U.S. launches 'virtual' embassy for Iran

The Web-based "embassy" went online Tuesday with versions in English and Farsi explaining why the administration has chosen a virtual diplomatic mission to further expand its effort to reach out to Iranians even as President Obama's attempts to engage the government in Tehran over its nuclear program have yet to succeed.
Earlier this year, the State Department launched a Farsi-language Twitter account and Facebook page aimed at providing news to Iranians about U.S. government policies and encouraging feedback. The virtual embassy is intended to complement the social media sites.
"This website is not a formal diplomatic mission, nor does it represent or describe a real U.S. embassy accredited to the Iranian government," the State Department said in an introductory note. "But, in the absence of direct contact, it can work as a bridge between the American and Iranian people."
The note lamented that the embassy hostage crisis — in which 52 Americans were held hostage by Islamist militants and students for 444 days from November 1979 to January 1981 — and breakdown in U.S.-Iran relations had cost America a valuable back-and-forth with ordinary Iranians.
"While the world knows that the United States lost an embassy in Iran, in fact, we lost more: we were deprived of a relationship with the Iranian people, access to Iranian society, and thousands of daily interactions between American and Iranian citizens," the department said.
In a video message, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the websites were an attempt to make up for the loss of dialogue between Americans and Iranians since the closure of the physical embassy in Tehran.
"Because the United States and Iran do not have diplomatic relations, we have missed some important opportunities for dialogue with you, the citizens of Iran," she said. "This is a platform for us to communicate with each other — openly and without fear — about the United States, about our policies, our culture, and the American people."
In addition to the introductory note and Clinton's message, the websites offer links to interviews Clinton has done with Farsi-language radio stations, Obama's Persian New Year Address to the Iranian people, various news stories along with information about obtaining U.S. visas and studying in the United States.