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Iran could be among our best allies

Posted by Joshua Holland at 1:56 PM on February 27, 2007.


Seriously ...
takhjam2

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Newsweek caught on to a point I made a couple of weeks ago about the administration's saber-rattling towards Iran. Of the ominous-sounding "Quds Force," Christopher Dickey and John Barry write:

...the unit appears to be as close to America's Shiite and Kurdish allies as to splinter groups accused of killing perhaps 170 of the more than 3,000 American soldiers who've died in Iraq. The relationship between the Quds Force and figures like Iraqi President Jalal Talabani or Abdul Aziz al-Hakim of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq (both of whom have been received in the White House recently) goes back two decades to the days when only Tehran was aiding Saddam Hussein's enemies.

Bien. We knew that. But I hadn't realized that we've been on the same side as the Quds Force in several other conflicts as well. According to Newsweek:

[Quds] supported the legendary Ahmed Shah Massoud against the Russians and his Taliban rivals in Afghanistan...

As did we!

... [and] Quds helped the Bosnians hold back the Serbian war machine.

We did too!

And let's not forget Iran/ Contra, although I wouldn't use "we" in that context.

Of course, they've also reportedly supported Hezbollah, a group our government thinks is quite bad. But still, we've been on the same side as the Quds Force for three of our past four conflicts - not including Haiti. Oh, and the recent bombing of Somalia. And the earlier invasion of Somalia -- oh, it gets so hard to keep track sometimes, but you know what I mean. (It's still been 102 years since Iran invaded anyone.)

Think about that, and also recall the point Juan Cole made:

In 2003, Iran offered to come in from the cold in a proposal to George W. Bush. Recognition of Israel within 1967 borders, pressure on Hizbullah and the Palestinians to moderate, signing the additional protocols of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, full cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency, it was all there for Bush's taking.

What did Bush do?

He reprimanded the Swiss embassy, which takes care of US affairs in Iran, for daring to forward this proposal to Crawford on the Potomac.

Then there was this recently:

CNN chief international correspondent Christiane Amanpour recently traveled in Iran, and here she recaps a conversation with a top government official.

Tehran - As I sat down recently with a senior Iranian government official, he urgently waved a column by Thomas Friedman of The New York Times in my face, one about how the United States and Iran need to engage each other.

"Natural allies," this official said.

It was a surprising choice of words considering the barbs Washington and Tehran have been trading of late.

"We are not after conflict. We are not after crisis. We are not after war," said this official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "But we don't know whether the same is true in the U.S. or not. If the same is true on the U.S. side, the first step must be to end this vicious cycle that can lead to dangerous action - war."

He confided that what he was telling me was not shared by all in the Iranian government, but it was endorsed so high up in the religious leadership that he felt confident spelling out the rationale.

"This view is not off the streets. It's not the reformist view and it's not even the view of the whole government," he replied.

But he insisted he was describing the thinking at the highest levels of the religious leadership - the center of decision-making power in Iran.

I asked whether he meant Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei himself.

"Yes," he said.

Did I mention that they pretty much hate al Qaeda? Well, they do:

Both Iranians and Americans have strongly negative views of Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda. Three in four Iranians (74%) and more than nine in ten Americans (94%) view bin Laden unfavorably, including large majorities (68% and 89%, respectively) who view him very unfavorably. Only 10 percent of Iranians look at the al Qaeda leader favorably (2% Americans).

That's why Iran tried to help us in Afghanistan in the fall of 2001 and spring of 2002. That is, until Don Rumsfeld and Stephen Hadley smacked away the country's outstretched hand. The fact that we're now supporting al Qaeda muddies the waters a bit, of course.

I know I've made this point many times before, but it's important. Iran is not our natural enemy. We perpetrated a coup against their most popular leader in the 20th century and replaced him with a dictator; they took our embassy and held our people hostage. We fought a proxy war with them through our boy Saddam Hussein. We're more than even. And while we may not like their right-wing, theocratic government, the bottom line is that they'll stop being our enemies the day we stop casting them in the role.

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Tagged as: iran, israel, armageddon, apocalypse, hagee, mccain

Joshua Holland is a staff writer at Alternet and a regular contributor to The Gadflyer.


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James Baker III is already on record
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Feb 27, 2007 3:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
stating that, to paraphrase, he 'would rather deal with Persians than Arabs'. This is commonly held belief from the British days to recent times. The Persians are more highly educated and see as 'civilised' versus the sand arabs who were often nomadic, barbaric, and whose version of Islam is highly violent (salafist/wahabbist). Bzezenski also has mentioned that he likes Iran and it would help fulfill his constant dream of more intervention into the former Soviet Republics. And of course, you have the Bush, 'relationship' with Iran/Contra etc. Having said that, historically Persians are better to deal with than Arabs so I'm not saying they are wrong. Remember these like big, autocratic, stable regimes. Not small, violent, pesky regimes which are found more in the Arabic family/tribal systems.

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Yep
Posted by: lessbread on Feb 27, 2007 8:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What stands in the way of better US-Iranian relations is the Israel Lobby and a corporate media that relishes the glory days of the 1979-1980 hostage crisis - oh and the neo-con crazies too. :)

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Time Is The Enemy Of Secrecy
Posted by: bob t on Feb 27, 2007 9:55 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Juan Cole, Sy Hersh, Amy Goodman, Noam Chomsky and Norman Finkelstein, Keith Olbermann, reveal all. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert and Molly Ivins(reewntly deceased) reveal all with humor. Imagine what america could be if many more journalists behaved like David Gregory, Mark Shields and Helen Thomas.

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Josh,
Posted by: bob t on Feb 27, 2007 10:15 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...Kudos and I agree completely with you. But the Bushie rethugs(Catholics and Evangelical Fundies and Neocons) will bomb them anyway. And there is nothing we can do to stop it, even as we are and have been watching it forming at this very moment. Repubs and their enablers are all PRO-DEATH. Dominate them or kill them is their mindset. The Bushies are scary and SCARED people. They are all Cold War leftovers and Civil War leftovers who have and will never recover, grow up and move on. They live in the past and in time their way of life and POV will die and this scares the hell out of them because that is all they know. If the world survives long enough, time is working against them as the content of their agenda for america and the world becomes more revealed and known to more people.
Great article---

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Josh, you deserve praise when you get it right ...
Posted by: CounterCorp on Feb 28, 2007 4:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... so, kudos to you for bucking the trend to bash Iran and cast it as a mortal threat to the U.S., the rest of the Middle East, and probably the world.

Now you need to similarly question the anti-Shi'a narrative in the Western media — including from a majority of left-leaning media — especially against the Hezbollah, who are only doing in Lebanon what the Shi'a are doing in Iraq: defending themselves and demanding more equitable treatment after decades (if not centuries) of oppression, persecution, and abuse.

Bashing the Shi'a is like bashing the IRA in Northern Ireland, or the ANC in apartheid-era South Africa; none of these groups is perfect or without blame, but they are all motivated by a similar necessity to defend themselves against more powerful groups exercising hegemony over them ...

The idea that the world would be better off if Iran had a nuclear bomb than Pakistan — which no mainstream (and far too few left-leaning) journalists could begin to fathom, much less try to explore or question government officials about , is precisely why articles such as yours are important ...

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IRAN
Posted by: pfm on Feb 28, 2007 8:19 AM   
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Iran was our ally following Sept 11th, but GWB chose to summarily dismiss them and most all of our allies in the Middle East with his "cowboy" diplomacy. What county besides England with whom we are joined at the hip truly might count as their ally and moreover who would want us as an ally. Our word means absolutely nothing and we'll turn on you quicker than a rattle snake.

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Let the games continue...In this proposed round the 'real' blue eyed
Posted by: ekipnrut on Feb 28, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
anglo saxons will attempt to further pit the 'wanna be
soooooooooo bad' european Iranians against their
fragmented religion inferior arab brethren.

From Washington Jewish Week Online Edition 1/16/2006:
Relations between Berlin and Tehran were strong from the moment Adolf Hitler came to power in 1933, when Reza Shah Pahlavi's nation was still known as Persia.
The shah became a stalwart admirer of Hitler, Nazism and the concept of the Aryan master race. He also sought the Nazis' help in reducing British petro-political domination.
So intense was the shah's identification with the Third Reich that in 1935 he renamed his ancient country Iran, which in Farsi means Aryan and refers to the Proto-Indo-European lineage that Nazi racial theorists and Persian ethnologists cherished.

I suppose that as these fiendishly racist vermin work their
way more into the Horn of Africa and east africa for oil
control and greater regional exploitation...they'll maybe
come up with a lost tribe of African Aryans to pimp as front
stooges to murder their kin. :o)

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Secrets
Posted by: willymack on Feb 28, 2007 3:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it when the bushies dirty secrets about their dirty lies and total inability to identify peaceful overtures when they see and hear them come to light. While the rest of the world wants peace, and is scared half to death of the US and its intentions, our pretend president and the cretins around him go right ahead with their plotting and bellicose posturing, seemingly oblivious to it all. The election of 2006 seems to have come to naught as the Democrats, who comprise a majority in both houses of Congress have reverted to their old ways, and pulled their heads back into their shells. This bothers me more than anything else, as Congress has the power to shackle this hideous regime and is playing it safe, rather than do its job.

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