[Mb-civic] FW: A regime built on terror

villasudjuan villasudjuan at free.fr
Wed Aug 4 07:04:49 PDT 2004


------ Forwarded Message
From: "Farhad Sepahbody" <monsoon at esedona.net>
Date: Tue, 3 Aug 2004 08:40:21 -0700
To: <villasudjuan at free.fr>
Subject: A regime built on terror

A REGIME BUILT ON TERROR
 
Symbiotic relationship links Iran's tyrants, the terrorists they aid
 
by Michael A. Ledeen
National Post
July 31, 2004
 
 
WASHINGTON - Last week's 9/11 Commission report had a considerable amount
of new news about the connections between al-Qaeda and Iran. Earlier leaks
had flagged the discovery that Iranian border guards had assisted at least
eight of the 9/11 terrorists as they crossed Iran on their suicidal
mission; the report added the detail that their passports were not
stamped. It is possible this was an oversight, or that the guards were
bribed. Such things happen. But it's more likely that there was active
co-operation, especially since it turns out that al-Qaeda personnel were
trained by Iranians and Iranian surrogates, first in Iran itself and then
in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon, where Hezbollah -- a wholly owned
subsidiary of the Islamic Republic of Iran -- has long operated terrorist
training centres. Moreover, the commission reported, such top al-Qaeda
leaders as Khalid Sheikh Mohammed spent time in Iran, and parked his
family there for several months while he travelled elsewhere.
 
There are other details, but you get the point. For those who have
followed the assembly of the al-Qaeda mosaic, these new tiles are
beautiful, but do not change the overall design we have come to know over
the past few years. Indeed, the Iranian regime, knowing there is abundant
proof that al-Qaeda leaders have spent a lot of time in the Islamic
Republic both before and after 9/11, has long since proclaimed that fact,
all the while claiming the terrorists were actually "in detention" in
Iran. When things got alarmingly hot for Tehran, they even promised to
hand over the a-Qaeda killers to the United States (at the same time that
the regime's leaders constantly praise the terrorists and call upon the
people of the Middle East to do everything necessary to drive out the
Coalition forces from Iraq). But of course the promises were never kept,
and for good reason: Iran's tyrants can no more surrender the terrorists
than amputate their own limbs. Terrorism is the essence of the Iranian
regime, and the terrorists are there because the regime wants them, helps
them and guides them.
 
On the Iraqi front, all you have to do is listen to the Defence Minister,
who puts it quite clearly: Hazim Shalan was quoted in The Washington Post
recently saying Iran has taken over Iraqi border positions, sent spies and
saboteurs into the country and infiltrated the new government -- including
his own ministry. Iran remains "the first enemy of Iraq," he declared.
 
It is not just terrorism in Iraq. Hardly a week goes by without new
information concerning Iran's active support for the leaders of the
intifada against Israel, and the Israeli government has said categorically
that Iran is now the leading supporter of Hamas and Islamic Jihad. And why
not? Both were created by Iran.
 
The details are new, but, after all, we already knew the mosaic. Each
year, the State Department compiles a list of state sponsors of terrorism,
and Iran always wins the blue ribbon.
 
Alongside the new news about Iran's support for terrorism is the ongoing
comic routine about Iran's nuclear program. Here again, the facts are not
in dispute. Iran acknowledges its nuclear program, which it claims is
necessary for domestic energy generation, even though Iran has a
near-inexhaustible supply of natural gas and huge petroleum deposits. The
regime faithfully promises to provide the United Nations watchdogs with
all the details, and to provide full access. But time and time again the
inspectors find the regime has lied, and has lied about components of a
program to build atomic bombs. Whenever the International Atomic Energy
Agency asks to visit a sensitive site, the Iranians either declare it off
limits, or delay the inspection. They talk like virgins, but act like
streetwalkers.
 
President Bush says there is a linkage between terrorism and tyranny, and
that the most effective way to win the war against the terrorists is to
bring freedom to the Middle East. Nowhere is the accuracy of the linkage,
and the importance of a policy of supporting democratic revolution, so
evident as in Iran.
 
The Canadian people have had this point driven home to them by the
horrible story of Zahra Kazemi, a brave female journalist who was brutally
murdered by the mullahs when she dared to look at the repression under way
in Iran.
 
Time after time, Iran has spit in the face of any Canadian who even hinted
that the mullahs should behave in a civilized way. The Iranians told
Kazemi's family to get out of the country, for the affront of asking for
Zahra's body. The Iranians buried her, destroying the evidence of their
crime and humiliating her mourners. Then the regime staged a farcical
trial, banned foreign observers, warned the press not to report on it and
cleared the only (low-level) person they had bothered to charge.
 
Faced with this dreadful and dangerous regime, the Western world has
punted, combining occasional denunciations and warnings with a constant
leitmotif of appeasement. Yet Iran has long been the Middle East's prime
candidate for democratic revolution. The mullahs have wrecked the country
and alienated the overwhelming majority of its citizens. Given a free
choice, Iranians would almost certainly throw the mullahs into history's
dust bin. The West should do everything possible to give them that
opportunity, just as was done in the Soviet Empire, the Philippines,
Yugoslavia, South Africa, Chile and many other former tyrannies that are
now much freer and more democratic. If the Iranian people heard the
leaders of the West denounce Iran's oppression, its support for terror and
its race to build atomic bombs, coupled with calls for regime change in
Iran by peaceful means, they might well find ways to accomplish it.
 
Otherwise we shall soon confront the world's biggest Islamist tyranny, and
the world's leading supporter of terrorism, armed with nuclear weapons.
 
Shouldn't be a tough decision.
 
http://www.benadorassociates.com/article/6268
 


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