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February
02, 2004, 9:25 a.m.
The Seventh Level
Americans Appeasing Evil - By Michael Ledeen
Sorry to say, I haven't reread Dante's "Inferno" for some years,
but I still remember his description of a very low and extremely unpleasant
level of hell that houses traitors. Surely abject appeasers of evil qualify
for the same treatment, and we must note grimly that three prime candidates
have recently come forward to swell the ranks of that overheated realm:
Senator Joe Biden of Delaware (D.), Senator Arlen Specter (R.), of Pennsylvania,
and Congressman Bob Ney of Ohio (R.).
All have
undertaken to "improve relations" between the United States
and the theocratic fascist regime of Iran. Specter announced over the
weekend that congressional staffers would soon go to Tehran in the first
stage of the appeasement program. After supping in Washington with the
Iranian ambassador to the U.N. at a dinner helpfully facilitated by the
State Department, Specter proclaimed that Iran had "helped us in
the fight against al Qaeda and in the Afghanistan situation. I don't think
we have given them sufficient credit. They deserve credit." And since
"They are showing some signs of wanting to improve relations. Now
is a good time."
One must
wonder what elixir was served at the dinner, or if these remarks are the
result of a more durable mental disorder. The recent wave of terror attacks
against our Coalition in Afghanistan famously include the Iranian-supported
forces of Gulbadin Hekhmatiar, and the whole world now takes it for granted
that top al Qaeda figures, including Osama and his number-one son, along
with the likes of Zawahiri and Zarkawi, have been operating out of Iran
for some time.
Senator Specter
has long labored for better American relations with Middle Eastern tyrannical
regimes, three times traveling to Damascus for meetings with Syrian dictators:
kicking off a short-lived love-fest with Syria's Hafez al Assad in January,
1990 with a sortie to Damascus; again in December, 1998, when he witnessed
a mob storm the U.S. embassy following Clinton's missile attack on Baghdad;
and then in January, 2003, when he met with Bashar Assad as part of a
holiday junket to Europe and the Middle East. On that occasion, Specter
warned of massive Arab uprisings against the United States if we attempted
a military liberation of Iraq, and reiterated his insistence that we ask
for further U.N. resolutions before moving forward.
Ney and Biden
have reportedly received campaign contributions from pro-Tehran Iranian-American
groups, and Biden has been outspokenly critical of President Bush's repeated
criticism of the mullahcracy. He vigorously rejected the inclusion of
Iran in the Axis of Evil even though Iran is always number one
on the State Department's list of state sponsors of terrorism and
recently met with the Iranian foreign minister at the big party in Davos,
Switzerland.
Ney, who
lived in Iran 30 years ago, has been the most cautious of the three, endorsing
the Iran-trip idea by warning that "I don't think it is set in stone."
Ney's first-hand experiences may have made him more perspicacious than
Specter, because, within hours of the "announcement" of the
trip, an Iranian foreign-ministry spokesman said that he knew of no such
plans.
This is part
of a longstanding pattern, part of the Iranians' policy of deception,
aimed simultaneously at us and at their own people. It is not unusual
for conflicting statements to emerge from different offices and different
leaders. Over and over again for the past several months, some of our
most celebrated officials, from Secretary of State Colin Powell and his
loyal deputy Richard Armitage, to State Department spokesmen, have enthusiastically
gushed over vague hints that the Iranians were prepared to hand over al
Qaeda terrorists who, it was said, were "being held in Iran. The
Iranians officially announced their desire to cooperate with the United
States, then quickly attacked America as a satanic force. The same has
happened with regard to "better relations;" some leaders speak
as if they welcome it, others declare it out of the question. The same,
again, happens with regard to Iran's "promise" to "suspend
uranium enrichment;" one day, one leader says it's a whole new policy,
and the next day another leader says it's only temporary, it depends on
what "suspend" means, and it's going to be resumed right away.
This is
baffling to our diplomats, who love to parse language and to believe that
words have the same significance to our enemies as to us. But with the
mullahs, it's important to reason from first principles. No terrorist
of any importance was, or will be, released, for the simple reason that
Iran is a major supporter of al Qaeda, and could no more enable us to
strike a major blow at Osama and his henchmen than they could provide
us with Imad Mughniyah, the top killer of Hezbollah, or any of the others
who receive all manner of support from the Islamic regime.
Did Specter,
Ney, and Biden and the deep thinkers at State who sponsored the
appeasement happen to notice that, at the very moment they were
kissing up to the mullahs, the leaders of some 30-plus terrorist organizations
were converging on Tehran for their annual powwow? Is this the sort of
helpfulness of which Senator Specter oozed enthusiastic?
If the Specter/Ney/Biden
efforts to "improve relations" were simply acts of folly by
men who don't know better, one might laugh them off. But they have serious
consequences, as our diplomats who actively encouraged the representatives'
acts of appeasement must realize. The Iranian people overwhelmingly
hate the regime, and look to Washington for encouragement and support
to carry out a democratic revolution, and therefore the mullahs try to
create opportunities to convince the people that the Bush administration
in fact approves of the regime itself. Any warm statement from a famous
American is a body blow to the democratic opposition, and a balm to the
mullahs, just as every critical word from President Bush has encouraged
the people, and weakened the tyrants.
Appeasers
are sent deep into the Inferno, because their acts are truly wicked, shoring
up our would-be killers and discouraging our would-be allies inside the
country. And they are doing it at a potentially explosive moment, as can
be learned by listening to the instructions given to Iranian interpreters,
assigned to the foreign journalists flying in for the 25th-anniversary
celebrations starting this week (of which the terror jamboree is a part).
The words came from Mohammad-Hossein Khoshvaght, head of Iran's international
press bureau. He reminded them that lying or mistranslating Iranians'
words is mandatory, if the truth would give a bad image of the country.
"If a woman starts saying that her lipstick is a sign of revolution,
just don't translate it. Say it's nonsense."
If any foreign
journalist tries to cover politically sensitive matters (like student
protests) or if they ask to work on their own, the interpreters should
immediately report them to the regime. Furthermore, foreign journalists
are not to enter Iranians' homes, and the interpreters should remember
that the journalists' phone calls will be monitored by security officers.
"These
days are very tough days," he told the translators. "The security
of the regime is threatened. You shouldn't do anything that threatens
the security of the system."
And almost
anything can be judged to threaten the mullahcracy nowadays. Ask poor
Ali Akabar Najafi, a 27-year-old taxi driver who was arrested in south
Tehran for an imaginative bumper sticker: "The era of arrogant rulers
is over." He was held blindfolded, in solitary confinement, for 53
days, and now, according to Reuters, "faces a possible lengthy prison
term or even the death penalty."
But Specter,
Ney, and Biden, and their State Department facilitators, think this is
a good time to improve relations.
Someone
should tell them about the January 24 executions of several commanders
and senior officers of the Revolutionary Guards, the elite security force
of the regime. The most distinguished of the men was Brigadier General
Mohammed-Mehdi Dozdoozani, one of the founders of the RG and a hero in
the Iran-Iraq War. His crime was to have exposed government corruption,
especially the massive trafficking in young Iranian girls, sold for prostitution
to Arab countries. Dozdoozani and his comrades had written an open letter,
entitled "We the Warriors," threatening rebellion against these
evils.
If they
want to know more, they can read "Sex Slave Jihad" by Donna
M. Hughes (read her on NRO today, too, here), which speaks of a 635-percent
increase in teenage prostitution, and trafficking of girls as young as
8 and 10 years old. There are 25,000 street children in Tehran alone,
and the trafficking network feeds on them, often in cahoots with authorities,
including judges and Justice Department officials. As Hughes concludes,
"only the end of the Iranian regime will free women and girls from
all the forms of slavery they suffer.
But Specter,
Ney, and Biden, and their State Department facilitators, think this is
a good time for "improved relations."
It would
be nice to think that they will be held accountable for their acts of
appeasement Ney and Specter are up for reelection but the
odds are that justice will be delayed until their final judgment.
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