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Has Iraq Made Things Worse?

People on the Left tend to view this as though we have gone in and occupied a country and how people in that country must feel about that. Since we wouldn't want a foreign country occupying ours, it is assumed that naturally the Iraqi's don't want us there and therefore we are only making things worse and creating enemies.
 
But this misses the whole point entirely. Namely, we are at war. And not just in Iraq. We are engaged in a worldwide war against radical Muslims who seek to destroy us.
 
When you are at war, the enemy will use every tactic possible to defeat you and that would include fighting back and using propaganda and lies to convince others to join the fight against you. If the bad guys can convince people that the US actually wants to control the region, that we want the oil, that we are at war with Islam, etc, then they will gain new recruits to fight us. Moreover, since we are at war, wouldn't this be the ideal time for our enemy to try as hard as possible to recruit as many people as it can? Wouldn't this be the perfect time to foment a civil war?
 
Why should anybody be surprised then that going to war can at times make things worse?
 
The question is not are things better now while the war is still going on. The question should be what will things be like after we win this war? Or, what will things be like if we lose the war?
 
When faced with an enemy truly intent on destroying us, then negotiation, appeasement and ignoring the problem simply won't work. Those aren't choices of various levels of poisons, they're choices for suicide.
 
Some wonder how Iraq has anything to do with our real enemy and why waste time and resources there, but the whole point of what makes a small terrorist group lethal is the potential that it will acquire WMD's and we all knew Iraq previously had WMD's, that they desired to rebuild those programs, and that they had collaborated with terrorists or terrorist groups from time to time. WMD's in the hands of terrorists is such a grave threat that we simply have to act, even if our intelligence is not 100 percent sure, and even if it's not altogether likely that those WMD's would ever end up in terrorist hands.
 
Even a small chance is too great a chance when it comes to WMD's and terrorists.
 
Moreover, getting rid of a dictator makes other dictators think twice, and bringing freedom to a people gives the other people of the region real hope. People that live in freedom and democracies are the best long term solution to the threats we all face. When the people of the region see what real freedom is like and the prosperity it can bring, then the terrorists will have a much harder time continuing a war that threatens us all.
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Is the Bush Doctrine Dead?

Norman Podhoretz has written a terrific essay in Commentary magazine. It is long but WELL worth the read:

Is the Bush Doctrine Dead?

Rich Lowry has followed up on the Podhoretz essay with these two comments:

1) There's this passage:
Surely what makes more sense is the opposite interpretation of the terrible violence being perpetrated by the terrorists of the so-called "insurgency": that it is in itself a tribute to the enormous strides that have been made in democratizing the country. If this murderous collection of diehard Sunni Baathists and vengeful Shiite militias, together with their allies inside the government, agreed that democratization had already failed, would they be waging so desperate a campaign to defeat it? And if democratization in Iraq posed no threat to the other despotisms in the region, would those regimes be sending jihadists and material support to the "insurgency" there?
This comes close to the if-we're-attacking-us-we-must-be-winning view that administration spokesmen have flirted with at times. It is certainly true that jihadists feel threatened by what we're doing in Iraq. But their attacks aren't necessarily "a tribute to the enormous strides that we have made in democratizing the country." If we were succeeding even more, does that mean there would be 200 people dying a day instead of 100? Even if the violence is a tribute to our democracy-building, it certainly isn't a tribute to our ability to establish order, something that people value more than democracy. If we (and the Iraqi government) continue fail to establish order, I suspect our progress on democratization is eventually going to disappear. In general, I think Podhoretz avoids truly grappling with the current state of Iraq by keeping it all at a less-discomfiting level of abstraction. (One pet peeve: Why do conservatives have such a problem with the term "insurgency"? It's not necessarily a positive term. There are good insurgencies and evil insurgencies.)
 
2) I don't think the essay fully addresses the challenge the Bush doctrine faces from Islamic radicals winning power at the ballot box. In response to a George Will passage noting darkly that elections brought Hamas to power and gave Hezbollah significant representation in Lebanon's parliament, Podhoretz mostly brandishes a quote from Foud Ajami that recent elections have "broken the pact with Arab tyranny." Perhaps it has broken our pact with traditional Arab tyrants (although we certainly worked with them in the current Lebanon crisis), but the point is that elections risk bringing to power a new set of Islamic radicals who enjoy a measure of popular support.
 
Those are my two criticisms. But, again, I think it's a very successful essay. It leans against the current tide of pessimism. It saves the Bush Doctrine from caricature. And I think it demonstrates that there really isn't any good alternative to some version of the current Bush approach.

------------------------
Here are my comments...

Concerning point one, It seems to me that Podhoretz's essay puts things into the correct perspective. Iraq is not an isolated war somehow disconnected from the overall war on terror. When viewed from the Bush doctrine, it is an integral part. And while there are insurgents who have their own reasons for fighting us there, it is clear that our enemies in the war on terror see this as a battle they really need to win. If they can drive the U.S. out of Iraq they will have achieved a huge victory. If they can subsequently make large parts of Iraq align with Iran (or other Taliban-like Islamists), then they will have succeeded in turning this war on terror in their favor.
 
The point is, we must start forcefully emphasizing how integral Iraq is to our overall war on terror. We must realize how much the enemy wants to see us defeated there. We must realize that the extremes they have gone to fighting us there have more to do with the worldwide war we our engaged in then just to do with Iraq.
 
Both Shiite and Sunni have reasons for seeking civil war, but on the whole they don't really want all out civil war. If they did, we would have already seen it. No, it's the outside extremists who want to push Iraq that way. They are the ones who will do anything to make Iraq a miserable place to live. They are the ones who take advantage of the long standing resentments and fears between Shia and Sunni to push civil war as the only option left open for them.
 
Iraq is hard exactly because it is such a turning point on the war on terror. Lose this and we are put on the run. Lose this and the extremists know they can win again on the next battlefield, and one of their choosing.
 
Winning in Iraq is a BIG deal for them. They know it. They fight like it. Do we? All of us?
 
Or are we ready to concede the war on terror?
 
Concerning the second point of radicals winning at the ballot box. This certainly is a gamble on our part. After all, it wouldn't be a good thing to see a country like Egypt lose to radicals at the ballot box. But as bad as that would be, true freedom and democracy are the only long term solutions to the problems we face in the region. As long as we say we can't risk giving the people of the region freedom, then we will be forced to acknowledge we favor keeping tyranny in place out of our own interests -- and that simply won't succeed long term.
 
It is better to accept setbacks at the ballot box now and be consistent in fighting for freedom and democracy, while at the same time we can voice our displeasure (or even resort to sanctions) to what freely elected governments choose to do (as with Hamas).
 
But given our vulnerability in this area, it is therefore even more incumbent on us to see freedom through to the end in Iraq and other places where it has a good chance of succeeding. Pull out of Iraq, and we not only lose there, but pro-freedom Muslims in the region will give up hope that we will support them when push comes to shove. Why should Pakistan continue to support us if they see us run from Iraq? Wouldn't Afghanistan be next? And then Pakistan?
 
No, in my view the Bush doctrine is exactly right. But since our enemy has become so serious in fighting us, it's time we review our strategies and fight back appropriately with the view to truly win this war on terror!
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Was Airline Attack Planned for Aug 22nd?

I was asked if I thought the thwarted terrorist attacks on airplanes may have been planned for Aug 22nd. This is my response:

I think I saw something about a possible trial run was meant to be done on Aug 16th, but who can say for sure about any of this? It was this uncertainty, after all, which led the authorities to arrest them now rather than wait any longer. Even if the terrorists had already purchased plane tickets for Aug 21/22, that doesn't mean that the attack would have happened then. Not only was it possible for the terrorists to change their plans at any moment, but the trial run could have become the real run, or equally possible, it could have led them to rethink their plans and delay their attack.
 
Moreover, the Aug 22nd date is a Shiite/Hezbollah/Iranian thing, not a Sunni/al Qaeda/Pakistani thing.
 
No, the more troubling thing here is the general feeling that things are getting worse. Terrorist cells are springing up everywhere -- with radicals anxious to strike us the next cruel blow. Terrorist militias are getting bolder -- with no sense that they will ever negotiate, compromise or back down. Terrorist insurgents are getting bloodier -- with the knowledge that their barbarism is creating uncontainable chaos that is forcing us to withdrawal.
 
And now terrorists nations are readying to join the world war seeking to project their power and influence like never before.
 
And we -- Israel, the U.S., Europe -- just want it all to go away. This barbaric radicalism defies sense and reason. We just want to go back to our normal lives and hope we can negotiate some compromise that will work things out -- if only for a while -- until reason and sanity can be restored.
 
But our enemy is serious. Our enemy is not looking for their grievances to be addressed. They never will. Our enemy is looking to slit our throats.
 
The world is changing before our eyes. We are powerless to stop it because the more we do to fight it, the more we stir it up and the more it is able to use what we do against us. The less we do to fight it, the more it advances, the more powerful it becomes and the closer it comes to destroying us.
 
It is winning because it doesn't care when it loses. It is winning because we care about humanity, decency and all things good. It is winning because it would rather die than become us.
 
But make no mistake about who is the greatest threat to us. As bad as all these terrorist cells are. As bad as all these various terrorist militias are. As bad as all the terrorist insurgents are. None of them is nearly as threatening to us as Iran is.
 
Iran is the real deal. They are powerful and professional at many levels. When they launch their terror cells, they will do substantial damage. They aren't like al Qaeda that depends on relatively untrained fanatics to carry out an occasional impressive attack. They have professional special forces that know how to carry out strategic attacks. They have technology that they are quite willing to give to terrorist militias. They have powerful weapons that they give to the insurgents. They are able to project their power and influence outside their own region more significantly than any other terrorist or rogue nation at this time.
 
And when they get their nuclear bomb, they will feel they are unstoppable.
 
If Iran intends (or intended) to do anything on Aug 21/22, even if only indirectly through others, I would see it as their way to further establish their ascendancy and the significance of their Shiite view of the world -- even if only in their own mind's eye.
 
I'm afraid the writing is on the wall. We can only stomach so much fighting. We are only willing to go so far, while our enemy is quite willing to take what we've given them and keep upping the ante.
 
This is not our government that lacks the resolve. It is us. Both here and in Israel. Real war is something nobody in Western style democracies wants. Costly wars even less so.
 
This is what dooms us in the face of an enemy that is not reticent for war, death or destruction.

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Are you a gloomy Hawk too?

This spells out more accurately than anything I've read so far on where I stand on the "War on Terror". It's worth a careful read. The last paragraph of "More Doom" lists four options available to the free world. In my view, option four is the only realistic option. Unfortunately, it is simply not politically viable at this time.
 
But I think events will ultimately make it viable and so I pray that when those events happen that we will have a president as steadfast as Bush has been. And given that option four may become pointless if we withdrawal from Iraq in failure, then I hope that those events will happen sooner rather than later. And at the same time I dread those very events even happening.
 
So count me a gloomy hawk too.
 
Dean
 
Hawkish Gloom
Unfortunately, you'll be joining me one of these days.

By Stanley Kurtz

Call me a gloomy hawk. It's not just that I'm a hawk who's disappointed with the course of fighting in the Middle East. My concern is that our underlying foreign-policy dilemma calls for both hawkishness and gloom - and will for some time. The two worst-case scenarios are world-war abroad and nuclear terror at home. I fear we're on a slow-motion track to both.

No, I don't think our venture in Iraq has gotten us into this mess. I think this mess has gotten us into Iraq. And the mess will not go away, whatever we do. Our Islamist enemy has proven himself implacable - unwilling to relent in the face of either dovish or hawkish policies. That means we're facing years - maybe decades - of inconclusive, on/off (mostly on) hot war, unless and until a nuclear terror strike, a major case of nuclear blackmail, or a nuclear clash among Middle Eastern states ushers in a radical new phase.

Castro

Let's take a moment to think about Castro. Castro is the master and pioneer of ornery third-world defiance. We need to appreciate the immensity of Castro's achievement in preserving Cuba's Communist dictatorship for 17 years after the collapse of his chief patron, the Soviet Union. It's remarkable that, absent any great-power protection, and even after becoming, without Soviet subsidies, a permanent economic basket-case, Castro's regime has not collapsed.

Let that be a lesson to those who wait for the collapse of regimes in Iran, North Korea, or Palestine because of long-term economic failure and/or economic sanctions. Yes, popular uprisings happen (as in Iran against the Shah). Yet it's also clear that a posture of anti-Western defiance, combined with nationalism, ideology, and dictatorial rule is perfectly capable of sustaining a miserable, poverty-stricken, failed system far, far beyond the point that Westerners would consider tolerable or believable.

If you are willing to kill yourself - if you are willing even to impoverish, immiserate, and let die much of your country, you can accomplish a great deal. Hezbollah's gains in its war with Israel stem from its ability to define success as mere survival, even as the country around it is destroyed. This is no mere clever public-relations spin, but the reflection of a profound reality: the growing independence of terrorist organizations from states, and the willingness of Islamist terrorists to sacrifice all in pursuit of fundamentally non-material goals. With military success (accurately) framed as the near-complete destruction of terrorist forces, decisive military victory is virtually defined out of existence.

Democracy?
This is why the United States has turned to democratization. The stick of military force combined with the carrot of democracy was supposed to have provided a way out. Unfortunately, democratization of fundamentally illiberal societies cannot happen quickly. Real democratization requires a great deal of time and deep, painful, expensive underlying cultural change, almost impossible to bring about without an effectively permanent military occupation.

Even a long-term military occupation cannot promote democratization in the absence of social peace. The Iraqi resistance's greatest victory came with the very start of their campaign. By creating sufficient insecurity to bar Western civilians from Iraq, the real key to democratic change was blocked from the start. If advising an Iraqi bureaucrat, working with an Iraqi entrepreneur, or teaching at an Iraqi college had become career-making occupations for an ambitious generation of young American civilians, we might have had a chance to build genuine democracy in Iraq. Once the rebellion made that sort of cultural exchange impossible, the democratization project was cut off before it could begin.

I've made these points about the problems of democratization since before the invasion of Iraq (See my "After the War" and "Democratic Imperialism.") In those pieces, I even "predicted" the sort of trouble we're seeing now. Yet, despite that gloom, I was, and remain, a hawk. I am hawk because I believe that the danger of nuclear terror and nuclear blackmail remain real, and because I am convinced that negotiations from weakness, grand bargains, and unilateral retreats are powerless to defuse these threats. In short, I am a gloomy hawk because I believe that neither hawks nor doves have any viable near-term solutions to the problem we now face.

Technology
Globalization, economic advance, and technology are at the root of our dilemma. It is remarkable that 9/11 meant more civilian casualties from a foreign foe than this country had ever experienced at a blow. Without the movement of Middle Easterners to Europe (to learn our languages, take our classes, etc.), without our modern mastery of building technology and air travel, 9/11 could not have happened. Recall that the plan of the first, failed blast in 1993 was to topple one World Trade Center tower into the other, bringing both down on surrounding buildings for a possible total of 200,000 dead. This was the approximate combined total of dead at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The 1993 terrorists were consciously focused on that precedent, wanting to inflict nuclear-level damage on the United States.

The destruction of the World Trade Center raised the possibility that a rogue state might supply terrorists with a nuclear bomb, or enough material to make such a bomb. Already, there was an alliance between a state (Afghanistan) and a terrorist organization. But in the war between Israel and Hezbollah, we've seen a further step toward the feared pattern. Hezbollah rockets have already inflicted far more damage and disruption on Israeli civilians than attacks in any previous Middle Eastern war. That is because military technology is getting ever cheaper, more advanced, and more available, and because of a military alliance between a supplying state (Iran) and a terrorist organization.

So we are already seeing a terrorist-executed proxy war against the West using advanced technology supplied by a rogue state. It only remains for a nuclear device to replace the cheap rockets. Iran is working on that. This is why Europe, led by France, is moving into the American corner. The internal Islamist terror Europe had hoped to avoid by distancing itself from the United States is happening anyway. And Europe fears that a terrorist-supplied Iranian bomb, a nuclear-armed Iranian missile, or an Iranian attempt to corner the world's oil supply through nuclear blackmail, pose direct threats to the continent itself.

Iraq
Our attack on Saddam was the easiest way to create a credible threat of force against Iran and North Korea, while also cutting out Saddam's own capacity to build or buy (from Korea and/or the A. Q. Kahn network) his own nuclear weapons. For this reason, it needed doing. Given the immense dangers faced by the West, and compared to our sacrifices in World War II and Korea, 3,000 casualties is not an excessive cost (tragic as these losses are). Yet our domestic divisions, and our inability to pacify Iraq have largely (although not, I believe, entirely) canceled out the deterrent message of the invasion.

Without a credible threat of force (and maybe even with a credible threat), there is simply no way that negotiations, "grand bargains," or unilateral withdrawals will accomplish anything. Israel had about as credible a threat as anyone could. Given its foes' rejection of a reasonable American-brokered deal, Israel tried unilateral withdrawal instead. Now look what's happened. The depth of the Moslem world's failure to adjust to modernity, the profundity of its need for scapegoats, the seeming boundlessness of its willingness to accept the death and destruction of its own in exchange for the "honor" of "revenge," are difficult for Americans to acknowledge. Read "A Middle Way" (by David Warren in the Ottawa Citizen) and you will see that the Western public is systematically sheltered from the sort of news that turns people into gloomy hawks.

Wishful Thinking
At Newsday, typically dovish Middle East Studies professor Fawaz Gerges says, "Hezbollah has risen to fill a social need." I find Gerges's vision of a solution in the Middle East utterly naive. He pretends that Hezbollah is not standing as a proxy for Iran, and acts as though a little bit of forceful negotiating can prod Hezbollah into disarming, and Israel and its Arab foes into a comprehensive settlement. But Israel has already made the sort of gestures that ought to have created momentum for peace. Instead, it's gotten more attacks, and the persistent calls for its destruction so chillingly described by David Warren.

On one critical point, however, Gerges is right. If liberals are lost in wishful thinking about the prospects of negotiated settlements and nuclear containment, conservatives are naive about the possibility of ending terror by a decisive military blow. Gerges is right that Hezbollah is not some finite terror force, but the expression of the will and aspirations of a massive portion of the Lebanese people. As such, it is unlikely to be bombed out of existence.

Gerges makes the doves' favorite point: bombing and war only breed more terrorists. True enough, but only because the underlying cultural dilemma of Muslim modernity has created a need for scapegoats. War ought to produce the realization that peaceful compromise is the way out. Instead it produces the opposite. Gestures for peace fare no better. Withdraw or attack, the results are the same: more hatred, more terror, more war. Compromise and settlement have been ruled out from the start by a pervasive ideology, an ideology that is a product of the underlying inability to reconcile Islam with modernity.

New Israel
This means that the entire Western world now stands in a position roughly analogous to that of Israel: locked in an essentially permanent struggle with a foe it is impossible either to placate, or to entirely destroy - a foe who demands our own destruction, and whose problems are so deep they would not be solved even by victory.

We can leave Iraq, as the Israelis left Lebanon. But we'll likely be back, there or somewhere else, before long. Some say our army should wait among the Kurds, striking selectively in the rest of Iraq, only when al Qaeda returns. That's a plan. Yet its likely to end up where Israel is in Lebanon, especially if al Qaeda starts kidnapping American soldiers with cross-border raids into the "Kurdish entity."

Meanwhile, short of a preemptive war, Iran is bound to get the bomb. No grand bargain or set of economic sanctions can deter it - especially now that Iran is convinced of its success in creating havoc for the West, and in consolidating popular support through its proxy attacks on Western interests. As Ian Bremmer reports in "What the Israeli-Hezbollah War Means for Iran,"

Iran is convinced it's winning, while America and Europe are increasingly convinced that a nuclear-armed Iran would be an intolerable danger to their interests. "Imagine...how much more dangerous the war in Lebanon would be if Iran had a nuclear weapon."

Collision Course
The West is on a collision course with Iran. There will either be a preemptive war against Iran's nuclear program, or an endless series of hot-and-cold war crises following Iran's acquisition of a bomb. And an Iranian bomb means further nuclear proliferation to Egypt and Saudi Arabia, as a balancing move by the big Sunni states. With all those Islamic bombs floating around, what are the chances the U.S. will avoid a nuclear terrorist strike over the long-term?

You don't believe that dovishness and negotiations will fail? Just wait till President Hillary tries to buy off the Iranians with a "grand bargain." Just wait till a nuclear Iran is unleashed to make further mischief. A seemingly futile and endless occupation of Lebanon once split Israel down the middle, breeding an entire generation of Israeli doves. Now Israel is a united nation of gloomy hawks, transformed by the repeated failure of every gesture of peace, and by the reality of their implacable foe. (See "Praying for Hummus, Getting Hamas.") I'm betting that someday we'll all be gloomy hawks, too. As for me, I'm already there.

- Stanley Kurtz is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

 

------------------------------ 

More Gloom [Stanley Kurtz]


That panel discussion on democracy with Michael Rubin, Dan Pipes, Robert Satloff, and Joshua Muravchik is fascinating. I'm partial to Pipes's democratic gradualism (as I note today in "Hawkish Gloom"). But to continue the gloominess, gradualists like Pipes and me have a problem.  Without a ongoing American military presence in the Middle East, it's tough to operate, much less calibrate, a policy of gradual democratic transformation.  That is the great attraction and advantage of a strategy of rapid democratization.  Quick democratization raises the hope of a quick American exit.  Unfortunately, quick democratization doesn't work.

The panelists all give the Bush administration an A for effort, while also faulting the administration for poor democratic implementation.  I think the problem is less a lack of knowledge than political pressure.  The administration knows that public support for our presence in the Middle East is time-limited.  So they're trying to push democratization quickly.  That leads to the sort of corner-cutting described by Satloff.  This mentality of "hold elections then get out" has been in place since we first went into Iraq.

Supposedly, 9/11 worked a radical change in the Bush administration, replacing opposition to nation building with the goal of democratic transformation.  But from the perspective of a democratic gradualist, the administration is still uncomfortable with the idea of nation building.  Real democratization takes time.  "Hold elections and get out" is not a formula for successful nation building.

On the other hand, neither the American public nor the Bush administration have the desire for an extended military presence in the Middle East.  The truth is, despite the accusations, neither the American public nor the Bush administration are imperialists.  And precisely because of that, it's tough to get the time needed for genuine transformation.

So we are running out of good alternatives.  Option one is to pretend that 9/11 was an isolated incident (or a hidden internal conspiracy), not the revelation of a new and serious long-term danger.  Many anti-war types prefer option one.  Option two is to acknowledge the danger of mass-scale terrorism using weapons of mass destruction, but rely on negotiations, economic incentives, "grand bargains," etc. to solve the problem (the favorite Democratic solution).  In the absence of a credible threat of force (and maybe even then, given the nature of our terrorist foe), I think option two is doomed.  Option three is to deploy force to preempt one rogue state and frighten others, while depending on a rapidly-spreading wave of democratization to assure long-term change, and permit relatively rapid American military withdrawal.  Option three is not working out as planned.  Option four is an expanded American military and a combination of more attacks (eg. a strike on Iran's nuclear facilities) with an extended and enlarged occupation of Iraq, working real social transformation and democratization.  In the absence of a major new terror strike on the U.S., or an Iran on or over the nuclear brink, option four is politically unsustainable.

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Iran's Day of Terror?

It's hard to know what to make of articles like the following. Is Iran planning to attack Israel soon? And if so, how close is Iran from constructing its first nuclear bomb?

The truth is we don't know.

However, I suspect that we must take the Iranian president at his word, and based on that things don't look good for the Middle-East. True, it doesn't seem like Iran is willing to attack Israel directly just yet. But perhaps it could escalate the missile attack that it is already launching at Israel through its ally and proxy, the Hezbollah. Hezbollah has in fact already threatened to launch longer range missiles at Israel. Could Iran then be planning a large scale missile attack via Hezbollah that would "light up" the skies over Jerusalem on the night of Aug 21st?

Time will tell.
------------------

PUTRAJAYA, Malaysia - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said Thursday the solution to the Middle East crisis was to destroy Israel, Iranian state media reported.
 
In a speech during an emergency meeting of Muslim leaders in Malaysia, Ahmadinejad also called for an immediate cease-fire to end the fighting between Israel and the Iranian-back group Hezbollah. "Although the main solution is for the elimination of the Zionist regime, at this stage an immediate cease-fire must be implemented," Ahmadinejad said, according to state-run television in a report posted on its Web site.

 

TEHRAN, Iran - President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on Tuesday rejected a U.N. Security Council resolution that would give his nation until Aug. 31 to suspend uranium enrichment.
 
Instead, Ahmadinejad insisted Tehran would pursue its nuclear program. Ahmadinejad said Iran will not give in to threats from the United Nations.

"If some think they can still speak with threatening language to the Iranian nation, they must know that they are badly mistaken," he said in a speech broadcast live on state-run television.
 
"Our nation has made its decision. We have passed the difficult stages. Today, the Iranian nation has acquired the nuclear technology."


Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has frustrated Western officials by refusing to reply to their offer of various incentives in exchange for Iran's discarding its nuclear program until August 22. The Western governments had asked Ahmadinejad to reply by June 29; why would Tehran need two extra months?
 
Farid Ghadry, the president of the Reform Party of Syria, has offered a provocative explanation for this delay. He asserts that the Supreme National Security Council of Iran chose the August 22 date "for a very precise reason. August 21, 2006 (Rajab 27, 1427) is known in the Islamic calendar as the Night of the Sira'a and Miira'aj, the night Prophet Mohammed (saas) ascended to heaven from the Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem on a Bourak (Half animal, half man), while a great light lit-up the night sky, and visited Heaven and Hell also Beit al-Saada and Beit al-Shaqaa (House of Happiness and House of Misery) and then descended back to Mecca...."
 
The Night Journey, or Miraj, is central to Islam's claim to Jerusalem as an Islamic holy city. According to Islamic tradition, Muhammad was carried on a Buraq, a miraculous horse with a human head, from Mecca to Jerusalem, where he ascended into heaven and met the other prophets. The only thing the Qur'an has to say about it is this: "Glory to (Allah) Who did take His servant for a Journey by night from the Sacred Mosque to the farthest Mosque, whose precincts We did bless, in order that We might show him some of Our Signs: for He is the One Who heareth and seeth (all things)" (17:1). There is no identification of the "farthest Mosque" with any mosque in Jerusalem in this, but the Hadith is very clear on the identification of its location with Jerusalem.
 
The traditions say that Muhammad and the Buraq, along with the angel Gabriel, went to the Temple Mount, and from there to heaven itself, where Muhammad encountered various prophets. In the sixth heaven was Moses, occasioning a dig at the Jews. "When I left him," Muhammad says, "he wept. Someone asked him, 'What makes you weep?' Moses said, 'I weep because after me there has been sent (Muhammad as a Prophet) a young man, whose followers will enter Paradise in greater numbers than my followers.'"
 
Evidently, however, Muhammad's stories of his journey were not altogether convincing: even some of the Muslims abandoned their faith and challenged Muhammad's most faithful follower, Abu Bakr, to do the same. Abu Bakr was contemptuous: "If he says so then it is true. And what is so surprising in that? He tells me that communications from God from heaven to earth come to him in an hour of a day or night and I believe him, and that is more extraordinary than that at which you boggle!" The world has continued to witness such unshakeable devotion from Muslims to this day.
 
Did Muhammad really go anywhere? According to his favorite wife, Aisha, he did not: "The apostle's body remained where it was but God removed his spirit by night." Nevertheless, the Night Journey has become firmly embedded in the Islamic consciousness, such that Muslims today celebrate it as one of the central events of Muhammad's life. And now, according to Ghadry, Ahmadinejad is planning an illumination of the night sky over Jerusalem to rival the one that greeted the Prophet of Islam on his journey. What the Iranian President, he says, is "promising the world by August 22 is the light in the sky over the Aqsa Mosque that took place the night before. That is his answer to the package of incentives the international community offered Iran on June 6."
 
Certainly a nuclear attack on Jerusalem or even an all-out conventional assault against Israel by Iran would be consistent with Ahmadinejad's oft-repeated denials of Israel's right to exist and recent predictions that its demise was at hand. He hinted at the use of nuclear weapons in his phrasing when he said that Israel "pushed the button of its own destruction" by finally retaliating against Hizballah's relentless rocket barrage from south Lebanon.
 
"Arrogant powers," Ahmadinejad said, "have set up a base for themselves to threaten and plunder nations in the region. But today, the occupier regime" - that is, Israel - "whose philosophy is based on threats, massacre and invasion, has reached its finishing line."
 
Will he attempt to make good on these threats this year on the anniversary of the Miraj, illuminating the night sky over Jerusalem? Will Western powers heed Farid Ghadry's words and move to stop Iran before it is too late?
 
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See also: The Missiles of 27 Rajab by Lt. Col. Gordon Cucullu

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Clarity on "Disproportionate" Force

The Left is largely saying that Israel is using "disproportionate" force in the current conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon. They worry that such excessive force ends up creating more terrorists than it kills and pushes more Lebanese to side with Hezbollah and is thus counterproductive. People of this mindset are generally calling for an immediate cease-fire on both sides.

The Right is largely saying let's stop pretending there's some moral equivalence here. Israel is defending itself and if it doesn't eliminate Hezbollah, then it will simply be a matter of time until Hezbollah regroups and eventually it will become an even greater threat than it is now. It's not Israel's fault that Hezbollah hides out among civilians. People of this mindset generally want Israel to continue until Hezbollah has been disarmed.

I could go on, but what is the Real Truth here? How can we bring clarity to these two opposing views?

The answer is actually surprisingly simple. The first mindset (let's call it the Left mindset) sees this conflict as if it were some rehash of a feud between the Hatfields and the McCoys. When you look at things this way, all you can do is throw up your hands saying who knows who started this mess, and mutter something about how every time one side shoots at the other, it just keeps the cycle of violence going and the only way to stop it is to demand an immediate cease fire. In this view, it doesn't really matter which side is right or wrong, all that matters is that each side hates the other and we need to work on ways to calm the two parties down and bring peace.

The second mindset (call it the Right mindset) says this isn't a feud at all. It's a gang of criminals that are holed up in the hotel shooting at anybody passing by. Israel is the police going in to stop the bad guys from killing innocent bystanders. It's true that innocent people in the hotel are getting killed, but if the bad guys aren't put out of action, then even more innocent people will be killed. When you see things this way, it's absolutely crazy to call for a cease-fire. Do we ever ask the police to lay down there arms because they are perpetuating a cycle of violence? Do we ever tell the police to leave the bad guys alone because they are only creating more bad guys and more hate?

Now look, I think most people (Left or Right) will agree there is this difference in mindsets, but now the question is why? And what should the real mindset be?

To me, the reason there is a difference is because things in real life are never so clear-cut. Hezbollah is not purely a gang of criminals and bad guys. They reportedly also do a lot of good social services. The Left sees the good they are doing and concludes they must not really be that bad after all. The Right hears that they intend to eliminate Israel (read: kill the Jews) and they conclude that they must really be very bad underneath any facade of good deeds.

The reality is that they may well be both. They may indeed be doing good things. And they may at the same time desire to do truly bad things. The Left will tend to excuse the tendencies toward bad actions as being caused by the cycle of hate and violence. The Right says we don't care why they want to do bad things, we just have to stop them or many people will die.

The reason the Left sees a Hatfield-McCoy feud is because they view the hatreds (on both sides) as being based on semi-legitimate grievances caused by the other side. The Right sees a police standoff because they view one side as having illegitimate grievances spurred on by incessant propaganda and then redressed through immoral means. The Left's problem is compounded by the fact that they always view the more powerful side as inherently unfair and the weaker side as entitled to redress its dire situation through nearly any means at their disposal.

What is the Real Truth? The real truth is that Israel would gladly forever walk away from this fight if it knew it had nothing to fear from the actions on the other side. It has no desire to continue a cycle of violence just like police have no desire to go out and battle the criminals.

Unfortunately, it can be hard to see this truth. Actually, it takes a measure of faith -- the same type of faith that we have in our police. Amazing isn't it?
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What is Real Clear Truth?

Welcome to Real Clear Truth!

Who hasn't heard Dennis Prager talk about preferring clarity to agreement? We may never come to a full agreement with other people, but we can usually bring some clarity to issues and come away understanding better why each side thinks the way they do. For many years I have tried to understand what makes people think the way they do and I've tried to understand why people see things differently. At the same time, regardless of what anybody thinks, I've always wanted to know the real truth -- even if that was different than I was currently believing.

I've never felt afraid to believe the truth and to be open to whatever the truth really is. I've never felt threaten by other people's views or felt that I needed to close my mind to protect my core beliefs. To me, the truth is what is important and second to that is being clear about it and why we often see truth differently.

I don't desire to win arguments. I don't even want to convince people of what I believe. What I want to do is help people see why there is a difference to what we believe and then help everyone to learn what the real truth is.

And that's why I'm calling my blog: Real Clear Truth. It's exactly what I seek.

I hope you will join me on my adventure.

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