In this mailing:
Obama's Gamble
with Iran's Theocratic Regime
by Robert D. Onley
• July 28, 2015 at 5:00 am
As President Obama and Secretary Kerry dominated the airwaves with
rounds of media interviews to defend the Iran deal last week, German Vice
Chancellor and Economic Minister Sigmar Gabriel flew straight to Tehran for
the first of what are certain to be countless meetings by P5+1 leaders to
capitalize on new business opportunities in Iran.
In Europe, it seems, there is no debate to be had over the Iran deal;
rather, it is a fait accompli.
But in the United States, the domestic debate is heating up, fueled by a
Presidential primary campaign and increasingly justified bipartisan anxiety
over the bill.
Independent of these political realities, however, the immediacy and
tenacity of the White House's defense of the Iran deal (which now has its own
@TheIranDeal Twitter account, no less), betrays an acute unspoken discomfort
by many Democrats with the practical flaws and global security dangers that
the deal presents.
Iran Deal:
$150 Billion to Fund Obama's War
by George Phillips
• July 28, 2015 at 4:00 am
In 1947, U.S. President Truman made history by launching the Marshall
Plan, sending $13 billion (about $140 billion in today's dollars) to help
rebuild post-war Europe, in order to prevent Western Europe from falling to
Communist expansion.
Today President Obama is trying to make history through an Iranian
nuclear deal that will give an astounding $150 billion of sanctions relief to
a regime that was in 2014 considered by the U.S. Department of State, along
with Sudan and Syria, one of the world's leading sponsors of terrorism.
The Marshall Plan was spread out over 17 countries that were U.S. allies
and considered critical in the long struggle that would put Soviet communism
on the "ash-heap of history," in the words of President Ronald
Reagan.
Under the President Obama's disastrous Iran nuclear deal, $150 billion
would go to a single regime that has been a state sponsor of terrorism for
the entire 36 years of its existence.
Turkey Turns
on Its Jihadists Next Door
by Burak Bekdil
• July 28, 2015 at 3:00 am
When the Islamist radicals of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (IS,
or Islamic State) decided to send a suicide bomber across the border into a
small Turkish town, they probably did not think the bomb attack would poison
their relations with Turkey. After all, the bomber's target was a pro-Kurdish
group, also viewed with hostility by Turkey. The attack killed 32 people and
injured over 100.
The attack also prompted tighter border controls in an area patrolled by
the Turkish security forces. In an exchange of fire over the Turkey-Syria
border, one Turkish non-commissioned officer was killed (the first Turkish
casualty by IS fire) along with one IS fighter.
|
|||
To subscribe to the this mailing list, go to http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/list_subscribe.php
14 East 60 St., Suite 1001, New York, NY 10022
|
Tuesday, July 28, 2015
Obama's Gamble with Iran's Theocratic Regime
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment