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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 1:48 am Post subject: The Devil We Know |
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October 29, 2008
Interview with Robert Baer
By Kevin Sullivan
Editor�s note: RealClearWorld recently had the privilege of interviewing acclaimed author and former CIA case officer Robert Baer. His memoirs, See No Evil, were adapted into the hit 2005 film Syriana. In his latest book, The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower, Baer makes the case for a reappraisal of America�s approach to an increasingly ambitious and imperialistic Iran. This interview has been slightly edited for length and clarity.
RCW: Many of the recent books on Iran focus primarily on the nuclear question. You take a different approach in The Devil We Know. Why?
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BAER: What you have in Iran is a country that is very good at projecting power throughout the Middle East. What they are attempting to do, whether they succeed or not, is essentially build an empire in the Middle East. They justify this imperialistic expansion through an anti-colonial message�"for instance, the liberation of Lebanon, of Palestine, etc.�"and they have been extraordinarily effective at doing this. I don�t know of any other instance in history where anybody has tried it this way. Past Persian empires have always done this through invasion and occupation. It�s more like an empire by proxy, which is something that�s hard for the average person to understand.
RCW: You referred to Iran�s ambitions as an empire by proxy. One of the more common arguments against confronting Iran is that they are a small country with an economy the size of Switzerland�s. How can such a country desire empire, much less attain it?
BAER: Well, they would again prefer proxies and blackmail. The fact that Iran can take control of the Gulf�s oil resources ostensibly puts them in charge of the world�s economy. You might argue that the American military will be there to prevent this, but that�s provided we stay. But you need the military to do this. Do we want to put a million troops in the region to contain Iran and police the Middle East? And engaging the Iranians would be difficult, because any action we undertake could result in a form of proxy retaliation. One of these measures could be shutting down the world�s oil supply. We�re up against a regime with advanced capabilities in guerilla warfare, an extensive network of blackmail and an unassailable message: �We are being colonized!�
RCW: You argue that Basra fell to the Iranians without a single shot being fired. U.S. General Raymond Odierno recently took some heat for accusing Iran of bribing government officials in Baghdad. Has Baghdad already been compromised by the Iranians?
BAER: Yes. (U.S. Ambassador to Iraq) Ryan Crocker said it was the Iranians blocking a basing agreement. It was the Iranians buying elections and buying up the parliament. That tells me that Iran has de facto control over the country. Crocker didn�t say it was just a question of bringing a few parliamentarians around; he said Iran. That was his official statement. Crocker was the ambassador to Lebanon at the time I was there, and he calls this Iraq�s �Lebanonization.� Observers use Serbia as an example for Iraq and say we accomplished a victory there with just American troops. But they did it there with the Sunnis and Shi'a together. They were complicit in lowering the level of violence. Iran could make life hell if they unleash the Shi�a on us, as they�ve already done in the south of Iraq. The Iranians could fight us forever in Iraq, but that doesn�t actually serve their immediate interests. They know to just remain patient because eventually the Americans will leave. I don�t care if we even reach a basing agreement. Iran will undermine it. Unless we�re committed to placing a million troops in the region to contain this empire�"as we did the Soviet empire�"the basing agreement simply won�t have an effect.
RCW: We�ve watched as the price of oil has declined over the past two weeks. Add the fact that Iran has their own domestic economic woes�"skyrocketing inflation, high unemployment and limited energy refining capabilities�"and you have a recipe for some really poor economic conditions. Do these conditions at all hinder Iran�s imperial ambitions?
BAER: Not in the least. Throughout the 90s, when oil was at $20, $12 and even $11 a barrel, Iran was increasing its aid to Lebanon. It�s a national security issue for them, and much like our own security concerns, this issue can overcome any economic difficulties. And, an empire by proxy is relatively cheap. We�re talking about small arms, not tanks and airplanes. Large weapons are useless against the Americans, and Iran will never be able to match us in that area. Instead, they prefer small, efficient arms that can be acquired very cheaply. Not even a hiccup, really, in terms of Iran�s national budget. I don�t expect Iran to give up its message, nor do I expect them to abandon Hezbollah. Iran will stumble along, despite economic concerns, and one might argue that serious economic concerns will push the Iranians to force an economic union with Iraq.
RCW: Staying on the energy issue, there was a report last week about Iran holding talks with Qatar and Russia about the possibility of forming a �Gas OPEC� to regulate and fix the global gas market. Does this play into Iran�s regional ambitions, and what role do the Russians play in all this?
BAER: Well, if the number one and number two gas producers of the world form a cartel it could certainly be damaging. This is what Syriana was about. If you control all of the gas output to Europe, you basically have the Europeans right where you want them economically. The Iranians know this, and so do the Europeans. There�s an axis between the Russians and Iran, and it mostly involves weapons and gas. Qatar has done some pipeline development with them, too. The East is essentially forcing a dependence�"an economic connection�"that is just as important as Europe�s connection to the United States. The Europeans won�t continue to tolerate our adventurism in the Middle East, not unless we want to put more bases and more troops in the Middle East to police the region for them. I just don�t know if Americans would tolerate that.
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RCW: There�s a presidential election coming up in Iran. It�s looking like a strong possibility that former president Mohammad Khatami may run against Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for the office. Does it matter to us who wins that election next year?
BAER: It doesn�t necessarily matter for us, because if we�re going to deal with Iran it will be with someone other than the president. But, it would go a long way if Khatami could run and be elected. Iran could perhaps be molded into a moderate and reasonable force in the Middle East. Someone we could deal with. Ahmadinejad has an impolitic way of putting things, to say the least. The man does not know how to put things in reasonable terms, and we�ll need him out of the way before we can move on with Iran.
RCW: You call for a pretty ambitious reappraisal of our alliances in the Middle East.
BAER: It�s very ambitious. Basically, we would need to abandon our current relationships with the Sunni regimes in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Pakistan for Shi�a Iran. I don�t know of another instance in history when a country aligned with not just another country, but more importantly, a sect. But much of this is assuming that Iran has control over the Gulf�s Shi�a population 10-20 years from now. But the Shi�a are also more disciplined than the Sunnis, and they would be a more stable ally we could rely on.
RCW: Is there concern in Iran that the West is attempting to organize the Sunni Arab regimes against them?
BAER: It�s more than what they�re afraid of; it�s what they�ve seen already in the region. Iran�s plans can be undermined by pure sectarian conflict pitting Sunni against Shi�a. We saw this in Lebanon when Hezbollah went into west Beirut to confront Sunni militias there. As soon as they neutralized the situation, rather than occupying Beirut, Hezbollah turned the area right over to the military. Iran wanted to avoid civil war in Lebanon. It�s very important for the Shi�a to maintain their alliance with the Maronite Christians there, and the Iranians are sensitive to this fact.
RCW: What then can the United States do in response to the Islamic Republic�s imperial ambitions in the region?
BAER: We have to accept some of this as a fait accompli. It took the United States over fifteen years to come around and treat the Chinese as a global power. I think that�s what we need to do with Iran and use it to our benefit. The Sino-Soviet split was huge towards the end of the Cold War, and we need to utilize the Iranians in a similar fashion. We need a Nixon goes to Peking moment.
We�re the ones who invaded the wrong country. From a pure power politics perspective, we should�ve kept the Iranians down, not the Iraqis. Iran is a far more relevant actor than the Iraqis. Now we need to adapt and deal with those consequences.
RCW: Will the next American administration be equipped to engage the Iranians in the way that you�re proposing?
BAER: I think we�re equipped in terms of realpolitik. Even with the current administration, it became clear with the emergence of Gates and Rice that the adults were put back in charge. Even in Israel, Olmert came out and rightly pointed out the negative regional consequences of an attack on Iran.
There was an absence of seriousness on our part when we invaded Iraq and Afghanistan. But now that the world seems like a very serious place to us again, we don�t have the leisure to do anymore than we�ve already done. Once we approach the Iran issue with a little more seriousness, I think we�ll find that things will improve for us in the region relatively quickly.
Kevin Sullivan is co-editor of RealClearWorld. He may be reached at [email protected].
Page Printed from: http://www.realclearworld.com/articles/2008/10/interview_with_robert_baer.html at October 30, 2008 - 04:46:14 AM CDT |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 2:13 am Post subject: |
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Quote: |
The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower |
If Iran is a superpower, what does that make the US? The double-hyper-superduper-mega power?
Iran presents some serious challenges to American and others' foreign policies, but to inflate Iran into a 'superpower' is to give them far more power and prestige than they deserve. At the beginning of the Iraq War 'everyone' was saying the US was stronger than the next 10 countries. I don't recall Iran even being on that list of 10 countries. |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 3:19 am Post subject: |
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Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
Quote: |
The Devil We Know: Dealing with the New Iranian Superpower |
If Iran is a superpower, what does that make the US? The double-hyper-superduper-mega power?
Iran presents some serious challenges to American and others' foreign policies, but to inflate Iran into a 'superpower' is to give them far more power and prestige than they deserve. At the beginning of the Iraq War 'everyone' was saying the US was stronger than the next 10 countries. I don't recall Iran even being on that list of 10 countries. |
Oil + Nuclear weapons + a very effective security service.
Iran w/ nuclear weapons would be about 20x more powerful than North Korea. |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 5:09 am Post subject: |
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Quote: |
Oil + Nuclear weapons + a very effective security service.
Iran w/ nuclear weapons would be about 20x more powerful than North Korea. |
Not really.
Nuclear weapons don't give you much except security from attack. Only a fool would attack someone armed with a nuke. But as an offensive weapon, you can't use it--not in the modern world. You can brandish it about and bluster all you want, but if you actually use one on a neighbor, the US, Britain, France, Russia, China, India, Pakistan (and Israel) would all be nervous as hell about someone else being willing to use a nuke. (Japan, Taiwan, South Africa, Brazil and who knows who else might be motivated to get their programs on line and pointed in your direction.) Most of the rest of the world would be horrified at your actions--far beyond the reaction against the US in Iraq. You may well find your trade drying up.
Diplomacy to stall for time + patience for domestic troubles to modify the regime is the wisest way to go. It worked with the Soviets and is the best blueprint to follow with Iran. |
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ddeubel

Joined: 20 Jul 2005
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 6:14 am Post subject: |
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LOL! Joo, do you really take that piece of "journalism" as serious stuff?
You will believe any old schlock. I'll post this because I read it today -- just confirms my own opinion of how full of B.S. (like you), Baer is. He is a guy who puts two and two together and comes up with -4.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/10/30/arts/bookjeu.php
Quote: |
BOOKS
Review: 'The Devil We Know'
Reviewed by Elaine Sciolino
Published: October 28, 2008
The Devil We Know Dealing With the New Iranian Superpower By Robert Baer 279 pages. Crown Publishers. $25.95.
As the end of the Bush era draws near, it is clear that its policy of treating Iran as a country that must be weakened, punished and perhaps even overthrown has failed. Suddenly it has become fashionable to say that Iran must be recognized, respected and dealt with as the increasingly powerful nation that it is.
Earlier this month Henry Kissinger, who as secretary of state helped arm and prop up Iran's monarchy in the 1970s, said there was "no reason for the United States to resist a strong Iran" today. The goal should be to restore the old regional balance of power based on the pillars of two countries friendly to the United States, Israel and Iran, he added.
In his new book, "The Devil We Know," Robert Baer, a former CIA case officer turned author, goes further. He paints a picture of Iran as a disciplined, strategic, monolithic "police state" and military power driven by imperial ambitions. "At the bottom of Iran's soul is a newfound taste for empire," he states.
Baer, who is fluent in Arabic and says he has rusty Persian, spent years in the Middle East. He certainly knows places like Lebanon, Iraq and Saudi Arabia well. But Arabia is not Persia, and the lens of the Arab world can distort Iran rather than bring it into sharp focus.
Baer's Iran doesn't care about international boundaries or accept Western definitions of how the world should be organized. His Iran has "effectively annexed" the entire south of Iraq and could gain control of Iraqi oil. His Iran wants control of Islam's holiest sites, Mecca and Medina.
Today in Culture
Patrick Swayze takes on 'The Beast'
'Zack and Miri Make a Porno': A schmaltzy comedy
A play revives questions about Vatican murders
"I witnessed firsthand Iran's seismic shift, its rise from anarchy to statist power," Baer writes. But most of his eye-witnessing was done from afar. Baer says he was in Iran for a week in late 1978, just before the victory of the revolution. He visited again in 2005 - he doesn't say for how long - as part of a British television documentary team.
On that visit, he laments, he "couldn't find a single good restaurant in Tehran." He was invited to parties, which he heard were as "wild and hip" as anything in the West, but worried that he had "pressed his luck" and stayed away. Anyway, he adds, "I couldn't stay up that late."
Readers who enjoyed George Clooney's performance in "Syriana" (the character was modeled on Baer) might be disappointed that in real life Baer was too timid and tired to go to a party in a private Iranian home. He might have met some real Iranians there. And did he really have so few sources on the ground in Tehran that he could not find a good restaurant? (There are many.)
Perhaps Baer is unaware that Iranians operate in two worlds, the public and the private, and that just about everything meaningful in social and political life happens behind closed doors. Some of the best conversations - and the best meals - are in private homes.
"Iran is a culture completely alien to ours," he writes. But behind those walls are a lot of regular people from different backgrounds who want much the same things Americans do: a decent standard of living and secure futures for their children.
At times Baer describes Iran in sweeping absolutes. "For the last 15 years, Iran has demonstrated a consistent, coherent strategy: It tests its strategy, vets it proxies, judges who is serious and who isn't, and makes plans accordingly," he writes.
The statement ignores the fact that Iran's leadership sometimes behaves in unpredictable ways. Iran is a country of raw, often raucous politics where different points of view - within the ruling elite - are expressed, debated and accepted or rejected.
Then he shifts course, saying that Iran's lines of power and authority are "almost impossible to follow."
"They seem to change between morning and night," he continues.
Baer correctly points out that Iran is a place of checks and balances, where the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, "rules by a consensus obscure even to outsiders." But then he says with authority that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is merely a "figurehead," ignoring that he is an important player whose public declarations that Iran will never bow to the will of others in its nuclear program have been accepted as policy.
One of Baer's most honest assertions in "The Devil We Know" is toward the end, when he finally admits, "At all levels Iran is never what it seems." |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 7:31 pm Post subject: |
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="Ya-ta Boy"][
Quote: |
Not really.
Nuclear weapons don't give you much except security from attack. Only a fool would attack someone armed with a nuke. But as an offensive weapon, you can't use it--not in the modern world. You can brandish it about and bluster all you want, but if you actually use one on a neighbor, the US, Britain, France, Russia, China, India, Pakistan (and Israel) would all be nervous as hell about someone else being willing to use a nuke. (Japan, Taiwan, South Africa, Brazil and who knows who else might be motivated to get their programs on line and pointed in your direction.) Most of the rest of the world would be horrified at your actions--far beyond the reaction against the US in Iraq. You may well find your trade drying up.
Diplomacy to stall for time + patience for domestic troubles to modify the regime is the wisest way to go. It worked with the Soviets and is the best blueprint to follow with Iran |
Nuclear weapons would be very useful to Iran and that is why Iran wants them. You see how North Korea blackmails South Korea?
Were Iran to have nuclear the US would think twice about doing anything against Iran in responce to a terror attack. Countries in the gulf would think twice about producing more oil when Iran says not to. No one knows if Iran is really crazy or not. If Iran has nuclear weapons they will be able to give security guarantees to Hezbollah that others have to take seriously. Is that a good thing?
Match Iran's game changer with a game changer of its own. The Jimmy Carter passive style didn't work . The Reagan style is what worked with the Soviets . That is what the US needs to do with Iran. It worked before and it will work again and there will be one less enemy of the US in the world. A cold war with Iran would be easier than it was with the USSR.
Last edited by Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee on Thu Oct 30, 2008 8:21 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 7:53 pm Post subject: |
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ddeubel wrote: |
LOL! Joo, do you really take that piece of "journalism" as serious stuff?
You will believe any old schlock. I'll post this because I read it today -- just confirms my own opinion of how full of B.S. (like you), Baer is. He is a guy who puts two and two together and comes up with -4.
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/10/30/arts/bookjeu.php
Quote: |
BOOKS
Review: 'The Devil We Know'
Reviewed by Elaine Sciolino
Published: October 28, 2008
The Devil We Know Dealing With the New Iranian Superpower By Robert Baer 279 pages. Crown Publishers. $25.95.
As the end of the Bush era draws near, it is clear that its policy of treating Iran as a country that must be weakened, punished and perhaps even overthrown has failed. Suddenly it has become fashionable to say that Iran must be recognized, respected and dealt with as the increasingly powerful nation that it is.
Earlier this month Henry Kissinger, who as secretary of state helped arm and prop up Iran's monarchy in the 1970s, said there was "no reason for the United States to resist a strong Iran" today. The goal should be to restore the old regional balance of power based on the pillars of two countries friendly to the United States, Israel and Iran, he added.
In his new book, "The Devil We Know," Robert Baer, a former CIA case officer turned author, goes further. He paints a picture of Iran as a disciplined, strategic, monolithic "police state" and military power driven by imperial ambitions. "At the bottom of Iran's soul is a newfound taste for empire," he states.
Baer, who is fluent in Arabic and says he has rusty Persian, spent years in the Middle East. He certainly knows places like Lebanon, Iraq and Saudi Arabia well. But Arabia is not Persia, and the lens of the Arab world can distort Iran rather than bring it into sharp focus.
Baer's Iran doesn't care about international boundaries or accept Western definitions of how the world should be organized. His Iran has "effectively annexed" the entire south of Iraq and could gain control of Iraqi oil. His Iran wants control of Islam's holiest sites, Mecca and Medina.
Today in Culture
Patrick Swayze takes on 'The Beast'
'Zack and Miri Make a Porno': A schmaltzy comedy
A play revives questions about Vatican murders
"I witnessed firsthand Iran's seismic shift, its rise from anarchy to statist power," Baer writes. But most of his eye-witnessing was done from afar. Baer says he was in Iran for a week in late 1978, just before the victory of the revolution. He visited again in 2005 - he doesn't say for how long - as part of a British television documentary team.
On that visit, he laments, he "couldn't find a single good restaurant in Tehran." He was invited to parties, which he heard were as "wild and hip" as anything in the West, but worried that he had "pressed his luck" and stayed away. Anyway, he adds, "I couldn't stay up that late."
Readers who enjoyed George Clooney's performance in "Syriana" (the character was modeled on Baer) might be disappointed that in real life Baer was too timid and tired to go to a party in a private Iranian home. He might have met some real Iranians there. And did he really have so few sources on the ground in Tehran that he could not find a good restaurant? (There are many.)
Perhaps Baer is unaware that Iranians operate in two worlds, the public and the private, and that just about everything meaningful in social and political life happens behind closed doors. Some of the best conversations - and the best meals - are in private homes.
"Iran is a culture completely alien to ours," he writes. But behind those walls are a lot of regular people from different backgrounds who want much the same things Americans do: a decent standard of living and secure futures for their children.
At times Baer describes Iran in sweeping absolutes. "For the last 15 years, Iran has demonstrated a consistent, coherent strategy: It tests its strategy, vets it proxies, judges who is serious and who isn't, and makes plans accordingly," he writes.
The statement ignores the fact that Iran's leadership sometimes behaves in unpredictable ways. Iran is a country of raw, often raucous politics where different points of view - within the ruling elite - are expressed, debated and accepted or rejected.
Then he shifts course, saying that Iran's lines of power and authority are "almost impossible to follow."
"They seem to change between morning and night," he continues.
Baer correctly points out that Iran is a place of checks and balances, where the supreme leader, Ayatollah Khamenei, "rules by a consensus obscure even to outsiders." But then he says with authority that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is merely a "figurehead," ignoring that he is an important player whose public declarations that Iran will never bow to the will of others in its nuclear program have been accepted as policy.
One of Baer's most honest assertions in "The Devil We Know" is toward the end, when he finally admits, "At all levels Iran is never what it seems." |
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The negative number you mentioned is more valuable than your opinion.
The guys record speaks for itself, as does yours. I just know that the next time there is a full moon you'll be there flying around.
Quote: |
Baer quit the Agency in 1997 and received the CIA's Career Intelligence Medal on March 11, 1998. Baer wrote the book See No Evil documenting his experiences while working for the Agency.
According to Seymour Hersh, Baer "was considered perhaps the best on-the-ground field officer in the Middle East."[3
Baer offers an analysis of the Middle East through the lens of his experiences as a CIA operative. His political outlook does not hew exclusively to either conservative or liberal viewpoints. Through his years as a clandestine officer, he gained a very thorough knowledge of the Middle East, Arab world and former Republics of the Soviet Union. He speaks Arabic fluently. Over the years, Baer has become a strong advocate of the Agency's need to increase Human Intelligence (HUMINT) through the recruitment of agents.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Baer
Last edited by Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee on Thu Oct 30, 2008 8:14 pm; edited 2 times in total |
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Gopher

Joined: 04 Jun 2005
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 7:59 pm Post subject: |
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Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
If Iran is a superpower... |
You are seizing on the pretext of attacking the snazzy, marketing-oriented subtitle and refusing to see the point: Iran has been engaged in power-projection and empire-building in the Middle East since 1979 -- in the Arab-Israeli question through Syria, and now in Iraq. Even earlier, really. The Shah wanted to do the same. Only now, religious influence plays a part.
Do you truly not see this pattern? |
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Kuros
Joined: 27 Apr 2004
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Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2008 8:46 pm Post subject: |
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If Iran gets nukes then an arms race begins in the ME.
Ya-Ta, would you become concerned if Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey got nuclear weapons as well? Remember the 90s on the subcontinent? The 10s in the ME would make it look tame. |
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Ya-ta Boy
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Location: Established in 1994
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Posted: Fri Oct 31, 2008 5:53 am Post subject: |
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I think I clearly stated that Iran is/will be a problem, so thanks for the lectures, but no thanks. My point was that the wise thing is not to get carried away with fear and paranoia, as the US has done on occassion in the past. |
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Gopher

Joined: 04 Jun 2005
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Posted: Fri Oct 31, 2008 7:52 am Post subject: |
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Tehran has called us "the Great Satan" and has waged an undeclared war against us since the time they seized our embassy and held our diplomats hostage. It has aided terrorist/guerrilla organizations such as Hezbollah and has been involved in such incidents as the attacks against the American embassy and the Marine barracks in Lebanon and Lt. Col. William R. Higgins's torture and murder -- his captors dumped his body in a Beirut gutter when they finished with him. And Tehran blackmailed the Reagan Administration in the arms-for-hostages crisis.
Iran has treated America as its primary enemy since 1979. It is seeking to develop nuclear weapons at the same time that it is arguing to remove Israel from the map and holding Holocaust-denial conferences in order to better undermine Israel's moral claim to exist. Ultimately, I suspect Tehran started the Israeli-Hezbollah War in summer 2006. All of this fits within its larger empire-building and power-projecting program in the Middle East generally. This threatens American interests, to say the least.
What fear and paranoia are you talking about? When I look at who has become "carried away" in this relationship in the past, the United States is not the first govt that comes to mind... |
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Kuros
Joined: 27 Apr 2004
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Posted: Fri Oct 31, 2008 7:55 am Post subject: |
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Ya-ta Boy wrote: |
I think I clearly stated that Iran is/will be a problem, so thanks for the lectures, but no thanks. My point was that the wise thing is not to get carried away with fear and paranoia, as the US has done on occassion in the past. |
Okay.
If I thought Iran getting nuclear weapons would mean a nuclear Iran, and only a nuclear Iran, I probably would care very little about Iran. |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
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