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Regime Is Iran's Disease; Nukes Are Just a Symptom
· Friday, October 16, 2009
The Nobel Peace Prize has renewed prestige in my book. No, not because Barack Obama won it for accomplishments to be determined later. It's got new luster because Shirin Ebadi has, at great personal risk, effectively come out for regime change in her native Iran.
Ebadi, who won the Peace Prize six years ago (under the old rules whereby recipients were expected to do something to earn the prize before receiving it), is Iran's premier human rights lawyer. In an interview with the editors of the Washington Post, Ebadi "suggested that the nature of Iran's regime is more crucial to U.S. security than any specific deals on nuclear energy."
Her point is precisely the same point made by so-called neoconservatives for years. The problem with Iran is its regime; its nuclear program is merely a symptom of that problem.
Do you lay awake at night worrying about Britain's nuclear weapons? France's? Israel's? Of course not, because stable democracies in general, and stable democratic allies in particular, aren't a threat.
If your neighbor is an upright and responsible citizen, who cares if he has a gun? If your neighbor is a complete whackjob and criminal, you sure as Shinola care if he has a gun. Armed neighbors aren't a problem, dangerous ones are. The same logic applies to nations.
"Imagine if the government actually promised to stop its nuclear program tomorrow," Ebadi told the Post. "Would you trust this government not to start another secret nuclear program somewhere else?"
It's a profound and fundamental point. We've gotten many such promises from the North Koreans. They are worthless. Promises from oppressive regimes cannot be trusted any more than promises from Tony Soprano could be. If a government is willing to betray its own people on a daily basis, what makes anyone think that it won't betray its geopolitical adversaries?
A democratic Iran, Ebadi says, would be unlikely to pursue a nuclear program. The Iranian people fear sanctions more than the country's corrupt, economically insulated rulers do. Moreover, the Iranian regime needs nukes for its own survival. The Iranian people may like the prestige of being a member of the nuclear club, but they aren't eager to pay any price to join. More important, the Iranian people aren't interested in preserving the current regime, as has been demonstrated by the historic protests this summer.
But even if Iran did go nuclear, who really cares as long as the nutty, messianic, totalitarian leadership is gone? A stable, democratic regime concerned with economic growth and normalcy might not be perfect, but which sort of government would you rather see in charge of nuclear weapons?
Democracy is not necessarily a cure-all. Palestinians in Gaza held elections and swept Hamas to power. But the Iranians aren't Gazans. And while America is despised by most nations in the region, the U.S. is actually popular with the Iranian people.
Ebadi doesn't want America to topple the Iranian regime the way it toppled Saddam Hussein's. Or, if she does, she's certainly smart enough not to say so outright, given that her family is under constant surveillance by Iranian authorities. What she wants is for America to get its priorities straight. Iran, which has been sponsoring terror for 30 years, is a threat because the Iranian regime is a threat. Change the regime and the threat diminishes or vanishes instantaneously. We had a golden opportunity to accelerate regime change in June, but Obama blinked.
Enamored with the idea that "engagement" with evil will produce good, and convinced that a brutal, undemocratic regime is the legitimate representative of the Iranian people, Obama was slow to recognize the moral authority of the democracy movement. By the time he did say what he should have said at the outset, it was clear that his grudging and qualified support for the protestors had no steel to it. The Iranian regime recognized that it would have a free hand to murder and intimidate its own people in order to reconsolidate power after it stole the election. This was a sad moment for the leader of the free world. "Mr. Obama has extended the hand of friendship to a man who has blood on his hands," Ebadi told the Post. "He can at least avoid shaking the hand of friendship with him."
There are rumors -- unconfirmed at this point -- that the Supreme Leader of Iran, the Ayatollah Khamenei, is either dead or in a coma. If true, the resulting power vacuum might give Obama the chance for a do-over. That is, if he's interested in earning a peace prize, not just winning one.
(C) 2009 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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MichaelSSEC
Excellent column full of interesting news about a troubled region. Mr. Goldberg's analysis suffers from one major flaw, however. He makes the common mistake that many observers have been making in assuming that President Obama wants to do the right thing for America.
Can anyone name a single policy or action he has taken that would support that assumption? I'm certainly not aware of one, and I've been looking rather closely.
Instead, what we've seen since the campaign, then during the transition, then after the inauguration, is an Obama who views himself not as a citizen of American but as a citizen of the world. So he sees American foreign policy from the view of the world. Obama has gone around deliberately insulting the leaders of our allies (Mr. Krauthammer mistakenly called that "amateur hour" but Obama did it repeatedly, indicating it was calculated). He went around the world apologizing for the "crimes" of America. The man even apologized to France -- FRANCE! -- and astonishingly apologized to Germany.
This is not a President who cares about what's best for America. If he did, he could never have missed the incredible opportunity he was given at the UN Security Council meeting when he had the Qom intelligence in his pocket. It is impossible to believe that a man who has risen to Obama's position could do what he did over Qom out of mere stupidity. It's inconceivable. It makes a lot more sense to suppose that he did it because he just doesn't care about Qom. He doesn't care about the Iranian regime, its threat to US security, its nuke program, or its Democratic dissent.
He cares about weakening America's standing in the world, sucking up to tyrannical dictators and giving a billion dollars in aid to Hamas in Gaza. He cares about anxiously giving away the store to Russia, not because he's a moron who can't handle the schoolyard bully, but because his GOAL is to weaken America diplomatically. He betrays our allies in Poland for the same reason. And domestically he is shoving Global Warming and Socialized medicine down our throats to accomplish precisely the same goal.
If people would stop scratching their heads over Obama's blunders, wasting time wondering how such a smart guy can blunder so stupidly, and realize that he's doing this stuff deliberately, his "blunders" suddenly make a lot of sense. Then the way to fight him becomes obvious.
Posted October 18, 2009 at 4:53:25 PM