting on Iran, experts, analysts, scholars and Fellows are consistently tapped to weigh in on the latest nefarious thing the "Islamic Republic" is up to now.
But who are these so-called experts? What's their track record like and what are their tangential, non-Iranian, related regional political goals? And what does a recent partnership between the Trump State Department and Foundation for Defense of Democracies that targets peace activists on social media tell us about the broader problem of so-called neutral experts? On today's episode, we'll dig into some of the resumes of the media's favorite experticians and breakdown how a revolving door of deeply ideological partisans use US media to pawn themselves off as apolitical scholars.
We are joined today by journalist and editor Arash Karami.
By Nima Shirazi and Adam Johnson4.8
38943,894 ratings
"Satellite Images Raise Questions About Iran Threat, Experts Say," worries The Daily Beast. "Iran And Trading Partners Will Find Ways To Skirt Sanctions, Analysts Say," frets NPR. "Iran uses proxies to punch above its weight in the Middle East, experts say," declares NBC News. "Fuel from Iran is financing Yemen rebels' war, U.N. experts say," writes the Associated Press.
Experts say. Analysts say. Officials say. We hear these qualifiers constantly in the media and when it comes to reporting on Iran, experts, analysts, scholars and Fellows are consistently tapped to weigh in on the latest nefarious thing the "Islamic Republic" is up to now.
But who are these so-called experts? What's their track record like and what are their tangential, non-Iranian, related regional political goals? And what does a recent partnership between the Trump State Department and Foundation for Defense of Democracies that targets peace activists on social media tell us about the broader problem of so-called neutral experts? On today's episode, we'll dig into some of the resumes of the media's favorite experticians and breakdown how a revolving door of deeply ideological partisans use US media to pawn themselves off as apolitical scholars.
We are joined today by journalist and editor Arash Karami.

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