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Iranian Alert -- February 7, 2004 -- IRAN LIVE THREAD --Americans for Regime Change in Iran
The Iranian Student Movement Up To The Minute Reports ^ | 2.7.2004 | DoctorZin

Posted on 02/07/2004 12:05:05 AM PST by DoctorZIn

The US media almost entirely ignores news regarding the Islamic Republic of Iran. As Tony Snow of the Fox News Network has put it, “this is probably the most under-reported news story of the year.” But most American’s are unaware that the Islamic Republic of Iran is NOT supported by the masses of Iranians today. Modern Iranians are among the most pro-American in the Middle East.

There is a popular revolt against the Iranian regime brewing in Iran today. Starting June 10th of this year, Iranians have begun taking to the streets to express their desire for a regime change. Most want to replace the regime with a secular democracy. Many even want the US to over throw their government.

The regime is working hard to keep the news about the protest movement in Iran from being reported. Unfortunately, the regime has successfully prohibited western news reporters from covering the demonstrations. The voices of discontent within Iran are sometime murdered, more often imprisoned. Still the people continue to take to the streets to demonstrate against the regime.

In support of this revolt, Iranians in America have been broadcasting news stories by satellite into Iran. This 21st century news link has greatly encouraged these protests. The regime has been attempting to jam the signals, and locate the satellite dishes. Still the people violate the law and listen to these broadcasts. Iranians also use the Internet and the regime attempts to block their access to news against the regime. In spite of this, many Iranians inside of Iran read these posts daily to keep informed of the events in their own country.

This daily thread contains nearly all of the English news reports on Iran. It is thorough. If you follow this thread you will witness, I believe, the transformation of a nation. This daily thread provides a central place where those interested in the events in Iran can find the best news and commentary. The news stories and commentary will from time to time include material from the regime itself. But if you read the post you will discover for yourself, the real story of what is occurring in Iran and its effects on the war on terror.

I am not of Iranian heritage. I am an American committed to supporting the efforts of those in Iran seeking to replace their government with a secular democracy. I am in contact with leaders of the Iranian community here in the United States and in Iran itself.

If you read the daily posts you will gain a better understanding of the US war on terrorism, the Middle East and why we need to support a change of regime in Iran. Feel free to ask your questions and post news stories you discover in the weeks to come.

If all goes well Iran will be free soon and I am convinced become a major ally in the war on terrorism. The regime will fall. Iran will be free. It is just a matter of time.

DoctorZin


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: iaea; iran; iranianalert; iranquake; protests; southasia; studentmovement; studentprotest
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Join Us At Today's Iranian Alert Thread – The Most Underreported Story Of The Year!

"If you want on or off this Iran ping list, Freepmail DoctorZin”

1 posted on 02/07/2004 12:05:07 AM PST by DoctorZIn
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To: Pan_Yans Wife; fat city; freedom44; Tamsey; Grampa Dave; PhiKapMom; McGavin999; Hinoki Cypress; ...
Join Us At Today's Iranian Alert Thread – The Most Underreported Story Of The Year!

"If you want on or off this Iran ping list, Freepmail DoctorZin”

2 posted on 02/07/2004 12:09:34 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
IRAN TO STAGE LARGEST ANTI ISRAELI, ANTI US CONFERENCE

TEHRAN, 6 Feb. (IPS)

Iran plans to host the largest meeting of hard line Islamic groups regarded by the United States as terrorists, according to informed sources in Tehran.

Iranian officials said the ten-days conference starting next week would discuss strategy against the United States and its allies, particularly Israel and the best ways and means to increase military, financial and propaganda support for Palestinian groups fighting Tel Aviv.

According to same sources, organisations such as the Hamas, the Islamic Jihad of Palestine, the Iran-backed Lebanese Hezbollah, and al-Qa’eda allies like the Ansar al Eslam would attend the meeting, to be chaired by Hojjatoleslam Ali Akbar Mohtashami, also known as "the father" of the Lebanese Shi’ite organisation.

Mr. Mohtashami, a former ambassador to Damascus and Interior minister now a reformist Member of the Majles, or the Iranian parliament, was in Lebanon last month where he coordinated with Hezbollah and representatives from the Hamas and the Islamic Jihad of Palestine the Tehran conference, expected to be inaugurated by a message from Ayatollah Ali Khameneh'i, the leader of the Islamic Republic, in the presence of some high-ranking officials, including President Mohammad Khatami and Ayatollah Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, Chairman of the Expediency Council.

The conference would be held amidst an unprecedented political crisis following the disqualification of most of incumbent reformist lawmakers and, is the largest of Arab and Palestinian radical groups opposed to peace with Israel.

Under pressures and "encouragements" from the Islamic Republic, Hezbollah, created by the Islamic Republic after the victory of the Islamic Revolution of 1979, agreed last week to a dramatic exchange of prisoners with the Jewish State.

As a result, Israel handed over to Hezbollah more than 400 Palestinian, Lebanese and Arab prisoners and the bodies of 50 Hezbollah fighters against those of three Israeli soldiers and a businessman kidnapped two years ago by Hezbollah agents in the Persian Gulf city of Dubai.

Mr. Kamal Kharrazi, the Iranian Foreign Minister, in Beirut two days ago to discuss the second phase of the German-mediated exchange with both Lebanese and Hezbollah officials also invited Mr. Nabih Berri, the Speaker of Lebanese parliament and leader of Amal, the Syrian backed Shi’ite organisation to attend the Conference, sources added.

Besides Middle Eastern Islamist organisations, most of them supported by the Islamic Republic and officials from Syria, secular and leftist insurgent groups from South America, Spain and Ireland would also be present, the sources said, adding that representatives of several participating groups are already in the Iranian capital.

ENDS ISLAMIST CONFERENCE 6204

http://www.iran-press-service.com/articles_2004/Feb_04/islamist_conference_6204.htm
3 posted on 02/07/2004 12:15:54 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
Bump!
4 posted on 02/07/2004 1:40:22 AM PST by windchime (Podesta about Bush: "He's got four years to try to undo all the stuff we've done." (TIME-1/22/01))
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To: windchime
What a nice time for all those terrorists to be under one roof...1000lb JDAM bomb should do the trick...
5 posted on 02/07/2004 2:04:28 AM PST by Big Bad Bob (First it was Afghanistan, then Iraq...now for Iran...Syria...North Korea...Zimbabwe)
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To: Big Bad Bob
I was thinking Special Ops.
6 posted on 02/07/2004 3:15:42 AM PST by windchime (Podesta about Bush: "He's got four years to try to undo all the stuff we've done." (TIME-1/22/01))
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To: All
Iran: more to it than meets the eye

Khaleej Times
By Mohammed A. R. Galadari
7 February 2004

IS THE political situation in Iran the result of the disqualification by the Guardian Council of a number of candidates, where the conservatives and reformists are in confrontation? Or is the situation more profound than the superficial differences, and the crossroads for the Islamic Republic after 25 years of age?

What makes the above questions meaningful is that the history of nations, which witnessed grand revolutions, starts with the so-called legitimacy of the revolution, the new current opposing the previous one in all its forms and shapes. At this point, all the pre-revolution age becomes subject to evaluation and judgment. For that reason the ordinary judiciary system is suspended and a revolution-run judicature comes into existence. However, this has not happened in Iran only, but in almost all major revolutions: France has witnessed the most notorious revolutionary trials that fall beyond anybody's imagination. It is difficult to imagine that such trials could be staged in a country that presented the modern civil code to most of the world's constitutions.

With the passage of time, internal accountability commences: what have we done? What benefits have we gained? What aspects deserve advocacy and what need to be discarded? It is a process of self-evaluation of the experiment. This is what is seemingly taking place in Iran. It is a part Iran should play without fear.

Yes, all the players on the political arena in Iran should conduct this self-evaluation of the past 25 years. The pros and cons should be assessed. After that the pros should be reinforced and the cons be eliminated or remedied. This process is called the constitutional versus revolutionary legitimacy. It is where the rhythm of the political system is fine-tuned in harmony with the constitution. In other words, the constitution should not reflect the interests of a particular group. It should take into account the 'legitimate' dreams and ambitions buzzing in all the people's minds.

What is currently said about the two opposing currents within the Iranian government, namely the conservatives and reformists, does not necessarily mean that there are no other political currents on the arena. However, they should set aside their differences and bear the country's supreme interests in mind. Otherwise, a third current or movement, though lurking unseen, would emerge in opposition to the two conflicting movements. At that point, the political arena would witness more disorder, which cannot, rather will not, be tolerated.

The next phase is the economic development and the evolution of a uniform political identity having homogeneous internal and external policies respecting the international community's will as well as regional cooperation on the basis of equality, partnership rather than put into practice the pre-tailored patterns. It is seemingly taking place. However, attempts to provoke instability would not only hinder reforms and developments, but would also cause a relapse.

http://www.khaleejtimes.com/DisplayArticle.asp?xfile=data/comment/2004/February/comment_February7.xml&section=comment
7 posted on 02/07/2004 3:22:27 AM PST by F14 Pilot ("Terrorists declared war on U.S. and War is what they Got!")
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To: DoctorZIn; nuconvert; Pan_Yans Wife; McGavin999; Pro-Bush; Cindy; MEG33; downer911; Eala; ...
Iran's President Says Election Will Not Be Fair

7 Feb 2004
Radio Free Europe

Tehran, 7 February 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Iran's President Mohammad Khatami says legislative elections due in two weeks' time will not be fair because of a conservative oversight body's decision to bar more than 2,000 candidates.

Iran's official IRNA news agency says Khatami and parliament speaker Mehdi Karrubi have sent a joint letter to the country's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, to complain about the conservative Guardians Council's continuing disqualification of the candidates.

As a result, say Khatami and Karrubi in their letter, Iran's voters will have little motivation to come to the polls and will not have a chance to participate in a fair ballot.

But Khatami and Karrubi stopped short of calling for a postponement of the 20 February poll.

Iran's largest reformist party, headed by Khatami's brother, Mohammad Reza Khatami, has said it will boycott the election.

http://www.rferl.org/features/features_article.aspx?id=906ffc08-a9cc-4d0f-9714-1f6da1516e9f&y=2004&m=02
8 posted on 02/07/2004 4:33:25 AM PST by F14 Pilot ("Terrorists declared war on U.S. and War is what they Got!")
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To: F14 Pilot
What will the peope do? If it were me, I'd be organizing another election, running whoever wants to run, having a HUGE turnout and let the mad mullahs try to explain away why the official elections only had a 1% turnout and the unofficial elections had 70% turnout.

The Iranian people need to take back their country, but they can only do it by taking a united stand.

9 posted on 02/07/2004 8:19:56 AM PST by McGavin999 (Evil thrives when good men do nothing!)
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To: McGavin999
I doubt the leadership would allow the people to chose their own candidates, directly. Otherwise, why is there a Guardian Council?
10 posted on 02/07/2004 8:37:15 AM PST by Pan_Yans Wife (Say not, 'I have found the truth,' but rather, 'I have found a truth.'--- Kahlil Gibran)
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To: DoctorZIn; Pan_Yans Wife; nuconvert; McGavin999; PhilDragoo; Pro-Bush; Eala; windchime; MEG33; ...
Insurgents attack Iraqi soldiers; alleged Muslim radical caught entering Iran

CBC News Canada
Feb 07 2004

BAGHDAD (AP) - Insurgents fired a rocket propelled grenade Saturday at a bus carrying Iraqi soldiers west of Baghdad, wounding five of them and a civilian bystander, officials said.

Meanwhile, a UN election official was expected in Baghdad on Saturday to begin studying the feasibility of early legislative elections, as demanded by the country's leading Shiite Muslim cleric, Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Husseini al-Sistani.

Elsewhere, U.S.-allied Kurdish forces in northern Iraq captured suspected member of Ansar al-Islam, a radical Muslim group, as he tried to enter the country from Iran, an Iraqi official said.

U.S. and Kurdish officials believe Ansar al-Islam is linked to al-Qaida and may have been behind last weekend's twin suicide bombings in the northern city of Irbil.

The attack against the Iraqi army bus took place near the mayor's office in Fallujah, a hotbed of the insurgency in the Sunni Triangle west of the capital, said 1st Lt. Raad Mussab of Iraq's army. The attackers escaped.

The alleged Ansar al-Islam member, Warzir Ali Wali Mamoyi, was arrested Thursday at a checkpoint in Kurdish-controlled Sulaimaniyah province, according to Omar Ghareeb, a local civil administration official.

He described Mamoyi as a member of a committee that issues policy statements for Ansar al-Islam, a mostly Kurdish militant group that follows a strict interpretation of Islam.

Kurdish officials believe Ansar al-Islam carried out the Sunday suicide bombings at the offices of the Kurdistan Democratic party and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Irbil. Another group, the Ansar al-Sunna army, claimed responsibility for the attacks, which killed 109 people, in a statement posted on a Web site. U.S. officers believe Ansar al-Sunna is a splinter group of Ansar al-Islam.

A Kurdish newspaper, Kurdistani Nuwe, said Friday that Mamoyi was planning to travel to the Sunni Triangle area, possibly to link up with anti-U.S. insurgents from the former regime of Saddam Hussein.

UN officials have made no announcement about the scheduled arrival of a UN electoral team that Secretary General Kofi Annan was sending to break the impasse between al-Sistani and the occupation authority over the timetable for elections and the transfer of power.

Al-Sistani demands that the new legislature be elected, while the Americans want the members appointed in 18 regional caucuses. The legislature will choose a new sovereign government that will take office by July 1.

A senior UN elections expert, Carina Perelli, was in Amman, Jordan, on Friday. UN officials would not confirm she was en route to Baghdad, but an aide to Governing Council member Adnan Pachachi said he would meet with the UN team later Saturday in Baghdad. The aide, Mahdi Hafidh, Pachachi's priority was to ensure that the June 30 deadline for handing over sovereignty be met.

Also Saturday, about 200 former employees of the Ministry of Information gathered near the coalition headquarters in Baghdad to demand salaries. The employees were fired in May 2003 after occupation authorities dissolved the ministry, a mouthpiece of Saddam's regime.

"We are in the new Iraq and this is an injustice, unfair and we want our salaries because we are not criminals," shouted Yasmin Adnan, a former translator at the ministry.

The Information Ministry, which monitored journalists during Saddam's regime, gained notoriety when its chief, Mohammed Saeed al-Sahhaf, denied that American troops were in Baghdad even as American tanks could be seen on the grounds of Saddam's Republican Palace.

Elsewhere, the U.S. military said a roadside bomb Friday exploded in Baghdad, wounding two U.S. soldiers. No further details were released.

http://www.cbc.ca/cp/world/040207/w020726.html
11 posted on 02/07/2004 10:14:58 AM PST by F14 Pilot ("Terrorists declared war on U.S. and War is what they Got!")
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To: DoctorZIn
Iran's Most Wanted: Filmmakers

February 06, 2004
News Wires
Jason Silverman

It's the most low-tech filmmaking imaginable. Director Ali Mantini's films have no crane or tracking shots. The cameraman rides piggyback on the shoulders of a crew member or bumps along on a donkey. The cast consists of nonprofessional actors, some of whom pay Mantini for the privilege of stepping before the camera.

Mantini edits the movie while lying on his back, holding strips of 8-mm film that an assistant illuminates with a bare light bulb. Each splice uses a carefully snipped piece of Scotch tape. When finished, the film is projected on a sheet taped to the wall of a house for Mantini's neighbors to see.

Welcome to Iranian underground cinema. Mantini, who works 60-hour weeks at a brick factory, spends weekends and holidays making movies. Each film is totally handcrafted. And each is completely illegal.

The Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater, or REDCAT, a theater inside Los Angeles' new Walt Disney Hall, is screening a series of films from Iran's hidden cinema. The REDCAT is dedicated to showing cutting-edge works. The program includes Trial, by Iranian journalist and filmmaker Moslem Mansouri, which documents one of Mantini's film productions.

In Trial, Mantini's artistic pretensions seem comic -- he awards himself a best director prize at a wrap party -- but his intentions are profound. Mantini is determined to use his 18 films and 110 novels to share the kind of information he believes the Iranian government suppresses.

It's perilous work. Mantini faces imprisonment each time he takes out his camera or distributes a hand-bound book. Mansouri, who entered the United States under political asylum in 1999, estimated that Mantini and as many as 200 villagers -- Mantini's cast, crew and supporters -- have been jailed at one time or another for their filmmaking.

"The regime's response is very aggressive to any expression of this sort," said Mansouri, himself a former prisoner.

Since the Iranian revolution in 1979, the country's only sanctioned filmmaking has come about through government agencies. Within this system, world-renowned filmmakers including Abbas Kiarostami and Mohsen Makhmalbaf have built an artful, innovative stream of movies. In terms of aesthetics, Iranian cinema has been an unqualified success.

But Mansouri indicated that these state-sponsored filmmakers do not have the freedom to explore the important issues facing Iranians. Underground filmmakers like Mantini, on the other hand, strive to tackle, head-on, Iran's societal ills.

More and more may be doing just that, using consumer cameras and editing systems. Among the filmmakers represented in the REDCAT show are Mahnaz Afzali, a well-known actress, who shot her film, The Ladies, in a public restroom in a Tehran park, capturing the stories of prostitutes, runaways and other refugees from Iranian society.

Maziar Bahari's And Along Came a Spider features interviews with a man who became a hero after killing 16 prostitutes to "cleanse" Iranian society. Our Times and Zinat, A Very Special Day both explore the challenges facing female would-be politicians.

It seems a miracle that these films are being shot, let alone completed and sent overseas. But as more filmmakers hit the streets with digital camcorders in their backpacks, the Iranian government may have a harder time cracking down.

"With the advent of digital modes of recording, a lot of the things we thought we knew about repressive regimes and modes of censorship of cinema are not true anymore," said Berenice Reynaud, who with Shohreh Shashani and Caroline Masse curated REDCAT's Iranian program. "With a pocket digital camera you can record professional images, and you can have an editing system at home, so you don't need a permit. And you can walk outside of the country and present these images in the world."

That seems to be happening more often. Mansouri smuggled eight of his unfinished films out of Iran, and has heard other stories of friends escaping with provocative footage.

Iran isn't the first repressive country to have an underground, revolutionary cinema. In the 1970s, groups of radical filmmakers were embedded in the opposition parties in countries throughout South America. Today, China has a vibrant illegal filmmaking culture.

These underground films always have been difficult to exhibit -- you won't find them in theaters or on TV in their countries of origin. Mantini's films have not been seen outside his neighboring villages. However, low-cost video decks are helping get banned movies out into the world.

"These films have never had distribution and so could not be seen, and they haven't grown to the same strength as the official cinema," said Mansouri. "But the distribution and viewing of these underground films have increased a great deal. As soon as anyone gets their hands on something that can be considered a banned film they make copies and pass them on."

http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,62179,00.html?tw=wn_culthead_2
12 posted on 02/07/2004 10:15:46 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
Iran Conservatives: Reformers Will Pay After Poll

February 06, 2004
AFP
IranMania

TEHRAN -- Iran's conservatives, in chilling warnings, have told their reformist opponents they will pay dearly for the country's political crisis once February 20 parliamentary elections are over.

"Those executive officials who want to resign close to the time of the election should be dealt with like the enemies of God," hardline editor Hossein Shariatmadari wrote in his Kayhan evening newspaper earlier this month.

Under Iranian law, the charge is similar to blasphemy and carries the death penalty.

The reformists have seen the conservative-controlled Guardians Council vetting body bar thousands of their candidates from the poll.

They believe they could lose control of government and parliament if the election goes ahead and have called for it to be postponed. Some 120 MPs, who held a sit-in in parliament, have resigned, along with provincial governors and some ministers and deputy ministers.

Massoud Jazahiri, spokesman for the regime's ideological shocktroops, the Revolutionary Guards, warned those who had strongly protested against the mass banning of would-be candidates that they "will have to answer to the people's tribunal".

He said "MPs who organised a sit-in and made counter-revolutionary speeches insulting the values of Islam have written the blackest pages in the history of parliament".

For conservatives, the Guardians Council just did its Islamic, revolutionary and constitutitional duty when, during validation of prospective candidates, it disqualified more than 3,000 out of 8,000 for lack of respect for Islam and the constitution.

The Council denies any bias, although most of the barred candidates -- including some 80 sitting MPs and prominent figures -- were reformists.

Ayatollah Ahmad Janati, head of the 12-member Guardians Council, said it had never "cast a political look" on the candidates' files and had only applied Islamic law.

News of the banning on January 11 provoked what many see as the worst political crisis in the Islamic republic since it was founded in 1979.

In a bid to resolve the struggle, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told the Council to review its blacklist, resulting in the reinstatement of around 1,300 candidates but not ending the political conflict.

Reformists see the banning as the culmination of a "parliamentary coup d'etat", planned over two years, to eliminate them. Conservatives see the hand of foreign enemies behind their opponents.

Ali Akbar Nateq-Nuri, advisor to supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, told some 1,800 Friday-prayer imams late on Thursday: "A foreign conspiracy has been drawn up and a certain number of people were hoping that foreigners would intervene in their favour ... Shame be on those who have opened the way to foreigners."

Khamenei, whom the conservatives regard as one of their own, said on Wednesday that the elections could not be delayed even one day. They must go ahead as scheduled, on February 20, "to preserve the country and system against plots, and thwart the enemies of Islam and of the Islamic republic", he said.

Iran's "enemies" are traditionally the Americans and the Israelis.

Khamenei said "enemies of the republic" were "encouraging certain officials of the executive to step down from their posts", and they had also "infiltrated parliament".

"The strategy of the enemy is to prevent the February 20 elections from taking place," he said, adding that both sides in the crisis were "resisting" heavy pressure."The government and the people will foil this plot."

Reinforced by Khamenei's words, the conservatives, who control the security forces, have ratcheted up their threats.

"Hindering of the electoral process, by any government body, constitutes a violation of legal and religious duties and will thus be viewed as a criminal act and bring prosecution," warned Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, head of the Iranian judiciary.

On Friday, just two weeks from the scheduled election date, the chief editor of the hardline Resalaat paper, Mohamad Kazem Anbarloui, told the congregation in a mosque in Iran's clerical capital of Qom: "Those current MPs whose qualifications have been rejected by the Guardians Council are US spies and were implementing US rules instead of Islamic rules."

http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default.asp?NewsCode=22363&NewsKind=Current%20Affairs
13 posted on 02/07/2004 10:16:49 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: Pan_Yans Wife; fat city; freedom44; Tamsey; Grampa Dave; PhiKapMom; McGavin999; Hinoki Cypress; ...
Iran Conservatives: Reformers Will Pay After Elections

February 06, 2004
AFP
IranMania

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1073273/posts?page=13#13
14 posted on 02/07/2004 10:18:16 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
Iran Hosting Global Terrorist Conference

February 07, 2004
WorldNetDaily.com
World Net Daily

Just as the U.S. State Department approves wider contact with Iran and as members of Congress begin planning the first official trips in 25 years, Tehran is sponsoring a 10-day conference of major terrorist organization beginning next week.

The purpose of the conference is to discuss anti-U.S. strategy.

Among the groups headed to Iran to participate are: Hamas, Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad and al-Qaida allies Ansar Al Islam.

The conference, dubbed "Ten Days of Dawn," is designed to mark the 25th anniversary of the return to Iran from exile of the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who led the revolution that ousted the shah of Iran in 1979.

Officials said the conference, ordered by Iranian supreme leader Ali Khamenei, marks Iran's investment in sponsoring Islamic insurgency groups in the Middle East, Asia and South America.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=37000
15 posted on 02/07/2004 10:20:35 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
The Standoff with Iraqi Shiites Over Direct Elections

February 06, 2004
AEI Online
Reuel Marc Gerecht

The Bush administration needs to be aware of Islamic history as it works with the Iraqis to forge a democracy in their country. The Shiite Muslims, who constitute a majority of the population, are clamoring for direct elections after centuries of injustice suffered at the hands of others. If the administration rejects that approach to democratization, it runs a serious risk of losing Iraq to violence.

In the modern Middle East, much more than in the West, history is a living force. Denominated by faith, animated by folklore and daily language rich in religious allusion, and remembered overwhelmingly through military victory and defeat, Islamic history is an emotional keyboard for even the least educated and least faithful. When Yasser Arafat and his companions named his organization Fatah ("Conquest"), Muslims knew immediately the allusion to the surah of the Koran, with its references to victory over the Jews and Arabs uncommitted to God's calling, and to the early imperial conquests that made Byzantine Palestine Muslim. Shiite Muslims, whose core identity is built upon the injustice done to them by the larger Sunni Muslim world, have this historical sense in spades.

The Bush administration, in the person of L. Paul Bremer of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad, is now at odds with Iraqi Shiite history and Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the most influential cleric in Iraq and probably the most renowned divine in Shiite Islam. The ambassador wants to transfer sovereignty from the Provisional Authority and its Iraqi Governing Council to a new Iraqi governing body chosen by caucuses controlled by the Provisional Authority and the Governing Council. This larger, arguably more representative, but unelected body would then control the political process leading to a constitutional assembly and national legislative elections. Ayatollah Sistani, however, wants direct elections for any provisional government, as well as for a constituent assembly. Beyond any modern education that Sistani may have had in Iran and Iraq--the great libraries of Shiism's religious schools are well-stocked with books about the Western tradition of one-man, one-vote--he certainly knows his flock's fate since Britain created Iraq from the ruins of the Ottoman state.

Simply put, Shiites everywhere have been cheated--by the Ottomans, British, Sunni Arab Hashemites, pan-Arab nationalists, Baathists, and the first Bush administration, which let them die by the tens of thousands when Saddam put down the rebellion following the first Gulf War. To make matters worse for the Shiites of Iraq, their country is the birthplace of Shiism, where annually the faithful commemorate (except when the Sunnis would not let them) the mother of all shortchanges, the defeat and martyrdom of the Imam Hussein, the son of the Caliph Ali and the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad. Muslims loyal to an Umayyad caliph in Damascus--the folks who would later be called Sunnis--won the day, and kept on winning for 1,300 years (minus a few, usually short-lived, Shiite triumphs).

The Ashura celebrations of Hussein's martyrdom that occurred not long after the fall of Saddam Hussein produced a palpable political quickening throughout Iraq's Shiite community. As one cleric later remarked to me, in the spring of 2003 when the Shiites beat their chests in mourning for the betrayal of their imam, they were really saying the centuries of cheating had come to an end. For him, a democratic system in Iraq would ensure that no conspiracy of forces would ever again hurt Shiites. The age of taqiyya--the historic Shiite disposition toward dissimulation in self-defense--could finally end, and Shiites could live as normal men, that is, as Sunnis. Though the understanding of democracy among Iraq's Shiites, especially among the clergy, is more sophisticated than that, at heart this is the wellspring of their democratic sentiment and goodwill toward the United States. Sistani's commitment to the Bush administration's effort to midwife democracy in his country rides on this simple conviction. The more complicated America's blueprint for democracy in Iraq--and the caucus system envisaged by Washington is not easily grasped by American officials, let alone Iraqis--the greater the risk Sistani will abandon the project. Keeping it simple greatly helps to check the historical sense that betrayal is near.

The Administration's Perspective

Of course, American officials do not see it this way, and are increasingly perplexed, if not downright angry, that Sistani does not appreciate their good intentions. The caucus process, so the theory goes, will allow the Iraqi people more control over their affairs more quickly, with a transfer of sovereignty in less than 180 days. Preparations for elections would, in the CPA's view, take eighteen months (though some officials, particularly those at the State Department with experience in successfully jerry-rigging quick elections, think several months could be sliced off the CPA's prognostications). In addition, both Americans and many Iraqis hope the transfer of sovereignty to the new body selected by the caucuses will improve counterinsurgency operations in the Sunni Triangle (more Iraqis will be committed to the process as Iraqis become more responsible for protecting their own political system, and their kith and kin). And radical forces, particularly on the Shiite side, will not be able to use the ballot box to derail the fragile political order, which has been increasingly envenomed by Sunni-stomping Shiite followers of the clerical upstart Moqtada al-Sadr and Shiite-hating Sunni fundamentalists, who are, it appears, growing in number.

Also, as a senior State Department official fearfully confessed, there is no guarantee that the traditional Shiite forces behind Sistani will be able to stop the followers of al-Sadr, or the radicals within the Shiite Dawa party, or the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq once the passions start to flow in a more open election process. Democracy in this view is the handmaiden of militants in a post-totalitarian society. Conversely, "moderate" Shiite forces led by Sistani do not appear to many so moderate anymore since the ayatollah's recent actions suggest that he may be seeking a one-man veto of Iraq's new order. Sistani's conception of the separation of church and state is obviously not the preferred conception of many in the U.S. government or of the non-Shiite members of the Iraqi Governing Council. There is growing concern in certain quarters that Sistani--born, raised, and partly educated in Iran--shows signs of Persian hubris that might lead to an Iraqi version of Iran's Islamic Republic. Because of his "bad genes," and because members of his family are still in Iran, and thus subject to possible blackmail, Sistani could in fact become a Trojan horse for hardcore Iranian clerical influence throughout Iraq.

Of at least equal concern to U.S. officials is the fact that a nonelected transitional government would also be much less susceptible to terrorist violence, and the Bush administration has been seriously concerned since August that violence could somehow derail the transfer of sovereignty, let alone messy, easily disrupted preparations for national elections. Election results could also easily be skewed by terrorist intimidation. More important, U.S. soldiers, who would have to be used extensively to protect the electioneering, would be much more open to insurgent strikes than they are now.

Understandably, the Bush administration does not want the U.S. casualty rate to spike upward close to November 2004--a possible scenario if the Bush administration allows national elections sooner, not later. And the administration really wants to find some way to vest the Arab-Sunni population, who were the backbone of Saddam Hussein's power, in the new political process. Rumors, probably based on fact, of moderate Arab-Sunni families' searching for visas to abandon Iraq are already spooking some U.S. officials, who know that a majority of Iraq's Arab-Sunnis are, though happy about Saddam's fall, distinctly uncomfortable with the idea of a Shiite-dominated state. Elections sooner not later could ruin the American hope that some political construct is possible for the Arab-Sunnis.

Elections later would, at minimum, punt the problem down the road--an appealing prospect at any time for a U.S. official, let alone during an election year when the Democratic candidate obviously intends to pummel the Bush administration over its handling of Iraq. (How any prowar Democrat can plausibly suggest that better prewar planning could have obviated the great schism between Sunnis and Shiites in Iraq is not immediately apparent. The French, Germans, and Russians--the tripartite antiwar union that appears to form the core of Senator John Kerry's "international community"--have not shown in the last several hundred years notable adeptness with Muslim sectarian squabbles.)

And last but not least, U.S. officials do not want to flinch again before Grand Ayatollah Sistani for fear that the United States will completely lose control of the transition process. Bremer and the Bush administration have already blinked once, if not twice, and each time surely encouraged Sistani to push his views more strongly. Though the Bush administration is loath to admit it, the Provisional Authority and the Pentagon poorly handled the case of Moqtada al-Sadr, the firebrand descendant of the most famous and revolutionary Iraqi clerical family. According to U.S. officials, Sadr was behind the death of U.S. soldiers, but the Provisional Authority and the Pentagon declined to move against him directly (they did round up some of his men) because they feared Shiite repercussions. Sadr and Sistani undoubtedly learned from this failure of American will.

The easiest concern of the Bush administration to understand is its desire not to retreat again before Ayatollah Sistani. The United States will likely discover after July 1--assuming the June 30 date for the transfer of sovereignty holds--that its effective power in Iraq will evaporate quickly. Those on the American right who hope to use Iraq for years to come as a partner in projecting American influence throughout the Middle East, and those on the left who fear that American soldiers will be stuck in Iraq for years, are likely to learn this summer and fall that their hopes and fears are unfounded. American power in Iraq is ideological, not imperial. It is inextricably connected to the promise of democracy. If the Bush administration backs down on the June 30 date--effectively ceding the entire democratic process to Ayatollah Sistani--Ambassador Bremer's position in Baghdad could become ceremonial overnight.

Grand Ayatollah Sistani

This is not necessarily a bad thing. Anyone who has had any contact with the Provisional Authority knows how far removed it is from the real Baghdad, let alone Iraqi society. It is a good bet that Ayatollah Sistani understands the pitfalls of democracy in Iraq as well as Ambassador Bremer. A very good sign that many in the U.S. government (and in the press) are losing their balance and judgment concerning Sistani and the traditional clergy of Najaf is when they allude ominously to Sistani's Persianness, implying he contains within him the serious potential for theocratic authoritarianism and nasty anti- American behavior. Ironically, this nefarious Iranian DNA critique is the one that radical "pure-Arab Iraqi" clerics, like Moqtada al-Sadr, and others within the Dawa movement, have used against traditional clerics in Najaf and Karbala who have been insufficiently militant. Before them, the Hashemites regularly threw this gravamen at Shiite clerics, of Iranian lineage or not, who attempted to counter the Hashemite quest to centralize Iraq in Arab-Sunni hands. Ditto the Baath and Saddam Hussein.

The point is, you judge a Shiite cleric first and foremost by his writings, his lectures to his students, the younger clerics he has trained, and his mentors. By all of these criteria, Grand Ayatollah Sistani is a "good" mullah. There are two big intellectual currents in modern Shiite clerical thought. One leads to Khomeini and the other leads to clerics like Sistani. There are certainly overlapping areas between the two schools of thought--the place of women in post-Saddam Iraq will likely be a fascinating subject--but on the role of the people as the final arbiter of politics, there is very little reason to doubt Sistani's commitment to democracy. Clerics like Sistani may use high-volume moral suasion, they may suggest that a certain view is sinful, but they understand that clerics cannot become politicians without compromising their religious mission.

Having Iranian blood and family in the Islamic Republic surely has made Sistani more sensitive to the pitfalls of clerical dictatorship. Sistani is a true marja'-e taqlid--"a source of emulation"--the highest stature that any Shiite cleric can have. The Iranian revolution has done a superb job of deconstructing and diminishing the clerical educational system in Iran. The Islamic Republic now produces only national clerics, whose traditional juridical eminence barely extends beyond the confines of Iran's religious schools. Sistani is the last great transnational Shiite divine. His eminence easily reaches into his motherland. The relationship between Grand Ayatollah Sistani and the other senior clerics of Najaf with Iran's mullahs is a complicated work in progress. American officials would be wise not to sell Sistani short in his inevitable competition with Iran's hard-core clergy. The Iranians have not yet let loose hell against the Americans in Iraq even though logistically they probably could. One reason for this is surely Sistani, of whom Iran's ruling clerics must be careful and respectful. As in the matter of democracy in Iraq, Sistani may again become one of America's most effective allies.

Regardless of what the Bush administration decides to do with the June 30 deadline, Bremer and the Provisional Authority are probably going to pass into desuetude quite soon. Once Sistani began Iraq's internal democratic discussion--a debate the Governing Council and the Provisional Authority had failed to generate on their own for months--Bremer's stature was destined to collapse. The Bush administration made Sistani strong the moment it decided to become a bit too clever about constructing an Iraqi political system to limit democracy in favor of communal stability and American self-interest.

So should the administration change course now, and either accelerate national elections for a provisional government before June 30, or abandon the deadline and the transitional caucus system for a directly elected body as soon as possible? The administration is obviously hoping that Sistani is sufficiently spooked by the possibility of a big confrontation with the United States that he will use the United Nations' intercession as a face-saving escape valve. A UN declaration about the logistical problems of having an election before June 30 would, so the theory goes, assuage the Shiites demonstrating on the streets and reinforce the confidence of Najaf's mullahs, who might doubt the democratic commitment of the United States. A man of moderation, Sistani might not want to aid the radicals who are itching for a fight. Unfortunately, this is not a great theory.

Sistani, like most Iraqis, does not really care what the United Nations thinks. The UN's reputation is distinctly bad in the country, especially among the Shiites, who saw it as an antiwar, pro-Saddam institution. Sistani might use the UN as leverage against the United States; he might use it as cover for a retreat. He could also simply discard its views without any hesitation. And the caucus system devised by the Americans and given to the Iraqi Governing Council to support is spiritually, if not operationally, a mess. Neither Ambassador Bremer, nor Colin Powell, nor Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld has stood up and given a full-throated defense of this arrangement. They cannot. It really does not make much sense.

Whatever our legitimate concerns about moving directly to national elections, postponing the franchise is much more likely to increase resentment among those who believe in democracy in Iraq, and to raise unrealistic expectations among those who want to stall and diminish the chances of real representative government (which may, unfortunately, mean a significant slice of the Arab-Sunni population). Those Iraqis who participate in any new unelected transitional government could easily find themselves destroyed politically when they start making controversial decisions unbacked by the legitimacy and authority of elections. The passive voice is a disease in Middle Eastern politics. Unintentionally, the Bush administration could fuel irresponsibility among Iraq's people, who will gladly blame others for their problems. The Bush administration could end up fatally hurting the very Iraqis--the more liberal, Western-minded--who will be inclined to swallow their democratic reservations about the arrangement to work for the common good.

The Bush administration did not need to get itself into this situation. If it had put less emphasis on the expeditious transfer of sovereignty and more on accelerating the election process, the confrontation with Sistani could have been avoided. The grand ayatollah could not have attacked us for being too democratic. Under our watchful and still powerful eye, we could have encouraged Iraqis to develop political parties with a national reach. And it is unlikely that the transfer of sovereignty alone is going to diminish the American death toll in Iraq. It is unwise, especially in an election year, to punt these things down the road. We should assume that the Sunni-inspired violence in Iraq is going to get worse, and devise a strategy, buttressed by an ongoing, fast-paced democratic process, for handling it.

Unless the administration is lucky--and Grand Ayatollah Sistani will let the president know very quickly whether he is--it should be prepared to beat a tactical retreat on the issue of direct elections for a provisional government. It can choose: either direct elections within the June 30 deadline or direct elections as soon as possible after. But if Sistani decides to confront us on national elections and the White House chooses neither of the above, the odds are decent that we will lose Iraq to violence. The Bush administration will have played against Islamic history, not knowing the age of Shiite submission ended when American soldiers liberated the Iraqi people.

Reuel Marc Gerecht is a resident fellow at AEI.

http://www.aei.org/publications/pubID.19851,filter./pub_detail.asp
16 posted on 02/07/2004 10:22:13 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
German FM Calls for Joint Mideast Initiative by U.S., Europe

February 07, 2004
News Agencies
Ha'aretz

German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer called Saturday for Europe and the United States to join together in a broad effort to bring peace and stability to the Middle East.

A major push to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, fight terrorism and promote economic development in the Arab world would contribute toward overcoming U.S.-European rifts over the Iraq war, Fischer told an annual defense conference of major experts and officials, including U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, and attended, among others, by officials from Israel, Jordan, Iran and the Palestinian Authority.

"Neither the United States nor Europe and the Middle East itself can tolerate the status quo in the Middle East any longer," Fischer said in speech opening the annual Munich gathering.

With Rumsfeld listening in the audience, Fischer strongly defended Germany's opposition to the Iraq war saying "we were not, and are still not, convinced of the validity of the reasons" - repeating phrasing that angered Rumsfeld at the conference a year ago, during the runup to war.

But he insisted that both camps must look ahead and confront what he called the world's greatest security threat: "destructive Jihadist terrorism," with its "epicenter" in the Middle East.

"We cannot counter the threat of this new totalitarianism by military means alone," Fischer said.

Broadly outlining his proposal, Fischer said the initiative should involved efforts to help Middle Eastern countries combat security threats, promote regional disarmament and foster democracy.

To help the region's economies, he suggested the creation of a Mediterranean free trade area and that Europe and the United States open their markets to more products from the area.

He also proposed a treaty under the umbrella of the NATO alliance pledging Middle Eastern countries to renouncing war and terrorism in return for Western promises of support for economic and social reforms.

The 40th annual Munich security conference, reputedly the "Davos" of the defense world, gets underway with a debate on the "Prospects of Transatlantic Relations".

Several hundred protesters demonstrated Friday against the conference, trying to block streets and tussling with police.

Police said they detained 28 protesters for suspected possession of illegal weapons, assault and resisting law enforcement officials. No one was injured during the protest in the center of the Bavarian capital, police said.

Police sealed off streets around the conference hotel. Conference opponents say they expect several thousand people for the main demonstration Saturday. The city of Munich has mobilized more than 3,500 police and security personnel to deal with any disruptions.

Some of the officials taking part, including Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld, were at pains to emphasize the strength of ties between Washington and Brussels, which were badly damaged by the Iraq war, at an informal NATO meeting here on Friday.

But scars were evident. Rumsfeld urged the Alliance to commit more troops and resources to Afghanistan and Iraq, but he was met with reluctance, notably on the part of France, to commit to any long term mission in Afghanistan.

In the afternoon, the talks turn to NATO, which new Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said Friday had "had a difficult year".

The Alliance's role in Afghanistan, which will be boosted in the provinces though probably not before a general election there in June. How it might provide security in Iraq will be at the center of debate.

De Hoop Scheffer, French Defence Minister Michele Alliot-Marie and her German counterpart Peter Struck will lead the talks at the luxury Hotel Bayerischer Hof.

Sunday's debate at the "Wehrkunde", as the conference was first known when it began in 1962, will be on "Future Developments in the Middle East" and is due to get underway with a speech by King Abdullah of Jordan.

Washington wants NATO to develop relations there to help build regional stability, and some six Middle East and northern African nations, including Israel and Egypt, are being invited to the Alliance summit in Istanbul in June.

With several Middle East officials present in Munich, Israel's security fence in and around the West Bank and its decision to dismantle some settlements promise lively discussion, as do developments in Iran.

http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=391642&contrassID=1&subContrassID=1&sbSubContrassID=0&listSrc=Y
17 posted on 02/07/2004 10:22:49 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
DoctorZin Note: The following article is an example of how ignorant the US media is of the situtation in Iran. They assume the struggle in Iran is between the reformists and the hardliner. They are ignorant of the third force in Iran, those that want to replace the current regime with a secular democracy.

Iran reform at the brink
Chicago Tribune - Editorial
Feb 7, 2004

When President Mohammad Khatami swept into office as a reformer in 1997, many Iranians hoped that his election marked the end of the tyranny of the mullahs and the beginning of significant freedoms. There were hopes that Khatami and his allies in parliament could deliver on promises of a free press, a more independent judiciary, more power for elected officials and less for unelected clerics.

But Iran's supreme ayatollah and his henchmen, the aptly named Guardian Council, have swatted aside most if not all parliamentary laws aimed at reform. In 1999, and again last year, that ignited violent student-led demonstrations in the streets. But those efforts fizzled.

Then came a brazen power grab by the hard-liners last month. The Guardian Council banned nearly half the 8,200 candidates from the Feb. 20 parliamentary ballot. Most of them were liberals who backed reforms--including the president's brother. That move all but guaranteed a sham election in which hard-liners would regain a parliamentary majority and cripple the reformers.

The move to fix the election finally seems to have awakened some gumption in the parliament's reformers. They're protesting, and about 125 have resigned. They're promising a boycott of the election unless most of those banned from the ballot are reinstated.

But their show of spine may be too little, too late. A few years ago, such an arrogant grab for power would likely have brought thousands of angry students into the streets. This time, almost a month into a crisis that could deal a lethal blow to the reform movement, the most ominous and disappointing development is the silence of those students. Those who seek greater freedoms are apparently content to stand on the sidelines, watching while legislators battle for their careers and their ideals.

That no major protest has yet erupted reveals how frustrated many have become with the slow, almost nonexistent pace of reform. Many students and others seem to be saying that it's not worth fighting for these reformers, since they've accomplished so little in seven years.

In a recent National Public Radio broadcast, producer Rasool Nafisi described how many of the young cope with the repressive society. "The term is `internal exile,' " he said. "It means that society has separated itself from the government and a great number of people take refuge and escape into various things from very hard drugs to foreign movies and watching satellite [TV] and basically pursuing a very personal, private life away from the edicts of the government . . . "

That could all change quickly. Pro-reform groups have announced boycotts of the election. One has called for a referendum over the future of the Islamic state.

The hope is that the mullahs are overplaying their hand. The ruling clerics would be foolish to believe that the students' muted reaction so far means that most Iranians have abandoned hope for greater liberty, freer markets, and modernization. With so many Iranians under 30, with prospects for better jobs and more freedom so bleak, it's probably only a matter of time before the mullahs lose their grip.

The reformers may be forced underground if the farcical election is held. But by strong-arming the reform movement from the national stage, the clerics should remember a basic law of physics: every action has an equal and opposite reaction.

The only question now is: when?

http://www.daneshjoo.org/generalnews/article/publish/article_4807.shtml
18 posted on 02/07/2004 10:29:04 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
'Senator Kerry would seek direct talks with Iran'

Saturday, February 07, 2004 - ©2003 IranMania.com

Washington, Feb 6 (IranMania) --

According to Iran’s State News Agency (IRNA) democratic presidential hopeful John Kerry will seek direct talks with Iran if he wins the White House, his foreign policy chief said.

Rand Beers, national security issues coordinator for the Massachusetts senator, was critical of President George W Bush for shunning direct dialogue with Iran after branding it a member of an "axis of evil," dispatches indicated.

Speaking to a foreign policy forum, Beers said the question of nuclear non-proliferation was one of the most significant issues facing the world and Washington should press harder to advance negotiations.

Beers said Kerry, currently leading the pack in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, sought more direct efforts to thaw relations with Iran that have been frozen since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

"John Kerry is not saying that he is looking for better relations with Iran. He is looking for a dialogue with Iran," Beers said. "There are some issues on which we really need to sit down with the Iranians."

He listed the cultivation of opium poppies in neighboring Afghanistan, terrorism and nuclear non-proliferation as among the questions Kerry would like to take up directly with Tehran.

"It`s a realistic sitting down and having the kinds of discussions that we`re just not having because this administration is so tied in its own ideological views of Iran and waiting for the Iranian regime to collapse."

He said Kerry would want to work with a "broad range of countries" to stem the traffic in materials that could fall into the wrong hands and help make nuclear, biological or chemical weapons.

"We`re going to have look at international (non-proliferation) regimes that currently exist and probably go through some revisions of those regimes in order to find a way to approach and address

http://www.iranmania.com/News/ArticleView/Default.asp?NewsCode=22370&NewsKind=Current%20Affairs
19 posted on 02/07/2004 10:58:43 AM PST by DoctorZIn (Until they are Free, "We shall all be Iranians!")
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To: DoctorZIn
There is a TV program at this moment on NITV (LA Based Anti-Mullah TV Station) which is discussing ways to inform the justice systems of EU countries where the criminal Mullah Regime officials come to visit.
Have a look at the web site: www.iricrimes.org
Please support this movement so to prevent the Criminal Mullahs and their officials visiting EU states, and if they do they can be taken to court for crimes against humanity. This way, EU contact by Islamic Republic Thugs should be reduced!
20 posted on 02/07/2004 12:16:50 PM PST by Mullah-Killer
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