In this mailing:
- Guy Millière: Europe's Betrayal
of the Iranian People
- Richard Kemp: The Arab-Israeli
Conflict: Why No Peace?
- John R. Bolton: Beyond the Iran
Nuclear Deal
by Guy Millière • January 17,
2018 at 5:00 am
- The alliance between
Saudi Arabia and the United States seems intended to contain
the Iranian regime, and not, as falsely advertised by
President Barack Obama, to prevent a nuclear program.
- Leaders of Western
Europe know exactly what the mullahs' regime is, and what its
goals and activities are. They know it is the world's main
sponsor of Islamic terrorism. They know the disastrous state
of Iran's society and economy, but they prefer to play deaf
and dumb. All they think about, it seems, are the contracts
they sign with the mullahs to get more money. They do not care
about the suffering of Iranians; the chaos, massacres and
destruction caused by the regime. They know that the nuclear
deal is constantly violated by the self-policing regime, and
that a nuclear bomb is in the making. They are aware that the
regime has close ties with North Korea, and that both are
global threats.
- The EU's chief
diplomat, Federica Mogherini, has hypocritically called
"all parties concerned to abstain from violence", as
if there were a moral equivalence between unarmed protesters
and killer militias with weapons of war. Meanwhile, in Iranian
prisons, protesters were being arrested and tortured to death.
- Leaders of Western
Europe like to boast how they respect human rights, yet they
are the ones trampling on them.
The EU's
chief diplomat, Federica Mogherini, has hypocritically called
"all parties concerned to abstain from violence" in Iran,
as if there were a moral equivalence between unarmed protesters and
killer militias with weapons of war. Pictured: Mogherini (left)
stands with Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif, during her August
2017 visit to Iran. (Image source: European External Action
Service/Flickr)
It is hard to know exactly the current situation in
Iran, but the uprising seems to be fading . The mullahs' regime
might survive a little longer.
The overthrow of a totalitarian regime takes place
when the security forces -- which ensure the survival of a regime
that has been ruling through repression and fear -- begin to
falter, or else when the number of angry people becomes so big that
a tidal wave sweeps away all in its path.
This time, Iranian security forces remained loyal to
the regime and angry people were too few. The regime could manage
the situation by killing a few dozen protesters, arresting four thousand
more, torturing and murdering some of them, and
cutting off access to digital networks. It is a defeat not only for
the Iranian people, but for all who defend freedom.
The defeat, however, is temporary.
by Richard Kemp • January 17,
2018 at 4:30 am
- The jihadist aim is
to isolate Israel politically; to influence political leaders,
public opinion, international institutions and international
organizations so that on the day their planned offensive
begins, no one will be there to support Israel and the Jews.
The Palestinian Authority, the PLO and the Arab/Muslim states
will be unhampered to do what Hitler was unable to do in
historic Palestine -- make it Judenrein (free of Jews).
- Terror is "to
achieve Palestinian political goals, to influence Israeli
politics, to favor a given Israeli candidate for the post of
Prime Minister, to compel the Israeli government to conceal
more land, to prevent a final peace settlement by maintaining
a state of conflict that could eventually lead to total war,
to erode Israeli and American resolve and to demonstrate to
Arab population that peace is not an option and that the
existence of the Jews on their land cannot be
recognized". Some of the attacks occurred just when
foreign representatives landed in Israel, "to prevent the
revival of the peace talks." Mr. Jason Greenblatt should
take that into consideration.
- The same jihadist
war is also underway against the Americans and all
"infidels": Christians, Jews, Yazidis, Hindus,
Buddhists, and in a general manner all those who do not
believe in the "religion of truth", namely Islam;
and against those Muslims who compromise with such so-called
infidels.
(Image
source: Palestinian Media Watch)
The critical question of why the Middle East seems
unable to achieve peace has just been rigorously considered again,
this time by Michael Calvo, an international lawyer, in an
important new book, The Middle East and World War III: Why No
Peace? It is worth being read by all political leaders,
academics, journalists, students and anyone who wants to understand
why there is no peace and what may happen.
The book analyzes why the
Israeli-Palestinian/Arab/Muslim conflict has not been resolved, in
spite of the Oslo Accords and many years of active involvement by
the European Union, individual European states, the U.S., Russia
and the United Nations.
The long-term Palestinian use of terror, for
instance, looked at chronologically:
by John R. Bolton • January 17,
2018 at 4:00 am
Pictured:
The perimeter defenses of the underground nuclear fuel enrichment
plant in Natanz, Iran. (Image source: Hamed Saber/Wikimedia
Commons)
President Trump seemingly served notice Friday that
the days are dwindling for Barack Obama's Iran agreement. Although
deal proponents also gained time to pursue "fixes," this
is a forlorn option. No fix will remedy the diplomatic Waterloo Mr.
Obama negotiated. Democrats will reject anything that endangers his
prized international contrivance, and the Europeans are more
interested in trade with Tehran than a stronger agreement.
There is an even more fundamental obstacle: Iran.
Negotiating with Congress and Europe will not modify the actual
deal's terms, which Iran (buttressed by Russia and China) has no
interest in changing. Increased inspections, for example, is a
nonstarter for Tehran. Mr. Obama gave the ayatollahs what they
wanted; they will not give it back.
Most important, there is no evidence Iran's
intention to obtain deliverable nuclear weapons has wavered. None
of the proposed "fixes" change this basic, unanswerable
reality.
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