This Tree Bears No Fruit

Mobile Biological Weapons Labs Evade Weapons Inspectors (credit to http://www.journalscape.com/pasquinade/2003-05-06-09:37)The White House reacted to the article in The Washington Post with unusual vigor. In his response to the report that the Administration pushed the false claim that mobile biological weapons labs had been found in Iraq when they had evidence to the contrary, Scott McClellan bristled with indignation:

Now, I will point out that the reporting I saw this morning was simply reckless and it was irresponsible. The lead in The Washington Post left the impression for the reader that the President was saying something he knew at the time not to be true. That is absolutely false and it is irresponsible, and I don’t know how The Washington Post can defend something so irresponsible.

He was of course defending President Bush’s unequivocal statement of May 29, 2003 declaring:

We have found the weapons of mass destruction.

Now, I don’t know about you but if I wake up in the morning and turn on the news and I hear the President of the United States make a declaration like that I would think to myself "Golly, we have found the weapons of mass destruction." I would certainly not be thinking, "Our intelligence community believes we have found the weapons of mass destruction. Let me withhold judgment until the Iraq Survey Group releases its final report a year and a half from now. Gee, I am such a critical thinker, aren’t I?"

Yet, the Administration would like us to believe just that; that the intelligence agencies passed on bad information to the President who mindlessly parroted it. However, the President and the other senior members of his Administration have a peculiar history of cherry picking intelligence that supports their claims while ignoring any intelligence or evidence to the contrary. If this selective use of intelligence were an isolated incident, I would be more sympathetic to Mr. McClellan’s pleading that it was all the fault of the intelligence agencies or the media. The record however shows a pattern of behavior that is either dangerously incompetent or maliciously deceptive. Whether it is incompetence or deception, the effect is the same and the behavior is utterly indefensible.

A close look at the events during May of 2003 suggests a very peculiar breakdown in communications on a matter of grave importance. The timeline is as follows:

  •  A technical team dispatched by the DIA begins examining the trailers on May 25, 2003.
  • Within four hours the team concludes that the trailers are not mobile biological weapons labs.
  • The team’s findings are quickly communicated to Washington and a series of email discussions follow between Washington and Baghdad.
  • A CIA analyst completes a draft paper alleging that the trailers were the strongest evidence to date of Iraq’s biological weapons program.
  • The technical team publishes their preliminary report in the early hours of May 27, 2003 dismissing the notion that the trailers were biological weapons labs.
  • Ignoring the findings on the ground, on May 28, 2003 the CIA and DIA jointly releases a report written by an analyst located at Langley that claims:

    The design, equipment, and layout of the trailer found in late April is strikingly similar to descriptions provided by a source who was a chemical engineer that managed one of the mobile plants. 

  • On May 29, 2003 the President of the United States unequivocally states that weapons of mass destruction have been found in Iraq.
  • Scientists and biological weapons experts cast serious doubts on the claim that the trailers were likely used for biological weapons manufacture.
  • Throughout 2003 senior Administration officials continue to assert that the trailers were mobile biological weapons labs.
  • The report of the technical team is shelved and not shown to David Kay, then head of the Iraq Survey Group, until late in 2003 near the end of his tenure.

A number of questions quickly arise from this chronology of events that need to be answered and cannot simply be brushed away. These are:

  • Why did the CIA and DIA ignore the report of the technical team in its report of May 28, 2003? Clearly, the DIA must have been aware of the team’s findings. After all, it was the DIA that dispatched this team.
  • The CIA report brushed aside doubts about the trailers, specifically in a New York Times article, by stating "The experts cited in the editorial are not on the scene and probably do not have complete access to information about the trailers. ". This is a curious claim from an analyst writing from Washington when the DIA’s own team on the scene contradicts the analyst’s conclusions.
  • The CIA report by its own admission is at best guesswork. The report makes the rather Orwellian claim that "despite the lack of confirmatory samples, we nevertheless are confident that this trailer is a mobile BW production plant". The report continues by stating that sample analysis has begun and the results were not yet known. The report is then, by its own admission, incomplete. In the face of contradictory findings by the DIA’s own technical team on the ground in Iraq, it defies reason why anyone would publish a report of such importance based on speculation and gossip. What was the urgency in releasing an incomplete report? What were the political pressures on the intelligence agencies to produce such an incomplete report?
  • The CIA report relies on "Curveball" as a source that confirms its analysis. "Curveball" who is a self-described chemical engineer was the thoroughly discredited Iraqi defector who passed on wild fantasies to the CIA in the prelude to the Iraq war. The report states:

    The design, equipment, and layout of the trailer found in late April is strikingly similar to descriptions provided by a source who was a chemical engineer that managed one of the mobile plants.

  • Why was the technical teams findings buried? And by whom?
  • When did the White House become aware that the technical analysis did not support the conclusions of the CIA report? Why did the White House state as fact that the trailers were biological weapons labs when even the CIA report did not go that far. Did the White House read the CIA report carefully and understand that the analysis was still incomplete?

There are serious questions raised by this mishandling of the Iraqi trailers story by the White House. The pattern of incomplete information that always favors the Administration’s assertion is overwhelming and cannot be accidental. As far as I can discern from the Administration’s position, they are claiming that the CIA and other intelligence agencies led this Administration by the nose into war with Iraq by providing always inaccurate, yet always consistent, intelligence supporting the Administration’s preconceived notions. This is a wonderfully circular argument that has a highly technical description: nonsense.

It is well past time that the Administration stops blaming everyone else for its failures. If the CIA or DIA is to blame, where are the mass firings? Surely, if they are so dangerously incompetent then we as a nation are ill served by having these people on the payroll. From where I sit, it does not at all seem to me that this was a failure of intelligence. After all, it took the DIA team of experts four hours to correctly deduce that the trailers were not biological weapons labs. That is to me very strong evidence that our intelligence agencies have extremely competent and skilled people on the ground. Other public reports we have seen from the Iraq Survey Group and others also suggests a highly professional and well trained group of professionals who are reaching correct reasoned conclusions when allowed to complete their tasks.

The incompetence I see does not appear to be with the men and women of the intelligence agencies. There is a consistent pattern of the field level reports from the intelligence agencies being accurate but somehow, extraordinarily, the final report always being consistent with the preconceived (and always incorrect) notions of this White House. Why is that? This does not appear to me to be a failure of intelligence. It appears to me and I would hope to most reasonable observers to be a case of the King hearing what the King wants to hear.

It is time for common sense to prevail in Washington. It is time for accountability. It is long past time that dedicated hard working career Government servants are made to take the fall for the masters they serve. It is time for the world to see that the emperor has no clothes.

Posted in Foreign Policy, Iraq, Politics | 8 Comments

A Crime Against Humanity

Today I feel shame. I feel shame that in the name of my religion innocent men, women, children, mothers, fathers, sons and daughters were slaughtered. I feel shame that the last words from these barbarians was "Allah is great" as they extinguished innocent human life.

The first word in the Koran is "Read". I say to everyone who reads this post and especially to any Muslim who reads this post: Read

Posted in Islam, Personal | 7 Comments

Iran Strikes Back

The United States has threatened a nuclear strike on the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Government of Iran has responded to this threat by publicly humiliating the United States. Iran has declared that it has officially joined the Nuclear Club. Though Iran does not yet have a nuclear weapon, its announcement that it is now capable of enriching uranium puts the United States, and the international community, on notice that Iran is rapidly becoming the newest nuclear power in the world.

In his latest column in The Washington Post, David Ignatius compares the current impasse with the Cuban Missile Crisis. He writes about the choices President Bush is presented with:

[Professor Graham] Allison argues that Bush’s dilemma is similar to the one that confronted Kennedy in 1962. His advisers are telling him that he may face a stark choice — either to acquiesce in the acquisition of nuclear weapons by a dangerous adversary, or risk war to stop that nuclear fait accompli . Hard-liners warned JFK that alternative courses of action would only delay the inevitable day of reckoning, and Bush is probably hearing similar advice now.

He argues that an attack on Iran will undermine America’s pre-eminent position in the world. He cites Zbigniew Brzezinski to drive home the point:

Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former national security adviser to President Jimmy Carter, makes a similar argument about Iran. "I think of war with Iran as the ending of America’s present role in the world," he told me this week. "Iraq may have been a preview of that, but it’s still redeemable if we get out fast. In a war with Iran, we’ll get dragged down for 20 or 30 years. The world will condemn us. We will lose our position in the world."

While I agree with Mr. Ignatius and Mr. Brzezinski that an attack on Iran will further undermine America’s relevance in the world, I disagree with the suggestion that we are not already there. I think it is a direct consequence of the war in Iraq that Iran and to a similar extent North Korea are able to throw dirt in America’s face with impunity. By threatening war we have rendered impotent our ability to wage war. Our adversaries know this and know that the vast diplomatic playing field between war and peace belongs to them.

While Kennedy during the Cuban Missile Crisis realized that the goal of war is to achieve your will and not war itself, the Bush administration considers war as an end by itself. Kennedy deftly employed the tools of war, gunboat diplomacy, and the art of political communication in combination to achieve the primary goal – to avoid a nuclear Cuba. His genius, as Mr. Ignatius points out, was to realize that the other side does not necessarily want war. Kennedy cultivated this notion and pounced on it in one brilliant act in high stakes diplomacy: he received two contradictory messages from the Soviet Union, one belligerent one conciliatory, he chose to ignore the belligerent and act on the conciliatory. That single act shifted the dynamics of the Cuban Missile Crisis. The detente that followed can be traced back directly to this triumph of uncommon common sense alone.

The Bush Administration, by contrast, has played the diplomatic game with the subtlety of a jackhammer. It may work well in movies, where you draw a line in the sand and your opponent quickly crumbles and grovels at your feet, but in the real world a show of force is underpinned by multiple of acts of mutual compromise. The Administration however, due to its misadventure in Iraq, has lost the ability to make a credible show of force. When the United States says that we will strike you militarily if condition A is not met, the opposing party knows that this is not a starting point of diplomacy but an inflexible ultimatum. The choices for the adversary now are either capitulate or wage war. From anyone else’s perspective except perhaps that of the United States, the sounder choice is to prepare for war. It is better to fight a war under these circumstances with the final political outcome in doubt than to capitulate with its assured outcome of defeat. This is not to say that the United States cannot win militarily against Iran, it certainly can. But war is not about military victories. War is a political act and its final outcome must be measured with a political yardstick. By that yardstick, a prospect of an American victory in Iran is remote.

President Ahmadinejad of Iran has in recent days struck both a conciliatory and a belligerent tone in his public remarks. This is not a sign of an unstable personality, as many in the Administration appear to believe. It is, on the contrary, a sign that Iran is practiced in the art of diplomacy. The Bush Administration should now be at a moment of decision. Past experience suggests that the Administration perhaps does not realize this and may already have made the decision to go to war. That is a shame. This crisis offers the United States the opportunity to truly remake the Middle East – but perhaps not in the way they had originally envisioned. Iran is destined to be, with an assist from the United States in Iraq, a major power in the Middle East. The United States has an opportunity here to get ahead of this development and broker a new status quo in the Middle East that can usher in an era of regional and global stability. This development is in our National Interest, far more so than a full-scale war in the Middle East.

It is now time to move the conversation to the achievement of this new order in the Middle East.

 
 
Posted in Foreign Policy, Iran | 7 Comments

A Series Of Unfortunate Juxtapositions

The details of my life are quite inconsequential… very well, where do I begin? My father was a relentlessly self-improving boulangerie owner from Belgium with low grade narcolepsy and a penchant for buggery. My mother was a fifteen year old French prostitute named Chloe with webbed feet. My father would womanize, he would drink. He would make outrageous claims like he invented the question mark. Sometimes he would accuse chestnuts of being lazy. The sort of general malaise that only the genius possess and the insane lament. My childhood was typical. Summers in Rangoon, luge lessons. In the spring we’d make meat helmets. When I was insolent I was placed in a burlap bag and beaten with reeds- pretty standard really. At the age of twelve I received my first scribe. At the age of fourteen a Zoroastrian named Vilma ritualistically shaved my testicles. There really is nothing like a shorn scrotum… it’s breathtaking- I highly suggest you try it.
– Dr. Evil (Austin Powers – International Man of Mystery)

I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids.
– General Jack D. Ripper (Dr. Strangelove)Richard Perle

Mandrake, do you realize that in addition to fluoridating water, why, there are studies underway to fluoridate salt, flour, fruit juices, soup, sugar, milk… ice cream. Ice cream, Mandrake, children’s ice cream.
– General Jack D. Ripper (Dr. Strangelove)

Yes, uh, a profound sense of fatigue… a feeling of emptiness followed. Luckily I… I was able to interpret these feelings correctly. Loss of essence.
– General Jack D. Ripper (Dr. Strangelove)

No, it’s not what you think. It’s much, much worse!
– Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

I could never find time for love–too heavy–it’s an anchor that drowns a man. Besides, I’ve got the sky, the smell of jet exhaust, my bike.
– Topper Hurley (Hot Shots!)

 


 It’s a man, baby!
– Austin Powers (Austin Powers – International Man of Mystery)

Oh, you’re right. And when you’re right, you’re right. And you – you’re always right.
– Barf (Spaceballs)

Ann Coulter

That was my virgin-alarm. It’s programmed to go off before you do!
– Dot Matrix (Spaceballs)

Oh, my God. It’s Mega Maid. She’s gone from suck to blow.
– Colonel Sandurz (Spaceballs)

Prepare ship for ludicrous speed! Fasten all seatbelts, seal all entrances and exits, close all shops in the mall, cancel the three ring circus, secure all animals in the zoo!
– Colonel Sandurz (Spaceballs)

Do you know what it’s like to fall in the mud and get kicked… in the head… with an iron boot? Of course you don’t, no one does. It never happens. It’s a dumb question… skip it.
– Rex Kramer (Airplane!)

I look out there at all you wonderful guys and I say to myself, "what I wouldn’t give to be twenty years younger . . . and a woman."
– Admiral Benson (Hot Shots!)


Let me tell you a little story about a man named Sh! Sh! even before you start. That was a pre-emptive "sh!" Now, I have a whole bag of "sh!" with your name on it.
– Dr. Evil (Austin Powers – International Man of Mystery)

Daniel Pipes

Well, I, uh, don’t think it’s quite fair to condemn a whole program because of a single slip-up, sir.
– General "Buck" Turgidson (Dr. Strangelove) 

Mr. President, I’m not saying we wouldn’t get our hair mussed. But I do say no more than ten to twenty million killed, tops. Uh, depending on the breaks.
– General "Buck" Turgidson (Dr. Strangelove)

I’m a mog: half man, half dog. I’m my own best friend!
– Barf (Spaceballs)

Well, I hope it’s a long ceremony, ’cause it’s gonna be a short honeymoon.
– Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

Why didn’t somebody tell me my ass was so big?
– President Skroob (Spaceballs)

As president of Planet Spaceball, I can assure both you and your viewers that there’s absolutely no air shortage whatsoever. Yes, of course. I’ve heard the same rumor myself. Yes, thanks for calling and not reversing the charges. Bye-bye.
– President Skroob (Spaceballs)

You only think I guessed wrong – that’s what’s so funny. I switched glasses when your back was turned. Ha-ha, you fool. You fell victim to one of the classic blunders, the most famous of which is "Never get involved in a land war in Asia", but only slightly less well known is this: "Never go in against a Sicilian, when *death* is on the line.". Hahahahahah…
– Vizzini (The Princess Bride)

 


 Debbie SchlusselWell my friend Sweet Jay took me to that video arcade in town, right, and they don’t speak English there, so Jay got into a fight and he’s all, "Hey quit hasslin’ me cuz’ I don’t speak French" or whatever! And then the guy said something in Paris talk, and I’m like, "Just back off!" And they’re all, "Get out!" And we’re like, "Make me!" It was cool.
– Scott Evil (Austin Powers – Internation Man of Mystery)

No, no, go away, I hate you! And yet… I find you strangely attractive.
– Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

…yet another problem created by so many illegal aliens in our midst: deadly car accidents.
– Debbie Schlussel

concentrate… concentrate… I’ve got to concentrate… concentrate… concentrate… Hello?… hello… hello… Echo… echo… echo… Pinch hitting for Pedro Borbon… Manny Mota… Mota… Mota…
– Ted Striker (Airplane!)

Look, if I were joking I would’ve said, "what do you do with an elephant with three balls? You walk him and pitch to the rhino."
– Ramada Thompson (Hot Shots!)

 


Sir! I have a plan! Charles Krauthammer
– Dr. Strangelove (Dr. Strangelove)

Regrettably, yes. But it is, you know, a sacrifice required for the future of the human race. I hasten to add that since each man will be required to do prodigious… service along these lines, the women will have to be selected for their sexual characteristics which will have to be of a highly stimulating nature.
– Dr. Strangelove (Dr. Strangelove)

Hmm… Strangelove? What kind of a name is that? That ain’t no Kraut name is it, Stainesey?
– General “Buck” Turgidson (Dr. Strangelove)

I’ve hired you to help me start a war. It’s a prestigious line of work, with a long and glorious tradition.
– Vizzini (The Princess Bride)

Yankee Doodle Floppy Disk, this is Foxtrot Zulu Milk Shake, checking in at seven hundred feet
– Lt. Cmdr. James Block (Hot Shots!)

 

 

 


 Well, no offense, but if that is a woman it looks like she was beaten with an ugly stick!
– Austin Powers (Austin Powers – International Man of Mystery)

So the combination is one, two, three, four, five? That’s the stupidest combination I’ve ever heard in my life! The kind of thing an idiot would have on his luggage!
– Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

Laura Ingraham

So, Lone Star, now you see that evil will always triumph because good is dumb.
– Dark Helmet (Spaceballs)

My hair, he shot my hair. Son of a bitch!
– Princess Vespa (Spaceballs)

Your ears you keep and I’ll tell you why. So that every shriek of every child at seeing your hideousness will be yours to cherish. Every babe that weeps at your approach, every woman who cries out, "Dear God! What is that thing," will echo in your perfect ears. That is what to the pain means. It means I leave you in anguish, wallowing in freakish misery forever.
– Wesley (The Princess Bride)

It’s possible, Pig, I might be bluffing. It’s conceivable, you miserable, vomitous mass, that I’m only lying here because I lack the strength to stand. But, then again… perhaps I have the strength after all.
– Wesley (The Princess Bride)


Update: Recommend this article on my diary at Daily Kos and take the poll at the end.

Posted in Humor | 5 Comments

The View From Iran: Two Suns In The Sunset

You have just learned that the "Shaytan Bozorg" wants to go nuclear on you. What do you do? Do you run into the streets screaming "Marg bar Amrika!"? Do you run and hide in the basement? Do you head for the hils? Do you check the newspapers first?

I am not sure I know the answers to any of those questions so I thought that I would check the Iranian (English language) newspapers to try to get a pulse on the Iranian reaction to our nuclear gambit. What I found was an interesting mix of news stories and opinion ranging from defiance to indifference. Here’s the rundown:

Iran News Daily, published from Tehran, quotes an Iranian foreign ministry spokesman as saying that the threatened strikes are "psychological warfare":

"We regard that (planning for air strikes) as psychological warfare stemming from America’s anger and helplessness," foreign ministry spokesman Hamid Reza Asefi told reporters.

"The Americans are not seeking a solution for the Iranian nuclear file and are seeking to make crisis. They do not want us to reach an agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the Europeans," Asefi said.

The spokesman warned that Iran "will not give up its nuclear rights," adding that "activities of research on uranium enrichment are continuing normally" in Natanz.

"Sending our file to the UN Security Council will not make us retreat. During the past 27 years, we underwent economic sanctions and in spite of that we made economic, technical and scientific progress," he added.

The same article also reports on British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw’s dismissal of the nuclear strike idea as "completely nuts".

The official Government news outlet, Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), notably buries the news about the possible U.S. attack deep inside a story about Iran-U.S. talks about Iraq entitled "Asefi: Iran doubts US good intention in talks on Iraq". The headline story is entitled "Iran does not need nuclear weapons: Ambassador" and argues that Iran has sufficient conventional deterrent:

Iran’s Ambassador to Ankara Firouz Dowlatabadi said here Sunday that the Great Prophet (PBUH) military exercise conducted in the Persian Gulf waters last week proved that Iran does not need any nuclear weapons.

In an exclusive interview with IRNA, he said, "Recent military exercise was a response to futile allegations made by the US and Zionist regime that Iran wants to manufacture nuclear weapons." "The military exercise proved that Iran does not need nuclear weapons and Iranian nuclear program has noting to do with military aspect," he said.

"Successful test fire of missiles in the military exercise showed that they can meet Iran’s defensive requirement in modern wars," he said.

In perhaps an ominous sign, the Iranian exercise was codenamed "Great Prophet" while the planned test detonation (story via Polimom) of the largest conventional bomb by the U.S. has been codenamed "Divine Strake".

IRNA also carries an article entitled "Israel nuke depots biggest threat to int’l security: envoy". The article makes the argument we are likely to hear more of as the standoff heats up that Israel’s nuclear arsenal is a bigger concern for the region than Iran’s nuclear program:

Syrian Ambassador to Tehran Hamed Hassan here Sunday said nuclear depots of Israel, composed of 200 nuclear warheads, is the biggest danger and threat to regional and international security and stability.

Hassan made the remark while speaking to IRNA in an exclusive interview on the threshold of an international conference in support of Palestinian rights.

He said Israel’s nuclear plan was very important for the United States and the West, referring to Western media reports that Britain delivered thousands of tons of uranium to Israel last year and that the regime’s nuclear facilities have been constructed in cooperation with France.

The US and West have turned a blind eye to Israel’s nuclear arsenals and its weapons of mass destruction, he stated and urged Muslims to adopt an effective stand in international organizations to disclose the dual policies of the West and the US.

He called on Muslims to strive to restore the right of the Islamic and Arab states and all Third World countries to access nuclear technology for peaceful purposes. 

This argument always has been and continues to be a problem for the United States as it tries to rally worldwide support against Iran.

Tehran Times also carries the Foreign Ministry’s dismissal of the U.S. nuclear threat, although once again buried inside a news story about U.S.-Iran talks on Iraq. The paper also carries an analysis of the U.S. Administration’s unilateralist tendencies:

They essentially believed that the U.S. could regain unassailable power and dominance over the world through the unilateral use of its great military power.

The article demonstrates an understanding of American political forces and also offers a fascinating critique of the closed political systems in other Middle Eastern countries:

Meanwhile, due to their closed political systems, most Middle Eastern countries have many discontents. Thus, they have been unable to effectively meet the challenge of the Western powers and have adopted a passive attitude toward U.S. actions, encouraging U.S. officials to pursue their policies in the region.

Unfortunately, the militarist attitude of U.S. officials and the lack of a powerful political channel in the Middle East through which public opinion could be manifested have paved the way for U.S. warmongers to pursue their policies in the Middle East with no concern for world public opinion.

Yet, the dawn is breaking at last, since the masses of the Middle East are finally beginning to realize that there is no real difference between the dictators of the Arab World, the U.S. imperialists, and the powers behind the throne.

This is a critique that resonates well with the Arab street and the larger Muslim masses. It also highlights the complex challenge of bringing democracy to the Middle East. It is not clear who the real winners will be if and when the United States succeeds in bringing democracy to the Middle East. In the case of Iraq at least, it appears that the real winner is Iran and this article clearly understands this point well.

The Iranian North American expatriate website iranian.com meets the U.S. attack story head on with an article entitled "Pre-emptive Genocide?". If the Administration is harboring fantasies of Iranians dancing in the streets when their country is nuked, this article should put those rosy scenarios to bed:

The foxy neo-cons, with fangs out for a kill, have outwitted the world.  After 27 years of violating the bi-lateral Algiers Agreement, finding itself in a quagmire in Iraq, the United States decided to bring on board other countries to attack Iran, or at the very least, have their blessings.  Falsely accusing Iran of pursuing a nuclear weapons program and using the NPT, it succeeded.

Clearly, the aim of this administration is regime change.  However, its propaganda, the continuous revelations about the audacious lies that led it to illegally invade Iraq and cause the death of over 100,000 human beings, including thousands of Americans, has left us inert and emotionally inept to extract the neo-cons’ fangs and put a stop to their incessant demise of nations.   This is exactly what they count on – this allows them to persist. 

Their next heinous plan – nuking Iran, will morally bankrupt humanity and be the next chapter of genocide in our history books.  But in their shrewdness, they have even planned the murder of an entire civilization based on a preemptive genocide!

If I had to place a wager, I would guess that when your country is attacked, most reasonable people put aside their political differences with their Government and rally together against the attacker. I think it is long past time to put the "cakewalk" neo-cons out with the garbage.

In my previous post on the subject, I argued that if Seymour Hersh’s sources are accurate war with Iran is inevitable. I hope I turn out to be very wrong. However, unless there is a dramatic development in Congress or perhaps within the Military (as Mr. Hersh suggested might be possible) I think this train has already pulled out of the station.

All that remains is for the facts and intelligence to be fixed around the decision to go to war.

[Author’s Note: The title of this post comes from the Pink Floyd song "Two Suns In The Sunset" from The Final Cut album]

Posted in Foreign Policy, Iran, Politics | Comments Off on The View From Iran: Two Suns In The Sunset