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March 24, 2007 at 00:01:47

Detente or Appeasement?e

by Jubin Afshar     Page 1 of 2 page(s)

http://www.opednews.com

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Among the most curious aspects of the debate over how to handle the rogue Iranian regime is perhaps the strew of Iran pundits who consistently argue in favor of accepting the current status quo in Iran, recognizing the Iranian regime as a major regional power, and providing security guarantees for its political survival, and recognizing it on par with a regional superpower to be reckoned with.

Such Iran experts argue that the Iranian regime enjoys widespread domestic support, wields a hefty military punch, and is a formidable enemy if the US or the West were to ever think of confronting it in its pursuit of suspected nuclear weapons or support of terrorism.

Most notable among such experts are Ray Takeyh, Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, Vali Nasr, Adjunct Senior Fellow for Middle East Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, and Gary Sick of the Gulf 2000 Project at Columbia University.

In his latest article in Foreign Affairs, Tekeyh calls for bolstering the standing of “pragmatists” in Iran’s elite who supposedly want to move the country away from confrontation with the United States.

In his article, “Time for Détente With Iran,” Takeyh writes, “If it hopes to tame Iran, the United States must rethink its strategy from the ground up. The Islamic Republic is not going away anytime soon, and its growing regional influence cannot be limited. Washington must eschew superficially appealing military options, the prospect of conditional talks, and its policy of containing Iran in favor of a new policy of détente. In particular, it should offer pragmatists in Tehran a chance to resume diplomatic and economic relations. Thus armed with the prospect of a new relationship with the United States, the pragmatists would be in a position to sideline the radicals in Tehran and try to tip the balance of power in their own favor. The sooner Washington recognizes these truths and finally normalizes relations with its most enduring Middle Eastern foe, the better.”

Indeed, the sooner Washington succumbs to these fantasies the sooner the Iranian regime’s grand plan for regional hegemony and consolidation of its brutal religious rule over a restive Iranian populace will be realized and the US will yet again gain notoriety among Iranians as siding with their oppressors. This of course is something that the Bush Administration has ruled out.

Takeyh and the Council on Foreign Relations like to think of the above policy formulation as paradigm shift in U.S. diplomacy. However, what is clear is that the above has been the US and European foreign policy modus operandi for the past decade and a half in their dealings with Tehran.

For two decades now, the Europeans and the Clinton Administration in the 90’s have futilely sought negotiating partners in Tehran in a vain effort to woo the regressive religious regime back to modern times. Indeed, it was in the early 90’s that it was first argued that “moderates” such as then Iranian president Rafsanjani are closet reformers biding their time to bring Iran back to the fold. It turned out that Rafsanjani was more interested in using the Western fascination with his connivance to launch a series of bloody assassinations in Western Europe and line his pockets with Iranian oil money.

The would-be Iran pundits did not lose heart however and persevered until Khatami arrived on a white horse to rescue the pipe dream of moderates within the Iranian religious theocracy. Khatami seduced his Western audience with skill and squeezed as much juice out of Western appeasers as he could. After all he was the Minister of Propaganda (ie: Information Minister) in the war years and a mullah with fairly good oratory skills but little substance. In the meantime, the regime rushed full speed to clandestinely develop the deadly tools to realize its designs for regional hegemony, i.e. nuclear weapons capability and the delivery means that could threaten Israel, Europe and eventually the United States.

Khamenei, the regime’s supreme leader and unelected despot, finally pulled the rug from under the appeasement camp’s feet in the summer of 2005 by robbing them of their would-be champion, and maneuvered Ahmadinejad to power. With the firebrand president spewing hatred and bigotry, our Iran pundits must have felt like chumps who had their pockets picked in the middle of the dance floor.

Reeling from the loss of Khatami and the drubbing of Rafasanjani in sham elections in Iran, they began to fantasize about differences between Khamenei and Ahmadinejad himself. What a sad case of delusion. Imagine having to acquiesce to Khamenei as the champion of moderation in Iran. But this was precisely what we were hearing from Takeyh and his colleagues not so long ago as last summer.

Gary Sick said in an interview with Bernard Gwertzman of the CFR websiteas recently as January 23, “There is very serious opposition building up to Mr. Ahmadinejad in Iran. Basically the entire political elite are coming together in opposition to him.” Sick concluded that he believes “Iran would probably be in a situation where it could possibly make concessions” on its uranium enrichment drive and expressed hope that the EU and US don’t lose the opportunity “because I do believe that if a reasonable offer is put on the table and raised with Iran under those circumstances, there’s a very real chance that the political elite in Iran will in fact use that as a rallying point and try to outflank Mr. Ahmadinejad.”

Of course, this is not the first time that Sick has argued for engagement, dialogue, concessions and incentives for Iran, in a policy that can best be characterized as a de facto recognition of the current Iranian regime and normalization of relations with the leading state-sponsor of terrorism abroad and human rights violations at home. Sick’s reading of the internal Iranian scene is however as muddled as ever since his last exaggerated appraisal of Rafsanjani and Khatami’s “moderation” efforts.

So what gives? Will the true moderates in the Iranian regime please stand up?

Alas, silence. Takeyh, Sick and the like are sounding more and more like doctors peddling snake oil in lieu of true medicine.

Perhaps the desire to truly see “moderates” in Tehran and to marginalize the “radicals” is a noble one. But noble desires fade in the face of the true nature of a regressive religious dictatorship that is hell-bent on maintaining itself in power in the face of modernity, domestic social, economic and political pressures, and a US Administration that has finally sets its sight on the main source of instability in the region.

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Jubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/

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11 comments

A writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

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Mark SashineA writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

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How many of those do we have?

All those ' near east', ' Middle East', ' upper west' and ' clear south' Institutes with all those  people  on the retainer who joggle the words all the time and push us all to war. Iran may be anything but it if it is a major power in the region now it happened because the US had invaded Iraq. Moreover,   it has been proven by Justin Raimondo and others on www.antiwar.com that the US govt in sorts worked for the Iranian interests. Now we have  here another talking head who  would do anything to push  our people to go to war or at least to total confrontation, so that the real enemies of  our  country rejoice.

How sad, really. 

by Mark Sashine (44 articles, 19 quicklinks, 228 diaries, 3265 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 9:08:24 AM
 


Jubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/
Jubin AfsharJubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/

War can be avoided by a firm policy against the mullahs

Well actually the point is that appeasing the regime will drive us to war and standing firm against such a brutal and reactionary regime will avoid war. I think you are perhaps confusing your argument with the US Administration with the Iranian people's struggle for their own freedom. I don't think its particularly helpful to view everthing from that angle. You should understand that the Iranian regime is an illegitimate regime that is not supported by Iranians, suppresses women, workers, students and does not tolerate freedom of speech, association, press and has been condemned 52 times by the UN for gross violations of human rights. There were 4800 strikes and protest actions in Iran last year that were suppressed by the regime. I suggest instead of protecting such a regime you should support the democratic opposition to it. I agree that the US intervention in Iraq was wrong and actually aided the regime in Iran but the way to fix that cannot be to appease the mullahs but to correctly oppose them, oppose another foreign war, but at the same time support the opposition to such a brutal regime.

I hope you can see the struggle for freedom and progress in Iran from another angle other than your beef with the Bush Administration.

by Jubin Afshar (2 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 7 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 12:08:10 PM
 


A writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Mark SashineA writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

to see more of bio, click on member name

My 'beef' with the current US administration

 is due to the cconsequences- about several million people so far since we had sanctions on Iraq. Our administraation has no right to do anything- it has to go. After it goes I would  even encourage an honest  assessment of the foreign policy towards Iran and one of the measures- to give a refugee status to the refugees from Iran. But it is only after we clean our own mess.  Only after that.

Any  raising of  Iraninan topic now  only harms  all of us because criminals in power use it. The road to Hell is paved with good intentions. 

by Mark Sashine (44 articles, 19 quicklinks, 228 diaries, 3265 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 1:41:25 PM
 


A 'senior' world citizen concerned about how badly our shared domicile is being ravaged by imperialists, dominionists, neo-cons and evangelists.
syed mahdiA 'senior' world citizen concerned about how badly our shared domicile is being ravaged by imperialists, dominionists, neo-cons and evangelists.

Comments on Detente or Appeasement

Reading through Mr.Afshin's article I almost forgot it was a repeat of various articles written by the likes of Ahmed Chalabi, Richard Perle, Daniel Pipes & Reilly in the months preceding the Invasion of Iraq. Does he realise the dire consequences which would follow if the Bushies go by what he is recommending. Does he care for human lives, Iranian and American? Does he have any shame, being an Iranian himself? Oops, I forgot that the likes of Chalabi, Iyad Allawi and Quislings don't care about anyone except themselves. Thse last always end up losing everything because the likes of Chengis Khan & Bush don't care about anyone except themselves.

by syed mahdi (1 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 123 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 1:23:03 PM
 


Professor, California State University, FullertonAfter marriage to an Iranian lady in Tehran, Iran in 1968, I returned to Tehran in the summer of 1970 to work at the American Embassy. After earning an MBA from Harvard Business School, I remained at Harvard University for another year to study the Persian (Farsi) language. In the early 1970's, Singer Sewing Machine Company sent me on assignments in the Middle East and North Africa, including assignments in Tehran, Iran.From 1994 to 1996, I ...

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Paul Sheldon FooteProfessor, California State University, FullertonAfter marriage to an Iranian lady in Tehran, Iran in 1968, I returned to Tehran in the summer of 1970 to work at the American Embassy. After earning an MBA from Harvard Business School, I remained at Harvard University for another year to study the Persian (Farsi) language. In the early 1970's, Singer Sewing Machine Company sent me on assignments in the Middle East and North Africa, including assignments in Tehran, Iran.From 1994 to 1996, I ...

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Can the Rajavi Cult Dupe Progressives?

Everyone should look at the content of the author's Web site.  The author's solution for Iran is the totalitarian takeover of Iran by the MEK (Rajavi Cult or Pol Pot of Iran).  The MEK has murdered American military officers and Rockwell International employees.  The MEK has committed terrorist acts, even in New York City.  The State Departments of Presidents Bill Clinton and of George W. Bush have placed the MEK on terrorist lists for good reasons.

At the end of the Iran-Iraq War, Massoud Rajavi waved to 2,000 MEK fighters from the safety of Iraq while they invaded Iran.  Rajavi told them they would not need to fire a single shot because one million Iranians would march with them to Tehran.

In 1991, the MEK committed terrible atrocities against unarmed Kurdish civilians--including running over them with tanks or with armored personnel carriers.

In April 2003, the American and coalition forces attacked the MEK at Camp Ashraf, Iraq.  Does the author dare to reveal where Massoud Rajavi is today?  Is the American military holding Massoud Rajavi as a prisoner at a camp in Iraq or protecting him until the American military invades Iran?

This is the same group of crazies who burned themselves in front of television cameras in June 2003. 

While the American government has closed the office of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI) in Washington, DC, the American has not closed the operations of other supporters of America's terrorist enemies.

Many of the neo-conservatives (neo-Trotskyites) have been strong supporters of the Rajavi Cult.  See, for example, the Web site of the Iran Policy Committee.  While the Iran Policy Committee does disclose that one of its employees is a former employee of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the IPC does not disclose its funding sources.

With the help of the neo-conservatives (neo-Trotskyites), this totalitarian terrorist organization has been able to dupe many in the Democratic and Republican parties. 

Can the Rajavi Cult dupe progressives?

Professor Paul Sheldon Foote

 

by Paul Sheldon Foote (8 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 40 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 4:44:15 PM
 


Rosa Schmidt is an American married to an Iranian, hence the second last name, Azadi.  She's a long-time peace activist with a background in anthropology, education, and public health.  She's also one of the people who walked away from the falling Twin Towers on 9/11 and returned to help with the recovery effort.  Out of this experience of destruction, death, and horror came a deeper commitment to human life everywhere and specifically to non-violence.  Retired and sp...

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Rosa Schmidt AzadiRosa Schmidt is an American married to an Iranian, hence the second last name, Azadi.  She's a long-time peace activist with a background in anthropology, education, and public health.  She's also one of the people who walked away from the falling Twin Towers on 9/11 and returned to help with the recovery effort.  Out of this experience of destruction, death, and horror came a deeper commitment to human life everywhere and specifically to non-violence.  Retired and sp...

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It's not Americans' place to choose sides in Iran

That's fine if exiles like I imagine Mr. Afshar to be want to imagine the MEK  will save Iran. I've been living in Iran for a while now and so far I haven't met anybody that likes the MEK.  But whatever.  He can even picture the brutal mullahs beating us all on a daily basis if that gives him a reason to live.  Not that there weren't plenty of beatings, and executions, after the Revolution. Not that many people aren't afraid. Not that the struggle for democracy has been won.

But why is Afshar writing this on OpEdNews? It's not the place of Americans to get involved in the internal affairs of Iran, and Americans wouldn't be able to make truly informed judgements, anyway. Clinton was right to refuse to fund or support an armed group of Iranian exiles operating out of Iraq to overthrow the Iranian government.

We Americans do not want our government to get involved in regime change, by war, by coup d'etat, by arming exile groups that commit acts of sabotage/terror/whatever across another nation's boundaries. There's been quite enough of that. Peaceful methods to demonstrate and encourage democracy exist.

The word "appeasement" is currently being used in the propaganda campaign to paint Iran as a latter day Nazi Germany that must be immediately attacked for the sake of humanity. To Afshar's credit, he doesn't seem to wish people (his relatives?) in Iran to be nuked. But going on and on about the terrible threat Iran poses to the world is one sure way to increase the chances that that is going to happen.

by Rosa Schmidt Azadi (6 articles, 0 quicklinks, 1 diaries, 50 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 5:02:11 PM
 


Jubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/
Jubin AfsharJubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/

Iranians are entitled to their struggle for freedom too

Mark, your beef with the US Administartion is your beef and while you are entitled to that, it is not Iranians beef. Iranians are also entitled to voice their grievances against a regime that has committed wholesale murder for 28 years without being called road pavers to hell. It just is not right. I think that anyone can adopt a correct postion in condemnation of the Iranian regime's brutality towards its own people without having to support a war agenda.

salamahali, chalabi was a crook and an Iranian regime agent. He duped the US hawks to launch the war on Iraq. The war in Iraq was fully supported by the Iranian regime and it covertly put its SCIRI and INC agents to work in order to feed "WMD" intelligence to the US to push for a war. Its not reasonable to rush to compare and discredit without looking at the facts first. It would tend to show intolerance and ignorance which I trust is not what you intend.

Rosa, I write here because the Iranian issue is a global one now. The West has wrongfully tied the hands of the Iranian opposition and the US government has participated in this. I think its for the American people to know that and to understand how a series of foreign policy decisions and actions of the US government (particularly during the Clinton years) has worked to empower the most extremist elements in Iran and to actually assist that regime in its designs to establish a regressive and backward totalitarian Islamic empire that is about regressive, reactionary ideas that I am sure you know about. You perhaps also know that tens of thousands of MEK sympathizers have been killed by the regime without any due process, any trial, and in the most inhuman manner. So its obvious that you won't find anyone telling you that they support the MEK, particularly since you do not really oppose that regime and talking about "dangerous" issues with you wouldn't sound wise. What is important is that Iranians oppose the regime. See the recent student demonstration against Ahmadinejad, the teachers protest, the women's demonstrations, the transit workers strikes, and the continuing oppostion to the regime's rule and its policies. I oppose a foreign war in Iran, and that is why I oppose any appeasement of this regime that has for your information waged a war against its own people for 28 years now. I believe that firmness against this regime, after over two decades of putting business and oil interests ahead of human rights values, and support for the democratic opposition in Iran, is the only way to avoid war.

by Jubin Afshar (2 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 7 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 6:35:41 PM
 


A writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Mark SashineA writer is a rogue goose. All other gees fly in a flock formation; every goose knows his place and time for honking. The rogue goose is undisciplined. He leaves the formation indiscriminately to have a look at it from aside. He roams back and forth, takes a peep at the leader, honks a little bit from behind, distracts everyone and writes on what he sees. Time passes and as he wants to return back to his place he discovers someone else there. Thus he either has to wait until they land for rest...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Just for the sake of the argument

Do true Iranian opposition forces in Iran want the current US administration to invade Iran? Or do they as you say, know about the cahoots between the current regime and the US admin. and as such feel as between the rock and the hard place?

And it is not true that Iranian people have no reason to have any 'beef'. with our adimin. They better be very afraid. They have to understand ( and it looks that you do understand) that the current admin here does not give a damn about Human rights or anything like that. Iraq proved it. So, as I said, the proper way for everyone who fights for human rights is to work on getting rid of our administration and installing a proper one which will, hopefully redefine a foreign policy of this country. I sympathise, I think, that Iranian regime, a theocracy, is not in the interests of the people there, but Iran cannot be a source of WWIII. We can. So, bottomline, your intentions are understandable but the timing and especially the power here is not the ones to address. Tough luck. I cannot say that I do not understand the concern here. But you do not want to have a devil here to help you to defeat a devil there. Help us to restore the forces of good here and you will be in good company.

by Mark Sashine (44 articles, 19 quicklinks, 228 diaries, 3265 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 6:56:36 PM
 


Jubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/
Jubin AfsharJubin Afshar, is Director of the Near East Project at Near East Policy Research in Washington, D.C. http://www.neareastpolicy.com/

Litmus test

Of course Iranians do not want any foreign invasion or interference. But appeasement and doing business with the mullahs and at the same time blacklisting their opposition and hampering their democratic activities of free speech and association is plain wrong and actually interference in Iranian affairs. The only true litmus test of Western expressions of concern about Iran is how they treat the Iranian opposition which embodies the fight for democracy and human rights in that country and has shown its grass roots support among Iranians at home and abroad many times. All they ask is that the US and EU take a neutral stand and at least do not side with the regime in hampering their rights and their struggle against the regime. You are entitled to your quarrel with the the government but at least you can quarrel without having your family taken hostage, your honor dragged in mud, you being arrested, tortured, and executed at the whim of a religious judge. That is the harsh reality of Iran for those who dare to speak against this regime.

by Jubin Afshar (2 articles, 0 quicklinks, 0 diaries, 7 comments) on Saturday, March 24, 2007 at 8:15:29 PM
 


Steven Leser specializes in Politics, Science & Health, and Entertainment topics. He has held positions within the Democratic Party including District Chair and Public Relations Chair within county organizations.

Steven Leser writes for www.opednews.com, an internet only media site that has grown to become one of the highest traffic news sites in America, reaching more traffic, according to alexa.com, than all but the thirty largest daily newspapers in the US. Mr. Leser is one of t...

to see more of bio, click on member name

Steven LeserSteven Leser specializes in Politics, Science & Health, and Entertainment topics. He has held positions within the Democratic Party including District Chair and Public Relations Chair within county organizations.

Steven Leser writes for www.opednews.com, an internet only media site that has grown to become one of the highest traffic news sites in America, reaching more traffic, according to alexa.com, than all but the thirty largest daily newspapers in the US. Mr. Leser is one of t...

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Author lost me from the Get go

Whenever I see an author address a contemporary situation with an appeal to emotion by using the word "Appeasement" I know that we as readers are being had. I wrote as much with the following article--> http://www.opednews.com/articles/opedne_steven_l_061013_appeasement___republ.htm

We might as well call shoving someone in the hallway "murder" and winking at someone "rape".

Anyone who insists that diplomacy should categorically not be engaged in with a nation-state should not be taken seriously. We have all seen where that road leads.

 

by Steven Leser (189 articles, 35 quicklinks, 32 diaries, 1263 comments) on Monday, March 26, 2007 at 7:30:51 AM
 


I am a freelance journalist , researcher on effects of fundamentalism on women, member of ISCC research committee and the CSDHI institute for human rights.
summerI am a freelance journalist , researcher on effects of fundamentalism on women, member of ISCC research committee and the CSDHI institute for human rights.

Appeasement or Selling out?

 So many comments in this page gave me the idea that this regime has been quite successful in masking its true nature. This is exactly what’s wrong, and this is the reason for the most dangerous political pragmatism in dealing with this regime. No one is in favor of Imperialist invasions, but then again no ones is in favor of blood thirsty religious dictatorships, masking their true nature, fooling the world over, and getting away with that , while dangerously venturing in the Bomb. Of course while the “progressive left” is unknowingly defending the major slogan of this regime “the right for nuclear energy” – read nuclear bomb. Appeasment is actually a soft ward to be used for the political scandal ongoing in World politics to this regime.  “Selling out, bowing to pressure, or even giving in to bribery “is more likely to reflect the truth.

For 16 years, the EU banked on the premise of dealing with a moderating faction within the Iranian regime. It began with Ayatollah Khomeini’s death in 1989 and the presidency of Ali-Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who was dubbed as “pragmatic”. Then, in 1997, Europe saw a new hope – the election of Mohammed Khatami, a so-called “moderate” as president. The Europeans geared up their rapprochement with Tehran for eight more years, during which they failed to censure Iran’s oppressive record on torture, execution and brutality, and instead commenced “human rights dialogue” with the executioners, expanded trade and allowed Tehran to push forward at full speed on its goal to obtain nuclear weapons. European complicity, acquiescence and its recurring habit of turning a blind eye continued apace.

On top of it all, the EU designated the PMOI as a terrorist organization. Senior European diplomats, including the UK’s former foreign secretary Jack Straw, have acknowledged that the PMOI figured prominently as a bargaining chip in a bridge-building effort with Tehran.

The “moderate” fantasy completely ran aground last year when the regime’s supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, engineered the “election” of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, a diehard Revolutionary Guard commander as president, shattering all dreams (and dreams are all they were) about reform or moderation. Sixteen years of Western concessions and negotiations with the regime gave it the opportunity to put in power the most extremist factions.

Now Tehran’s mullahs are snubbing their noses at the EU by rejecting all UN resolutions, in their drive to obtain nuclear weapons. They continue to fuel the insurgency in Iraq with money, men and weapons. They finance Hamas in Palestine and were the paymasters behind Hezbollah’s recent war against Israel in Lebanon. On top of it all, Tehran repeatedly calls for the destruction of the state of Israel. Soon they will have the means to carry out this threat.

Now please tell me in the following metaphor; how can a dangerous arsonist be stopped? Would a few incentives or bottles of petrol help the situation to put out the fire??

 

by summer (2 articles, 3 quicklinks, 2 diaries, 7 comments) on Wednesday, March 28, 2007 at 3:02:56 PM
 

 

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