Posted on 07/02/2007 9:25:39 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
I wonder what methods were used to get Dadouk to stop playing deaf and dumb and start squawking like a magpie.
(Hint--whatever methods were used, virtually every democrat in Congress opposes.)
There is this:
Make Iran Feel the Pain
By Matthew Levitt
Wall Street Journal Europe, July 2, 2007
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The international community, led by the U.S. and the U.K., is now developing and debating new economic sanctions against Iran. This third round will be pivotal -- either by significantly increasing the cost to Iran of continuing to engage in illicit and dangerous activities, or by showing the regime that it can outlast whatever symbolic measures are levied against it without fear of being bled financially.
The first two rounds of targeted and graduated sanctions have failed to change Iran's nuclear calculus. Iran's chief nuclear negotiator continues to meet with senior EU officials, most likely to buy time, while Tehran refuses to accede to demands that it freeze its uranium enrichment program.
U.N. Security Council Resolutions 1737 and 1747, passed last December and March respectively, signaled seriousness about using financial measures against Iran. The first declared an international consensus to sanction Iran, and the second to target banks. In particular, Russian and Chinese support for these resolutions shocked Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Iran saw first-hand the weak U.N. pressure on Saddam Hussein and expected no worse treatment. Mr. Ahmadinejad reportedly predicted that neither Moscow nor Beijing would sign off on these resolutions. Their passage made the country's professional classes, which are proud of Iran's integration in the international system, feel the sting of diplomatic and economic isolation.
See #15 for why they oppose .....
Iranian Clerics Being Assassinated, Pressure On Iranian Rulers
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Is the pressure in Iran about to boil over and destroy the Islamo-Fascists?
THE assassination of a prominent cleric in an oil-rich Iranian province, coinciding with violent protests in Tehran over the rationing of petrol, has plunged President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad into his biggest crisis since he was elected two years ago.
The murder on June 24 of Hesham Saymary in Ahvaz, the centre of Irans oil-producing province in the south, was a blow to a regime that is already under pressure because of international condemnation of its nuclear program and the prospect of economic meltdown.The assassination, the third of a senior cleric this year, bore the hallmarks of a well-planned murder.....................
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It is clear why Iran and Venezuela are talking. Both have restive populations, large oil reserves and busted economies. Iran may very well be hitting a tipping point of its own.
So, basically, Iran is killing our soldiers, training others to kill our soldiers, providing weapons to kill our soldiers, and, oh yeah, developing a nuclear weapon which just might be able to kill a whole bunch of our soldiers. And our reply is to (unsuccessfully) make Iran an international pariah.
Call me crazy, but I think that the proper response to the above provocations should be for us to kill their soldiers, train others to kill their soldiers, provide weapons to kill their soldiers, and, since we already have a nuclear weapon, threaten to use it to kill a whole bunch of their soldiers. Of course, we’d need to have a president like Reagan so the mullahs would know we just might not be bluffing.
Well....there is stuff going on....see #24....
It's a start, anyway. Thanks for your excellent research.
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Added some Toon’s....
Is Michael Ramirez the best or what!!!
He used to be the only reason I ever checked out the Op-Ed page of the LAT Online...
now, thankfully, I have absolutely no reason to go there at all. LOL
We are seeing real progress in this third phase (have been for the past 6-8 months). During such time period Iranian influence has continued (and even increased some most likely).
Do we try to keep this continued traction / success we are seeing currently on the ground in Iraq....and fight simply a shadow war with these Iranian elements (while trying to get Iraq to the stage we need)?....Or do we risk perhaps a new phase (and more overtly chaotic, especially in the PR aspect of this WOT) by beginning an over shooting war with Iran.
Tremendously complicated (to a point). Whichever we choose will be second guessed 24/7 as completely wrong during....
And take into consideration that it may be Mil HQs who have had the most reservations / restrictions about wanting an overt shooting war with Iran....more so then the WH.
Intel the Media won’t tell you.
The roaches have traveled further then the map indicates.
Thanks E.
Great idea, Grampa Dave:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1859675/posts?page=13#13
Thanks E for the pings.
Strategic Policy Consulting confirmed a two year old report by the British Ahwazi Friendship Society that Iran was using the "Arab populated city of Ahwaz, southwestern Iran, as a base of operations." The city of Ahwaz is in Khuzestan province, which borders the southern Iraqi province of Basra.Sounds like a good place for a MOAB.
A U.S. military explosives expert displays explosives used by Iraqi militants, including the 'EFP' armour-penetrating roadside bomb (far L), in the Green Zone in Baghdad July 2, 2007. Senior Iranian leaders know about the operations of Iran's Qods Force in fomenting violence in Iraq, the U.S. military said on Monday, in some of the most direct accusations yet against Tehran over the chaos in Iraq. (Chris Hondros/Wathiq Khuzaie/Pool/Reuters)
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