
A silhouette of the US Regime's figurehead Donald Trump over a backdrop of the US Empire's flag (Left) as well as the Islamic Republic of Iran's (Right). Photo: Cradle.
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A silhouette of the US Regime's figurehead Donald Trump over a backdrop of the US Empire's flag (Left) as well as the Islamic Republic of Iran's (Right). Photo: Cradle.
By Kit Klarenberg  –  Feb 11, 2025
Newly leaked documents expose Washingtonâs ongoing, covert push for regime change in Iran. With millions funneled into secretive initiatives, the US aims to infiltrate civil society, manipulate political participation, and engineer unrest, all while keeping its Iranian beneficiaries in the shadows.
A bombshell leak reviewed by The Cradle exposes the depths of Washingtonâs long-running campaign to destabilize the Islamic Republic.Â
For years, the US State Departmentâs Near East Regional Democracy fund (NERD) has funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into covert operations aimed at toppling Tehranâs government â without success. Details on where this money goes and who benefits are typically concealed. However, this leak provides a rare glimpse into NERDâs latest regime-change blueprint.
Covert funding for Iranâs opposition
The document in question is a classified US State Department invitation for bids from private contractors and intelligence-linked entities such as the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) and USAID.Â
Circulated discreetly in August 2023, it solicited proposals to âsupport Iranian civil society, civic advocates, and all Iranian people in exercising their civil and political rights during and beyondâ the next yearâs electoral period, âin order to increase viable avenues for democratic participation.â
NERD summoned applicants to âpropose activitiesâ that would âstrengthen civil societyâs efforts to organize around issues of importance to the Iranian people during the election period and hold elected and unelected leaders accountable to citizen demands.âÂ
The State Department also wished to educate citizens on purported âflaws of Iranian electoral processes.â Submissions were to âpay special attention to developing strategies and activities that increase womenâs participation in civil society, advocacy, rule of law, and good governance efforts.â
The document is filled with lofty, euphemistic language. NERD claims to champion âparticipatory governance, economic reform, and educational advancement,â aiming to cultivate âa more responsive and responsible Iranian government that is internally stable and externally a peaceful and productive member of the community of nations.â In other words, another compliant western client state that serves imperial interests in West Asia rather than challenging them.
NERD envisaged successful applicants coordinating with âgovernments, civil society organizations, community leaders, youth and women activists, and private sector groupsâ in these grand plans.Â
State Department financing would produce âincreased diversity of uncensored mediaâ in Iran, while expanding âaccess to digital media through the use of secure communications infrastructure, tools, and techniques.â This would, it was forecast, improve the âability of civil society to organize and advocate for citizensâ interests.â
âHuman subjectsâ
NERD viewed Iranâs 2024 election cycle and the campaigning period as âopportunitiesâ for civil society infiltration. The plan envisioned a network of âcivic actorsâ engaged in electoral strategies ranging from âelectoral participationâ to âelectoral non-participationâ â in other words, either mobilizing voters or undermining turnout.Â
Meanwhile, âtechnical support and trainingâ would be offered to aspiring female, youth, and ethnic minority leaders at all levels of governance â though no âcurrently servingâ Iranian government official was eligible for assistance.
Once in place, this network of Iranian regime change operatives would, it was hoped, organize âmock national referendumsâ and other âunofficialâ political action outside the Islamic Republicâs formal structures to highlight the alleged disparity between government action and public will.Â
Iranians would also be assisted in drafting âmanifestosâ on the local populationâs âunmet needs and priorities.â Reference to how crippling US and EU-imposed sanctions contribute significantly to public discontent in Tehran was predictably absent. Instead, it stated:
âActivities should be nonpartisan and open to participation from a broad range of groups in order to encourage diverse actors to organize around common interests ⊠All proposed activities must clearly demonstrate an impact upon citizens and civil society groups inside Iran. Support may be provided in-country, through third-country activities with Iranian participants, or virtually through online channels, but the applicant must demonstrate a direct link to civil society actors inside Iran and the ability to engage with these individuals safely and effectively.â
Curiously, certain expenditures were explicitly prohibited, including support for âindividual political parties or attempts to advance a particular political agenda in Iran,â US-based activities, academic research, social welfare programs, commercial ventures, cultural festivals, and even âentertainment costs,â such as âreceptions, social activities, ceremonies, alcoholic beverages [and] guided tours.â
Most strikingly, the embargo extended to âmedical and psychological research or clinical studies using human subjects.â This raises unsettling questions about past NERD-funded projects: Have there been proposals involving human experimentation on Iranian or other foreign citizens? Were efforts to use alcohol as a destabilization tool previously entertained?
âRising protestsâ
It remains unknown which groups ultimately secured NERD funding for these regime-change efforts. The mainstream media maintains that such information is classified ostensibly due to âthe risk activists face from Iran.â However, Washingtonâs secrecy may have less to do with security concerns and more with obscuring the questionable nature of these covert operations.
Tehran long ago wisely banned the meddlesome, subversive activities of US government agencies and intelligence fronts on its soil. However, Washington continued to support multiple western-based Iranian âexileâ and diaspora groups, and associated NGOs, civil society groups, and propaganda platforms abroad.Â
While US officials have publicly acknowledged these efforts, the details â including the identities of sponsored groups and individuals â are systematically concealed.
For example, since-deleted public records show NED alone invested at least $4.6 million in 51 separate counter-revolutionary efforts in Iran between 2016 and 2021. This included financing labor unions, âstrengthening independent journalism,â creating a legal publication to encourage âlawyers, law students, and clericsâ to agitate for âdemocraticâ reforms, and multiple initiatives concerned with âempowering Iranian womenâ in business, politics, and society.Â
The organization charged with delivering a specific initiative was named in just seven cases â that being the DC-based Abdorrahman Boroumand Center.
The identities of the remaining 44 recipients remain unknown. Another erased NED entry reveals that in the year leading up to the September 2022 protests in Iran, the agency spent nearly $1 million on undisclosed projects focused on âhuman rightsâ advocacy.Â
Not a single participating organization was named. For instance, tens of thousands of US dollars were pumped into an anonymous entity to âmonitor, document, and report on human rights violations.â The organization would, moreover:
âWork closely with its network of human rights activists [in Iran] to build their capacity in reporting, advocacy, and digital security.â
Foreign influence and the hijacking of Iranâs protests
Itâs unclear whether this windfall in any way influenced the September 2022 mass unrest in Iran, but NED was markedly keeping an extremely close eye on events locally from an early stage. One week after demonstrations commenced, the Endowment encouraged anyoneinterested in âcoverage of the rising protestsâ to follow its aforementioned repeat grant recipient, the Abdorrahman Boroumand Center. While Iranian protests initially generated blanket western media coverage, they fizzled out as rapidly and abruptly as they began.
In a bitter irony, protestersâ energies were significantly dampened due to the brazen exploitation of the upheaval by western actors. Embittered activists openly complainedtheir cause had been âhijackedâ by foreign elements.Â
The most prominent of these US-based agitators is Masih Alinejad, an Iranian exile who has reaped hundreds of thousands of dollars from US government agencies for anti-Tehran propaganda operations. Falsely proclaiming herself to be âleadingâ the protest movement in the Islamic Republic was, it seems, sufficient to deter further action by locals on the ground.
This reveals the core reason why Washington conceals the recipients of its regime-change funding: Iranâs history of resisting western meddling makes its citizens deeply suspicious of foreign influence. Covert US backing erodes the legitimacy of opposition movements and fuels nationalist pushback.
Ironically, the Washington Post recently reported that many Iranians, across ideological lines, viewed US President Donald Trump’s administrationâs freeze on regime-change funding as an opportunity for meaningful political evolution.
In former US president Joe Bidenâs final year in office, the White House requested an additional $65 million for NERDâs operations, as outlined in the leaked tender. However, with this funding now in limbo, Iranâs western-backed opposition â largely dependent on foreign subsidies â finds itself in a state of paralysis.Â
As a result, a significant impediment to genuine diplomatic engagement between Washington and Tehran may have been removed. The coming months could reveal whether this shift opens new avenues for dialogue â or simply marks a temporary pause in Americaâs longstanding quest for regime change in Iran.
Kit Klarenberg is an investigative journalist exploring the role of intelligence services in shaping politics and perceptions.