Posted on 05/31/2007 2:56:26 AM PDT by familyop
If anyone still believes in the utility of talking to the Tehran regime, they should read the revealing comments made to the press by the Iranian and the U.S. ambassadors to Baghdad, just minutes after concluding what were billed as historic talks between the two governments on Monday.
While the talks had proceeded positively, U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told reporters that he had emphasized to the Iranians the need for concrete action on the ground.
"I laid out before the Iranians a number of our direct, specific concerns about their behavior in Iraq, their support for militias that are fighting both the Iraqi security forces and coalition forces," Crocker said.
"The fact (is) that a lot of the explosives and ammunitions that are used by these groups are coming in from Iran ... Such activities ... need to cease and ... we would be looking for results," he added.
Across the city, Irans ambassador Hassan Kazemi-Qomi just thumbed his nose. We dont take the American accusations seriously, he said. It was the United States which bore sore responsibility for the violence in Iraq, he opined, noting that Iraqs infrastructure had been demolished by the American invaders.
If the U.S. was really serious about helping Iraq, he suggested that we take up Irans offer to train and equip Iraqi security forces. (That way, the Iranians wont have to steal Iraqi police uniforms any longer when they want to kill us).
In Tehran, Iranian foreign minister Manouchehr Mottaki, crossed the tees and dotted the eyes.
We are hopeful that Washingtons realistic approach to the current issues in Iraq by confessing its failed policy in Iraq and the region and by showing a determination in changing the policy guarantees success of the talks and possible future talks, he said.
So there you have it. If the United States wishes to have further talks with the Iranian regime, we must first admit 1) that our policies were wrong, and 2) that they have failed. Once thats over with, hey whatever you like!
I dont know how deaf you have to be not to hear the message. Lee Hamilton, are you listening?
As the Democrat half of the Baker-Hamilton commission that promoted talks with Tehran last fall, Lee Hamilton now finds himself in the embarrassing situation of seeing the fruits of the policy he promoted so arduously.
Just talk to Tehran, he said. All they want is a little respect. They want a secure, integral Iraq, just as we do, he claimed. We have lots of things in common. Lots!
I give Mr. Hamilton credit for drinking his own Kool-Aid. As director of the Woodrow Wilson Center, a center-left think tank in Washington, he thought the Iranians were so eager for talks that he agreed to send the head of his centers Iran programs to his native land, despite all the flap over the Iraq Study Group report.
And so Haleh Esfandiareh, a former Communist (Tudeh) Party militant, who has long advocated dialogue between the U.S. and Iran, went to Tehran early this year, ostensibly to see her ailing mother.
When she tried to leave, regime thugs intercepted her taxi, stole her passport, and forced her to request a replacement travel document from the authorities. That led to her arrest, and recent indictment in Iran on charges of espionage.
(For the record, I place the word indictment in quotation marks because the so-called rule of law in Iran is an arbitrary system that obeys the whims and orders of the ruling elite, not any objective legal standard created with the consent of the governed).
Now, just to be clear about whats going on. Haleh Esfandiareh has absolutely zero to do with any purported U.S. government program to promote a velvet revolution in Iran, as intelligence minister Hossein Mohseni-Ejei has claimed. Would that it were so!
On the contrary. She and many other left-wing Iran experts in Washington have been promoting closer ties between Tehran and Washington, not confrontation.
So its more than ironic that the regime should arrest her. Seriously, if there were justice in this world, they would have picked up me or Michael Ledeen, or any number of Iranians who are working hard to organize womens groups and student groups and labor organizations inside Iran, to stand up for their rights.
The Tehran regime continues to dangle talk of talks to buy more time to finish their nuclear weapons development, and are taking U.S. hostages to use as bargaining chips. Meanwhile, they have expanded their terrorist networks inside Iraq, and are supplying Explosively Formed Penetrators (EFPs), money and conventional weapons to both Sunni and Shiite insurgent groups. (And finally, the U.S. military is being allowed by the Pentagon to say this in public).
My sources in Iran tell me that the regime plans to dramatically scale up the terrorist attacks against U.S. and Iraqi forces this summer, and is contemplating ordering Muqtada al-Sadrs Mahdi army to launch terrorist attacks in Kuwait, the first time that Sadr will have used his fighters outside of Iraq.
So should we continue to talk to Tehran?
Well, okay but only if our diplomats can do so without buying every over-priced carpet they are offered.
(Ambassador Ryan Crocker is someone who has got his priorities straight. After all, he knows a few things about Iranian terrorism, having received his baptism by fire on April 18, 1983 in Beirut, when Hezbollah operative Imad Mugniyeh blew up the U.S. embassy. Thats where I first met Crocker, who was still brushing dust off his clothes and his hair from the explosion).
Irans goal is clear. They seek to defeat us in Iraq, and to prevent Iraq from emerging as an strong, independent, federal state. Further down the road, they seek to drive the United States from the Persian Gulf, smash Israel, and ultimately destroy us..
To achieve these ends, they are furiously developing nuclear weapons. Even the IAEA has recognized Irans nuclear weapons ambitions, although IAEA Secretary General Mohammed ElBaradei now says that we should give up trying to prevent them from going nuclear.
He said that Irans recent progress in uranium enrichment should convince us that Irans nuclear program has become a fait accompli, and that efforts to make Iran pay a price for defying UN Security Council resolutions aimed at stopping their nuclear program have been overtaken by events.
That was too much even for the Washington Post, who chided ElBaradei this past Sunday for his response to Irans aggressive and illegal behavior.
[W]e can only marvel at the nerve of Mr. ElBaradei, an unelected international civil servant whose mission is to implement the decisions of the Security Council -- and who proposes to destroy the council's authority by having it simply drop binding resolutions, the Post editorial board wrote.
The Washington Post and many of the cooler heads in the foreign policy establishment now believe there is no better alternative than returning to the United Nations Security Council for further sanctions on Iran.
While that may be necessary, a mere ratcheting up of sanctions will not be sufficient to keep Tehrans murderers from striking again. I mentioned some of the stronger steps the UN could take, should the U.S. press hard enough, in this space recently.
But there is a better alternative, and its staring us right in the face. And thats helping the growing pro-democracy movement inside Iran.
Even as the Europeans continue to meet with Iranian government emissary Ali Larijani over their nuclear program later this week, its important to remember that economic leverage, however severe, will not deter this regime from building the bomb.
While the United States and the West are right to focus on terrorism and the regimes nuclear programs, if they ignore the pro-democracy movement and human rights, they wont get the results they want, says Dr. Hossein Bagherzadeh, a spokesman for Solidarity Iran, a new Iranian coordinating council that aims to connect opposition groups in exile with activists working inside Iran.
The choice between appeasement and war is as bad as ever. But unlike the Washington Post, which believes that sanctions alone provide the alternative, I believe we have a better option.
Solidarity Iran will be holding its third conference in two weeks time in Paris, when it plans to announce a plan of action that represents the first serious step toward forming a united Iranian opposition coalition in twenty-eight years.
Stay tuned next week for more.
Most people around us can agree with that and assume that things will be fine for another 28 years. ..."business" as usual, because it's been that way so far.
Maybe you misread that quote?
Iran thinks Iraq will be theirs. Iran has another think coming.
.
IRAN recently proclaimed that:
“It’s time for the world to start imagining a world without an America in it”
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CLINTON stated after 9/11 that:
“There may not even be an America around in 300 years”
.
Thus the Battle for the 21st Century has just been enjoined by our enemies without & within.
.
I miss f14pilot.
‘On the contrary. She and many other left-wing Iran experts in Washington have been promoting closer ties between Tehran and Washington, not confrontation. ‘
Golly, our mainstream media forgot to tell us the woman is a communist, and is advocating co-existence with a regime that wants us all DEAD.
Wonder how they forgot to mention this....(sarcasm)
I doubt he is particularly embarrassed, though of course I don;t know. He is part of the Washington liberal elite, and no one will hold him accountable for his previous advice. Frankly, most liberals probably believe that talking for the sake of talking is a "victory." And besides, when the talks collapse the left can always attack Bush for "not offering enough" or "being unreasonable."
I'm sure that the Post almost dropped its merlot when they heard a UN official being realistic about IRan. The Post would like to think that the world actually invests some moral authority in the UN, and cares about its dictates. But the fact is, developing countries see the UN as a cash cow, while wealthy countries use it as a convenient way of passing the political buck. i.e. ("We are waiting for the UN to pass a resolution strongly condemning the...")
Uh, it’s nearly 6 years after 9/11, and if we haven’t been helping some opposition in Iran, why not? Would have been a bit cheaper than what we’re in now. Now, Iran is stronger than 2003, closer to nukes and once again killing Americans. WHY would we need to talk unless they’re winning?
bump.
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