The Scholarly Paradox of Abbas Milani: Historian, Advocate, or Policy Instrument?
Navigating the Contradictions of an Iranian-American Scholar at the Crossroads of Memory, Money, and Regime Change Abbas Milani, the Stanford-based historian and director of Iranian Studies, embodies a profound contradiction in contemporary Iranian scholarship. To his admirers, he is a rigorous archival researcher who has suffered under both the Shah's savak and the Islamic Republic—a double exile whose firsthand experience uniquely qualifies him to diagnose Iran's ailments. To his critics, however, he is a partisan operative whose institutional links to conservative think tanks, advocacy for "crippling sanctions," and uncanny embrace of the Pahlavi dynasty render him an instrument of Western regime-change agendas rather than an objective observer of Iranian reality. This article synthesizes the extensive debate surrounding Milani's reliability, examining the funding of the Iran Democracy Project, the statistical paradox of Iran's literacy boom under th...