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| The future doesn’t look bright at all. It seems the U.S. administration is bent on destroying anything that it can not control. And by doing this, it is losing all controls. |
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Saturday, 26 August 2006 Iran nuclear project forges ahead
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Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has inaugurated a new phase of a heavy water reactor project despite Western fears about its nuclear programme.
He said Iran posed no threat to other states, not even its "enemy" Israel.
Heavy water made at Arak will be used to cool a reactor being built that will create a plutonium by-product that could be used to make atomic warheads.
Observers say Iran's move aims to send a signal of defiance days ahead of a UN deadline to halt uranium enrichment.
The US says Tehran is trying to build a nuclear weapon, while Iran says it is building a reactor to supply the country with nuclear power.
The Iranian president toured the site at Arak, 190km (120 miles) south-west of Tehran.
After inaugurating the heavy water plant, he again said Iran would never abandon its nuclear programme, but that nuclear weapons were not its goal.
"Basically, there is no talk of nuclear weapons," he said. "There is no discussion of nuclear weapons. We are not a threat to anybody, even the Zionist regime which is a definite enemy of the people of the region."
The ceremony comes amid mounting international pressure for Iran to suspend its nuclear programme.
Earlier this week, Iran had offered "serious talks" in response to a package of incentives offered if, by 31 August, it halted uranium enrichment — another possible route to nuclear weapons.
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However, the US said suspension of research was required first, echoing French comments. China and Russia said earlier that talks were the only way forward.
Iran could face sanctions if it does not suspend its nuclear programme.
'Bone of contention'
BBC regional analyst Pam O'Toole says the heavy water reactor project at Arak has long been a bone of contention between Iran and some Western governments.
Arak was one of two Iranian nuclear facilities whose existence was revealed by an exiled Iranian opposition group four years ago. At that stage Iran had failed to declare its existence to the UN's nuclear watchdog, the IAEA.
The IAEA later called on Iran to reconsider construction of its heavy water reactor project.
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US vs. Iran — Is An Attack Inevitable?
Monday, 28 August 2006, Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
The Plan
In 1997 another set of Neo-Conservatives that included personalities such as Dick Cheney, Jeb Bush, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz Elliott Abrams, Lewis Libby, Eliot A. Cohen and others, created a think-tank organisation by the name of “The Project for the New American Century”.
They stated their vision of the new world in their “statement of Principles”.
To their credit, they were very honest about their goals.
They said:
We aim to make the case and rally support for American global leadership.
As the 20th century draws to a close, the United States stands as the world's pre-eminent power.
Having led the West to victory in the Cold War, America faces an opportunity and a challenge: Does the United States have the vision to build upon the achievements of past decades?
Does the United States have the resolve to shape a new century favorable to American principles and interests? [9] |
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US vs. Iran — Is An Attack Inevitable?
Monday, 28 August 2006, Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
The Plan
Stupid or not, this is exactly what the current US administration is trying to do.
After examining all the possible scenarios of how to forestall the US’ decline, it came up with one solution: control of oil fields.
If the US could physically control the sources of world energy, it could practically determine the growth of the world economies and by extension their military powers that were to challenge it in the future.
Of course, the US government could achieve a similar outcome by entering into an alliance with two major Middle Eastern countries Iran and Iraq, but this would require a rethink of its Israel strategy; something that a US president is not even allowed to contemplate.
So they tried to implement this grand strategy.
The current US administration under the pretext of “war on terror” invaded Iraq and occupied it.
Now we have to note that Iraq was chosen first because it was extremely weak.
After 8 years of war with Iran, a devastating war with the US and its coalition in Kuwait and nearly 10 years of sanctions, Iraq was in no position to put-up any kind of resistance.
On top of all these, the US government through its agents in UN team in Iraq had obtained blueprints of all military installations, and had even bought the general responsible for the defence of Baghdad.
It was envisaged that once Iraq was occupied and the population pacified, the US and UK forces would turn around and occupy the Iranian Southern oil region of Khuzestan.
The area is relatively flat and is ideal for armour assault.
Once the oil fields are occupied, it was thought, it would be only a matter of time for the regime in Tehran to collapse; paving the way for a puppet regime to be installed in Tehran. |
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| This simply can not continue. United States can not endure this for many more years. Its economy simply can not cope with these kinds of oil prices and the cost of military operations abroad. |
US vs. Iran — Is An Attack Inevitable?
Monday, 28 August 2006, Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
Open country for western corporations
When I talk about neo-colonisation of the Middle East I am speaking of the above laws and regulations.
United States, citing national security, has consistently refused to allow foreign companies or individuals to control major American companies.
The US congress refused to approve the sale of some US ports to a UAE company because of “national security” reasons. [13 ] [14 ]
If a foreigner wants to own more than a certain percentage of a US company (e.g., TVs, Newspapers etc) he/she has to become a US citizen.
Yet when it comes to Iraq, it is an open country for western corporations to do as they wish.
But as Murphy’s Law dictates, everything that can go wrong will go wrong; and in the case of Iraq it did go wrong.
First it took over 4 months to capture Saddam Hussein.
The number of troops employed was not sufficient for the job.
The people not only did not welcome the occupation troops with flowers but also started a full-blown guerrilla war as well.
Now the troops that were supposed to turn around and go into Iran had to stay to fight the insurgents.
The UN and others that were against the invasion were not going to help either
They had tried their best to stop the invasion without any success.
The Quagmire
This has left the US and UK governments in a quagmire.
They had calculated that the invasion of Iraq was going to cost around $100 billion.
“When Lawrence Lindsey, then President Bush's top economic adviser, said in September 2002 that war in Iraq might cost the United States as much as $200 billion, other top aides rebuked him and Bush fired him three months later.” [15 ]
Now the total Iraq war cost is estimated to reach as much as 2 trillion dollars. [16 ]
US had calculated that with a swift occupation of Iraq, the oil fields could be brought online, reducing the price of oil; this has also back-fired.
The oil fields, pipelines and installations have been under heavy insurgent fire. [17 ]
It is three years since Iraq was occupied and its oil fields still can not produce anything close to half of the 5 to 6 million barrel/day that the US/UK had envisaged.
The oil prices have stayed at 60 to 78 dollar range, with no sign of weakening.
This simply can not continue.
United States can not endure this for many more years.
Its economy simply can not cope with these kinds of oil prices and the cost of military operations abroad. |
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| Iran Malaysia to develop two offshore gas fields Ferdos and Golshan southeast of Iran |
US vs. Iran — Is An Attack Inevitable?
Monday, 28 August 2006, Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
The Quagmire
We all know that the higher oil prices affect GDPs negatively.
The only question is to what extend.
Colin Campbell and Jean Laherrère have studied this problem and published their result in the Journal of Applied Economics.
“We find that in the US the output loss resulting from a 100% oil price hike increases from around 3.5% in the linear approach to 5% in the scaled case.
Among the other oil importing countries, the respective increase in the output loss arising from the same shock is from around 2% to a range of 3 to 5% in the case of individual euro area countries, from less than 1% to 2% in the case of the euro area as a whole, and from very small values to around 1% in Canada.” [18]
Three and a half percent or five percent may sound marginal, but it is only when one looks at the dollar amount that one begins to see the significant of this loss.
(United States GDP 2005) 12.47 trillion dollars X 3.5% = 436.45 billion dollars.
(United States GDP 2005) 12.47 trillion dollars X 5% = 623.5 billion dollars.
The negative affect of higher oil prices on GDP has not been ignored by the United States.
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) estimates that the negative effect of high oil prices on U.S.
GDP will be felt for years to come. |
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Republican Congressional Report on Iran Riddled With Errors
Folks, we are being set up again.
On page 9, the report alleges that "Iran is currently enriching uranium to weapons grade using a 164-machine centrifuge cascade at this facility in Natanz."
This is an outright lie.
Enriching to weapons grade would require at least 80% enrichment.
Iran claims . . . 2.5 per cent.
See how that isn't the same thing?
See how you can't blow up anything with 2.5 percent?
The claim is not only flat wrong, but it is misleading in another way.
You need 16,000 centrifuges, hooked up so that they cascade, to make enough enriched uranium for a bomb in any realistic time fame, even if you know how to get the 80 percent!
Iran has . . . 164.
See how that isn't the same?
The report cites the International Atomic Energy Agency only when it is critical of Iran. It does not tell us what the IAEA actually has found.
...vastly exaggerates the range of Iran's missiles and also exaggerates the number of its longer-range ones, and seems to think that Iran already has the Shahab-4, which it does not.
It also doesn't seem to realize that Iran can't send missiles on other countries without receiving them back.
Israel has more and longer-range missiles than Iran, and can quickly equip them with real nuclear warheads, not the imaginary variety in Fleitz's fevered brain.
Folks, we are being set up again. |
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CBS Mike Wallace interview with Iranian Prime Minister Ahmadinejad
Condescending manner of a school principal lecturing the class clown for immature behavior.
Are you a Zionist? Ahmadinejad asked
On August 13, Sixty Minutes aired a segment that revealed a great deal about Islamophobia and the role the corporate media plays in its proliferation. In his recent open letter to Mike Wallace, Michael K. Smith declared: Your interview with Iranian Prime Minister Ahmadinejad was a disgrace to the journalistic profession.
You began with the condescending manner of a school principal lecturing the class clown for immature behavior and squandered the entire interview on hypocritically accusatory questions.
If gall were an Olympic sport, you’d take the Gold Medal.
Michael made some fine points throughout his letter.
However, I opine that he was too generous when he called Wallace’s vituperative verbal assault an interview.
What I witnessed was Mike Wallace, the Ugly American.
Brimming with contempt, impatience, hubris, and belligerence, he more closely resembled the Grand Inquisitor than a journalist.
Did Wallace truly fail to grasp that he was acting as an apologist and cheerleader for bellicose, heartless, and ruthless perpetrators of war crimes on behalf of Israel, and thus is a Zionist (as Ahmadinejad suggested)?
Through its grossly biased coverage of the "War on Terrorism" and mindless perpetuation of the inane myth that Israel has the right to annihilate an unlimited number of civilians to protect its "right to exist", CBS News has joined the squad of corporate media cheerleaders which has been shamelessly complicit in the Empire’s egregious crimes against humanity.
I submit that one can be a Zionist and a journalist.
Mike Wallace is living proof.
Yet in spite of Wallace’s tenacious efforts, the "devil incarnate", Ahmadinejad, remained composed.
At times Ahmadinejad seemed to thoroughly enjoy Wallace’s obvious "flustration" in attacking him from what has become an absurdly untenable position, both morally and logically.
For those of us who don’t believe the Western media fairy tale that the United States is a force for good engaged in a noble struggle in its bid to rid the world of the evil of Islam and defend Israel’s "right to exist", Wallace’s ill-fated attempt to expose the malevolence of the "enemy" was quite entertaining. |
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George Galloway: Blair, Olmert and Bush are murderers
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“Expanding and strengthening” the onslaught against the people of Lebanon.
That was Israel’s response to the international outcry over the slaughter of 56 civilians, most of them children, in Qana.
And with the world’s eyes turned to the increasingly savage offensive in southern Lebanon, Israel has tightened the noose of collective punishment around the Palestinians in Gaza.
Accompanying all this are the barely concealed calls in Washington for an assault on Iran and Syria.
No one should be in any doubt which way the chain of cause and effect runs.
George Bush, with Tony Blair at his heel, is backing Israel to the hilt because the US wants Hizbollah’s resistance in Lebanon smashed as a prelude to an attack on Iran.
In Washington, Blair alluded to such a war.
Catastrophe
It is their perverse reaction to the catastrophe engulfing the occupation in Iraq, where the number of US forces is now increasing rather than being “drawn down” as was promised to military families earlier this year.
To the Iraq disaster we can add Afghanistan, where Britain lost three more soldiers on Monday.
Where two wars have failed, perhaps a wider one might succeed.
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Such is the logic that is tearing hundreds of Lebanese civilians to shreds and is bringing us to the brink of a gigantic conflagration.
That is also the reasoning behind US, British and Israeli talk of imposing a foreign force in southern Lebanon.
This is not a plan for peace — it is a step to further war.
Blair using British airports
The belligerent forces — Israel, armed by the US, with Blair using British airports to act as quartermaster — are talking of sending troops as an alternative to a ceasefire.
They want the war to continue until Israel wins, and they want to deploy forces in southern Lebanon to help Israel win.
They are becoming more anxious to get other countries to send those troops precisely because Israel is not winning.
Its generals have been shocked by the effectiveness of Hizbollah’s military resistance.
Politically, the invasion of Lebanon — for that is what it is — is already a disaster for Israel and the US.
It has strengthened the national resistance in Lebanon, with Hizbollah at its centre.
Lebanon’s pro-Western Government speaks of Hizbollah as resistance fighters.
Far from reopening sectarian and confessional divisions, which the US and Israel hoped would embroil Hizbollah in civil war, the assault on Lebanon has rallied huge numbers of Christians, Druze and Sunni Muslims behind the banner of Hizbollah.
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Across the Middle East anger is boiling at Israel and the US certainly, but also at the corrupt kings and puppet presidents who are allowing the massacre of Lebanon to take place.
Millions are taking inspiration
Millions are taking inspiration from the Lebanese resistance.
It is that resistance that could halt the wider war drive and bring some relief to the besieged Palestinians.
Make no mistake, if that resistance is broken, the result will be no kind of peace, but an even wider war.
If Israel, the US and Britain win in southern Lebanon, I warn you not to be Iranian; I warn you not to be Syrian; I warn you not to be an infant in Gaza; I warn you not to be old in Bint Jbeil; I warn you not to thirst for freedom in Egypt; I warn you not to cry out for justice in Jordan; I warn you not to demand democracy in Saudi Arabia — for if the imperialist forces win in Lebanon, more Middle Eastern countries will be dragged into the maw of war, and the hand of reaction will be strengthened everywhere.
Fire will be lit under every throne
But if they are defeated, if the resistance led by Hizbollah halts the invasion of Lebanon, if it refuses to kneel before imperial might, then a fire will be lit under every throne and in every corrupt chancellery from the Atlantic coast of North Africa to the banks of the Euphrates.
It will speed the day when the impoverished masses across the region take control of their destiny. It will give new hope to the Palestinians.
It will inspire those Israelis, currently few in number, who know the next six decades cannot be like the last and that there must be justice for Palestine. It will bring us closer to a durable peace.
And, in humbling the masters of global military and economic power, it will embolden everyone who is fighting for a better world. |
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Juggernaut Gathering Momentum, Headed for Iran
By Ray McGovern t r u t h o u t | Perspective Monday 06 February 2006 [Images inserted by TheWE.biz]
What President George W. Bush, FOX news, and the Washington Times were saying about Iraq three years ago they are now saying about Iran.
After Saturday's vote by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to report Iran's suspicious nuclear activities to the UN Security Council, the president wasted no time in warning, "The world will not permit the Iranian regime to gain nuclear weapons."
The next IAEA milestone will be reached on March 6, when its director, Mohamed ElBaradei, makes a formal report to the Security Council regarding what steps Iran needs to take to allay growing suspicions.
The Bush administration, however, has already mounted a full-court press to indict and convict the Iranian leaders, and the key question is why.
Iran signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty and insists (correctly) that the treaty assures signatories the right to pursue nuclear programs for peaceful use.
And when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice claims, as she did last month:
"There is simply no peaceful rationale for the Iranian regime to resume uranium enrichment."
She is being, well, disingenuous again.
If Dr. Rice has done her homework, she is aware that in 1975 President Gerald Ford's chief of staff Dick Cheney and his defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld bought Iran's argument that it needed a nuclear program to meet future energy requirements.
This is what Iranian officials are saying today, and they are supported by energy experts who point out that oil extraction in Iran is already at or near peak and that the country will need alternatives to oil in coming decades.
Ironically, Cheney and Rumsfeld were among those persuading the reluctant Ford in 1976 to approve offering Iran a deal for nuclear reprocessing facilities that would have brought at least $6.4 billion for US corporations like Westinghouse and General Electric.
The project fell through when the Shah was ousted three years later.
It is altogether reasonable to expect that Iran's leaders want to have a nuclear weapons capability as well, and that they plan to use their nuclear program to acquire one.
From their perspective, they would be fools not to.
Iran is one of three countries earning the "axis-of-evil" sobriquet from President Bush and it has watched what happened to Iraq, which had no nuclear weapons, as well as what did not happen to North Korea, which does have them.
And Iran's rival Israel, which has not signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty but somehow escapes widespread opprobrium, has a formidable nuclear arsenal cum delivery systems.
Israeli threats to destroy Iranian nuclear facilities simply provide additional incentive to Tehran to bury and harden them against the kind of Israeli air attack that destroyed the Iraqi nuclear facility at Osirak in 1981.
Although the US (together with every other UN Security Council member) condemned that attack, Dick Cheney and other senior officials do not disguise their view that it was just what the doctor ordered at the time ... and that the same prescription might take care of Iran.
Who Is Threatened by Iranian Nukes?
The same country that felt threatened by putative nuclear weapons in the hands of Iraq.
With at least 200 nuclear weapons and various modes of delivery at their disposal, the Israelis have a powerful deterrent.
They appear determined to put that deterrent into play early to pre-empt any nuclear weapons capability in Iran, rather than have to deal with one after it has been put in place.
Israeli leaders seem allergic to the thought that other countries in the region might be able to break its nuclear monopoly and they react neuralgically to proposals for a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East.
Bending over backwards to such sensitivities, the US delegation to the IAEA delayed the proceedings for a day in a futile attempt to delete from Sunday's report language calling for such a zone.
The final report called for a "Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction."
This is the first time a link has been made, however implicitly, between the Iranian and Israeli nuclear programs.
The argument that the US is also threatened directly by nuclear weapons in Iranian hands is as far-fetched as was the case before the war in Iraq, when co-opted intelligence analysts were strongly encouraged to stretch their imaginations — to include, for example the specter that Iraqi weapons of mass destruction could be delivered by unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAVs) launched from ships off the US coast.
No, I'm not kidding. They even included this in the infamous National Intelligence Estimate (NIE) of October 1, 2002.
That canard was held up to ridicule by the US Air Force, which was permitted to take a footnote in the NIE.
The scare story nonetheless provided grist for the president's key speech in Cincinnati on October 7, 2002 — three days before Congress voted to authorize war.
That was also the speech in which he also warned, "Facing clear evidence of peril, we cannot wait for the final proof — the smoking gun — that could come in the form of a mushroom cloud."
While Congress was voting for war on October 10, more candid observations came in highly unusual remarks from a source with excellent access to high-level thinking at the White House.
Philip Zelikow, at the time a member of the prestigious President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board and confidant of then-national security adviser Condoleezza Rice (and later Executive Director of the 9/11 commission), said this to a crowd at the University of Virginia:
Why would Iraq attack America or use nuclear weapons against us?
I'll tell you what I think the real threat is and actually has been since 1990 — it's the threat against Israel.
And this is the threat that dare not speak its name ... the American government doesn't want to lean too hard on it rhetorically, because it is not a popular sell.
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To kind of catapult the propaganda.
More recently, in the case of Iran, President Bush has been unabashed in naming Israel as the most probable target of any Iranian nuclear weapons.
He has also created a rhetorical lash-up of the US and Israel, referring three times in the past two weeks to Israel as an "ally" of the US, as if to condition Americans to the notion that the US is required to join Israel in any confrontation with Iran.
For example, on February 1 the president told the press, "Israel is a solid ally of the United States; we will rise to Israel's defense if need be."
Asked if he meant the US would rise to Israel's defense militarily, Bush replied with a startlingly open-ended commitment, "You bet, we'll defend Israel."
In repeatedly labeling Israel our "ally," Bush is following his own corollary to the dictum of Nazi propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels that if you repeat something often enough, most people will believe it.
In an unusual moment of candor in a discussion of domestic affairs last May, Bush noted:
That's the third time I've said that.
I'll probably say it three more times.
See, in my line of work you got to keep repeating things over and over again for the truth to sink in, to kind of catapult the propaganda.
Why No Treaty?
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The trouble is that, strictly speaking, allies are not picked by presidential whim — or by smart staffers like the top Bush aide who bragged that he and his colleagues are "history's actors ... creating new realities."
Bush's speech writers are acting as though the "new realities" they create can include defense treaties.
But unless they've changed the Constitution, in our system nations become allies via treaty; and treaties have to be approved by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.
There is no treaty of alliance with Israel.
But why? Earlier, I had had the impression that it must be because of US reluctance — despite widespread sympathy for Israel — to get entangled in the complexities of the Middle East and gratuitously antagonize Arab countries.
Comparing notes with Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) colleagues with more experience in the Middle East, however, I learned that the Israelis themselves have shown strong resistance to a US-Israel defense treaty — for reasons quite sound from their perspective, and quite instructive from ours.
The possibility of a bilateral treaty was broached after the 1973 Yom Kippur war as a way to reduce chances of armed conflict between Israel and its Arab neighbors.
But before the US could commit to defending Israel, its boundaries would have had to be defined, and the Israelis wanted no part of that.
Moreover, the Israelis feared that a defense pact would curb their freedom of action — as would signing the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
They were aware that in a crisis situation, the US would almost certainly discourage them from resorting to their familiar policy of massive — often disproportionate — retaliation against the Arabs.
It became quite clear that the Israelis did not want the US to have any say over when they would use force, against whom, and what (US or non-US) equipment might be employed.
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Aside from all that, the Israelis were, and are, confident that their influence in Washington is such as to ensure US support, no matter what.
And, as President Bush's rhetoric demonstrates, they are correct in thinking they can, in effect, have their cake and eat it too — a commitment equivalent to a defense treaty, with no binding undertakings on Israel's part.
That is a very volatile admixture.
Congress would do well to wake up to its Constitutional prerogatives and responsibilities in this key area — particularly now that the juggernaut to war has begun to roll.
Preparing the Public
One major task is to convince the public and, as far as possible, our allies that the Iran-nuclear problem is critical.
This would be an uphill task, were it not for the success of our domesticated media in suppressing the considered judgment of the US intelligence community that Iran is nowhere near a nuclear weapon.
Washington Post reporter Dafna Linzer, to her credit, drew on several inside sources to report on August 2, 2005, that the latest NIE concludes Iran will not be able to produce enough highly enriched uranium for a nuclear weapon until "early to mid-next decade," with general consensus among intelligence analysts that 2015 would actually be the earliest.
That important information was ignored in other media and quickly dropped off the radar screen.
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In the Washington of today there is no need to bother with unwelcome intelligence that does not support the case you wish to make.
Polls show that hyped-up public statements on the threat from Iran are having some effect, and indiscriminately hawkish pronouncements by usual suspects like senators Joseph Lieberman and John McCain are icing on the cake.
Ahmed Chalabi-type Iranian "dissidents" have surfaced to tell us of secret tunnels for nuclear weapons research, and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld keeps reminding the world that Iran is the "world's leading state sponsor of terrorism."
Administration spokespeople keep warning of Iranian interference on the Iraqi side of their long mutual border — themes readily replayed in FOX channel news and the Washington Times.
This morning's Chicago Tribune editorial put it this way:
There will likely be an economic confrontation with Iran, or a military confrontation, or both.
Though diplomatic efforts have succeeded in convincing most of the world that this matter is grave, diplomatic efforts are highly unlikely to sway Iran.
On Saturday, Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist insisted that Congress has the political will to use military force against Iran, if necessary, repeating the mantra " We cannot allow Iran to become a nuclear nation."
Even Richard Perle has come out of the woodwork to add a convoluted new wrinkle regarding the lessons of the attack on Iraq.
Since one cannot depend on good intelligence, says Perle, it is a matter of "take action now or lose the option of taking action."
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One of the most influential intellectual authors of the war on Iraq, Perle and his "neo-conservative" colleagues see themselves as men of biblical stature.
Just before the attack on Iraq, Perle prophesized:
If we just let our vision of the world go forth, and we embrace it entirely and we don't try to piece together clever diplomacy, but just wage a total war ... our children will sing great songs about us years from now.
Those songs have turned out to be funeral dirges for over 2,250 US troops and tens of thousands of Iraqis
Ray McGovern works with Tell the Word, the publishing arm of the ecumenical Church of the Saviour. He was a CIA analyst for 27 years and is now on the Steering Group of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS). |
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Published on Tuesday, December 19, 2006 by the Inter Press Service
Holy Warriors Set Sights on Iran by Bill Berkowitz Over the past 20 years, the U.S. Christian right has evolved into one of the most powerful grassroots organising forces within the Republican Party, and a host of Christian Zionists have taken a well-earned seat at the foreign policy table. At the same time, their support for Israel is not only growing — it is also becoming an influential political factor.
Several prominent Christian right and conservative Jewish leaders have teamed up to found organisations that have provided millions of dollars to Israeli charities, lobbied in support of policies advanced by right wing leaders in Israel, opposed President George W. Bush's so-called "Road Map" to peace in the Middle East, and have helped defray the costs of the immigration of Russian Jews to Israel, among other activities.
While the Reverends Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell have been longtime supporters of Israel, the founding earlier this year of Christians United for Israel by John Hagee, the pastor of the 18,000-member Cornerstone Church in San Antonio, Texas, drew a great deal of media attention.
As Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert's popularity has plummeted since the end of the Israel-Hezbollah conflict, Christian Zionists in the United States view the outcome not only as a defeat for Israel, but also as a prelude to a much wider war. In fact, they think the conflict might be a sign of impending Armageddon.
The end of the world as we know it is rapidly approaching
"The end of the world as we know it is rapidly approaching," Hagee wrote in his most recent book, "Jerusalem Countdown: A Warning to the World".
"Just before us is a nuclear countdown with Iran," he wrote, "followed by Ezekiel's war (as described in Ezekiel, chapters 38 and 39), and then the final battle — the battle of Armageddon."
For Hagee, bestselling author Joel Rosenberg and other Christian Zionists, Israel plays the critical role in End Time scenarios.
Their books, commentaries, and public statements reflect their beliefs that serial conflicts in the Middle East are a sign of the biblical prophesy presaging Armageddon, the return of Jesus Christ, and the final battle for the souls of mankind.
And some have started to train their sights on Tehran. In a recent blog post datelined Jerusalem, Rosenberg wrote: "The buzz here in the last few days is that Israel is seriously considering a preemptive strike against Iran's nuclear facilities and ballistic missile sites."
Given Israel's less than sterling performance against Hezbollah this past summer, Rosenberg was not convinced that Israel "has the capacity — or the will — at the moment to neutralise the Iranian nuclear and ballistic missile threat."
However, with "a new Hitler rising in Iran", it is up to U.S. President George W. Bush, who met with Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in Washington in mid-November, to deal with the Iranian threat: "If President Bush believes Iran needs to be neutralised (and I believe he does), and he is convinced that military action is the only way (I don't believe he is there right now), then the U.S. should take the lead."
After all, wrote Rosenberg, "If anyone is going to stop Iran from threatening the world with nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them, it has to be soon, perhaps no later than the end of 2007. After all, 2008 is an American election year.
"2009 will be the start of a new administration.
"By then it may be too late. The thermonuclear genie may be out of the bottle."
The Israeli/Hezbollah war led several U.S. cable television news networks to raise questions about whether the crisis in the Middle East was a signal that the "End Times" were approaching.
Rosenberg, author of such apocalyptic political thrillers as "The Copper Scroll," "The Ezekiel Option," and "The Last Jihad," was invited to appear on CNN and the Fox News Channel.
Made several visits to "speak at a White House Bible study
In one recent appearance, Rosenberg said that he had made several visits to "speak at a White House Bible study" and had conversations with "a number of congressional leaders and Homeland Security, Pentagon [officials] about my novels, which are based on Bible prophecy."
Rosenberg said that "the question that's been most interesting among these various administration and congressional officials is, 'Are you saying that the Bible talks about an alliance between Iran, Russia, and a group of Middle Eastern countries to attack Israel at some point?' And the answer is yes."
Some critics charge that Rosenberg is a self-promoter with little real understanding of Judaism.
"Rosenberg chooses to trade in his private salvation narrative as way of winning readers, exploiting contacts, and most dangerously — political ventriloquism," said Rabbi Haim Dov Beliak, the co-founder of JewsOnFirst.org, a website devoted to protecting free speech, and the rabbi of Beth Shalom Temple in Whittier, California.
"In this case, political ventriloquism is using the 'voice' of Jews to their eventual detriment — while claiming it is for their benefit — and seeking, what I as a believing Jew, must describe as apostasy against Judaism and God," he told IPS.
"Rooting for war with Iran and lobbying for world destruction using Israel, as catalytic agent, is no longer 'entertainment' — it is obscene."
Rosenberg was an important but mostly behind-the-scenes figure in the conservative movement until his first novel "The Last Jihad" became a bestseller.
A Jew who converted to Christianity more than 30 years ago, he had worked for former Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Israeli politician and author Natan Sharansky, U.S. business magazine magnate Steve Forbes, and right-wing radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh. He is also a former Heritage Foundation staffer.
"The Last Jihad," completed before the 9/11 Trade Centre and Pentagon attacks, propelled Rosenberg into the spotlight.
The novel featured a hijacked jet making a kamikaze-like attack against the president of the United States, simultaneous terrorist strikes on the U.S., London, Paris and Saudi Arabia, an oil deal between Israel and the Palestinians that threatened to unleash a war with Iraq, and a possible preemptive nuclear strike.
In a late-October interview with the Washington Times, Rosenberg told reporter Chrissie Thompson that he didn't think that his novels "were going to predict the future... I was basing them on a series of Bible prophecies, but when [they] started to come true... that has been striking for all of us, myself included."
Another of his novels, "The Ezekiel Option," is described by Rosenberg as "a political thriller about the threat of a Russian-Iranian alliance to destroy Israel based on the Biblical prophecies found in the Book of Ezekiel, chapters 38 and 39."
These prophecies, according to Rosenberg, "describe what Bible scholars call the war of Gog and Magog. Russia and Iran form a military alliance with Lebanon, Syria and a group of other Middle East countries to destroy Israel in what Ezekiel described as the last days."
In recent months Rosenberg has suggested that Russia be added to the Bush administration's "axis of evil".
Recently, Rosenberg, and his wife Lynn, co-founded the Joshua Fund, which "partner[s] with evangelical ministries in the Middle East to provide desperately needed resources to Christians in the region to bless their neighbours in need in the name of Jesus.."
According to Richard Bartholomew, the Fund's two "humanitarian aid" efforts are called the "Project to Bless Israel" and the "Project to Bless Lebanon."
"Lebanese refugees will get 'Bags of Blessing', to be distributed by Campus Crusade for Christ and local evangelicals," Bartholomew reported.
The bags will include food and other basic items like soap and aspirin, he said, as well as a Jesus film DVD in Arabic.
However, Bartholomew clarified that while the Lebanese refugees will receive the Jesus DVD, the Israelis "will be spared a similar Jesus DVD in Hebrew, for obvious political reasons."
Copyright © 2006 IPS-Inter Press Service
Common Dreams © 1997-2006 |
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Monday, 17 January, 2005 US rebuts 'Iran covert op' claim
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The Pentagon has hit back at claims by investigative reporter Seymour Hersh that US commandos are carrying out covert operations inside Iran.
A spokesman said Hersh's New Yorker magazine article was based on rumour, innuendo and conspiracy theories.
"Errors of fundamental fact" destroyed the article's credibility, he said.
Hersh argues that US forces, aided by intelligence from Pakistan, have been inside Iran, identifying military targets for future air strikes.
A Pakistani foreign ministry spokesman has described the reports of collaboration with the US over Iran as "far-fetched".
Hersh, an award-winning reporter who last year revealed abusive practises at the US military's Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq,
quotes unnamed intelligence officials as saying Iran is the Bush administration's "next strategic target".
He says US special forces have been conducting reconnaissance missions inside Iran for six months.
'Intelligence coup'
Pentagon spokesman Laurence DiRita said on Monday that Hersh's article did not do justice to the "global challenge" posed by the "Iranian regime's apparent nuclear ambitions and its demonstrated support for terrorist organisations".
Mr DiRita said the article was "so riddled with errors of fundamental fact" as to destroy its entire credibility.
"Views and policies" ascribed by Hersh to several top US defence department officials were not accurate, he said.
Hersh has told the BBC the White House is trying to make a plausible case that Tehran is cheating UN weapons inspectors in order to justify possible future military action against it.
He says the Pentagon is taking over much of the responsibility for covert "deniable" military operations from the CIA,
in what amounts to an "intelligence coup" within the US.
The BBC's Justin Webb in Washington says that while Hersh could be wrong, he has a series of scoops to his name, including
the details of the Abu Ghraib prison abuse scandal last year.
His track record suggests that he should be taken seriously, our correspondent says.
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Monday, 24 January, 2005
US 'terminates' Iranian website
Iran has accused the US government of ordering an American internet service provider to stop hosting the website of an official Iranian news agency.
The Iranian Student News Agency said no explanation had been given by the server, called The Planet, for its abrupt move to terminate the contract.
Isna, which is widely read in Iran, says it has moved to another server, which it did not name.
The Planet was unable to comment immediately on the allegations.
The row has led to calls for Iran to develop its own satellite technology.
Isna said it had received an e-mail from The Planet warning that the website would be terminated within 48 hours and that the decision was final and non-negotiable.
'Breakdown of trust'
The agency said it had sent repeated e-mails to the server, and then telephoned, but no satisfactory reason was given for the breach of contract.
A senior official in the Iranian ministry of Islamic guidance, which handles the media, accused the US government of breaching human rights by allegedly ordering the move.
He said it was a sign that Iran could not trust the US or Europe.
The BBC's Frances Harrison in Tehran says the incident has prompted renewed pressure on Iran and other Islamic nations to build up their own satellite communications technology.
This means they would no longer be dependent on the US or European countries.
Other official Iranian websites which also use American servers are braced for similar action against them, our correspondent adds.
Iran was last week cited as a "outpost of tyranny" by Condoleezza Rice, President Bush's choice for new US secretary of state, and it was and labelled the world's chief potential trouble-spot by Vice-President Dick Cheney.
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Photo: Aljazzera/Gallo/Getty |
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Wednesday, October 3, 2007 Ahmadinejad's message to the world
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By Mark LeVine
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(An inaccurate translation of the Persian "bayad az safheh-ye ruzgar mahv shavad," which is better — but less violently and therefore less usefully — rendered in English as "erased from the page of time" or "fate").
Even Lee Bollinger, the president of Columbia University, introduced him with an unprecedented — and to the minds of many academics, not to mention Iranians, uncouth — verbal attack, accusing him of being little more than a "petty dictator".
[Ignorance, not to mention a knee-bending pandering to the elite, sadly has become the most prominent feature of University Presidents in the waxing fascist state that now is the US, a practice now copied by many teachers of academics in Western countries - Kewe TheWE.biz]
In its critiques of Ahmadinejad's speech at Columbia, the mainstream US press focused most of its attention on Ahmadinejad's tendentious claim that "there are no homosexuals in Iran" (belied by an evening stroll through Tehran's famous Daneshjoo Park), and his attempt to redefine his position on the Holocaust (it happened, but more research is needed to know its true extent).
At the UN, his criticism of "widespread human rights violations" elicited the expected derisive response in light of his own government's increasingly repressive policies, while his declaration that the nuclear case against Iran "is closed" suggested, to most commentators, continued intransigence by Iran in the face of supposedly universal opposition to its nuclear programme.
Discourteous treatment'
Few commentators considered how Ahmadinejad's words were heard outside of the US media circus.
And those who did, such as Timothy Rutton of the LA Times, focused purely on the reaction in the Muslim world, arguing that, as a "totalitarian demagogue", Ahmadinejad gained legitimacy because of the discourteous treatment by Columbia's president.
Rutton wrote: "Bollinger's denunciation was icing on the cake, because the constituency the Iranian leader cares about is scattered across an Islamic world that values hospitality and its courtesies as core social virtues."
"To that audience, Bollinger looked stunningly ill-mannered; Ahmadinejad dignified and restrained."
Underlying Rutton's argument is the still-widespread belief, whose roots lie deep in Europe and America's histories as imperial powers, that Muslims and the other formerly colonised peoples value "honour", "pride" and "hospitality" far more than they do issues of substance.
Indeed, they remain incapable of making well-reasoned and documented criticisms of a West, and the United States in particular, that remains by definition technologically, politically, and morally superior to the developing world.
'Poverty and deprivation'
It's no wonder, then, that almost no one in the American media focused on the substantive claims of Ahmadinejad's speech at the UN.
Chief among them were his argument regarding the "alarming situation of poverty and deprivation".
"Let me draw your attention to some data issued by the United Nations," he said, before calling to the attention of the world's leaders the fact that close to one billion people live on less than $1-a-day and that there is a rapidly increasing gap between the world's rich and poor.
He mentioned the continued disgraceful figures for infant mortality, schooling and related human development indicators in the developing world.
Perhaps wanting to be courteous, Ahmadinejad blamed "certain big powers" for the plight of a large share of humanity — he might have added that according to UN estimates almost half the world lives on less than $2 per day.
But he didn't need to name names; most of the developing world, including the Muslim world, share his belief that their plight is linked to a world economic system whose goal, for more than half a millennium, has been to exploit the peoples and resources of the rest of the world for the benefit of the more advanced countries of the West.
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Discourteous treatment
That is precisely why so many people in the developing world remain opposed to Western-sponsored globalisation, which for most critics, including in the Arab/Muslim world, is little more than imperialism dressed up in the rhetoric of "free markets" and "liberal democracy".
It is this much wider audience, from the favelas of Rio De Janeiro and the shanty towns of Lagos as much as the slums of Casablanca, Sadr City or Cairo, to whom Ahmadinejad was speaking.
His discourse was strikingly similar to that of his biggest ally, Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president, who in his speech before the assembly last year had fewer qualms (perhaps because he's neither Arab nor Muslim) about pointing fingers at whom he considers responsible for the sorry shape of so much of the world.
Hoisting Noam Chomsky's Hegemony or Survival above his head, he exclaimed that "the hegemonic pretensions of US imperialism ... put at risk the very survival of humankind".
America, not Iran, Chavez argued, is "the greatest threat looming over our planet".
The Ahmadinejad-Chavez axis has been compared by American politicians such as Florida Republican Congressman Connie Mack to the relationship between Fidel Castro and Russia.
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Such analogies are far off the mark.
A more accurate historical comparison would be to the relationship between Egypt's Gemal Abdel Nasser and India's Jawaharlal Nehru, when both came together at the Bandung conference in 1955 to attempt to build a coherent bloc of nations that could protect its interests against those of the two major superpowers, the US and the Soviet Union.
'Human underdogs'
Writing after attending the Bandung Conference, the American novelist Richard Wright exclaimed that it was a meeting of "the despised, the insulted, the hurt, the dispossessed - in short, the underdogs of the human race".
It was this shared experience of oppression that grounded the "Bandung Spirit", which leaders such as Nasser used to develop the "pan-" ideologies (-Arab, -African, -American, -Islamic) that proved a thorn in the side of US policymakers for much of the Cold war.
The difference between Chavez and Ahmadinejad and their "Third World" predecessors, is, in a word, oil.
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'Courteous treatment' — that's how you do it, Columbia Iran and Venezuela possess the third- and seventh-largest oil reserves in the world, totaling well over 200 billion barrels — that's not much less than the proven reserves of Saudi Arabia. The two countries will earn well over $80bn in revenues this year alone. As important, both countries possess non-oil sectors that are surprisingly robust, according to many estimates, for the majority of both Iran's and Venezuela's Gross Domestic Product. This provides both countries with billions of dollars to spend on foreign aid, as demonstrated by Ahmadinejad's stopover in Bolivia, where he pledged $1bn in Iranian aid and development to the poverty stricken country. US policymakers' view of the world through the "you're either with us or against us" prism divides the globe into those who support the US and Europe (and the "West" more broadly), and those who support al-Qaeda and "Islamofascism", a term which has been created precisely to ensure that Americans conflate Osama bin Laden with Ahmadinejad, and both with Hitler. But few people outside of the West buy this comparison, or the larger black-and-white world-view it reflects. Instead, in Africa and Latin America, Ahmadenijad's argument that "humanity has had a deep wound on its tired body caused by impious powers for centuries" resonates far more deeply than George Bush's hollow-sounding calls for democracy and "ending tyranny". |
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Colonial rule
The West advises Africa to "get over" colonialism, but the pain of colonial rule is still felt by those suffering under the policies imposed by the IMF and/or the World Bank, or from the continued subsidisation of American and European agribusiness while their countries are flooded with below-market wheat, soy or corn.
It is to those people whom Ahmadinejad promised — in language that strikingly mirrors US President Bush's often religiously-hued speeches — that "the era of darkness will end" with the "dawn of the liberation of, and freedom for, all humans".
Americans may not like Ahmadinejad's or Chavez's internal politics, ideological orientations, or foreign policies.
But for most of the third world, which is tired of centuries of domination by the West, the two leaders are a breath of fresh air, who are coming not as conquerors, but as comrades.
They are free of the condescending "civilising mission" that, from Napoleon's invasion of Egypt to the US invasion of Iraq, always seem to include war, occupation, and the appropriation of strategic natural resources under foreign control as part of their mandate.
And because of this, most of the citizens of the developing world, rightly or wrongly, couldn't care less about Ahmadinejad's positions on Israel, the Holocaust, and nuclear weapons, never mind homosexuals, none of which affect them directly.
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They care only that he is sticking-it-to their old colonial or Cold war masters, and offering "respect", "friendship" and billions of dollars in aid with no strings attached.
Americans, Europeans and Israelis can fret about it all they want, but it will not change this reality.
Only a reorientation of the world economy towards real sustainability and equality will dampen his appeal, and that's not likely to happen soon.
Which means that Americans will be hearing a lot more of Ahmadinejad and leaders like him in the future.
The question is, will they be listening?
Subtitles, captions, added by TheWE.biz |
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Iran generations Youth seeking Shopping in Tehran Iran New Year Norouz |
Last Victims of Hitler Holocaust — Click here He is just a helpless baby My son was killed He was peacefully sleeping in his cradle |
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