Posted on 07/02/2003 12:31:57 AM PDT by DoctorZIn
In just 7 days (July 9th) the people of Iran are planning massive demonstrations events and strikes.
On this date, 4 years ago, the regime brutally attacked peaceful student demonstrators while in their dorms. The result was the loss of life and liberty of hundreds of students, many of which are still unaccounted for.
Once again, the regime has been threatening a major crackdown on the protesters. A major confrontation is just days away.
Iran is a country ready for a regime change. If you follow this thread you will witness, I believe, the transformation of a country. This daily thread provides a central place where those interested in the events in Iran can find the best news and commentary.
Please continue to post your news stories and comments to this thread.
Thanks for all the help.
DoctorZin
Welcome to the thread. What ideology is driving whom? We spend a lot of time here examing the players in Iran and their ideology. So could you please clarify your statement?
Wednesday, July 02, 2003 - ©2003 IranMania.com
Tehran, Jul 1 - Iran's former president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani on Tuesday described the United States as a 'dinosaur with a bird's brain' and said that the failure of recent unrest in Iran, encouraged by Washington, was yet another disgrace for America, IRNA reported.
©2002 IranMania & AFP Photo/Atta Kenare Former President, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.
"The failure of recent riots in Iran brought about another disgrace for America," he told a festival, held by the Iranian Air Force here.
Iran's leaders have said that Washington was behind several days of rioting in Tehran and some other cities and that US officials' praise for the unrest constituted a 'blatant interference in Iran's internal affairs'.
©2003 AP
[Iranian students gather in a demonstration at the Amir Kabir university in Tehran, Iran, Monday, June 16, 2003. More than 250 university lecturers and writers have called on Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to abandon the principle of being God's representative on earth and to accept his accountability to his people. The move follows a week of protests and riots in Tehran in which pro-democracy demonstrators clashed with police and vigilantes who support the hard-line clerical regime. Theprotests witnessed unprecedented condemnation of Khamenei, calls for his death, in a land where criticism of the supreme leader is punishable by imprisonment.]
"Recent unrest in our country was so much important for America that Mr. (George W.) Bush announced that he supports the protestors and will remain with them," Rafsanjani said.
"The American Congress also announced that it will establish channels to contact the rioters," the official, who heads the arbitrative Expediency Council, added.
Rafsanjani cited US-led occupation of Iraq as another blunder and said America is like a dinosaur which has a got a bird's brain.
©2003 IranMania.com
"More than three months have passed since the end of war in Iraq and insecurity still predominates in that country, but Washington is not responsible for the reasons for this insecurity," he declared.
By invading Iraq, US is now repeating its military debacle in Vietnam, he said forecasting a 'bitter experience for America' ahead.
"America must realize that it has embarked a hard work and it presumes that the world has no custodians.
"American Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld likens the troubles resulting from Iraq's occupation to the times when America was gaining independence.
"His analysis is false since the American people were seeking independence, but armed forces cannot bring independence for the Iraqi people," Rafsanjani said.
The former president, who partly served during the 1980-1988 imposed war of Iraq under Saddam Hussein, played down threats of any military action against Iran.
"The enemies of the Islamic Republic of Iran have the experience of the eight-year Sacred Defense in their archives and (know) that Iran is not a suitable ground for aggression," Rafsanjani said.
He reiterated that 'the Islamic Republic of Iran's doctrine is not to invade and attack although the country enjoys a favorable military power'.
©2003 ISNA Photo/Mehdi Ghasemi
A high-ranking police officer seen arguing with a masked student in the fourth consecutive day of protest in areas around Tehran University campus and dormitories on 13 June 2003 in Tehran.
The official, however, stressed the need for investment in the country's military and defense research establishments in the face of 'American floating of the plan to establish a unipolar world'.
"Under such conditions, it is necessary to maintain Iran's defense preparedness and our vigilance," he said.
Commenting further on the recent unrest in Iran, Rafsanjani said, "Washington paid a very heavy price to create an atmosphere of unrest in our country."
The riots were conducted by 'a bunch of thugs, hooligans and hoodlums who thought a miracle was in the offing in Iran', he added.
The riots followed a peaceful gathering of students to protest perceived privatization of state universities, which officials have denied, and took an ugly turn when vigilantes attacked students.
Police have said maximum security had been restored following the unrest and vowed to 'stand up with full force to those who seek to jeopardize the country's security'.
http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default.asp?NewsCode=16620&NewsKind=Current%20Affairs
Time to storm the Bastille?
All they will settle for is total Muslim control of the world.
I understand your scepticism of the Iranian masses. But on what do you base your opinion?
If you were to read the articles and comments from Iranians living in Iran to these threads you will hear a very different attitude than the one you assert.
So my question is, on what do you based this opinion? Can you cite me polls, studies, or anything?
I found that fascinating as well.
In case we've forgotten...
Almin Karamehmedovic
The Associated Press
March 29, 2003
Capt. Andrew Wallace said the victims were part of the Army's 1st Brigade, 3rd Infantry Division.
The attack occurred at a U.S. checkpoint on the highway north of Najaf.
A taxi stopped close to the checkpoint, and the driver waved for help. The soldiers approached the car, and it exploded, Wallace told Associated Press Television News.
U.S. Central Command in Doha, Qatar, confirmed the incident but had no additional details. Maj. Gen. Victor Renuart said that kind of attack was "a symbol of an organization that's starting to get a little bit desperate."
The suicide bombing was the first against U.S. and British forces since the invasion of Iraq began.
There have been warnings of suicide attacks in Iraq.
Iraqi dissidents and Arab media have claimed that Saddam Hussein has opened a training camp for Arab volunteers willing to carry out suicide bombings against U.S. forces in Iraq.
Terror mastermind Osama bin Laden also urged Iraqis last month in an audio tape aired on Arabic television to employ the tactic against the Americans. Other Arab militants also spoke about suicide missions against the invading armies.
Such suicide attacks are common by Palestinian militants in targeting the better equipped Israeli army during the uprising on the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Naji Sabri was asked in a mid-March television interview, whether Iraq would use the tactic of suicide attacks against the invading American forces.
"We have prepared ourselves for all kinds of war. For many months, tens of thousands have volunteered to serve as martyrdom-seekers (suicide attackers) in the battle with the American enemy," he said. "We trained them and readied them. We have prepared ourselves for street fighting and desert fighting."
The biggest suicide bombing against the U.S. military abroad was in Lebanon when a truck packed with explosives drove into the U.S. Marine base at Beirut International Airport and exploded in the early morning Oct. 23, 1983, as the troops slept. The attack killed 241 American servicemen and leveled the base. Simultaneously, a Beirut base for French soldiers was attacked by another suicide bomber, killing 58 paratroopers.
The Americans and the French were in Lebanon as part of an ill-fated peacekeeping mission to end Lebanon's civil war. Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim militants were blamed for the attacks.
In 1996, a truck bomb at the U.S. Khobar Towers barracks in Saudi Arabia killed 19 U.S. servicemen.
I am not arguing that there are not Islamic fascists in Iran. The opposite is true. I am only arguing that this element in the Iranian regime is a small minority position in the Iran of today.
The people of Iran, according to their own polling; want a radical change in the regime. The majority are angry at the regime's emphasis on Islam and Palestine at the expense of the needs of their own people.
The majority no longer respect the mullahs in Iran, most consider them corrupt or fools. This is why there is a huge interest in pre Islamic religions in Iran today.
The problem is so serious that Iranian mullahs are now starting to support the protest movement, because they fear Islam will be dead in Iran if they don't support it and a regime change happens.
Are you aware of any of this? Have you been reading the news reports in the threads I mentioned? I understand your anger, I share it against the Islamic fascists, but I do not agree that the people of Iran are all Islamic fascists. Few are today. This is the very reason the regime is about to crumble. The students and people of Iran are demanding a secular democratic republic. I support this, and I believe you would to. Read the comments of the Iranian students and leaders. They often sound more conservative and informed about our founding principles than most conservatives I know. If they succeed, they will be one of our strongest allies. Please support them.
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